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#furiant
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Dear @faisonsunreve thanks for the tag. This was definitely a time taking task but so much fun to do. A true time travel to your watching history. To my surprise there are three French films and three Tom Hanks films included. 😄
A few comments about certain choices.
Favorite film of all time: The Thief of Bagdad (1940): The jewel of the film is Conrad Veidt’s insane Jaffar dressed up with the turban.
Best script: Some Like It Hot (1959): The story about two antihero musicians trying to make a living and avoiding gangsters by dressing as women and joining a female band and traveling to Miami is still unique to watch.
Favorite poster: The Empire Strikes Back (1980): Memories from the childhood. Darth Vader’s perhaps a little too epic posture promises you an emotional adventure and that promise will be fulfilled.
"I’ll watch it some day": Napoléon (1927): @missholson and I were introduced to this 6-hour biopic of Napoleon and we were stunned by the shots of the twenty-minute triptych sequence, where widescreen panorama is made by projecting multiple-image montages simultaneously on three screens. Blu-ray is waiting on the shelf.
Big personal impact: Elvis (2022): I wasn’t prepared for the narrative where female gaze and male vulnerability are allowed and validated.
You like, but everyone hates: Angels & Demons (2009): Don’t know today’s reception but when it was released the film was heavily criticized by the critics and the audience. I like both this and The Da Vinci Code (2006), but having more convincing characters, plot and hold for the entirety makes it better than the first one.
Underrated: The Ninth Gate (1999): Polanski is a very contradictory director for his sexual abuse charges, therefore it feels shameful to admit liking his films or considering his films to be valued. Many find Gate as a dull thriller. The film doesn’t rely on jump scares or gore but the mystery around the occult books and the things you can’t see. 
"Why do I like this?": Bachelor Party (1984): This is my favourite question of them all. I discussed with @faisonsunreve about on what basis you should answer this and does it reveal your true movie taste. The 80’s crazy comedy is a silly and out-dated genre and that is why the films of this era fascinate me. Bachelor Party is full of lame humor and over-the-top characters. Yet the storyline is versatile and entertaining. Young Tom Hanks embodies the past. 
Great soundtrack: La Cage aux Folles (1978): Ennio Morricone has said first he has to understand the film, the images, the story and the director’s intentions before starting to compose. I would like to know his study for Folles, because the soundtrack has such a humorous, characteristic and warm sound. 
That cinematography: Furiant (2015): I was balancing between Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (2011) and La double vie de Véronique (1991), but this short film stands out with the way the rural landscapes, the dimly lit rooms and the unspoken moments are visualized (and edited) by the producer, director, writer, cinematographer and editor Ondřej Hudeček.
Criminally overlooked: Angélique film series (1964-68): Yes, you could put almost any Conrad Veidt film here, however I chose this. I have been fond of Angélique films since I was a child. These spectacles tell the story of Angélique in the time of King Louis XIV of France. Romance, adventure, scheming with breathtaking soundtrack and costume design, beautiful Michèle Mercier in the leading role and the flashy way of speaking French offer us an exquisite interpretation from the 60’s. 
Favorite active director: Peter Strickland: I have seen only The Duke of Burgundy (2014) and Flux Gourmet (2022), nevertheless his style of using the aesthetics of Italian genre films and the intimacy he creates is just heartwarming.
Anyone who wants to make their own version, please do and let me know. 📼📀📦🔦
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jpe3thedz · 1 year
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iamarealkat · 2 months
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FIFTH COURSE - COOKING APRON
(already my last post of this series)
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mads mikkelsen by patrizio di renzo.
I had to do some research on the cooking apron Hannibal is wearing while preparing his culinary artwork since there appears to be nothing much but white cloth. Turns out it is a custom creation for the show and is made out of a white blend material, woven in a self-stripe pattern. To be honest I like its simplicity and the way it just wraps around the front and ties at the back of the waist.
By the way...the books reveal much more of his tastes and where he likes to shop.
So if you're interested in more...I'd start there.
And lastly some melodies to never forget:
dvořák will forever be my favorite.
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ginbenci · 3 months
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Get to Know Me
Tagged by @im-95-not-dead --- thanks!
List 3 ships I like: Superbat, Spirk, [[why must I only pick 3]], Stony [but special shoutout to Bruce Wayne/Paul Grimson (OC) because they are my darlings and Paul is beleaguered & I usually avoid OC ships and then I wrote one, what?]
