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fuckyeahcostumedramas · 11 months
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Dev Patel as David Copperfield in The Personal History of David Copperfield (Film, 2019).
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histonics · 4 months
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svalleynow · 4 months
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Sequatchie County Sheriff’s Office works with Drug Task Force in Lewis Chapel operation
The Sequatchie County Sheriff’s Office works with the 12th Judicial Drug Task Force in Lewis Chapel operation...
The Sequatchie County Sheriff’s Office worked with the 12 th Judicial District Drug Task Force for several weeks on a drug investigation which has landed several people in jail and leaves others on the run and wanted by authorities. The investigation focused on illegal drugs, primarily meth, being distributed in the Lewis Chapel community of Sequatchie County and it led to several drug related…
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kingsnorthlobotomy · 11 months
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disneytva · 9 months
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Disney Princesses Click in ‘LEGO Disney Princess: The Castle Quest’ Special For August 18 On Disney+.
An new bricktastic adventure begins today with the release of the official trailer and key art for LEGO® Disney Princess: The Castle Quest. The all-new animated special from Disney Princess and the LEGO Group will premiere August 18 on Disney+, leading into the World Princess Week celebration.
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Tiana, Moana, Snow White, Rapunzel and Ariel are off on an adventure as they are each unexpectedly transported to a mysterious castle. Shortly after arriving, they soon discover that Gaston has hatched an evil plan to take over all their kingdoms! The Princess characters must work together to solve challenges hidden deep within the castle walls and try to save their kingdoms from Gaston. Will bravery, quick-thinking and teamwork prevail? LEGO Disney Princess: The Castle Quest features the voices of Jodi Benson (The Little Mermaid Franchise) as Ariel, Auli’i Cravalho (Moana franchise, Disney TVA's Hailey's On It!) as Moana, Mandy Moore (Tangled franchise) as Rapunzel, Anika Noni Rose (The Princess and the Frog franchise, Disney TVA's Amphibia Franchise) as Tiana, and Katie Von Till (Sofia the First) as Snow White. Additional cast includes Richard White (Walt Disney Animation Studios "Beauty and the Beast") as Gaston, Joanne Worley (Walt Disney Animation Studios "Beauty and the Beast") as Wardrobe, Corey Burton (Disney "Chip N Dale Rescue Rangers" Franchise) as Magic Mirror and Jim Cummings (Disney "Winnie The Pooh" Franchise) as King Triton.
Michael D. Black is the director and Robert Fewkes, Pamela J. Keller, Joshua R. Wexler and Sanjee Gupta are producers. 
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keirahknightley · 2 years
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PERIOD DRAMA APPRECIATION WEEK 2022 
Day 3: Favorite Costumes Day 6: Favorite Era
VICTORIAN ERA (1837-1901)  FAVORITE COSTUMES IN FILM
The Young Victoria (2009) costume design by Sandy Powell
Il Gattopardo (1963) costume design by Piero Tosi
Jane Eyre (2011) costume design by Michael O’Connor
The Personal History of David Copperfield (2019) costume design by Suzie Harman and Robert Worley
Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1992) costume design by Eiko Ishioka
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Getting the led out - interview to JPJ
(by Gail Worley, Ink19 - April 26, 2002 - x)
This has to be THE interview. It's Jonesy's best interview I've found so far, so READ IT. You won't regret a single second spent reading it, I promise you.
I saw the interview you did with Jim DeRogatis at South By Southwest in 2000. In that interview you said – perhaps jokingly – that one of the reasons it took you so long to make your first solo album is that you don’t sing. 'The Thunderthief' has your first recorded vocals ever. Was singing on a record with no previous experience a scary thing for you?
Yes. I mean, I had to make sure I could sing well enough to put [the performance] on record, so it wasn’t totally scary, you know what I mean? I sort of crept up on it [laughs]. The scary thing was actually doing it live on stage the first night, in Nashville (when Jones opened for King Crimson on their last tour). That was scary. What I wanted to do was do three songs from 'Thunderthief'. We started with 'Leafy Meadows' and then I did 'Hoediddle' and then I did 'Freedom Song' – which is scary enough. However, I suddenly thought, "I can’t just sing one song" (two of these three songs are instrumentals). So I thought, I need another vocal [laughs]. I didn’t want to do anything else off 'The Thunderthief', so I, in my bravura, decided to sing 'That’s The Way'. Singing a Zeppelin song was even scarier, I can tell you.
I bet.
What I used to do on the tour before, I played an instrumental version of 'Going To California' on the mandolin, and I used to team [those two songs]. I would start with 'That’s The Way' – because I played those mandolin parts on the original record. [Hums the tune] Then I said, "You didn’t think I was going to sing, did you?" [Laughs] But this time I did it and I sang it, so people who went to both concerts thought it was some kind of a trick [laughs]. But it went down alright. Nobody killed me for it, ‘cause I can’t possibly sing it like Robert Plant. I don’t have that voice. But I did it in this other way, and it worked, but the first night I was terrified. Remembering words is the hard part. I put the lyrics on a music stand, so I couldn’t fuck it up. But I’m learning, I’m getting better.
How has working with a guy like Robert Fripp influenced your own writing and playing?
