: a passage or section performed by all the performers
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At the launch, Naturalz plans to debut a few more flavors like tutti frutti, roasted almonds and more.—Jenna Thompson
april 8, Kansas City Star, 8 Apr. 2026 Every detail is audible, even within a healthy tutti.—Zachary Lewis, cleveland, 3 Oct. 2022 When first violins shriek out the opening fanfare’s return in a fearsome orchestra tutti, that section can feel like a sudden reckoning, a strike from the heavens.—Hannah Edgar, Chicago Tribune, 28 June 2022 For the first time, outbursts of minor and diminished chords appear to darken the sky, and these caprices of mood were thoughtfully emphasized by tutti and soloist.—Lukas Schulze, San Diego Union-Tribune, 13 June 2022 Langrée’s palms tensed into claws as Ravel’s final five bars reared up, its bombastic tutti collapsing into the arms of an audience that roared its approval.—Michael Andor Brodeur, Washington Post, 20 May 2022 But Reimann achieves an exemplary balance by alternating his scalding eruptions of vocal power (which in general are sparsely accompanied, sometimes by percussion alone) with full-throttle tutti blasts from the orchestra.—Matthew Aucoin, The New York Review of Books, 7 Dec. 2019 The blend of Beethoven snippets is kaleidoscopic, and with the two sonic planes — string quartet versus massive tutti — add to the dizzying effort of chasing the ever-changing focal points.—Corinna Da Fonseca-Wollheim, New York Times, 10 Mar. 2017