It’s as beautiful as the non retractability of the talons of rapacious birds or as the uncertainty of muscular movements in wounds of the soft tissues of the posterior cervical region
You all prolly dont care but does any of you know a tool to log back into an instagram account..? I was stupid lost my password. I would love any assistance you can give me!
@Lukas Jared i really appreciate your reply. I got to the site thru google and im waiting for the hacking stuff atm. Looks like it's gonna take a while so I will reply here later with my results.
Thanks for all the Stockhausen uploads. I have known Karlheinz personally since 1980 in countless encounters ... was at his funeral ..... a great, albeit often difficult person! So thank you for your commitment! (do we know each other from the courses in Kürten?)
I guess Stockhausen has written, in many cases as this one, a kind of music that help us to enter in an upper state of the mind. When I will pass through the last moment of my life, if I felt something of familiar, I would probably have to thank his music too.
Thanks for the music, which is more accurately titled 'Der Jahreslauf'. Without the article Der, 'Jahreslauf' would refer to the original Japanese Gagaku version, which has only been performed twice - the premiere in 1977 was very poorly received, and it was revived just once in 2014. Worst still, both performances went unrecorded :(
Der Jahreslauf / The Course of the Years can be found as Stockhausen Edition no. 29 www.stockhausencds.com/Stockhausen_Edition_CD29.html. This is the Operatic version correctly titled JAHRESLAUF. www.stockhausencds.com/Stockhausen_Edition_CD40.html.
@@VictorAlexanderFiltenborg Thanks again regarding the titles, though I believe both recordings are made with European instruments & follow the German libretto. The Gagaku version would have a Japanese libretto instead
hello ,thanks for the video. I wonder...at minute 38:41 there is another music that appears... what is that? Is it the : "A slow, sultry blues in night-club style... " that's in the description?
It's the transmogrified theme song from "In the Heat of the Night", a movie starring Sidney Poitier as a Black detective in Sparta, Mississippi, fighting bravely against bigotry with his peaceful efforts to solve a murder mystery.