An outro (sometimes "outtro", also "extro") is the conclusion or epilogue to a piece of music, work of literature, television program, or video game. It is the opposite of an intro. "Outro" is a blend or portmanteau as it replaces the element "in" of the "intro" with its opposite, to create a new word. The word was used facetiously by The Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band for the 1967 track "The Intro and the Outro".[citation needed]

Music [link]

The term is typically used only in the realm of pop music. It can refer to the concluding track of an album (such as Snoop Doggy Dogg's Tha Doggfather) or to an outro-solo, an instrumental solo (usually a guitar solo) played as the song fades out or until it stops. For outro-solo examples see Led Zeppelin's "Black Dog",[citation needed] Vanessa Carlton's "Home" (piano solo),[citation needed] Eric Clapton's "Layla" (piano, guitar and slide guitar solo composed with Jim Gordon),[citation needed] Pink Floyd' "Comfortably Numb",[citation needed] Eagles' "Hotel California",[citation needed] Metallica's "Fade to Black" and "Astronomy" (Blue Öyster Cult cover),[citation needed] Tenacious D's "The Metal",[citation needed] Guilherme Arantes' "Amanhã",[citation needed] Dire Straits' "Tunnel of Love",[citation needed] Rush's "Working Man",[citation needed] Blur's "To the End (La Comedie)",[citation needed] and T34's "Hbabi".[citation needed]

Television [link]

In contemporary television, an outro is theme music present over closing credits or played at the end of a program (common in news programs or game shows when the lights go down and the camera angle is wide).

Video games [link]

In video games, the outro is the end sequence. The term usually refers to the cut scene presented to the player on completion of the game. Credits can be rolled at this time, including Editors, Story Developers, ect.


https://wn.com/Outro

Conclusion (music)

In music, the conclusion is the ending of a composition and may take the form of a coda or outro.

Pieces using sonata form typically use the recapitulation to conclude a piece, providing closure through the repetition of thematic material from the exposition in the tonic key. In all musical forms other techniques include "altogether unexpected digressions just as a work is drawing to its close, followed by a return...to a consequently more emphatic confirmation of the structural relations implied in the body of the work."

For example:

  • The slow movement of Bach's Brandenburg Concerto No. 2, where a "diminished-7th chord progression interrupts the final cadence."
  • The slow movement of Symphony No. 5 by Beethoven, where, "echoing afterthoughts", follow the initial statements of the first theme and only return expanded in the coda.
  • Varèse's Density 21.5, where partitioning of the chromatic scale into (two) whole tone scales provides the missing tritone of b implied in the previously exclusive partitioning by (three) diminished seventh chords.
  • Outro (album)

    Outro is a 2002 album by Jair Oliveira. Jair’s second album blends jazz, samba, soul and MPB. Most of Outro's songs were co-written by fellow Brazilian singer and composer Ed Motta.

    Track listing

  • "Instrucoes" (Vinheta 1) - 03:36
  • "Bom Dia, Anjo" - 04:55
  • "Sou Teu Nego" (Todas as Letras)- 04:06
  • "Falso Amor" - 04:38
  • "Amor E Saudade" - 07:23 (duet with Ed Motta)
  • "Dor De Ressaca" - 04:07
  • "Frio Pra Bem Longe" - 05:23
  • "Minuto De Silencio" - 05:46
  • "Sorriso Pra Te Dar" - 05:52
  • "Vai E Volta" - 04:57
  • "São Paulo, Fim Do Dia" - 03:41
  • "Uma Outra Beleza" - 03:11
  • "Local Proibido" - 03:30
  • "Ficar No Escuro" - 12:28

  • TekWar

    TekWar is a series of science fiction novels created by William Shatner and ghost-written by science-fiction author Ron Goulart, published by Putnam. The novels gave rise to a comic book series, video game and later TV movies and a series, both of the latter featuring Shatner.

    Premise

    The 23rd century universe is centered around "tek"—an illegal, addictive, mind-altering digital drug in the form of a microchip. The drug has the effect of simulated reality (as shown in the films and series), and taps into "the matrix" hyperspace. The protagonist, Jake Cardigan, is a former police officer who is framed for dealing in the drug four years before the start of the story. Having been sentenced to 15 years' cryo-imprisonment, he is released early. After discovering that Walt Bascom, the powerful head of a private security firm, arranged for the early release, Jake goes to work for Bascom as an investigator dedicated to tracking down the real Tek lords.

