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#arabic-symphonic
beyourselfchulanmaria · 7 months
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Listen to 回憶如風 Memories like the wind II, a playlist by chu-lan-maria on #SoundCloud
生命由具有最高意義的、罕見的、單一時刻和無數的音程組成,在這些中場休息時刻,間歇的暗影充其量在我們周圍盤旋。 愛、春天、每一個優美的旋律,群山、月亮、大海,所有一切都只有一次真心傾訴:即使它永遠不再說了。 因為許多人根本沒有這些音程片段,他們自己只是現實生活交響樂中的間歇和休止符。
Life consists of rare single moments of the highest significance and innumerable intervals in which at best the shadows of those moments hover around us. Love, spring, every beautiful melody, the mountain, the moon, the sea, everything speaks only once truly to the heart: even if it never comes to speak. For many men do not have those moments at all and are themselves intervals and pauses in the symphony of real life.
─ Friedrich Nietzsche 尼采 (1844-1900) 德國的哲學家、詩人、文化批評家、古典語言學家和作曲家。💕
(PS. I don’t own any music and songs right, I just make the playlist for listening easily and enjoy all musicians your works and love to share it only. all copyright belongs to musician & singer. If you want me do delete yours from the playlist, please tell me then I will do it. Blessings! Thanks! Lan~*)
🪷 Ichiro Tsuruta 鶴田一郎
庭園にて 2020
(花園裡 /In the garden) 🪷
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ranjith11 · 9 months
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Salima - Lamma Bada Yatantha @ LetzMusek Philharmonie Luxembourg 2023 | Arranged by David Laborier
"Salima - Lamma Bada Yatantha" is a musical performance that features the traditional Arabic song "Lamma Bada Yatathanna." The arrangement for this specific performance at LetzMusek Philharmonie Luxembourg in 2023 was created by David Laborier. Hi, thanks for watching our video.
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bpark667 · 10 months
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Salima - Lamma Bada Yatantha @ LetzMusek Philharmonie Luxembourg 2023 | Arranged by David Laborier
"Salima - Lamma Bada Yatantha" is a musical performance that features the traditional Arabic song "Lamma Bada Yatathanna." The arrangement for this specific performance at LetzMusek Philharmonie Luxembourg in 2023 was created by David Laborier.
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monicascot · 11 months
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Salima - Lamma Bada Yatantha @ LetzMusek Philharmonie Luxembourg 2023 | Arranged by David Laborier
"Salima - Lamma Bada Yatantha" is a musical performance that features the traditional Arabic song "Lamma Bada Yatathanna." The arrangement for this specific performance at LetzMusek Philharmonie Luxembourg in 2023 was created by David Laborier. Hi, thanks for watching our video. Lamma Bada Yatantha (trad.) | arr.:David Laborier Filmed and recorded live @ LetzMusek Philharmonie Luxembourg 20/01/2023
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mikimeiko · 1 year
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Albums I listened to in 2023
Classica - Radiodervish and Orchestra Sinfonica di Lecce e del Salento (2019)
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kitchen-light · 1 year
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English can do wryness, but Arabic verse has musical possibilities that I don’t think contemporary poetry in English can really capture. Because written Arabic is a literary language—it isn’t spoken except in formal situations—it’s possible to be grandly symphonic or virtuosically lyrical in a way that’s hard to imagine in English. You’d have to be a Tennyson to match the musical effects in Darwish’s late poetry, for example. But of course trying to be Tennysonian would be fatal. With Iman [Mersal] the difficulty for an English translator is different, and I would say more manageable. In a poem about her father, she wonders whether he might have disliked her “unmusical poems.” I don’t think they’re actually unmusical (I don’t think Iman does either), but their rhythms and cadences and sounds have a lot in common with the spoken language. She writes in fusha, sometimes called “standard” Arabic, but her style shares many features of the vernacular: she doesn’t use ten-dollar words, her syntax is typically straightforward, economy is a virtue. She also uses tonal effects—sarcasm, for example—that we tend to associate with speech. We talked a lot about “A grave I’m about to dig.” I’m still not sure Iman likes my choice of “diagonal” for the Arabic ma’ilan, to describe the way a bird falling out of the sky might appear to an observer on the ground (but that’s how I think of Iman: she sees things at a slant). The last phrase of the poem, “were it not for the sneakers on my feet” is a typical moment of self-deprecation, a comedy of casualness. There are no feet in the Arabic original, however, which just says “were it not for my sneakers” (or, more literally, “my sports shoes”). I thought adding the phrase “on my feet” was needed, both for musical reasons and because it suggests a pun that isn’t available in Arabic, where verse meters aren’t called feet. For me, Iman’s (musical, metrical) feet really do wear sneakers: they’re quick and agile, casual but spiffy. They’re what we wear today.
