4 dicembre … ricordiamo …
#semprevivineiricordi #nomidaricordare #personaggiimportanti #perfettamentechic
2021: Gertraud Jesserer, attrice austriaca, moglie dell’attore tedesco Peter Vogel e la madre dell’attore-giornalista Nikolas Voge. La ricordiamo per le sue interpretazioni nei film: Il mercante di Venezia (1968), Commissario Rex (dal 2008-2011) e Non con me tesoro (2012). È morta all’età di 77 anni nell’incendio della sua casa a Vienna. (n.1943)
2020: François Leterrier, regista e attore…
I normally have a hard time listening to podcasts but lo and behold I have finally found one that is both great for me as a writer AND thoroughly hilarious and entertaining throughout:
Yes it's by Jk! Studios, and it basically focuses on embracing failure and bad writing (which is a crucial step towards good writing!). I'm currently in the middle of ep 2 rn and I'm LOVING it.
So if you're a writer, who's maybe insecure about your work, or even just an artist in general, who likes to listen to funny people talk, then this podcast might be for you! (you don't even have to be a writer or artist! It's just definitely about writing LOL)
(The Seymour family has Leber Congenital Amaurosis (LCA), an Inherited Retinal Disorder (IRD). It's a family of congenital retinal dystrophies that results in severe vision loss at an early age. Patients usually present with nystagmus, sluggish or near-absent pupillary responses, severely decreased visual acuity, photophobia, and high hyperopia. It is the most severe retinal dystrophy causing blindness by the age of 1 year in most cases. The white pupil represents who inherited the disorder)
You can't hear how great the band sounded through photos and photos don't do Sphere justice. U2 and Sphere both need to be experienced.
Missed LMJ, of course.
Shout out to all the lovely fans I met at Zoo Station and Sphere, those who complimented my 'fit, helped me take photos, who took my U2 friendship bracelets! Going to shows by myself can be awkward, but you guys made it a blast before the show even started!
hi. can anyone hear me. im going to explode in a good way. new stuck inside with the (no longer) bachelors might just be in the works i think. excuse me while i go crazyinsane
In the following video, we can hear Miles Davis with his band consisting of George Duke on keyboards, Robben Ford on guitar, Bob Berg on saxophone, Adam Holzman (yes, that Adam Holzman) on synthesizer, Felton Crews on bass, Vincent Wilburn on drums and Steve Thornton on percussion, at the 1986 Montreux Festival, performing "Tutu".
Enjoy!
"Tutu", named after the South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu, an advocate of human rights and social justice, reflecting Davis' commitment to exploring social and political issues through his music, is an album that does not leave the listener indifferent. Miles Davis "embraces" without any regard and overthrows once again all the concepts of what jazz "should" be.
A man of melodic revolutions, Davis delves into the new technologies of the eighties, and fuses the sounds of his eternal trumpet with funk elements and a groove that transforms a legend of the forties into a musician at the forefront of what was being done in 1986, the year in which this album was released.
The multi-instrumentalist Marcus Miller, cousin of jazz legend Wynton Kelly, who played with Davis on the essential "Kind of Blue", on the album we can hear synthesizers, drum machines and everything mixed with a soul sound and even a revival of bebop, which gives this work the status of a contemporary classic. Along with a crop of new musicians with whom Miles began to work at the beginning of the decade, including Mike Stern, Bill Evans, John Scofield, Branford Marsalis, Omar Hakim, among others, Miles becomes one with the winds of change of each generation.