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Answer for the clue "Short piece of music played on brass instruments (for the Common Man?) ", 7 letters:
fanfare

Alternative clues for the word fanfare

Word definitions for fanfare in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Fanfare is a one-act ballet made by New York City Ballet ballet master Jerome Robbins to Benjamin Britten 's The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra , Op.34 (1945), in celebration of the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II . The premiere took place on the ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 (context countable English) A flourish of trumpets or horns as to announce; a short and lively air performed on hunting horns during the chase. 2 (context uncountable English) A show of ceremony or celebration.

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ ADJECTIVE great ▪ It was launched last February amid great fanfare and made stops in six cities, staying at least a month in each. ▪ With great fanfare , the first players in the United States were sold in 1983. ▪ Early results ...

Usage examples of fanfare.

The Pope would die and the circus would actually begin with the tawdry tinkle of the hurdy-gurdy and monkeys on chains, the trumpet fanfare of a Fellini movie and the clowns and all the freaks and aerialists joining hands, dancing, capering across the screen.

But now the trumpets blew a fanfare, and forth rode divers gallant knights, who, spurring rearing steeds, charged amain to gore, to smite and batter each other with right good will while the concourse shouted, caps waved and scarves and ribands fluttered.

One of the biogenesis trillionaires acquired the land, then, with considerable fanfare, built the mansion, and for a moment or two, there was no more famous address in the solar system.

There, we were received with much fanfare, and our entire party ushered into the gates of the city, a gilded canopy borne over the head of Ysandre de la Courcel as we paraded through the streets to enter the mighty keep of the Castello.

Like every bar in Montana, this one was half filled with electronic keno and poker machines, relentlessly replaying their calliope fanfares to the empty bar.

HE WOULD allow no ceremony, moved quickly and without fanfare away from the train.

That meant the hunters were Mandrian, for no one in Nold hunted with such noise and fanfare.

And I once again enwrapped all that hot limber skill, endured her delighted chuckling, romped her onto her spring-steel spine, and tried in my endless, mindless, idiot frenzy to hammer her down through the damn silk sheets, down through the foam and springs, down through the carpeting and the tile and the beams and down into the deep black Mexican soil under the lovely and formal old house, where I could be buried without fanfare and sleep forever and ever and ever.

Not hard to find is that roseal fever of the gods, that fanfare of supernal trumpets and clash of immortal cymbals, that mystery whose place and meaning have haunted you through the halls of waking and the gulfs of dreaming, and tormented you with hints of vanished memory and the pain of lost things awesome and momentous.

A long fanfare rang out, silencing the chatter of the courtiers, and bright light spilled out from the great courtroom of Lionstone XIV.

There was great fanfare and celebration on the day the Marmor Deep-Sea Aquarium was officially opened to the public at a site adjoining the Marmor Marine Laboratory.

The Spin had ended as quietly as it had begun, no fanfare, no noise except for a crackle of uninterpretable static from the sunny side of the planet.

Olivia listened to the sound of the ivory trumpet and decided she preferred the brazen voice of the lituus and buccina to the muffled and delicate fanfare that heralded the arrival of Theodora.

Within thirty seconds they had started work on their usual nocturnal symphony, a rousing fanfare of farting and snoring, moaning and wanking.

Accompanied by a great, brassy fanfare from the orchestra, each woman posed by the footlights in her rustling Paris finery before moving offstage.