Well, I haven’t actually worked with him that much. The biggest connection is being on his label. [Long pause] I mean, when Zeppelin first started in 1969, and people would say, "What sort of band is it?" I used to say "progressive rock", because in those days it meant rock that progressed [laughs]. You know, it was a very literal term; "Well, you know, we’re trying to advance the form of it, and this is what we’re doing to make it go somewhere." But of course, that title came to have all sorts of different meanings. When it started to mean 'classic', that’s when I stopped saying it was progressive rock. But then we’d say it’s 'blues rock', because people love to label things. I didn’t really hear an awful lot of King Crimson [music], to be honest. But being on his label is great, mainly because of the fact that you get, obviously, total artistic freedom. There are no contracts, either. He really hates the music industry with a passion, and he’s not afraid of telling everybody [laughs] at every available opportunity, which is great. And the artist maintains the copyrights to all their material, so I just agree with him on that whole side, and I really like the way he approaches music, and musicians. He’s so passionate about everything and has a definite way that he wants to do it. It’s inspiring to know that people can say, "This is the way I want to do it!" and off he goes! He’s always kind of been around in the background, but the first time Fripp got my attention was when Brain Eno called me and asked if I knew a piano player who could do some avant garde piano. He asked if I knew anybody who could do some spacey sort of piano, and I couldn’t really think of anybody. I asked him to describe what he wanted and then I said, "Well, I can do that" [laughs]. Alright then, so I said, "What’s the track?" and he said, "Fripp’s doing a solo on it, and I want you to do the counterpart." So I went along, and it was just this rhythm track, and I played this sort of spacey piano. The next time I heard it, Fripp had put his guitar solo on afterwards, so there’s this sort of alien spacey piano and suddenly this guitar comes in like [makes sounds of cars crashing], and I was like, "Fuck! I wish I’d known he was doing that! Jesus Christ!" Like "Who is this guy?" [laughs] Then, when I met him, he was like [imitating Robert Fripp’s gentlemanly nature] "Oh, Hello John. How are you?" I’m thinking, "Now, this isn’t the same guy who was like [makes car crash noises] on that record?" But it was. And that’s what he did on "Leafy Meadows". He walked in and he puttered about and set his pedals up and had tea and cake and then he went, "Whaaaahh!!!!" [Laughs] I really like that. It’s quite a paradox. That’s what I like about Diamanda [Galas] as well. When you meet her she’s terribly nice and sweet. And then you see her sing and [makes exaggerated face of terror].
I had to smile when I saw that Nick Beggs plays the Chapman stick on the album, because I remember him as the bassist for Kajagoogoo. How do you go about finding the various players who are involved with your solo projects?
Well, on 'Zooma' I had Pete Thomas on drums and Trey Gunn on stick. I wanted a stick player because they think differently. They’re often bass players as well, and they just approach it differently. Plus, from a very practical point of view, in a trio, it’s great, because I’m a bass player and a keyboard player and I play quite a lot of lap steel in my show. If I’m doing bass, then [the stick player] can play all the lead parts. If I go to the keyboards, he can then switch to bass in mid-song, if necessary. So, it’s very practical and it means I haven’t got someone standing there with a guitar, who feels like, "Well I should be playing something, because I’m standing here" [laughs]. There’s loads of space in a trio – which is what was nice about Led Zeppelin, because when Robert wasn’t singing we were a trio. There’s loads of space and you can go anywhere you like. So, Trey Gunn was on that album and originally I had asked him to come out with me on the road, because the idea, of course, with 'Zooma' was to get out and play it. He was going to [come out with us], but then King Crimson had resurfaced and he said his first loyalty was to go with them. Then I asked Robert [Fripp] if he knew of another Chapman stick player, and he said [adopting Fripp’s accent], "Well you won't believe it, but Nick Beggs is a really good player." I went, "Nick Beggs from Kajagoogoo? ‘Too Shy’?" And he goes, "Yeah, try him out." So I did. Then I went through a few drummers and eventually Nick said, well, "Terl Bryant is a really good drummer." So he came on board and he was great, and their attitudes are just awesome. It’s a happy family, they call me 'Pater' [laughs]. But it really is just like a family on the road, it’s really sweet. And they’re just full-on, enthusiastic, 100% committed, and it’s great.
Will you be taking 'Thunderthief' on the road now that your tour opening for Crimson has passed?
Well, yes. We’re trying to get some dates together at the moment, to do 'The Thunderthief'. But the thing is, I’d like to headline again, because then I can do my long show with the keyboards and things. But I may have to open for somebody else, again, because we really need to play to more people. It’s just maddening. I mean, we can sell out Irving Plaza [mid-size venue in NYC], but there comes a point where that’s the biggest one we can sell out, because nobody knows us. Everybody comes to the show and goes away going [adopts American accent], "That was the greatest thing I’ve ever seen! It was fantastic!" and then they tell their friends and we get people going, "Wow, I wished I’d known he was playing there." We really just need to play to more people.
Here’s a quote from a review of 'The Thunderthief': "Since his days as a top sessioneer, his abilities as an arranger and multi-instrumentalist have equipped him to add musical finesse to any genre." That’s a pretty nice compliment. Is that part of the reason you’ve been attracted to such genre diverse projects? You know, from Cinderella to The Butthole Surfers?