First ship ever: Merthur! but I first wrote / actively engaged with Mystrade
Last Song I heard: currently got the New World Symphony thumping away, is that a song? idk [[edited to add, by the end of writing this post, I was on to Slavonic Dance in C, Op. 46/1, "Furiant"--also thumping]]
Favorite Childhood Book: Julie Andrews Edwards' The Last of the Really Great Whangdoodles (pax, amor, et lepos in iocando was the first Latin I knew by heart. I did not guess right in pronouncing "iocando", but bad pronunciation instincts are my lot in life, and I was like 8)
Currently Reading: Sherlock Holmes and the Mysterious Friend of Oscar Wilde, which is a mystery novel from 1988 about gay men in Victorian/Georgian London? I must look into this publisher. [It's St. Martin's Press, which is not niche, but the book's got a "Stonewall Inn Mystery" icon on the front, so ... I am curious. (Btw, I'm on p 36 and so far John Watson is intensely/laughably homophobic, this is not the land of Johnlock even slightly 👀)
Currently Watching: Star Trek: The Original Series because I've never seen them, only the tribbles and, like, three clips in various philosophy-adjacent class settings
Currently Consuming: Mukoujima Sencha which is the grassiest loveliest green. just about to make a third infusion
Currently Craving: ... Mukoujima Sencha in the third infusion (but I'm easily pleased)
si tu choisis: @marirah @banananutloaf4life @froizetta & anybody else
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hana-loves-bumblebees · 10 months
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Filuta filištín furiant
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Erwin Schulhoff (1894–1942) - Concertino für Flöte, Viola und Kontrabass (1925)
00:00 Andante con moto 06:13 Furiant. Allegro furioso 09:40 Andante 14:11 Rondino. Allegro gaio
Matvey Demin, Flöte Silvia
Simionescu, Viola
Ute Grewel, Kontrabass
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flutiot · 11 months
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flute piccolo ERWIN SCHULHOFF, Concertino : "Furiant, allegro furioso"
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lucborell · 1 year
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Leif Ove Andsnes - A. Dvorák: Poetic Tone Pictures, Op. 85: VII. Furiant
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musicaespansiva · 1 year
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My first NY Philharmonic concert in the new hall. It only took 6 months to get in the hall -- mostly because of timing, though the more expensive prices didn't help!
The screen is down for Adès's Piano Concerto "In Seven Days" with it's accompanying video. I saw this years ago in SF w/ Phil -- from then, I remembered it as being fine, though not as impressive as his Violin Concerto or his two main operas (Tempest & Exterminating Angel). And that's still my impression. The more densely orchestrated inner parts remind me or Rochberg or W. Schuman. The more delicate ones remind me of something else -- maybe what tintinnabulation music would sound like, but not like Schnittke (mostly not, at least). Parts of the video so literally follow the piano soloist's or the orchestra's parts that it feels like a high class version, if far more straight line angular, of parts of Fantasia. The best is perhaps the Trees Movement which is less literal and has striking growing green elements of branches. I'd see this again, but it's still not his best to me.
The opener was Grażyna Bacewicz's "Concerto For Orchestra" -- another fantastic piece of hers. Every time I hear her orchestral music I love it's spikiness and it's natural driving explosive momentum. This is short, and hasn't been heard since an 'all-female' concert in the 70's conducted by Sarah Caldwell (sigh!).
The second half was Dvořák's 5th Symphony. Which I would have sworn I have never heard in concert (and haven't listened to in years), but the first and especially the third movements were instantly recognizable. The third especially is a thrilling 'furiant' movement that is impressive enough that it drew some applause even though everyone knows it's not the end of the piece. The fourth movement is a fine summation, but for me it doesn't have that originality that those other moments do. Which is the answer to why this symphony doesn't get played as much as 7 - 9.
18 February 2023, NY Philharmonic, Ruth Reinhardt conducting, Kirill Gerstein piano. (I think he did the SF performance also.)
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sonyclasica · 2 years
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LEIF OVE ANDSNES
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POETIC TONE PICTURES
Leif Ove Andsnes saca a la luz las joyas ocultas de Dvořák para piano en Poetic Tone Pictures, disponible el 28 de octubre de 2022.
Consíguelo AQUÍ
"Debo decir que creo que este es el gran ciclo olvidado de la música para piano del siglo XIX. Quizá sean palabras mayores, pero así lo siento", afirma el pianista Leif Ove Andsnes sobre su último lanzamiento con Sony Classical. En este álbum, presenta la colección de piano más importante del gran compositor romántico Antonín Dvořák: los injustamente olvidados Poetic Tone Pictures.
