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Art et futurÀ l'heure où le Centre Pompidou prépare sa métamorphose, Un podcast, une œuvre explore la façon dont les artistes imaginent, anticipent ou fantasment le futur, du 20e siècle à aujourd'hui. Qu'est-ce que l'art peut nous dire de notre présent et de notre avenir ?Cette série de 4 podcasts vous propose un éclairage inédit sur les liens entre art et futur, grâce à 4 œuvres de la collection du Centre Pompidou.Épisode 1Luigi Russolo, Automobile in Corsa, 1912-1913Incarnation même de l'idée de vitesse, l'automobile est érigée en emblème par les peintres futuristes. Luigi Russolo (1885-1947) en traduit l'énergie mécanique dans une œuvre phare où couleurs et lignes transcrivent la rapidité du mouvement. Avec Iveta Slavkova, spécialiste des avant-gardes du 20e siècle, et Christophe Studeny, spécialiste de la vitesse, la journaliste Jeanne Dreyfus Daboussy revient sur l'héritage contesté du mouvement futuriste et sur la démarche visionnaire de Luigi Russolo.Crédits :Écriture et réalisation : Jeanne Dreyfus Daboussy Production : Clara GouraudLectures : Florian HutterEnregistrement et mixage : Ivan GarielAvec la participation de Christophe Studeny, Iveta Slavkova, Isabelle Bonzom, conférencière au Centre PompidouExtraits musicaux : - Balla Marinetti (Der Mussolini), Italo Monitor ; Hungarian Dance No.2, Brahms ; Circle, Columbia Nights ; Mist, Dor Ben Lulu ; bruiteurs de Luigi Russolo ; Zang Zang Tumb Tumb, Filipo Marinetti Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Johannes Brahms - Hungarian Dance No. 3London Symphony Orchestra Marin Alsop, conductorMore info about today's track: Naxos 8.557429Courtesy of Naxos of America Inc.SubscribeYou can subscribe to this podcast in Apple Podcasts, or by using the Daily Download podcast RSS feed.Purchase this recordingAmazon
SynopsisSome have claimed that it was on today's date in 1877 that the American inventor Thomas Edison recorded his own voice reciting, “Mary had a little lamb” on a tin-foil cylinder of his own design. Other historians date the precise birth of the phonograph earlier, others later. In any case, the Edison Speaking Phonograph Company wasn't established until January of 1878.Initially, music wasn't Edison's top priority: He thought his phonograph might be profitable as an aid to stenographers, or for families who wanted to record the last words of beloved relatives.Eventually, however, classical music and the phonograph began to interact.In London in 1888, a bit of a Crystal Palace performance of Handel's oratorio “Israel in Egypt” was captured on an Edison cylinder. In Vienna, Johannes Brahms, seated at the piano, recorded a snippet of his famous Hungarian Dance No. 3, with a spoken intro many wrongly assumed was by the composer himself.The voice of British composer Sir Arthur Sullivan WAS captured, however, commenting: “I am astonished—and terrified—at the thought that so much hideous and bad music may be put on record forever!” Well, Sir Arthur, I'm afraid there's no going back now…Music Played in Today's ProgramAntonin Dvořák (1841 - 1904) arr. Kreisler Songs My Mother Taught Me Fritz Kreisler, violin Pearl 9324George Frederic Handel (1685 – 1757) excerpt, fr Judas Maccabeus Edward Lloyd, tenor Koch Historic 7703Johannes Brahms (1833 – 1897) plays on an Edison cylinder (r. 1889) Johannes Brahms, p. Pearl 99049Johannes Brahms (1833 – 1897) Hungarian Dance No. 1 Idil Biret, piano Naxos 8.550355