[Laughing] Cinderella…
Oh come on, I love Cinderella.
Yeah, they were alright. The drummer owns a bus company now. Yeah, it’s all the same to me. As long as it’s good [music] I don’t care what it is. I mean, I’ve done classical composition and string quartets and [sighs] I don’t really care what it is. If somebody asks me to do something and I don’t know how to do it, I’ll find out.
In a criticism of the song 'Angry Angry', one reviewer said that you were "Always too accomplished to achieve something so off the cuff." I guess you’d call that a back-handed compliment.
Yeah, he didn’t get it. The Brits don’t like 'Angry Angry'. For a start, they understand the accent [I sing that song in], which they hate, ‘cause it’s "music hall", basically, is what it is – like a vaudeville accent. And they don’t like it because I think they think I’m taking the piss out of punk, which I’m not. I don’t do parody at all. It’s actually terribly prosaic, how it all happened, but music is just like that for me, basically. 'Angry Angry' is at the speed it is because I heard Adam Bomb (Pink Gibson from NY based rock band, Get Animal, who plays guitar on this song) play at the Borderline in London and I immediately heard what I wanted him to do [on the record]. I went back into the studio and put a riff down, which was on bass, mandolin, and drum machine which was [sings hyper-speed riff from song], at that speed. I got it to play for three minutes, just that riff, and then I wrote the song and thought, "Now, what do I do with it?" It was at that tempo and had that intensity and the phrase 'Angry Angry' just came to me, so I wrote the lyrics from there. And I had to do it in that voice because it sounds stupid any other way [laughs]. But the Brits hate it. They think I’m trying to be something that I’m not.
Oh, those Brits are so serious about everything.
Well, you haven’t met the Germans. They’ll go right into anything and find all the symbolism and the lot.
'Ice Fishing at Night' is a really beautiful song with some dark lyrics. What inspired you to write that song?
Well, I didn’t write the lyrics. They came with 'The Thunderthief'.
What does that mean?
What happened was, halfway through what was basically going to be an instrumental album, but was also a continuation from 'Zooma', I decided it’d be really nice to have voices [laughs]. As I’ve said before, I didn’t want to get a guest vocalist in, for a couple of reasons actually. One is that I know that I’d forget what I was doing and work on producing them, whoever the vocalist was. I would immediately turn into a producer and it would go somewhere else. The other reason is that, being a bass player, I don’t actually have a distinctive sound. I mean, some people will listen to a record and go, "Oh yeah, that’s a John Paul Jones record", but if you just heard one song in isolation, [you couldn’t tell]. Like, if you’re Santana, that record he did, every time he hits that guitar you know that’s Santana. It’s what he does. He doesn’t do anything else except for that sound. I don’t have that, because of the instruments I play. I thought, guest vocalists will only dilute that and just diffuse it even more. I decided, "I’m going to try and sing myself." Then I thought, "well, I’ve got nothing to sing." Then I was thinking that I don’t want to become a singer and a songwriter all at the same time. One thing at a time, you know? So, I knew Peter Blegvad, he’s a singer/songwriter, and a cartoonist as well – he did the album cover. He’s got a weird way of looking at things; just a strange, twisted sort of dark view. I thought he’d be the ideal person to write some lyrics. I asked him, "Have you got any lyrics that you haven’t got music to? Any lyrics just laying around?" He had about four songs that he gave me and I picked up 'The Thunderthief' and 'Ice Fishing at Night' and set them to music, and basically, just experimented with singing to see whether I liked what I did. I thought I could work with these songs and I could sing enough to do what I wanted to do. I don’t have a great technique or a great voice, but as long as I could convince myself that it sounded alright, then it would be OK… which is how I do everything [laughs]. You know, I’m not a great technician on any instrument, but as long as I can convince myself that it sounds real, then I’ll do it. I sang those two songs and then I thought, "well I can’t just sing two songs" [laughs]… I think like this all the time… it’s boring really. "You can’t just have two songs… how about trying to do some more?" Now that I know I can sing, I’ll try and write some lyrics and see how easy that is. So, I learned another trick. I discovered, like many people I’m sure have, that with the onset of the computer, I enjoyed writing emails. And since I enjoyed composing emails, I thought, "I wonder if it works for writing lyrics?" [Laughs] I tired writing some lyrics on the computer and – sure enough – I wrote three songs in an hour… one of which was 'Angry Angry'. I thought, "this is fun!" I could finally master the song form on the next album, ‘cause there’s no rules, you see? It’s great!
You make it up as you go along.
Absolutely, you get away with it yet again. [Laughing] I’ve had a lot of encouragement, but at the beginning of 'Zoom'a I thought, "They’re all going to go, 'it’s boring!'"
You’ve influenced so any modern rock bassists, from Tom Hamilton and John Deacon of Queen to Krist Novoselic and Flea. It’s almost like, if you drew it all as a Family Tree, you’d be the father of rock bass playing. What’s that like?
