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rodjonraskolnikov liked a video
(1 week ago)
Claudio Monteverdi, Madrigali guerrieri ed amorosi...Libro ottavo (1638)...
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Claudio Monteverdi, Madrigali guerrieri ed amorosi...Libro ottavo (1638) Céline Scheen, Mariana Flores, Fabián Schofrin, Jaime Caicompai, Andrés Silva, Matteo Bellotto
CAPPELLA MEDITERRANEA-LEONARDO GARCÍA ALARCÓN
LABEL AMBRONAY EDITIONS
video: Timea Nagy & Gustavo Gargiulo
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rodjonraskolnikov favorited a video
(2 weeks ago)
X Encontro brasileiro de clarinetista em Natal.
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Please listen this song to its end... Note: No infringement intended. Cop...
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Please listen this song to its end... Note: No infringement intended. Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Law of 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment,news reporting, teaching, scholarship,and research. Fair use is a use? permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.
"Youth of America" is the second album by the punk band Wipers released in 1981. The album marks a distinctive change in the band's sound. Compared to its predecessor "Is This Real?", which was composed mostly of raw, sleek and relatively traditional songs, "Youth of America" features much longer and complex compositions; the title track alone clocks in at over 10 minutes. Along with other records by the Wipers, "Youth of America" has since come to be acknowledged as an important album in the development of American underground and independent rock movements of the early 80s.
The Wipers were a punk rock group formed in Portland, Oregon in 1977 by guitarist Greg Sage, drummer Sam Henry and bassist Dave Koupal. The group's tight song structure and use of heavy distortion has been hailed as extremely influential by numerous critics and musicians, including Melvins, Mono Men, Stephen Malkmus, Poison Idea, My Vitriol, Nation of Ulysses, Nirvana and Calamity Jane.
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rodjonraskolnikov liked a video
(3 weeks ago)

This is a song included in the first album by (planet) Gong of their fam...
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This is a song included in the first album by (planet) Gong of their famous trilogy 'Radio Gnome Invisible' which constitues their mythology. This first album is called "Flying Teapot" and was released in May 1973, full with visions of their strange world and with the funny little aliens voices! Gong mythology is a collection of recurring characters, themes, and ideas that permeate the rock albums of Daevid Allen and Gong and to a lesser extent the early works of Steve Hillage. The story is based on a vision Allen had during the full moon of Easter, 1966 in which he claims he could see his future laid out before him. The mythology is hinted at through all of Gong's earlier albums but is not the central theme until the "Radio Gnome Trilogy" (1973--1974). The story begins on the album "Flying Teapot" (1973) when a pig-farming Egyptologist called Mista T Being is sold a "magick ear ring" by an "antique teapot street vendor & tea label collector" called Fred the Fish. The ear ring is capable of receiving messages from the Planet Gong via a pirate radio station called Radio Gnome Invisible. Being and Fish head off to the hymnalayas of Tibet (sic) where they meet the "great beer yogi" Banana Ananda in a cave. Ananda tends to chant "Banana Nirvana Manana" a lot and gets drunk on Foster's Australian Lager.
This latter development mirrors the real-life experience of band members Daevid Allen and Gilli Smyth who met their saxophonist, Didier Malherbe, in a cave in Majorca.
Meanwhile, the mythology's central character, Zero the Hero, is going about his everyday life when he suddenly has a vision in Charing Cross Road. He is compelled to seek heroes and starts worshipping the Cock Pot Pixie, one of a number of Pot Head Pixies from the Planet Gong. These pixies are green with propellers on their heads, and they fly around in teapots.
Zero is soon distracted by a cat which he offers his fish and chips to. The cat is actually the Good Witch Yoni, who gives Zero a potion. This concludes the first album of the Radio Gnome Trilogy.
(Planet) Gong is a Franco-British progressive/psychedelic rock band formed by Australian musician Daevid Allen. Their music has also been described as space rock. Other notable band members include Allan Holdsworth, Tim Blake, Didier Malherbe, Pip Pyle, Gilli Smyth, Steve Hillage, Francis Moze, Mike Howlett and Pierre Moerlen. Others who have, albeit briefly, played in Gong include Bill Bruford, Brian Davison and Chris Cutler.
Gong was formed in 1967, after Allen—then a member of Soft Machine—was denied re-entry to the United Kingdom because of a visa complication. Allen remained in France where he and a London-born Sorbonne professor, Gilli Smyth, established the first incarnation of the band. This line-up, including Ziska Baum on vocals and Loren Standlee on flute, fragmented during the 1968 student revolution, with Allen and Smyth forced to flee France for Deia in Majorca.
Personnel:
* Daevid Allen - vocals, guitar * Gilli Smyth - vocals * Tim Blake - keyboards, vocals * Didier Malherbe - saxes, flute * Steve Hillage - guitar * Christian Tritsch - guitar * Francis Moze - keyboards, bass * Laurie Allan - drums * Rachid Houari - percussion
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rodjonraskolnikov liked a video
(3 weeks ago)
Gabriele Mirabassi @ Umbriajazz
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Nick
Best Wishes....!
(daru)
www.myspace.com/pierpaoloroman
Saluti,
Pierpaolo
Saluti! Paolo