VISIT OUR SPONSORS: Louisiana Renaissance Festival https://www.larf.net/ The Ren Cruise http://www.canigoadventures.com/ SONGS Bogie's Bonnie Belle performed by Coeur De Lion from the album Coeur De Lion http://www.mpetersco.com/CDL/ Robin Hood performed by Retha Ferrell from the album Unreleased Cd Old Woman From Wexford performed by Phillip Hole from the album The Singing Gravedigger Dark Lady performed by Lark the Harper from the album Soothing Sounds For Shattered Psyches Rose and the Lindsey performed by Barrowburn from the album Barrowburn https://www.barrowburn.net/ Cruel Sister performed by Counterfeit Bards from the album Bard from this Hall Roxanna of Illyria performed by E Muzeki from the album E Muzeki https://emuzeki.bandcamp.com/album/e-muzeki Hungarian Dance No. 1 performed by Owl Morrisson from the album Sister Viola The Water Is Wide performed by Rosewood Guild from the album Forever And A Day Hare's Lament performed by Half Pint from the album Fair and Tender Ladies https://theharperandtheminstrel.com/ Athenrie performed by The Nightingales from the album Stone Bridges A Sailor's Prayer performed by Minstrosity from the album Why Am I Not Surprised? Le Hoboesque performed by Circled_by_Hounds from the album Chasing Our Tales https://myspace.com/circledbyhounds Spanish Ladies performed by Kerridwynn from the album Memories In Thyme Shepherd's Hey performed by Nightin Gael from the album First Flight https://www.facebook.com/nightingael/ Land of The Midnight Sun performed by Siren's Song from the album Starlight And Shadow The Scottish Song performed by O' Carolan's Daughters from the album O'Carolan's Daughters: Having Fun Do It All Again performed by Langer's Ball from the album Hold Tight www.TheLangersBall.com Place to Lay My Head performed by Langer's Ball from the album Hold Tight www.TheLangersBall.com Fields of Athenry.mp3 performed by The Hooligans from the album In Cider The Mermaid performed by Rum Runners from the album Got Rum? The Mermaid's Song performed by Harpnotic from the album Harpnotic https://www.facebook.com/Harpnotic/ Phil the Fluther's Ball performed by Jed Marum from the album The Soul of a Wanderer The Parting Glass In 3-Part Harmony performed by The Interpreters from the album Be Gentle SEGMENTS Festival update brought to you by The Ren List http://www.therenlist.com HOW TO CONTACT US Post it on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/renfestmusic Email us at renfestpodcast@gmail.com HOW TO LISTEN Apple https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/renaissance-festival-podcast/id74073024 Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/76uzuG0lRulhdjDCeufK15?si=obnUk_sUQnyzvvs3E_MV1g Pandora http://www.pandora.com/ Podbay http://www.podbay.fm/show/74073024 Listennotes http://www.listennotes.com/podcasts/renaissance-festival-podcast-minions-1Xd3YjQ7fWx/
Johannes Brahms: Hungarian Dance No. 1 by Carlos Márquez
Thomas Sowell calls "Disparate Impact" ideology the "grand dogma" of our time.But what is disparate impact and why is it so important?On this episode we take a deep dive into disparate impact ideology and how it has changed America.Joining me to discuss this important subject is Heather Mac Donald.Heather is a fellow at the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research based in New York City. Much like Sowell , Heather does research into domestic policy and urban affairs and tries to figure out what's working and what's not working. She then writes articles and books sharing what she has learned.Her first book was published in 2000 and was called “The burden of bad ideas : how modern intellectuals misshape our society”Three years later she wrote a book called “Are Cops Racist?”This was followed with another book about policing in 2016 called “The War on Cops: How the New Attack on Law and Order Makes Everyone Less Safe.”I first discovered Heather Mac Donald in 2018 with the publication of her book “The Diversity Delusion: How Race and Gender Pandering Corrupt the University and Undermine Our Culture.” I loved that book and I remember finishing it then immediately starting it over and reading