0 present participle of improvise
1 to invent or make something, such as a speech or a device, at the time when it is needed without already having planned it:
In the soloing/improvising of a blues the choice could be any of the notes from the chromatic scale.
Through aural copying and improvising these girls were developing vocal and musical skills.
This might sound a little fanciful, a case of the actors improvising and steering the scene towards a politically correct happy end.
The opposite behaviour, ' improvising' a speech unrehearsed and without regard for the audience and the occasion, was equally foolhardy and condemned.
Improvisors engage in dialogue with a computer-driven, interactive ' 'virtual improvising orchestra' '.
A possible reason for this could be that improvising and playing music by ear are mainly functions of the right-hemisphere, where intuition dominates.
Duct tape is also the improvising craftsman's favorite tool.
It is proposed that during this process they learn to become collectively attuned when performing and improvising.