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  1. The Devil's Tune is a novel by British politician Iain Duncan Smith, published on 6 November 2003, the same day he left office as leader of the Conservative Party after losing a no confidence vote . The book is notable for its uniformly negative reception, selling only 18 copies in its first week of release. [1]

  2. 20 mag 2011 · 473. 31K views 12 years ago. "Fanitullen", or "The Devils Tune" was heard for the first time during a wedding in a valley in Norway in 1724. When the toastmaster went down to the cellar...

    • 5 min
    • 31,5K
    • Peter Svaeren
  3. The Devil's Tune, performed by Andrea Hoag, Loretta Kelley, and Charlie Pilzer (www.hoagkelleypilzer.com). In concert at The Institute of Musical Traditions ...

    • 3 min
    • 11,1K
    • imtfolk
  4. 2 mar 2022 · Furthermore, the Devil is often portrayed as a fiddler in Scandinavian folklore, so the fiddler and the tune in the lyrics refer to the Devil and "Fanitullen" (aka "the Devil's tune"). This is what Gåte has written about the story of "Fanitullen" on their official website:

  5. 6 nov 2003 · Printable version. 'I hate to kick a man when he's down, but...' Iain Duncan Smith's novel seems to be spawning a new art-form in its own right - critics seeking to say honestly how much they hate...

  6. Dancing to the Devil's Tune: Liszt's Mephisto Waltz and the Encounter with Virtuosity. David Larkin. 2015. Despite its popularity with pianists, Liszt’s first Mephisto Waltz (pub. 1862) has been largely glossed over in musicological studies.

  7. 1 mar 2015 · In this article, I reconsider the relationship between the piano piece and the excerpt from Lenau's Faust (pub. 1836) that inspired it, and I explore potential programmatic interpretations of the rhetorical features and idiosyncratic structure of the music, informed by knowledge of Liszt's aesthetic stance around this period.