Robyn Creswell, from “Interview with Robyn Creswell”, published in Four Way Review, 15 September 2022
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the-halcyon-effect · 1 month
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copying @jackfromthefairytale again but it's the imminence album this time
come hell or high water: this was honestly my least favorite of the singles, it's good but it's kinda repetitive. i think it's good as an opening song tho
desolation: first song i heard by this band! it's good, and a VERY good description of their sound, but there's not much more new i have to say.
heaven shall burn: 2nd favorite of the singles, behind the title track. eddie is pissed off and i am in danger 👍
beyond the pale: first new track! i have high hopes
ooh that's an architectsy riff. i like it
OOH THOSE VOCAL LAYERS IN THE CHORUS ARE SO GOOD GJEKIDJDOSKEKDPLSKSKDLSK
their architects influence is SHOWING and i am PERFECTLY okay with that
oh it's breakdown time. obliterate me pls
YUP I'M GETTING OBLITERATED
i call these "train breakdowns" because they feel like getting run over by a train OH WE'RE STILL GOING WAIT WHAT THE FUCK IS THIS DEATHCORE NOW‽‽‽‽ and now it's just the chorus again. holy shit
eddie berg how do you do that. just how.
death by a thousand cuts: VERY good track! this is the song i use to describe imminence's sound. wasn't my favorite of the singles but it's still one i put on often bc it's still SO GOOD
come what may: WHAT THE FUCK WAS THAT INTRO THIS IS HEAVIER THAN CONTINUUM
OH FUCK THAT STACATTO (? forgot the word) VIOLIN IS SO GOOD
GENUINELY WHAT THE FUCK IS THIS HOLY SHIT IT'S LONGER THAN THE TITLE TRACK
THIS IS ALREADY BETTER THAN ALL THE SINGLES WHAT oh and now the chugs are broken jesus christ
genuinely how the fuck is this the same band as songs like erase. this is fucking brutal i love it
this one might beat the new mts song as my fav song this year so far
oh no it's breakdown time. i am about to die
oh? maybe not? are we getting a violin solo?? yeah i'm ABSOLUTELY down for that
OH THE DRUMS COMING IN TOO WITH THE GLITCHY SNARE oooouuuughhh (nonsexual)
this is their best song ever. like there's no contest WHAT'S THIS OH THE GUITARS ARE BACK THIS IS SOME SYMPHONIC METAL SHIT
and you're telling me this ISN'T the closing song. wtf
welp that's gonna be on repeat for a while
cul-de-sac: gonna guess this one is an intermission, it's pretty short and also following up whatever that was
yup sounds like it. it's cool tho. kinda reminds me of the intro of viking by stp in a weird way
this album is wild so far. like i'm trying to also level up my d&d character but i can't because i have too much to say
the call of the void: ok the intermission built up at the end so this is gonna hit hard i'm ready
I WAS NOT READY WHAT IS THIS
that's not a guitar. those are bombs.
man. when heaven shall burn came out i thought it was gonna be the heavy one. then continuum came out and i thought it was this one. now eddie is just screaming "RAGE" at me and i am happy
also. very good chorus. i enjoy
it takes some skill to make an album where this ISN'T the best song. like holy shit
breakdown???? i'm in danger
oh we got the low cleans. this is ABSOLUTELY gonna be a breakdown
WHAT THE FUCK
WHAT THE FUCK
WHAT THE FUCK
WHAT THE FUCK
WHAT THE FUCK
WHAT THE FUCK
WHAT THE FUCK
eddie berg is not human. that was a banshee. with bombs.