    Background

    Shatner began to write notes that would become the novels on the set of Star Trek V: The Final Frontier, and is quoted to say that the original book was an attempt to blend elements from Star Trek and T. J. Hooker. There are strong similarities between the story of the initial Tek novel (and TV pilot) and Ron Goulart's 1985 novel, Brainz Inc., which involves a murder mystery involving an heiress who is presumed dead and her android duplicate, who shares her memories and personality. Unlike the Tek story the earlier novel's plot is played for humor.

    Tek (rapper)

    El-Amin after converting to Islam (born Tekomin B. Williams on June 3, 1973) better known by his stage name Tek, is an American rapper, famous as a member of the duo Smif-N-Wessun, and the Hip Hop collective Boot Camp Clik. Tek debuted on Black Moon's 1993 album Enta Da Stage with his rhyming partner Steele. In 1994, Smif-N-Wessun released their debut single "Bucktown", which became a Billboard Hot 100 hit, and gave Brooklyn the nickname "Bucktown, home of the original gun clappers". Smif-N-Wessun dropped their debut album Dah Shinin' in early 1995, a release that is now hailed as a classic underground Hip Hop album. Later in 1995, the duo was sued by the Smith & Wesson firearms company, forcing them to change their name of Smif-N-Wessun to the Cocoa Brovaz. Tek recorded a group album with the Boot Camp Clik in 1997, For the People, then followed in 1998 with a Cocoa Brovaz album, The Rude Awakening. Though not as widely heralded as their debut, the album received moderate sales, led by the single "Black Trump". After Tek's label Duck Down Records was dropped from their Priority Records distribution deal, the Cocoa Brovaz released a single titled "Super Brooklyn", utilizing a sample from Super Mario Bros. The attention received from the single landed them a record deal with popular independent label Rawkus Records. The duo never released an album on the label, and they returned home to Duck Down Records to record another Boot Camp Clik album in 2002, The Chosen Few. In 2005, the Cocoa Brovaz returned with the name Smif-N-Wessun and released their third album Smif 'N' Wessun: Reloaded. Later that year, Tek released a street album titled It Is What It Is. Tek and the Boot Camp Clik released their third group album, The Last Stand, on July 18, 2006. Tek's voice appears in the cartoon Three Thug Mice http://threethugmice.com (2008)

    TEK

    Tek can refer to:

  • Tek, shorthand for Tektronix.
  • TEC-9 9mm firearm
  • Tek, a member of the hip-hop group Smif-N-Wessun.
  • Tek (drug), a fictional substance in the TekWar universe.
  • Jason Varitek, a baseball catcher for the Boston Red Sox.
  • TEK can refer to:

  • Társadalomelméleti Kollégium Hungarian szakkollégium
  • Traffic encryption key
  • Test of Economic Knowledge (TEK), a standardized test of economics
  • TEK tyrosine kinase
  • Traditional ecological knowledge or Traditional Environmental Knowledge (TEK), aboriginal, indigenous, or other forms of traditional knowledges regarding sustainability of local resources
  • TEK search engine ("Time Equals Knowledge"), an email-based search engine
  • Tekniikan Akateemiset (TEK), the Finnish Association of Graduate Engineers
  • Teen Evil King
  • Terrorelhárítási Központ (TEK, Counter Terrorism Centre), Hungarian state agency
  • See also

  • Technician
  • Tech (disambiguation)
  • Technology
  • Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Sphere (rotten And Consumed)

    by: Atheretic

    Revenge is upon us
    A catastrophic prophecy
    Lightning strikes, mountain of fire
    Severe power from the sky in anger
    A nature uncontrolled
    Chaotic nightmare unfold
    Pathetic breed in danger
    Enhancing the fear of the future
    Burning, drying, dead baby
    Lying in the desert miserably
    A monument of the path followed
    Example of inhumanity
    Too late to react
    Too strong to attack
    Elements united in terror
    Destitution of believes
    Desecration of hopes
    Unconscious degradation
    Irreversible process
    Furious purge
    Carnage of biblical proportion
    A sphere rotten and consumed
    Fruit of life killed from its roots
    Broken tree from witch the seed remains
    A social holocaust
    Fatal retribution
    Movement marking history




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