it a second time. Her latest book which just came out this month is called “When Race Trumps Merit, How the Pursuit of Equity Sacrifices Excellence, Destroys Beauty, and Threatens Lives.”USEFUL LINKS:• More podcast-related links here: AlanWolan.com• How to calculate the "Birthday Problem": Ted-Ed Video HERE• "Birthday Problem Khan Academy explanation HERE• You can purchase Heather Mac Donald's new book HERE• Photos of the CalTech Turtle Pond HERE• Jerry MacGuire "Show Me the Money" scene HERE• Heather Mac Donald Wikipedia page HERE• Classical Music featured in this episode:"Cello Suite No 1" by Bach, "Für Elise" by Beethoven, "Canon in D" by Pachelbel, "Humoresque" by Dvorak, "Caprice No. 24" by Paganini, "Symphony No. 5" by Beethoven, "Die Zauberflöte" by Mozart, "Eine Kleine Nachtmusik" by Mozart, "Theme from Schindler's List" by John Williams, "Hungarian Dance No. 5" by Brahms, "Gymnopedie No. 1" by Satie, and "Ode to Joy" by Beethoven. THERE ARE 3 WAYS TO SUPPORT THE PODCAST:1) Support the show financially by subscribing with a monthly contribution on Patreon: www.Patreon.com/SowellGeniusThe money raised through Patreon supports our efforts to popularize the books and ideas of Thomas Sowell.----------------------------------------------2) Rate and review the podcast on Apple Podcasts. This helps a lot by nudging the show to the top of Google searches. I really appreciate the many positive reviews, especially this one by Jonsby: "This is one of the few podcasts that I actually slow down so I can savor it!"----------------------------------------------3) Purchase our Thomas Sowell Post It Note pads: You can find all 100 digital images of the post it notes HERE, feel free to download them and use them however you like.To purchase pads o
勃拉姆斯独身一辈子,他与舒曼克拉拉夫妇的香火情一直为世人津津乐道。本期讲述浪漫主义时代最古典的作曲家勃拉姆斯隐秘的爱情故事,带你去深入了解勃拉姆斯其人其音乐。包含曲目:0:26 - Brahms: Trio in A minor, Op. 114, I: Allegro.3:13 - Intermezzi, Op. 117 - Brahms: Intermezzi, Op. 117 - 1. In E-Flat Major (间奏曲,作品117 - 第1首 降E大调).8:52 - Hungarian Dance - No. 4 in F-Sharp Minor (匈牙利舞曲 - 第4首 升f小调).
Tracklist00:00 Divine Purpose Of The Universe (Intro) By Eckhart Tolle00:55 Lento Con Gran Espressione (Nocturne In C Sharp Minor) By Chopin03:43 In The Hall Of The Mountain King By Edvard Grieg06:10 Butterflys By Tuamie07:16 Hot Breeze By Tuamie08:19 Interrogatorio By Pietro Grossi09:59 Der Holle Rache (Queen Of The Night Zaberflote) By Mozart11:57 La Campanella By Franz Liszt15:12 Cheers by Fly Anakin17:29 Abeja By Mndsgn Feat Sofie18:27 Piece #8 By Tod Dockstader21:55 Blue Danube By Johann Strauss23:55 Pomp & Circumstance March No. 1 By Sir Edward Elgar26:08 Sunday Gems By GT Lovecraft27:22 Take Notice By DJ Roddy Rod, Kev Brown, & Cy Young28:47 Crystal Machine By Tim Blake31:49 The Arrival Of Queen Sheba By Geroge Frideric Handel34:00 Piano Concerto No.1 (In B Flat) By Tchaikovsky36:04 Fried Tilapia By Tuamie37:50 Hit It With The Fork By Tuamie 39:46 Sound Life XI By Pietro Grossi41:24 Concerto No 5 (In F Minor) By Bach44:07 O Fortuna By Carl Orff46:42 Two Step Funkateer Interlude By DJ Roddy Rod47:34 Ted Talk By Jonwayne 49:39 Wireless Fantasy By Vladimir Ussachevsky 51:52 Trumpet Concerto (In E Flat Major) By Joseph Haydn53:32 Hungarian Dance No 5 (In F Sharp Minor) By Johannes Brahms55:09 Stay Strapped By Tuamie56:49 Generation Y By Tuamie 59:00 Divine Purpose Of The Universe (Outro) By Eckhart Tolle
So many reasons! G Major, phrasing and tutorials online. More than enough going on to maintain our interest as we learn new songs going forward. This is a good choice. Arranged by Bill Boyd for Easy Piano Solos. Published by Hal Leonard. Includes the Hungarian Dance No. 5 in C Major by Johannes Brahms and "Love Theme" in G Major from Romeo and Juliet. Push the envelope, dear students. Thank you for listening.
