todos los pasos , todos los bailarines excelentes cuanto arte , cuanta armonia en la musica y los movimientos hasta ahora lo vengo a pillar felicidades a los productores y artistas toda una obra de arte aqui en youtube para la humanidad
She, mentally retracing the defining moments of her life, caught in a moment of contemplation, reliving old emotions with newfound clarity. This "she" remains anonymous yet universal: we could be that person, immersed in thought, cradled by memories. Through this composition, Max Richter invites us into a moment of introspection, where the music becomes a space for reflecting on what has shaped us, on the imprints left by the past. It is a work that touches the intimate, deeply personal connection we have with our memories, regrets, joys, and losses. Each note is a memory, each silence is an absence, and together, they form the tapestry of a rich and complex inner life. Max Richter reminds us that the past never truly dies; it remains anchored within us, ready to resurface at the turn of a melody, a scent, or a thought.
It seems that Thom can always walk the fine tightrope line where joy and sadness meet, the solemn mystical awe that one feels when one experiences birth, death, a miracle, bliss, an encounter with the Divine. It's this space where we find a paradoxical knowing that we are both infinitely small and insignificant yet integrally one with the vastness of the universe.
My best friend left this forsaken place we call earth(home). Not a day goes by without thinking of him, it hurts and tears are rolling down my face, I miss him dearly ....Thank you God to have allowed me these few years of happiness....
Il pezzo degli Snap quando uscì spaccò qualsiasi altro, inarrivabile.... Il video per coreografia, scene e ballo veramente unico, stravagante, geniale, perfetto. Due opere d'arte fuse alla perfezione Il tutto si racchiude in una parola : Capolavoro ❤❤❤❤
Having never seen All that Jazz, I didn’t realise this was an excerpt from a movie, I thought it was an actual video clip. Doh! Either way it’s absolutely fascinating. I watch it regularly whenever it pops up.
@@eddierodden The OP was referring to the movie "All That Jazz", 1979, directed by Bob Fosse. But the clip is actually from another of Fosse's movies, "Sweet Charity", from 1969.