Posted on 08/02/2013 6:00:46 PM PDT by AZamericonnie
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FRIDAY NIGHT VIDEOS
and Special Web Sites
Theme: The Colorful World of Art
Note: Parental Discretion Advised.
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“Rack ‘Em Up” -Part 1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h8Zehg61MZQ
“Chicago - Colour My World”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ylOfi7dGJUo
“Erich Paulsen Original Art” [Music: “Molto Vivace - 2”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dQ_Kpu-YdSo
“For All Children — ‘The Magic Flute’ - Mozart”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-CQgRiTQCQo
“Beautiful Girl on Autumn Path scenery drawing - ThePortraitArt Video”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mh_i9OR8_U4
“Art in Chili Show - Vegetable Carvings into Birds in the Broccoli Tree”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y7WfqwEjJNU
“Tango Flamenco (ARMIK)”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UWCmubP5h9c
“Paintings” [The Playlist - Orban Jolana]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TBVpi8u9QiA&list=PL901738C2DA563C30
“Pirograbados Garcia Merina” [Music: “Cantata No. 147: Jesu bleibet meine Freude”]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZKTvc3M6y-0
“My Palette Knife Paintings” [Music: “Never Saw Blue Like That”]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QI9vwiFZO6c
“Pastel and Blue Eyes”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ICwtklLxhoQ
“The Romanticism in Music and Painting”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HXSi3XkJcHk
“Spray Paint Art by Clay Butler: Night Ocean Postcard” [The Playlist]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=38-AfVe3zB0&feature=c4-overview-vl&list=PL66AECA0226B07E1F
“Piano Improvisation: ‘Seascapes’”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QUAICQNZFS0
“Karel Roessingh - Piano by the Sea”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VZxgKbIIDi8
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Something Extra Special:
“The Canadian Tenors [and Ethan Bortnick on the piano] - Hallelujah”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bpxsJ-_vdPU
“Marion [Michigan] Heritage Days 2012”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uxZk3uc1MWI
“HomegrownOnAHobbyFarm.com: “Apples”
http://www.homegrownonahobbyfarm.com/index.php/tag/apples/
“Ronald Reagan Humor” [Sent in by retired PD/82nd Airborne]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wrRTau5jusU
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Are You Looking For A Job? [Resource Links Page]
http://www.truthusa.com/AreYouLookingForAJob.html
Jobs & Careers [NO REGISTRATION REQUIRED TO READ the forum boards.]
http://truthusa.com/jobs/index.php
Good news is always welcome right Bigs?
You going to get a vacation this summer?
Time with the grandkids?
Rofl! You find great stuff Janie! *Hugs*
All is well with you?
Hi Everybody.
(((((HUGS)))))
Calambuco - Guarachando
Listening as I type...jazzy! You & the "Bosses" doing well?
Thank you Cindy Sue for the links for the troops & us. I gotta watch that Reagan clip.
Try & get some rest this weekend ok?! *Hugs*
LOL! G’day, Janey...((HUGS))...hangin’ with your mates this weekend?
Good evening, ML...((HUGS))...prayers continuing for Lynn-Dah to keep getting better, and for her Mommy too!
Good evening, Cindy, and thank you for the Friday Night Videos. ((HUGS))
That spray paint art is really cool. I am always in awe of the “vision” that artists have....unbelievable.
Hi Kathy.
((((HUGS))))
Thank you for your prayers...I REALLY appreciate them SO MUCH.
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Thanks, Connie, for the tributes to our troops. *HUGS*
The weekend finally got here. Did you have a safe commute?
Is it time for shopping, your favorite chore?
The older the little boss gets, the more bossy she becomes. She will not let me do anything around here without her prior approval! Otherwise, she growls, snarls, bares her teeth, barks and then bites me! ;-)
Nicely done Conor.
Love & comfort to the family.
He was born in Bonn in December 1770 to a family of Dutch extraction. His grandfather, also named Ludwig, was one of the great choirmasters of his era. His father Johann (Jack) Beethoven was a musician who succumbed to alcohol and a dissolute life. Because Lou was born in the German city-state of the Rhineland, his first languages were both French and German.
Lou showed early promise as a musician, and Jack hired teachers to give hm a solid background. By his early teens, Lou had nailed down a court musicians job and supported the family as Jack sunk more deeply into the bottle.
Lou was 22 when Jack died, and he headed off to Vienna, the core of German musical life. He was a gifted pianist, and by now his compositions were beginning to show some sophistication. Mozart had died the year before, and Baron Gottfried von Swieten, who had championed Mozarts works, now took Beethoven under his wing.
Gottfried had a good ear for musical talent. He introduced Lou to Prince Karl Lichnowski, who provided a roof over Lous head, money, and who treated him like grandson. This connection also brought Franz Josef Haydn into Lous life as his new teacher.
That relationship was rocky from the start and only got worse. Neither particularly liked the other, and Lou turned to Antonio Salieri who later was to become Schuberts mentor. It was a very tight musical world in Vienna; everybody knew everybody else.
You can follow Beethovens output via symphonies, concertos, sonatas for mixed instruments, or string quartets. But his greatest area of output was his 32 piano sonatas. Two of them, the Opus 49 duo, were juvenile works, and Lou didnt want them published. That leaves 30 mature works, which we can cover in 15 weeks.
The first thing you notice is that Lous approach was different from Mozarts. Wolfgang wrote every melodic line for human voice, which means that you can sing a Mozart line no matter what instrument he wrote it for. Beethoven thinks in short, concentrated bursts of melody. Its a different way of composing.
The Piano Sonata in F minor, Op. 2/1, dates from 1794 when Lou was 24, and he dedicated it to his teacher Haydn. It begins with a device known as the Mannheim Rocket, an upward thrust of notes that Mozart was particularly fond of using. The first movement is in 2/2 and is marked simply allegro. The triplet grupetto that ends each phrase turns out to be something more than that because Lou does quite a bit with it. Tonal instability leads to a second subject in the expected key of A-flat. The exposition is repeated.
At 2:14 he begins development by switching between keys and moving the melody between the left and right hands, then bringing back that little grupetto.
The short development leads to a recapitulation at 3:07. His second subject, formerly in the major mode, appears now in F minor. This is one of Lous So there! endings, defying the world.
Lou sets his adagio (at rest) slow movement at second position in 3/4 in F Major. The opening melody has a Mozartean feel to it, phrased in singing lines. The middle section turns to D minor and then C, before returning to F for the opening melody. It ends quietly.
In third position, Lou opts for an allegretto minuet in 3/4 in F minor in the usual format: AA-BB-CC-DD-A-B.
For a finale, Lou returns to F minor and 2/2 for a movement marked prestissimo, which means like a bat out of hell. Its in a kind of sonatina format, and here we get a glimpse of the fire that Beethoven was to apply to his later works. The second subject is in C minor via A-flat but is no less vehement.
At 15:53, the middle section is not a sonata development but a quiet interlude, a port in the storm.
At 17:34 he recaps. The second subject appears now in F minor. Once again he ends it with a bang.
Aloha and good afternoon, Hawaii...((HUGS))
Have the grands caught a fish yet?
Good evening M/L & so glad to read that Linda is doing better.
You need a serious break sweetheart! *Hugs*
God must trust you ALOT!
I do soooo hope you mean the dog.....JUST KIDDING! ;-}
Thank You for undertaking this wonderful project!
I’m all ears!
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