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2 weeks ago
Black Speech of Mordor
The Ring Verse in the language of Mordor. Used with the aid of 'The Lord of the Rings' and 'Neo Black Speech'.
No muss, no fuss. No echoes, sound ...
MrFunkyBoogaloo • 25,112 views
abdiesus1
commented:
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1 month ago
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5 months ago
John Adams- Lollapalooza
Lollapalooza by John Adams in 1995. Performed by: Kent Nagano with Hallé Orchestra (2001).
burr123456789 • 5,049 views
abdiesus1
liked
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6 months ago
Mother Angelica Live - Nov 9 1999 -What is Heaven really like?
From Nov 8, 1999- Mother tells us what Heaven is really like,
MALC 2689
EWTN • 10 views
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6 months ago
Catholic News Roundup 02-29
Today's stories -
- Gag Order
- Homosexual Teaching Agenda
- Vatican Cyber-Siege
- GOP Primary Update
- Sacred Places Profaned
- Sins Of Omis...
RealCatholicTV • 20 views
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6 months ago
Idolatry - A commentary by Fr. Robert Barron
Another part of a video series from Wordonfire.org. Father Barron will be commenting on subjects from modern day culture. For more visit http://www...
wordonfirevideo • 140 views
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6 months ago
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6 months ago
Duo Lechner Tiempo: Variations on a Theme by Paganini
INSIGHTS OF A DUO: Duo Lechner Tiempo performing "Variations on a Theme by Paganini" by Witold Lutosławski
(P) les productions du verger
www.lespr...
Avanticlassic • 11,012 views
abdiesus1
liked
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6 months ago
Maurice Ravel La Valse
Myung-Whun Chung
Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France
maestra21 • 37,147 views
abdiesus1
liked
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10 months ago
Busoni · Fantasia Contrapuntistica · Kaviani
abdiesus1
added to a playlist
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10 months ago
Britten · String Quartet No. 3 · Maggini
abdiesus1
added to a playlist
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Britten String Quartet No. 3, Op. 94: I. Duets: With moderate movement
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Britten String Quartet No. 3, Op. 94: III. Solo: Very calm
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Britten String Quartet No. 3, Op. 94: II. Ostinato: Very fast
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Britten String Quartet No. 3, Op. 94: IV. Burlesque: Fast - con fuoco
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Britten String Quartet No. 3, Op. 94: V. Recitative & Passacaglia (La serenissima)
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10 months ago
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10 months ago
Rachmaninoff · Symphonic Dances · Massarelli
abdiesus1
added to a playlist
@SubjectAlpha100 which is what most writers do. Rather he thought up the *language* first, and then said, "what kind of culture, history, geography, weather, cosmology, would produce a language like this? And, of course, because he knew intimately the history of words and how they develop and ...