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Duke Ellington is known as one of the most important composers of his time, and his work has been enjoyed for more than 80 years by music lovers all over the world. During his lifetime Ellington turned musical sounds into many compositions, mostly in the style known as jazz.

The Early Years

Edward Kennedy Ellington was born in 1899 in Washington, D. C. It wasn’t until Ellington was a teenager that his interest in music grew. He taught himself to play the piano by listening to local piano players. Sometime around 1916 Ellington began playing the piano at high school parties. Ellington realized that he enjoyed entertaining people with his music. He soon became a very popular musician, playing at parties and other events in the Washington area. Young adults seemed especially delighted by the modern pieces he composed.

Success in New York

In 1923, when Ellington was almost 24 years old, he joined The Washingtonians, a five-piece group of musicians in Washington, and became the group’s leader in early 1924. In 1927 Ellington and his orchestra won an engagement(雇佣期)at Harlem’s famous Cotton Club. For the next three years, his orchestra played at the Cotton Club nearly every night.

The Influence of the Cotton Club

Working at the Cotton Club encouraged Ellington’s creativity. Since the shows changed every six months, he was challenged by the need to continually develop new material. He had to compose a wide variety of music to accompany the various acts in the Cotton Club shows and to adapt that music to the strengths and weaknesses of the players in his orchestra.

By 1928 the popular nightspot began radio broadcasts. From the broadcasts Ellington and his orchestra gained a national reputation.

On the Road

As Ellington’s popularity increased, he realized that his orchestra could do well on concert tours. They left the Cotton Club in 1931 and toured America and Europe almost continually for the next 43 years. In addition to touring, Ellington made recordings and continued to compose music.

Duke Ellington played the piano, composed music, and led his famous orchestra for more than 50 years, until his death in 1974. Music lovers all over the world agree that the large quantity of music he created will be enjoyed for many years to come.

小题1:From the second paragraph, we know that Ellington ____________.

A.could sing as well as he played the piano

B.preferred mature audiences to young adults

C.had a natural talent for musical composition

D.learnt to play musical instrument from very young age小题2:Which of the following can show us Ellington’s leadership ability?

A.Ellington was very popular at parties in the Washington area.

B.Ellington took the responsibility for a band for a long time.

C.Ellington did live radio broadcasts in New York City.

D.Ellington continually developed new material.小题3:We may infer from the passage that ____________.

A.Ellington’s career took off overnight

B.Ellington loves touring around the world

C.Ellington could compose a wide variety of songs

D.Ellington had a great effect on the world of music小题4:Which of the following shows the order in which the events happened in the story?

a. Ellington joined a five-piece group of musicians in Washington.

b. Ellington’s orchestra played at the Cotton Club.

c. Ellington and his orchestra gained a national reputation.

d. Ellington began playing the piano at high school parties.

e. Ellington’s orchestra went on concert tours.

A.d-b-a-e-c

B.d-a-b-c-e

C.a-d-b-c-e

D.a-d-b-e-c

答案

小题1:C

小题1:B

小题1:D

小题1:B

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     On Easter Day, 1722, Dutch explorers (探索者) landed on Easter Island (复活岛). It was the first

time that Easter Islanders had met people from the outside world. The strangers were about to discover

something very strange themselves -that they were on an island with hundreds of huge stone statues (雕像). The Dutch explorers wondered where the Islanders had come from and why and how they had built

the statues. Now science is putting together the story.

    The first people to arrive on the island came there around A.D. 700. The society that developed there

was based on fishing and farming to feed the population, which grew to 12,000. Its success showed itself

in a way that has become the island's trademark (标记): hundreds of huge stone figures -the moai.

    None of the moai was standing when scientists first arrived. People put them back up later; but how

had a Stone Age society ever made, moved and set them up there in the first place? And why?

    There are nearly 900 moai on Easter Island, and while the questions about them remain unanswered, no one doubts the years of effort that must have gone into making them.

    The real killer of the Easter Islanders came from across the ocean. After 1722, it became popular for

explorers to visit Easter Island, bringing diseases. The final blow (打击) came in 1862, when slave traders came from Peru and took away 1,500 people, one-third of the population.

1. Before the Dutch explorers arrived on Easter Island, _____.

A. Easter Island was separate from the outside world

B. they knew where Islanders had come from

C. they discovered something dangerous    

D. the huge stone statues were upright

2. When the first explorers arrived on the island, they _____.

A. were frightened by the huge stone statues

B. were surprised by what they saw

C. set many of the moai on the island upright

D. fished and farmed

3. All researchers agree that _____.

A. the natives could hardly support themselves

B. the moai must have taken a great effort to make

C. the Islanders mainly died of diseases brought by explorers

D. the explorers helped the Islanders live better lives

4. The passage implies that _____.

A. the Islanders built the moai to show off their success

B. the Dutch explorers discovered how the moai had been built

C. in 1862, before slave traders came, about 4,500 people were living on Easter Island

D. the natives of Easter Island have been there for about 1,200 years

5. "The real killer" in the last paragraph refers to _____.

A. the slave traders              

B. the scientists

C. the explorers                

D. the moai