fugue• All three suitescontain a fugue, while there is a chaconne in the Second and a passacaglia to end the Third.• But how dull a poorlyconstructedfugue can be.• But you can not go from the reed-pipe to the art of fugue in one day.• Now he was out of his Richie Quickfugue, he seemed to have a perspective on the City.• He is a grammarian, a swordsman, a musician with a predilection for the fugue.• In the fugue, at once elated and exhausting, Mullova was staggering technically.
Originfugue
(1500-1600)Italianfuga“flight, fugue”, from Latinfugere; → FUGITIVE2