Well, it’s just that they haven’t bothered to look further than me. I mean, I’m just lower down the food chain than somebody else is. It just depends on how far you want to go back, really. It’s very nice, it’s very flattering… but I’m imparting stuff that I probably learned from James Jamison and [Donald] 'Duck' Dunn and Charles Mingus. But it’s very nice [to hear that I’ve influenced somebody]. I met some guy in New Orleans on the last tour and he says, "You probably don’t remember me but I came to see you with my Dad when I was 12 years old. You really influenced me and you got me playing the bass and you told me I should practice." He was, like, in his twenties now. I asked him if he was still playing and he said yes, he was the principal bass for the New Orleans Philharmonic Symphony [laughs]. Right! Nice to meet you!
How did it happen that 'Rock & Roll' is now the theme music for a Cadillac commercial?
Ah! Because they asked us if they could use it [laughs]. Cadillac’s kind of a romantic thing – for Englishmen, especially. You think, "Pink Cadillac", and it was Elvis’s car, and it’s a Limo and it just has this aura. I don’t know whether it’s the same in America; probably not, because you have them over here all the time – you’ve lived with them [laughs]. I can see a Cadillac now, and it’s BIG, with big fins and whitewall tires. But they asked us if they could use the song, and they didn’t get it for nothing. And why not?
Do all three of you – you and Jimmy and Robert – all have to make a decision like that? It’s not like Page did it when you weren’t looking?
No, all three of us make those decisions.
Well, on one had, you can think, "Classic car, classic song", but it does kind of bother me that I hear The Who’s 'Bargain' now and instantly think of a car commercial.
Well, yeah… I haven’t actually seen the commercial yet.
Before Led Zeppelin ever came into being, you had a successful career as a session musician and arranger. How much of Zeppelin’s unique sound is owed to your work on the arrangements?
Eh… some. But then it’s equally the way Bonham approached the drums and it really was a group effort. Even if the original idea wasn’t a group effort, the final thing was a group effort. It really was, more than any band I was involved in. It was never like the songwriter ruled the band. Robert wrote the lyrics last, usually.
But there wasn’t any other band that sounded like Led Zeppelin, and there never has been since. That’s kind of a big deal when you think about it. Especially now, in this day of everybody sounding like everyone else.
That’s because people in bands these days always listen to the same music. They all start a band because they all like U2 or they all like Pearl Jam. Consequently, their field of reference is very narrow. Our field of reference was huge. Page and I were very hard working session musicians, and when you walk into a session it can be absolutely anything. Country and western, to Champion Jack Dupree, to Englebert Humperdink, to a big band session. You walk through that door and you don’t know; it could really be anything [laughs]. You name it, I’ve done it. I played weddings, I’ve played Bar Mitzvahs, I’ve done Irish weddings, Jewish weddings, Greek weddings, Italian weddings. I can play it all. Musicians these days, they don’t seem to do that anymore, and bring it all into the mix. Bonzo used to like soul music and knew the words to every Chi-Lites record, ever [laughs]. He was the biggest Smokey Robinson fan, he was into Motown, he loved The Beatles and James Brown. I was into all that soul music, jazz, and classical. Robert was really into blues and all the rock stuff and doo-wop. Page had all these other interests. It was just a huge range of influences, you could go here or there or this way or that. And that’s what I do now, with this music.
What was the dynamic like between you and John Bonham as a rock rhythm section?
Well, we weren’t like a lot of rock rhythm sections, we swung like a bastard! [laughs] Groove was extremely important in Zeppelin and it wasn’t in a lot of those bands [that were popular at the same time]. It was extremely important, which is what, to me, made the band [so great]. We used to have a lot of women at our concerts – and I loved having women at our concerts because they’d dance. [Laughing] It’s great, because the guys stand there with their arms folded and the girls are dancing. Zeppelin was great because it was music you could dance to, and you can’t say that about too many rock bands.
How did your work with Diamanda Galas on her record 'The Sporting Life' and its subsequent tour, end up affecting your own career?
Oh, wow, she’s my favorite piano player. She’s just very inspiring as an artist, she’s very passionate, very committed, always knows what she wants to do. I have several other things to thank her for; she got me playing steel guitar again, which I hadn’t done for years. She saw it in the studio and said "What’s that?" And I said, "Steel guitar", "I want to hear it." So we put it on one of her songs and we did two songs with it in her shows. It was good because it gave me some sort of "high voice" as well as being in the back playing bass. And I thought, "this is a way I can work, this is a way I can actually do a solo show without being a bass player and having other people take over all the fun stuff."
Didn’t she also inspire you to start playing live again?
Yes, she did. I mean… somebody actually said, I think this was a German interview, [the journalist] said that he thought that these records – this is interesting – that 'The Thunderthief' was the third record in a trilogy, starting with Diamanda’s record. And in fact, he’s right in that way, because that was the first time I’d tried using that sort of riff, drums and voice. A lot of people didn’t like it, but to me it was blindingly obvious. I couldn’t see why nobody had thought of it before, especially with her voice, because she has all that range and passion. Plus, her lyrics are great! These homicidal love songs are wonderful [laughs]. She came along with, "Hide the knives, baby’s insane!" [laughs]. 'Skotoseme', that first track [on 'The Sporting Life'], she did it in one take. Me and the engineer were shaking at the end of it, and she just went [adopting a woman’s voice] "Is that OK? I’m going to get myself some coffee" [laughing]. When someone suggested we work together, I could hear it all in my head. I just went [snaps fingers], "I know what we’re going to do as well." I sent her these riffs, to New York, and she sent back some ideas. Then she just turned up and stayed for two months, and we made the record. It was just brilliant. I thought, "This is great! We can do what we like again." I was just so inspired. Then she also told me – cause she’s collaborated with everybody as well – that she’d said in interviews, when they’d say, "Well, why don’t you collaborate anymore?" She’d say, "Well, I’ve put effort into everybody else’s music. If I’m going to put that much effort into music, it’s going to be my own." And I went, "Yeah!" [laughs].
