English
Noun
mouth music (uncountable)
- The vocal imitation of instrumental music.
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1877, Alexander Carmichael (translator); Angus Macleod (speaker), “The Reciters' Lament, and Their Story”, in W.Y. Evans-Wentz, editor, The Fairy-Faith in Celtic Countries, ISBN 0486425223, page 115:- She herself or one of the other crofter women of the townland would sing to us the mouth music.
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1996, George Odam; Joan Arnold, Alison Ley, Sounds of Music (Teacher's Book), ISBN 0748722963, page 61:- ‘Mouth music’ evolved in those parts of the country where poor people had no instruments but still wanted to dance.
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2002, Charles Keil & Angeliki V. Keil, “Foreword”, in Bright Balkan Morning: Romani Lives & the Power of Music in Greek Macedonia, ISBN 0819564885, page xxiii:- Listening to flamenco, or to English Gypsy or Russian Gypsy folk song, or to the “babba-deep-babbaa-doop” mouth music of the Hungarian Roma, one would be hard put to identify a commonality.
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