undersong

Etymology
From.

Noun

 * 1) An accompanying sound or strain; an accompaniment.
 * 2) * 1926, (as Clive Hamilton), , Canto 4, stanza 1,in Walter Hooper (ed.) Narrative Poems, New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1979, p.36,
 * Then the rain;
 * Twelve miles of downward water like one dart,
 * And in one leap were launched along the plain,
 * To break the budding flower and flood the grain,
 * And keep with dripping sound an undersong
 * Amid the wheeling thunder all night long.
 * 1)  Subordinate and underlying idea, meaning or atmosphere; undertone.
 * 2) * 1916,, “Oscar Wilde” in Suspended Judgments, New York: G. Arnold Shaw, p.410,
 * The mad smouldering lust which gives a sort of under-song of surging passion to the sophisticated sensuality of “” [...]
 * 1)  The burden of a song; the chorus; the refrain.
 * 1) * 1916,, “Oscar Wilde” in Suspended Judgments, New York: G. Arnold Shaw, p.410,
 * The mad smouldering lust which gives a sort of under-song of surging passion to the sophisticated sensuality of “” [...]
 * 1)  The burden of a song; the chorus; the refrain.
 * 1)  The burden of a song; the chorus; the refrain.
 * 1)  The burden of a song; the chorus; the refrain.
 * 1)  The burden of a song; the chorus; the refrain.