In a village full of rich peasants, one little peasant alone remains destitute. But through a series of cunning and devious tricks, this little guy is going to turn the tables on everyone in quite spectacular fashion. Join us for The Little Peasant by the Brothers Grimm, where we meet a fatally gullible Shepard, a soothsaying squeezable raven and - shocker - a nice miller! After the story we uncover other tales that use similar motifs of trickery, including in works by legendary fairy tale authors Straparola, Basile (of course), and even Hans Christian Andersen. Twitter Facebook Instagram Patreon grimmreadingpodcast@gmail.com Theme music: Bicycle Waltz by Goodbye Kumiko Other Music: Brahms' Hungarian Dance No. 5 performed by Kassia & Arthur Nickisch // Brahms' 4 Piano Pieces Performed by Peter Bradley-Fulgoni
Is it a folk song or an artfully created original work? Or both? Find out the secret to Brahms's beloved Hungarian Dance No. 5 in this week's episode! But sure to like and share with a friend! Music: https://imslp.org/wiki/21_Hungarian_Dances_(Orchestra)%2C_WoO_1_(Brahms%2C_Johannes) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/legalcode
To celebrate its 5th season, the SCF Bradenton Symphony Orchestra brings you Bach's Brandenburg Concerto No. 5, Brahm’s Hungarian Dance No. 5, Stamitz’s Clarinet Concerto No. 5 featuring soloist and SCF clarinet instructor Eric Anderson, and Beethoven’s monumental Symphony No. 5. Join us on Thursday, April 22 at 7:30 p.m. SCF students, faculty, and staff can attend live in the Neel Performing Arts Center, while all others can view the performance on the SCF Music Facebook page.• Dr. Robyn L. Bell Website & Facebook & Instagram• Eric Anderson, Clarinet Soloist Website• SCF Music Program Facebook Page Link to watch the concert live• SCF Foundation Donate2Music Link to donate to the SCF Music Program• Text Code to donate to the SCF Music Program: Text "SCFMUSIC" to 41444 • State College of Florida Music Program Website & Instagram• State College of Florida Theatre Program Website & Facebook & Instagram• State College of Florida Foundation Website & Facebook & Instagram & LinkedInSupport the show (https://scf-foundation.org/suncoastcultureclub/)
Some have claimed that it was on today’s date in 1877 that the American inventor Thomas Edison recorded his own voice reciting, “Mary had a little lamb” on a tin-foil cylinder of his own design. Other historians date the precise birth of the phonograph earlier, others later. In any case, the Edison Speaking Phonograph Company wasn’t established until January of 1878. Initially, music wasn’t Edison’s top priority: He thought his phonograph might be profitable as an aid to stenographers, or for families who wanted to record the last words of beloved relatives. Eventually, however, classical music and the phonograph began to interact. In London in 1888, a bit of a Crystal Palace performance of Handel’s oratorio “Israel in Egypt” was captured on an Edison cylinder. In Vienna, Johannes Brahms, seated at the piano, recorded a snippet of his famous Hungarian Dance No. 3, with a spoken intro many wrongly assumed was by the composer himself. The voice of British composer Sir Arthur Sullivan WAS captured, however, commenting: “I am astonished—and terrified—at the thought that so much hideous and bad music may be put on record forever!” Well, Sir Arthur, I’m afraid there’s no going back now…