She kinda scares me, to tell you the truth.
She scares us all! That’s the fun part. But she’s so committed to her music. She’s just having fun. She was great on stage one time, [laughs] there was that perfect moment in this theater in Chicago, she was there at the front of the stage and – you know how everybody shouts out song titles? – a little voice comes up in this slight lull between songs and goes "Song Remains the Same!" And she just looked at him and she goes [makes malevolent face], "No, it doesn’t, motherfucker." [Laughing] You could see the crowd part.
As a way of wrapping this up, I surely don’t have to tell you this, but thinking about how Led Zeppelin always gets the nod as the greatest hard rock or metal band of all time – on VH1 shows or magazine polls, or radio countdowns or whatever – do you think the endurance and greatness of the Led Zeppelin legend has much to do with the fact that you guys called it quits after John Bonham died, while you were still a hot item?
[Pauses] I suppose with hindsight, maybe that did have something to do with it. I mean, there was no point in carrying on, it would be a different band, because no John Bonham, no Led Zeppelin, it’s as simple as that. He was so integral, to have gotten someone else would have made it more of a tribute band, if you were playing Led Zeppelin songs, because anyone else would have to be in his shadow all the time. However, he died at a time when there was like a new lease on life, a new awakening in Zeppelin. Punk had severely embarrassed us [laughs]. We’d stripped down and just went, [shrugs] "Oh, OK, right. This is over, off we go again." It was a very hopeful time, despite the darkness of having lost John. That was terrible. So, yes, [had he not died] we would have gone on and… who knows what would have happened.
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elcitigre2021 · 2 months
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Nikola Tesla and his inventions for Vibrational Medicine
Robert W. Connolly visita o inventor August Worley, especialista em geradores de frequência de música analógica Moog, para aprender como o som, a luz, a vibração acústica e os campos eletromagnéticos podem afetar a cura no corpo humano. Robert é apresentado ao Pyradym, um dispositivo de ressonância fisioacústica que emula as propriedades piezoelétricas de uma tigela cantante de cristal de quartzo. Este vídeo oferece ao espectador uma visão dos "bastidores" de um próximo documentário atualmente em pós-produção. Chama-se Medicina de Tesla: Campos de Cura e apresenta as invenções médicas históricas de Nikola Tesla que agora estão sendo reintroduzidas legalmente em nosso sistema de saúde norte-americano. Para mais informações visite: www.TeslasMedicine.com
Transcrição do vídeo para português:
Nikola Tesla afirmou uma vez que os cristais eram seres vivos...é um assunto que me fascina porque experimentei um fenômeno interessante enquanto estudava seus efeitos nas plantas, fui o primeiro introduzido às propriedades vibracionais de quartzo enquanto assistia a uma música convenção na Carolina do Norte para especialistas em música digital e analógica instrumentos, mas minha razão para participar deste evento foi entrevistar um especialista especializada em luz sonora e campos eletromagnéticos de frequência máquinas. Eu me encontrei com August Worley durante mogh fest para visitar a fábrica que produz instrumentos musicais mogh agosto começou sua carreira profissional como teclado, técnico do grupo musical popular. Emerson Lake e Palmer o que eu gostaria é, uh, é um sintetizador motorizado que eu tenho descobri que Bob Moog estava procurando. Criei outro sintetizador e mostrei a ele o que eu tinha feito por Keith Emerson e ele ficou muito impressionado e então ele me convidou para ser seu diretor engenheiro da mode music sobre a qual falamos, frequência em formas de onda com as crianças e nosso programa como essas formas de onda realmente sinta o que vamos falar hoje. É como produzimos som o que acontece quando você adiciona mais osciladores que fazem o soa mais rico, então vou adicionar outro oscilador  sustentado por quanto tempo o som permanecerá ali e então há uma coisinha aqui chamado de release então observe como isso soa diferente, isso é muito maduro, mas então, quando vamos para um dente de serra, acenamos soa um pouco Brasier, então você vê que eles meio que se parecem com um dente de serra basicamente o que Bob fez foi pegar o equipamento de laboratório fora do laboratório e colocá-lo nas mãos de o músico que trabalha na Moga como engenheiro com Bob Moe cara se aproximou de Bob um dia e disse ei, seria legal se poderíamos fazer como um canto eletrônico, bola e ele pensou sobre isso e disse você deveria fazer isso e então esse tipo de ideia me deu o ímpeto e meio que plantou a semente para eu levar adiante isso, uma idéia do que seria um canto eletrônico tigela parece que também incorporou um vibração física e tinha luz associado a ele e também fez uma ressonância eletromagnética há um transdutor físico acústico na base do instrumento o paradigma é um som combinado luz fisioacústica e instrumento de ressonância eletromagnética os cristais entram nele porque eu queria ter um espectro tão amplo de modalidades ressonantes no instrumento como possível um dos tons do paradigma é na verdade, o tom do terceiro chakra foi encontrado para estimular o thelma alça cortical no cérebro humano o que faz é o laço termo cortical na verdade gera um pulso de sincronização que coordena todo o fluxo e processamento entre nossa coluna e em entre o funcionamento do nosso cérebro, por que gatos não apresentam a mesma displasia de quadril e alguns dos outros tecidos conjuntivos distúrbios que os cães fazem e a resposta para isso é porque eles ronronam, eles são pequenos geradores fisioacústicos e eles têm uma capacidade inata de saber como curar pessoas que eles gostam de escalar pessoas e elas parecem ter uma compreensão de quando alguém está com dor e eles vão direto para aquela área, e eles ronrona. 
