Αρχείο
A selection of jazz artists on Europeana
40 Most Beautiful Summer Songs
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Μουσική και τραγούδια για τα Χριστούγεννα
Χρόνια Πολλά
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sZdjV4JY6NU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oMIi400lUD0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLyyu73O7U4
Νίκος Τσούλιας
50 greatest symphonies
Engraving of Ludwig Van Beethoven (1770-1827) after painting by J. C. Stieler. Photograph: Time Life Pictures/Time & Life Pictures/Getty Image
Tom Service’s survey of the 50 symphonies that changed classical music
The best albums of 2016: the full list
Our countdown of Guardian music’s favourite albums of the year is complete, topped by a jaw-dropping work of passion and originality
Wednesday 30 November 2016
The Secret Link Between Jazz and Physics: How Einstein & Coltrane Shared Improvisation and Intuition in Common
Louis Armstrong
July 9th, 2016
Scientists need hobbies. The grueling work of navigating complex theory and the politics of academia can get to a person, even one as laid back as Dartmouth professor and astrophysicist Stephon Alexander. So Alexander plays the saxophone, though at this point it may not be accurate to call his avocation a spare time pursuit, since John Coltrane has become as important to him as Einstein, Kepler, and Newton.
Hear the World’s Oldest Surviving Written Song (200 BC), Originally Composed by Euripides, the Ancient Greek Playwright
The earliest surviving musical document “preserves a few bars of sung music” from fifth-century tragedian Euripides’ play Orestes.
Διαβάστε και ακούστε εδώ:
Related Content:
Hear the “Seikilos Epitaph,” the Oldest Complete Song in the World: An Inspiring Tune from 100 BC
Listen to the Oldest Song in the World: A Sumerian Hymn Written 3,400 Years Ago
Hear the World’s Oldest Instrument, the “Neanderthal Flute,” Dating Back Over 43,000 Years
50 greatest symphonies
Portrait of Tchaikovsky (1840-1893) – his Sixth Symphony changed at a stroke what a symphony could be.
Tom Service’s survey of the 50 symphonies that changed classical music
Watch Classic Performances from Maria Callas’ Wondrous and Tragically-Short Opera Career
February 18th, 2016
“Histrionic” is not a word we often hear used as a compliment, describing as it does overwrought, theatrical, melodramatic behavior we tend to frown on in everyday life. In the opera world, however, one can rightly praise a diva like the late Maria Callas for her “histrionic power.” Jason Victor Serinus uses the phrase in an article on Callas for San Francisco Classical Voice, and also writes of Callas’ “coloratura agility,” “stylistic authenticity,” “mesmerizing stage presence” and “increasingly scandalous behavior.”
How does a Greek traditional lullaby sound?
Mrs Kiriaki Vetidou in 1996 in Petrota, Evros, Greece. FMS CC BY-NC
written by Europeana Sounds on September 21, 2015
This is a guest post by Marianna Anastasiou, The Music Library of Greece of the Friends of Music Society, CC BY-NC. This post appeared first on September 21, 2015 on Europeana Sounds blog.
How does a Greek traditional lullaby sound? How did women used to put babies to sleep in Greece 100 years ago? You can find the answer while listening to the most popular greek lullaby here on Europeana, entitled “Sleep my pampered child” (Kimisou chaidemeno mou, Κοιμήσου χαϊδεμένο μου)!
The Guardian Culture Professionals Network’s top 10 stories of 2015
The voice of space – Rene Magritte, 1931
From the inspiring to the insightful, here are our team’s picks from a year of interviews, features, blogs and galleries.
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