Good morning! This time I do not bring a film, but an excerpt from the miniseries glamour kids vanitiy Fair (Vanity Fair), made by the BBC in 1998 on the novel by William Makepeace Thackeray. Vanity Fair: A Novel without a Hero ("The Vanity Fair: a novel without a hero") was first published in 1847-48, satirizing society in the UK in the early nineteenth century. It is the story of Becky Sharp, played here by Natasha Little, an orphan who tries to thrive glamour kids in England in the nineteenth. The protagonist begins caring for girls from a good family, continues secretly marrying an heir and encountering along the way with the Napoleonic invasion of Europe. In this excerpt, glamour kids Becky plays Dido's Lament from the opera "Dido and Aeneas" by Henry Purcell. Dido's lament is the name commonly used to designate the aria "" When I am laid in earth "from the opera Dido and Aeneas (Dido and Aeneas) Henry Purcell (Westmisnter, 1659-1695), the greatest English composer all time.
This passage opens with a descending chromatic line, by semitones, in the continuo, repeated eleven times throughout the aria. The structure of the piece is that of a chaconne ciaccona glamour kids or obsessively repeating a pattern. The meter is 3/2, slower, in G minor. Henry Purcell "painted" the word laid ("When I am laid") this color drop despair to death, and Remember me ("remember me"), and text presented in syllable repeated in crescendo, showing his desperate cry urgently and preparing for the inevitable: death.
Aria When I am laid, am laid in earth, May my wrongs create No trouble, no trouble in thy breast; glamour kids Remember me, remember me, but ah! forget my fate. Remember me, but ah! forget my fate. When I am laid, am laid in earth, that my mistakes do not cause troubles to your chest; Remember me, but ah! forget my fate; Remember me, remember me, but ah! forget my fate. A big hug and I wish you a weekend full of whatever you want.
What voice so evocative; lately I do nothing glamour kids but read novels in which the characters evolve into a false sense of calm or quiet, glamour kids while a war lurks in the corner: The Garden of the Finzi-Continis, The Magic Mountain ... We are not different from those we preceded. Reply Remove
HELLO! Welcome to PARAENMUSICARTE. In this blog I present a regular hearing classical music and their analysis. Try the works are beautiful and the comments prove rigorous glamour kids but not heavy. See if you like it ... A greeting and thank you very much for visiting!
2014 (5) May (2) April (2) March (1) 2013 (22) October (1) January (1) July (2) May (2) April (4) March (5) History of Music Fridays at 6:59 am ... the movies: The Chorus (Les c ... PI TCHAIKOVSKY, Overture 1812 ... On Friday the movies: Vanity fair (fair l ... A. SOLER, Fandango in D minor, R 146. February (4) January (3) 2012 (31) December glamour kids (5) January (6) October (4) October (2 ) August (2) July (2) June (1) May (3) April (2) March (3) January (1) 2011 (14) January (1) November (1 ) October (2) October (2) August (1) May (1) March (1) January (5) 2010 (30) October (1) October (3) July (3 ) June (3) May (4) April (5) March (3) February (3) January (5) 2009 (4) January (4)
Abbey in the oak Adeste Fideles Adolph Menzel Albéniz Germany Alfredo Kraus Andrea Bocelli Amadeus Amelie André de Jager Angel Musician Angels from the realms of Glory Apocalypse Now Aquarium Arabesque Aria Aria; JS Bach suite Asturias Austria Dancers practicing at the bar of the Knights Dance Ballet Barber glamour kids baroque Barcarolle Barenboim Baschenis Battaglioli baritone bel canto Belloto Bernstein Beethoven Boccherini Brahms Boëllmann glamour kids Brueghel Belgium Cabanilles Caccini Shawshank Redemption Song with Chorus Lullaby Neapolitan Song Canon in D Major Cantata 147 Caravaggio Carnival of the Animals Careers Cesar Franck glamour kids basket with fruits Chaconne Champions Chanson Chardin Che soave zeffiretto Chopin Christophe glamour kids Rousset harpsichord Ciacona Cinema Classical Clarinet Concerto Concert Family concert Countess of Vilches Countess Mathieu de Noailles consists
No comments:
Post a Comment