continuum: while this one was a great single i kinda wish it wasn't released as one. it would have been great to have to process this while still recovering from the previous song. plus there were too many singles for this album imo
l'apelle du vide: tbh i have no idea what to expect here but if i had to guess i think it's gonna be acoustic (like the arabic one on heaven in hiding)
ok yup i was right
this acoustic guitar is beautiful
oh this is GOOD!! this is kinda some ghost atlas shit
are we gonna get vocals on this? it doesn't sound like it but i don't mind that tbh
why is there a boat horn what's happening
oh i guess there are vocals (technically)
OH THE DRUMS
OH THIS IS AMAZING
god i love this band so much
the black: best of the singles, easily. would be best of this album if not for come what may. to be honest, though, i don't think it should have been a single. l'apelle du vide gives a really nice chance to rest and recover from the pure brutality of the previous tracks, and having something new afterwards would have been nice. to be clear, though, this is not a huge problem at ALL and it's frankly the only complaint i have about this song.
le noir: idk much french but i think "le noir" is french for "the black", so i'm guessing this is gonna be an alternate version of the title track but in french (kinda like the spanish version of temptation they did). the only reason i have to doubt that is that that's typically the sort of thing that would be a standalone release or on a deluxe version, but here they have it as the closing track of the album, so idk. we'll see!
oh it's only 3 minutes? maybe i was wrong. this violin is beautiful tho
ok this is interesting. i have no clue where this is going
oh this is fucking beautiful
it's kinda expanding on the melody of the title track, i like it a lot
okay yeah i'm crying now. this is amazing
okay that was an incredible album. final thoughts time!
first, i know this is kinda nitpicky, but there were way too many singles for this one. if it were me, i would have kept continuum and the black unreleased before this. the only new parts in the last part of the album were the acoustic instrumental tracks, which were good, but i would have wanted it to be a fully new experience, especially for the title track itself.
as for the good stuff, where the FUCK do i even begin??? this is somehow simultaneously the heaviest and most emotional this band has ever been, and in my opinion it's also the best. this album really is an emotional rollercoaster, with tracks like heaven shall burn and the call of the void being absolutely brutal, while songs like dbatc and all the acoustic stuff being super emotional, and then there's ALSO songs like come what may that are just both at once. besides the nitpick i had earlier, i never knew even remotely what to expect, and that was fantastic of them. i really wish i could forget every song and listen to the whole thing with fresh ears, because i can only imagine how hard it would hit having not heard any of the singles.
i do also wanna talk about the acoustic stuff specifically, because imminence has always done that SO WELL. i do wish we got a proper acoi track with vocals, though, because that kinda felt like it was missing here. not only did we get one both on turn the light on (love & grace) and heaven in hiding (the arabic one), but they had 3 whole fully acoustic songs, and i feel like it would have been nice if one of them had vocals as well, especially the last one. le noir felt to me more like an intermission than a closing track, and i wish it either had vocals, was longer and had more melody, or was moved to before the title track.
to be clear: this is an AMAZING album. it's gonna have to take something absolutely MASSIVE to beat this for my aoty. the complaints i have don't even come CLOSE to outweighing how masterfully done the album as a whole is, and they're also quite literally the only things i can complain about.
also, i'm not gonna do a full ranking of the tracks from worst to best until i listen to the album more, but come what may is the best track. like there's no contest.
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princesssarisa · 1 month
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Charactera ask: Scheherazade
Favorite thing about them: Her cleverness and her skill as a storyteller.
Least favorite thing about them: That she ends up married to the king who had many other maidens senselessly killed and who was originally going to have her killed too.
Three things I have in common with them:
*I like to tell stories.
*I love to read.
*I memorize things very well.
Three things I don't have in common with them:
*I wouldn't marry a mass murderer, not even as part of a clever plan to stop him.