Según el pianista noruego, estas joyas no exploradas muestran una faceta totalmente diferente del compositor conocido por sus sinfonías y cuartetos de cuerda. Me encanta esta música y parece que nadie la toca", dice Andsnes, que también defendió las obras para piano de Jean Sibelius, que rara vez se interpretan, con el lanzamiento de "Sibelius" en 2017.
Las 13 postales para piano que componen los Poetic Tone Pictures de Dvořák fueron escritas en la primavera de 1889, y señalan un cambio de estilo de un compositor que se aleja de las construcciones formales hacia una estética más libre e inspirada. Entre estas deliciosas piezas hay evocaciones de magia y misterio ("El viejo castillo"), danzas rústicas ("Furiant" y "Balada campesina"), piezas de humor nostálgico ("Camino del crepúsculo") y reminiscencias trágicas ("En la tumba de un héroe"). Las obras van de lo profundo a lo lúdico, de lo desenfadado a lo furioso. "Siento una narrativa muy fuerte y maravillosa en ellas", dice Leif Ove Andsnes, que cree firmemente que Dvořák concibió las piezas de este conjunto "excepcional" como un ciclo para ser interpretadas conjuntamente.
Es un ciclo de muchas historias, pero también parece una gran historia. Siento que es como si alguien abriera un libro y dijera: "Voy a contarte una cosa". Y luego simplemente se abre, pieza a pieza", concluye además. Andsnes, uno de los pianistas más destacados del mundo, se inspiró por primera vez en la música checa cuando llegó a su conservatorio de Bergen (Noruega) un nuevo profesor procedente de Praga. Su enorme fascinación por los Poetic Tone Pictures lo llevó a interpretar partes del repertorio en un Concurso Juvenil a la edad de 12 años.
Años más tarde, cuando la pandemia de Covid-19 asoló el mundo, Andsnes aprovechó el tiempo de inactividad para profundizar en los Poetic Tone Pictures y estar en comunión con sus historias. Encontró obras de un encanto infalible y abundantes ejemplos de Dvořák desplegando una amplitud orquestal de color desde el piano, además de su uso perversamente emocionante de ritmos cruzados y síncopas, a la manera de las danzas populares checas.
Creo que crea colores únicos en el piano, y utiliza toda la gama del piano de forma convincente, aunque no fuera un compositor pianista", dice Andsnes sobre la destreza de
Dvořák, que el propio pianista capta en una grabación fascinante realizada en Olavshallen, Trondheim, y producida por John Fraser.
El pedido anticipado comienza con el lanzamiento del primer tema el 19 de agosto de 2022.
Un pianista de elegancia magistral, fuerza y perspicacia".
New York Times
Con Andsnes, cada nota cuenta".
The Daily Telegraph
TRACKLIST
ANTONÍN DVOŘÁK 1841–1904
Poetic Tone Pictures op. 85
1. Twilight Way
2. Toying
3. In the Old Castle
4. Spring Song
5. Peasants’ Ballad
6. Rêverie
7. Furiant
8. Goblins’ Dance
9. Serenade
10. Bacchanalia
11. Tittle-Tattle
12. At the Hero’s Grave
13. On the Holy Mountain
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goat13 · 3 years
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Furiant
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Furiant (Peacock, 2015) dir. Ondrej Hudecek
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lampioneditrieste · 4 years
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18/10/20. Ore 11.00. "Quartetto Furiant". Ass. Chamber Music Trieste. ACM. Musica di Schubert, Schulhoff. Concerto. c/o DoubleTree by Hilton. Trieste. #quartettofuriant #associazionechambermusictrieste #acmchambermusictrieste #concerto #musicaclassica #musicastrumentale #musicadalvivo #doubletreebyhilton #trieste #lampioneditrieste (presso DoubleTree by Hilton Trieste) https://www.instagram.com/p/CGYGKpslr3l/?igshid=1316qowujv4a8
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wolftattoo · 4 years
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the mummy demastered ost track name hematic furiant
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animationnightsny · 5 years
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The short animated film made on Furiant music from Antonín Dvořák's Slavonic Dances. With a story about Czech folk wedding, folk embroidery, and very merry wedding revelry.
Directed by Zuzana Čupová (@s-u-w-i)
The Ties That Bind
Tues, July 16th, 2019 at 8 pm 200 N 14th Street Brooklyn, NY
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cotangentspace · 5 years
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dumky are the highest form of musical composition. change my mind
sources: dvořák’s famous slovanic dance op. 72 and dumka and furiant op. 12, tchaikovsky’s dumka
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