Some have claimed that it was on today’s date in 1877 that the American inventor Thomas Edison recorded his own voice reciting, “Mary had a little lamb” on a tin-foil cylinder of his own design. Other historians date the precise birth of the phonograph earlier, others later. In any case, the Edison Speaking Phonograph Company wasn’t established until January of 1878. Initially, music wasn’t Edison’s top priority: He thought his phonograph might be profitable as an aid to stenographers, or for families who wanted to record the last words of beloved relatives. Eventually, however, classical music and the phonograph began to interact. In London in 1888, a bit of a Crystal Palace performance of Handel’s oratorio “Israel in Egypt” was captured on an Edison cylinder. In Vienna, Johannes Brahms, seated at the piano, recorded a snippet of his famous Hungarian Dance No. 3, with a spoken intro many wrongly assumed was by the composer himself. The voice of British composer Sir Arthur Sullivan WAS captured, however, commenting: “I am astonished—and terrified—at the thought that so much hideous and bad music may be put on record forever!” Well, Sir Arthur, I’m afraid there’s no going back now…
Best classical study music, focus, thinking, meditation, relaxing music
Please, read this. Hello. If the podcast was helpful for you, I ask you to give some money to a charity. I truly believe we can make a better world with less cynicism and egoism. You can handle several days without coffee. However, that money REALLY can help. Even a few dollars. Where to send and how much is only on you. Children, nature, homeless people. All problems are more real and nearer than you think. Just be a good person. Be a real hero. Peace. My podcast about WEB Development. Check it out if you are interested. Apple Podcasts Spotify Google Podcasts Castbox Tracklist: 00:00:00 Mazurka in A Minor, Op. 67 No. 4 (Chopin) 00:03:01 Song Without Words, Op. 2 No. 3 (Tchaikovsky) 00:06:20 Divertimento, K. 334: Menuet (Mozart) 00:10:29 Hungarian Dance No. 6, WoO 1 (Brahms) 00:13:42 Hungarian Dance No. 1, WoO 1 (Brahms) 00:16:40 Romance in A Major, Op. 94 No. 2 (Schumann) 00:22:02 Morceaux, Op. 10: No. 2, Humoresque in G Major. Menuet (Bocherini) 00:25:34 Les millions D'Arlequin: Serenade (Drigo) 00:30:10 Sonata in A Major (Paganini) 00:35:04 Träumerei, Op. 21 (Drdla) 00:37:45 Das Lied der Geige, Op. 2 (Schebek) 00:40:56 Immer oder nimmer Walzer, Op. 156 (Waldteufel) 00:50:22 Schön Rosmarin (Kreisler) 00:52:10 Espana, Op. 165 No. 2: Tango (Albeniz) 00:54:45 Russian Romance (Chernyetsky) 00:57:36 Guitarre, Op. 45 No. 2 (Moszkowski) 01:01:14 Menuet (Attr. Porpora) (Porpora / Kreisler) 01:05:20 Allegretto grazioso (Porpora / Bonelli) 01:07:25 Le triomphe de la République: Tambourin (Arr. Burmester) (Gossec (Francois)) 01:08:42 Salut d'amour, Op. 12 (Elgar) 01:11:16 3 Pieces, Op. 11: Mazurka in F-Sharp Minor (Chopin) 01:14:07 Poème for Violin and Piano, Op. 41 No. 4 (Arr. Weniger) (Fibich (Zdenek)) 01:16:01 5 Gedichte, WWV 91: V. Träume (Wagner) 01:19:38 Valse scherzo (Tchaikovsky) 01:21:30 Song Without Words, Op. 60: I. Andante espressivo “May Breezes” (Arr. Kreisler) (Mendelssohn) 01:24:12 Myrthen, Op. 25: I. Dedication (Schumann) 01:26:38 Romance (Rubinstein) 01:29:18 Cantabile in D Major, Op. 17 (Paganini) 01:32:19 Hungarian Dance No. 7 in F Major, WoO 1 (Allegretto) (Brahms) 01:34:45 Romance, Op. 3 (Gliere) 01:38:50 Kujawiak in A Minor (Wieniawski (Henryk)) 01:41:48 3 Old Viennese Dances: II. Liebesleid (Kreisler) 01:44:48 Le roi s'amuse: VII. Passepied (Arr. Elman) (Delibes / Elman (Mischa)) 01:46:46 Waltz No. 1 in A Major, Op.54 (Moderato) (Dvorák) 01:50:22 5 Spanish Dances, Op. 12: I. Allegro brioso (Moszkowski) 01:52:01 16 Morceaux de Salon, Op. 49: VII. La Sevillana (Alard (Delphin)) 01:54:33 Bandana Sketches, Op. 12 "Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen" (White) 01:57:57 Le Secret (Gautier (Jacques)) 02:00:40 14 