O veterinário americano Associação afirmou que o motivo que os gatos não têm tecido conjuntivo distúrbios com é porque eles ronronam, isso é fisioterapia acústica, certo, eles são uma frequência de batida é uma diferença frequência entre dois geradores de tons, então desta forma podemos usar um gerador de tons que é muito próximo e com frequência outro gerador de tom a diferença a frequência será 10 Hertz, 8 Hertz, 7,8 Hertz este instrumento foi projetado para ressoar o corpo e induzindo um 40 Tom Hertz através do paradigma para o corpo humano, você pode realmente ajudar a estimular as pessoas formas de onda mais longas na parte inferior da escala de chakra, se você quiser, e eles obterão mais curto à medida que você sobe porque o corpo humano na verdade se torna menos massivo à medida que você sobe através do através do sistema de chakras, é necessária uma forma de onda mais longa para ressoar nossos quadris e nossa perna grande músculos do que para ressoar nossa garganta, Auguste garante expertise como um professor inventor e serviço técnico de frequência musical analógica geradores também fez dele um talentoso indivíduo na reparação de dispositivos eletromagnéticos e médicos, mesmas formas de onda que são usadas para sintetizar som analógico para produzir diferentes qualidades tonais também são usadas para tratar muitas condições dentro do corpo humano seno triângulo dente de serra quadrado e ondas de pulso da música analógica geradores de frequência são alimentados para Tesla bobinas de voz com as quais interagem permanentemente ímãs para reduzir vibrações sonoras para bobinas de Tesla em espiral plana para dispositivos médicos, que estão embutidos em almofadas finas e são energizado pela frequência médica geradores campos eletromagnéticos silenciosos estão uniformemente dispersos por toda a superfície da noz para tratar todo corpo, para aplicações direcionadas.  O Tesla bobinas é a único que podem ser inseridas em travesseiros e colocado sobre ou sob áreas do corpo, em vez de tocar um teclado para mudar os osciladores de notas musicais dentro do gerador de frequência pode ser programado para  varrer as frequências ou pulso campos magnéticos em predeterminados intervalos esses campos induzem pequenos campos elétricos no corpo para regenerar células fracas ou danificadas e energizar células saudáveis para que funcionem em seu potencial de tensão total, estas máquinas de frequência podem emular os campos magnéticos naturais da Terra que são vitais para a nossa sobrevivência, naturalmente aterrar e recarregar nosso corpo quando andar descalço pelo campo magnético da Terra campos no quartzo piezoelétrico areia cristalina o paradigma vibra a pedra angular de cristal para ativar seu efeito piezoelétrico. E quando você resina um cristal de quartzo um campo elétrico sutil emana para o ar e é absorvido por todas as coisas vivas e outros cristais quartzo.Resolvi adquirir um paradigma e um curso tigela de canto de cristal para estudar nosso laboratório que compra eventualmente me forneceu a chave que faltava necessário para compreender completamente a cura campos da natureza.
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kwebtv · 2 years
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The Wonderful World of Disney  -  Disneyland’s 25 Anniversary  -  CBS  -  March 6, 1980
Special  
Running Time:  60 minutes
Cast:
Danny Kaye ... Himself
Alan Osmond ... Himself
Wayne Osmond ... Himself
Merrill Osmond ... Himself
Jay Osmond ... Himself
Donny Osmond ... Himself
Michael Jackson ... Himself
Adam Rich ... Himself
Wally Boag ... Himself
Sorrell Booke ... Himself
Bart Braverman ... Himself
Danielle Brisebois ... Herself
Ruth Buzzi ... Herself
Peggy Cass ... Herself
Quinn Cummings ... Herself
Buddy Ebsen ... Himself
Jamie Farr ... Himself
Annette Funicello ... Herself
Stephen Furst ... Himself
Fred Grandy ... Himself
Gregory Harrison ... Himself
Ted Lange ... Himself
Richard Paul ... Himself
Joan Prather ... Herself
Kim Richards ... Herself
Ronnie Schell ... Himself
John Schneider ... Himself
Judy Norton ... Herself (as Judy Norton-Taylor)
Sal Viscuso ... Himself
Robert Walden ... Himself
Patrick Wayne ... Himself
Anson Williams ... Himself
Jo Anne Worley ... Herself
Linda Gray ... Herself
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scottishmusicnetwork · 7 months
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TOUR NEWS : Robert Plant's Saving Grace add special hometown show to UK tour due to demand