Romances, Op. 34: No. 14, Vocalise (Rachmaninoff) 02:06:31 Préludes, L. 117, Premier Livre: VIII. La fille aux cheveux de lin (Debussy) 02:09:17 Orfeo ed Euridice, Wq. 30, Act 2: Melodie No. 2 (Arr. Heifetz) (Von Gluck, arr. Jascha Heifetz) 02:12:27 2 Pieces for Cello and Orchestra, Op.20: II. Serenade Espagnole (Arr. Kreisler) (Glazunov, arr. Kreisler) 02:15:50 3 Romantic Pieces, Op. 75: I. Allegro moderato (Dvorák) 02:19:25 3 Romantic Pieces, Op. 75: II. Allegro maestoso (Dvorák) 02:22:22 3 Romantic Pieces, Op. 75: III. Allegro appassionato (Dvorák) 02:25:13 Thaïs, Act 2: Méditation (Massenet) 02:29:49 Zigeunerweisen, Op. 20 (Sarasate (Pablo de)) 02:39:46 Romance (Wieniawski (Henryk)) 02:44:46 Hora staccato (Dinicu (Grigoras)) 02:46:10 Pacsirta (Dinicu (Grigoras))
Are season openers the weakest link in the Buffy the Vampire Slayer chain? Is Rudolf Martin an interesting Prince of Darkness? Are Xander’s days of being everybody’s butt-monkey finally over? Dax Stokes, host of the podcast The Vampire Historian, makes his Conversations debut to discuss these and other very, very important questions. In the Season 5 premiere, “Buffy vs. Dracula,” that poncy bugger turns up to feed Xander bugs and smolder ineffectually as he blathers on about the Slayer’s darkness. In “Real Me,” Buffy’s little sister finally gets an episode of her own, only 79 episodes into the series, and of course she has a crush on Xander. And in “The Replacement,” Anya almost gets to live the dream with two Xanders at once. It’s a big week for the X-Man. Next: Mr. Point Award-winner Stephanie Graves returns to discuss episodes 504, “Out of My Mind” and 505, “No Place Like Home.” THE BREAKDOWN Run Time: 01:47:15 00:00:55 - Intro / Guest 00:11:10 - Main Topic 01:40:29 - Outro / Next THE LIBRARY Library Closed For Filing - Please Come Back Tomorrow THE LINKS The Vampire Historian Podcast THE MUSIC “Conversations (feat. Wesley Mead)” by Azura (2017) “Hungarian Dance No. 5 in G Minor” by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra & Walter Weller, Dracula: Dead and Loving It (1995) THE SCHOLARS Whedon Studies Association is a non-profit academic organization devoted to the study of the works of Joss Whedon and his associates. They put out Slayage: The Journal of Whedon Studies, and Watcher Junior: The Undergraduate Journal of Whedon Studies, both blind peer-reviewed twice-yearly online publications. They also host the biennial Slayage Conference on the Whedonverses, which brings all these incredible scholars together to present papers, discuss ways of incorporating Whedon Studies in education, and basically just geek out together. http://www.whedonstudies.tv/
What Makes Music Great? - The history of music. Is music becoming too commercial? What are our favorite genres? Our most embarrassing music. Music that would make us walk out of a coffee shop if we heard it playing.Music Genres Throughout HistoryRENAISSANCE 1400-1600BAROQUE 1600-1760Rep 1) Cello Suite No. 1 - Johann Sebastian BachRep 2) The Four Seasons - Antonio VivaldiCLASSICAL 1730-1820Rep 1) Symphony 40 in G - Wolfgang Amadeus MozartRep 2) Moonlight Sonata - Ludwig van BeethovenROMANTIC 1815-1910Rep 1) Hungarian Dance No. 5 in G minor - Johannes BrahmsRep 2) Chopin Nocturne Op. 9 No. 2 - Frédéric ChopinFOLK 1840(Undefined), 1940s(Revival)-presentRep 1) This Land Is Your Land - Woody GuthrieRep 2) Blowin' in the Wind - Bob DylanGOSPEL 1900-presentBLUES 1910-presentRep 1) T'ain't Nobody's Business if I Do - Bessie SmithRep 2) Call It Stormy Monday - T-Bone WalkerJAZZ 1910-PresentOrigin) Blues • FolkRep 1) Feeling Good - Nina Simone (soulful singing)Rep 2) Take Five - Dave Brubeck (pure instrumental)COUNTRY 1920-PresentOrigin) Folk • GospelSWING 1930-PresentOrigin) Classical • JazzRHYTHM & BLUES 1940-Present (Note: Diff from R&B which reffers to Contemporary R&B)Origin) Blues • Jazz • GospelDOO-WOP 1940-PresentOrigin) Blues • Gospel • Folk • Swing • Rhythmn & BluesROCK & ROLL 1940s-PresentOrigin) Blues • Gospel • Folk • Country • Swing • Rhythmn & Blues • Doo WopRep 1) Johnny B. Goode - Chuck Berry (thundering energy)Rep 2) - ElvisTRADITIONAL POP 1950-PresentOrigin) SwingRep 1) My Way - Frank SinatraRep 2) My Favorite Things - Julie Andrews (ex. of broadway influence)POP 1950-PresentOrigin) Folk • Jazz• Doo Wop • Rock & RollROCK 1950-PresentOrigin) Folk • Country • Rock & RollRep 1) Stairway to Heaven - Led Zeppelin (epic)SOUL 1950-PresentOrigin) Rhthm and Blues • Gospel • Doo-wopRep 1) Respect - Aretha FranklinPSYCHADELIC 1960-Present (FOLK, ROCK, POP, SOUL)FUNK 1960-PresentOrigin) Rhythm and Blues • Blues • Jazz • PsychedelicRep 1) - James BrownDISCO 1960-PresentOrigin) Funk • Psychadelic • Pop • Rock • Classical • Gospel • Swing • BluesHEAVY METAL 1960-PresentOrigin) Blues • Rock • PsychadelicREGGAE 1970-PresentOrigin) Rhythm and Blues • Jazz • R&B • SoulRep 1) Three Little Birds - Bob Marley & the WailersRep 2) I Can See Clearly Now - Johnny NashHIP HOP 1970-PresentOrigin) Blues • Jazz • ReggaeRep 1) The Message - Grandmaster Flash (1st recording)Rep 2) Rapper's Delight - The Sugarhill Gang (popularized term in lyrics)PUNK 1970-PresentOrigin) Rock & Roll • FolkNEW WAVE1970-PresentOrigin) Punk • Rock • DiscoR&B 1980-Present (CONTEMPORARY R&B)Origin) Rhythm and Blues • Funk • Folk • Soul • Hip Hop • Pop • DiscoRep 1) Billy Jean - Michael JacksonALTERNATIVE 1980-PresentOrigin) Punk• New WaveRep 1) R.E.M.Rep 2) The CureINDIE ROCK 1980-PresentOrigin) Alternative • PunkTECHNO 1980-PresentOrigin) Disco • FunkEMO 1980-PresentOrigin) Punk • Indie Rock References:"If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDEDFOR THE EXISTENCE OF GODWAS MUSIC"As quoted in "Vonnegut's Blues For America" Sunday Herald (7 January 2006)Relationship between Music and Language:http://www.science20.com/science_20/did_music_evolve_languagehttp://www.associatedcontent.com/article/68934/new_theories_on_language_shed_light.html?cat=4http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_are_the_origins_of_musicWhy Americans Have Bad Rhythm“If you have to ask what jazz is, you'll never know.” - Louis ArmstrongParticipants:Kellen, Kaiti, JimmyCredits:Jonathan Coulton - Big Bad World OneJosh Woodward - A SongJosh Woodward - Big Disco BallQuestions, comments, ideas, suggestions? Leave a comment or email us at the obvious address at gmail (no spaces or underscores).Subscribe via iTunes using:direct link iTunes Store ListingOr Subscribe via RSS using these feeds:http://gettingthinky.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default?alt=rss RSShttp://gettingthinky.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default ATOMhttp://feeds.feedburner.com/GettingThinky FeedBurner RSSLicense:Creative Commons license: Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported
Recorded by Ismael, student of Cynthia Marie VanLandingham at Tally Piano & Keyboard Studio in Tallahassee, Florida (www.tallypiano.com)
Sue Lawley's castaway is chef Raymond Blanc.Favourite track: Hungarian Dance No 1 in G Minor by Johannes Brahms Book: The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupery Luxury: A good luck stone (from his wife)
Sue Lawley's castaway is chef Raymond Blanc. Favourite track: Hungarian Dance No 1 in G Minor by Johannes Brahms Book: The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupery Luxury: A good luck stone (from his wife)