ROBERT PLANT PRESENTS SAVING GRACE FEATURING SUZI DIAN UK TOUR FOR NOVEMBER 2023 SPECIAL HOMETOWN SHOW ADDED DUE TO DEMAND With special guest Taylor McCall Robert Plant’s Saving Grace, the co-operative featuring Suzi Dian (vocals), Oli Jefferson (percussion), Tony Kelsey (mandolin, baritone, acoustic guitar), and Matt Worley (banjo, acoustic, baritone guitars, cuatro) have today announced an…
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kurtlukiraz · 7 months
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Evvelinden George Clooney, Julia Roberts ve Sam Rockwell benzer formattaki reklamların kadrosunda yer aldığı ve Chuck Barris'in benzer adlı otobiyografisinden beyazperdeye aktarılan film, Apple+ üzerinde yayınlanacak dizi uyarlamasında Justin Timberlake, aslolan 'e yaşamayacaksın. Justin Timberlake, bu projeye imza atmadan önceden tekrar Apple+ paketlerinde mevcuttur, Balıkçı Stevens imzalı Palmer'da rol almıştı. Her kısmı ortalama bir saat devam eden dizi, Chuck Barris'in iddiasını sürdürmekte olduğu, sunucunun 1960 ve 1970'li yıllarda devlet düşmanlarına suikast düzenleyen CIA ajanı tarafından hedef alınması. David Hollander dizinin yönetimsel yapımcıları içinde yer alırken senaristliğini Haklı ve Demir yumruk ile garantili Jon Worley kaleme alacak. Kaynak: çok yakında
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Rosalind Eleazar as Agnes Wickfield in ‘The Personal History of David Copperfield’ (Film, 2019).
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gundemburadadedim · 7 months
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Evvelinden George Clooney, Julia Roberts ve Sam Rockwell benzer formattaki reklamların kadrosunda yer aldığı ve Chuck Barris'in benzer adlı otobiyografisinden beyazperdeye aktarılan film, Apple+ üzerinde yayınlanacak dizi uyarlamasında Justin Timberlake, aslolan 'e yaşamayacaksın. Justin Timberlake, bu projeye imza atmadan önceden tekrar Apple+ paketlerinde mevcuttur, Balıkçı Stevens imzalı Palmer'da rol almıştı. Her kısmı ortalama bir saat devam eden dizi, Chuck Barris'in iddiasını sürdürmekte olduğu, sunucunun 1960 ve 1970'li yıllarda devlet düşmanlarına suikast düzenleyen CIA ajanı tarafından hedef alınması. David Hollander dizinin yönetimsel yapımcıları içinde yer alırken senaristliğini Haklı ve Demir yumruk ile garantili Jon Worley kaleme alacak. Kaynak: çok yakında
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brookstonalmanac · 8 months
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Birthdays 9.6
Beer Birthdays
Johann Peter Griess (1829)
William McEwan Younger (1905)
Frank Boon (1954)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Sergio Aragones; cartoonist (1937)
Pieter Bruegel the Elder; artist (1525)
Jane Curtin; comedian, actor (1947)
Dolores O'Riordan; rock singer (1971)
Roger Waters; rock bassist (1943)
Famous Birthdays
Jane Addams; social worker (1860)
Edward Appleton; English physicist (1892)
David Bargeron; jazz trombonist, tuba player (1942)
Catherine Esther Beecher; author of 1st American cookbook (1800)
David Allan Coe; country singer (1939)
John Dalton; English scientist (1766)
Red Faber; Chicago White Sox P (1888)
Macy Gray; pop singer (1967)
Marquis de Lafayette; French soldier, politician (1757)
Jeff Foxworthy; comedian (1958)
Swoosie Kurtz; actor (1944)
Henry Muhlenberg; founded Lutheran church in U.S. (1711)
Elizabeth Murray; artist (1940)
Go Nagai; manga artist (1945)
Patrick O'Hearn; musician (1954)
Rosie Perez; actor (1964)
Robert M. Pirsig; writer (1928)
Jimmy Reed; blues singer (1925)
Richard J. Roberts; molecular biologist, biochemist (1943)
Billy Rose; composer (1899)
Alice Sebold; writer (1963)
Susumu Tonegawa; molecular biologist (1939)
Carol Wayne; actor (1942)
Jo Anne Worley; comedian (1937)
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abcnewspr · 8 months
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HIGHLIGHTS FOR ABC NEWS’ ‘GOOD MORNING AMERICA,’ AUG. 28-SEP. 2
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The following report highlights the programming of ABC’s “Good Morning America” during the week of Aug. 28- Sep. 2. “Good Morning America” is a two-hour, live program anchored by Robin Roberts, George Stephanopoulos and Michael Strahan, and Ginger Zee is the chief meteorologist. The morning news program airs MONDAY-FRIDAY (7:00-9:00 a.m. EDT) on ABC.
Highlights of the week include the following:
Monday, Aug. 28 — United States of Tacos series kicks off in Chicago with ABC News chief meteorologist Ginger Zee and judges former NFL Chicago Bears defensive end Israel Idonije, chef Fabio Viviani and ABC7 meteorologist Tracy Butler
Tuesday, Aug. 29 — Rise and Shine series stops in Dallas with ABC News technology correspondent Becky Worley; United States of Tacos stops in Dallas with ABC News contributor Will Reeve and judges professional basketball player Grant Williams, WFAA anchor Marc Istook and chef Evelyn Garcia; “GMA” Book Club September reveal; author Jennifer Weiner (“The Breakaway”)
Wednesday, Aug. 30 — United States of Tacos series continues in Miami with ABC News correspondent Victor Oquendo and judges GRAMMY Award®-winning DJ and producer DJ Khaled, celebrity chef Lorena Garcia and singer and television personality Joey Fatone; Rise and Shine series in Miami with ABC News correspondent Victor Oquendo; tennis coach Rick Macci
Thursday, Aug. 31 — United States of Tacos series in Atlanta with “GMA” contributor Jess Sims and judges WSB-TV meteorologist Brian Monahan and TV personalities Kandi Burruss and Todd Tucker; a chat and performance by Billy Ray Cyrus and Firerose
Friday, Sep. 1— Journalist and biographer Andrew Morton on the new Princess Diana documentary; United States of Tacos series concludes with the four finalists, judged by chef Chris Valdes, Mexican singer-songwriter and member of RBD Christian Chávez and New York Yankees Hall of Fame legend CC Sabathia; “GMA” Summer Concert Series continues with a chat and performance by Sam Hunt
Saturday, Sep. 2 — TBA
ABC Media Relations Brooks Lancaster [email protected]
Daniela Urso [email protected]
-- ABC --
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personal-reporter · 9 months
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Notti in Arena 2023 a Lignano Sabbiadoro
Dal 19 agosto al 2 settembre tornano gli spettacoli dal vivo a Lignano Sabbiadoro, con Notti in Arena, il cartellone di grandi concerti e spettacoli che si terranno presso l’Arena Alpe Adria uno dei palcoscenici di riferimento dell’estate in Friuli Venezia Giulia. Il 19 agosto ci saranno i Soliti Idioti, il duo comico Biggio-Mandelli in cui riproporranno tutti i loro più celebri personaggi andati in onda su Mtv, che rappresentano in maniera grottesca la vita quotidiana dell’italiano medio attraverso stereotipi e archetipi fissati nel tempo. Molto famoso è lo sketch Father & Son, con l’anziano Ruggero De Ceglie e il figlio Gianluca, oltre agli iconici I tifosi, L’amante del primario, Gisella e Sebastiano, Mamma esco. Domenica 20 agosto arriveranno Paola & Chiara, il duo dance pop più iconico e conosciuto in Italia,  tornato quest’anno al Festival di Sanremo, dove hanno conquistato tutti con “Furore”, e ora da Lignano partirà il loro tour. Nate come coriste degli 883, il loro successo è iniziato nel 1997 con la vittoria del Festival di Sanremo nelle Nuove proposte con Amici come prima. Sempre più acclamate, decidono di tornare a Sanremo nel 1998 con Per te e nel 2005 con A modo mio,  partecipano a cinque Festivalbar e vincono Un disco per l’estate grazie al tormentone Vamos a bailar (Esta vida nueva). Nel 2013, dopo la pubblicazione della prima raccolta dei loro principali successi, il duo decide di sciogliersi. Sabato 26 agosto è il momento di Robert Plant, una leggenda vivente della musica mondiale, considerata una delle più belle voci della storia del rock. Con i Led Zeppelin Plant è diventato un’icona del Rock e della storia della musica, oltre ad esplorare la psichedelia e la musica nordafricana con i progetti solisti Band of Joy e Sensational Space Shifters e poi ad abbracciare le radici country e folk del rock con gli album realizzati con Alison Krauss. Fino al progetto acustico Saving Grace con Suzi Dian (voce), Oli Jefferson (percussioni), Tony Kelsey (mandolino, baritono e chitarre acustiche) e Matt Worley (banjo, chitarre acustiche e baritono, cuatro). La band ha fatto il suo debutto all’inizio del 2019 con una serie di concerti in piccoli locali in Inghilterra, Galles e Irlanda e, successivamente, un trio di date nel Regno Unito a sostegno della Fairport Convention. Domenica 27 agosto, in occasione dell’anniversario degli 80 anni di Lucio Battisti, andrà in scena Canto Libero – omaggio alle canzoni di Battisti e Mogol, che celebra il periodo d’oro della storica accoppiata Mogol – Battisti. Sul palco, un ensemble di musicisti affiatati, che portano avanti questo progetto con grande determinazione. La band propone uno spettacolo che omaggia sì Battisti e Mogol, oltre alla semplice esecuzione di cover dei classici del loro repertorio, mantenendo una certa aderenza ma cercando di non risultare semplice copia. Il 31 agosto ci saranno i Franz Ferdinand, una della più amate e influenti rock band del panorama alternative mondiale, con oltre 10 milioni di album venduti, 1,2 miliardi di stream, 14 dischi di platino, vittorie a Brit, Ivor Novello e Mercury Prize Awards, nomination ai Grammy e oltre 6 milioni di biglietti venduti per i loro incredibili concerti. Infine il 2 settembre arriveranno i Coma Cose che, dopo la prima partecipazione nel 2021, sono tornati quest’anno a Sanremo con la canzone L’Addio, che si è aggiudicata il Premio Bardotti per il miglior testo ed è diventata disco d’oro. Read the full article
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