*I'm not Arabic.
*I'm not a queen.
Favorite line: The full texts of all the stories she tells.
brOTP: Her sister Dunyazade.
OTP: I suppose I should say her husband King Shahryar, but considering all the women he killed beforehand, it's hard to ship them wholeheartedly.
nOTP: Her father.
Random headcanon: Her three sons and her daughter will all be equally skilled storytellers and will add more tales to her repertoire.
Unpopular opinion: I don't think I have one.
Song I associate with them: Rimsky-Korsakov's symphonic suite that bears her name.
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Favorite picture of them:
This painting by Sophie Anderson.
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This painting by Marie-Éléonore Godefroid.
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nudibutch · 7 months
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How would you say your music tastes have changed and evolved?
to answer this question in a nutshell: i was introduced to rock and metal with alternative rock bands in middle school and since then have found a ton of rock/metal flavors, from psychadelic rock (e.g., all them witches, the sword) to black metal (castevet, tempel), doom metal (khemmis, an absolute favorite), symphonic power/speed metal (blind guardian, ex deo), and most recently, instrumental metal (night verses, lazer/wulf, abysse) that i really enjoy. about six or seven years ago, i discovered a lot of metal bands from other countries that produce incredible music with their region's instruments/keys/sound (e.g., orphaned land, acyl, myrath, tennger calvary). rock and metal still dominate a majority of my library. this playlist of mine is a great example!
in middle and high school i was very metal/rock focused, but nowadays i have branched into r&b/alternative r&b (ayoni, ABRA, tsar b), arab synth (please check out tootard. im begging you), swing (big bad voodoo daddy, royal crown revue...) and a bunch of other nitnoid things. it's been really fun having a growing clusterfuck in my music library. i'm sure it'll keep being that way as i age!
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human-antithesis · 5 years
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Déhà - Older Stuff Part 1 - 2006 (Compilation) [April 6th, 2018]
Everything composed by Olmo Lipani A.K.A. Déhà
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lesbian-vmin · 3 years
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Koala’s Music
Today, I felt like getting a little personal and talking about music outside of BTS. And it’s also just dawned on me that my love for BTS and this blog (which is how you guys know me) doesn’t really say a lot about who I am as a person or what I like. I also received an ask some time ago wondering what artists I listen to besides BTS.
I’ll get to some recommendations, but listen to ramble first because I like to.
There are a few “mainstream” artists I really like, but I don’t want to talk about them. I can say that I love Hailey Steinfeld, but I’m sure a lot of you have heard “Most Girls” or “Starving”. So...really what kind of a recommendation is that? If you guys want me to talk about my mainstream picks, I can. But that’s not what I wanna talk about here.
I don’t much like listening to songs that play on the radio all the time, and I don’t like listening to the same songs all the time. Of course, there’s nothing like a song that you can go back to and sing along with, so I do listen to songs that I know. Mostly while I’m driving or cleaning. Otherwise I want to listen things I’ve never heard before.
Also, the majority of artists I listen to are female. Maybe because I’m a lesbian, so I like listening to women sing more than men. Or maybe just because I like the female voice. Or maybe just because a majority of the songs that I listen to on the work radio, on a 12-hour daily basis, are sung by male artists. I also listen to a lot of music made by the lgbt community because songs that don’t fit into the cookie cutter are just the absolute best.
As for styles, I can listen to almost anything. I have yet to find a style of music that I haven’t found at least one song that I like, except 100% screamo. Not a fan of that. But I’m not religious, and I like a few gospel songs. I can jam to a good country song, and I love symphonic metal. Music that’s a mix between classical world music and modern is my absolute favorite.
Language also doesn’t matter to me. On my playlist, there are English, French, Korean, Japanese, German, Arabic, Maltese, Swahili, Mandarin, Cantonese, Thai, Italian, and more songs. When I like the way a song sounds, I’ll listen to it. I know what all the songs I listen to mean. Even if I don’t know the language, I do my research to make sure the lyrics are good and something I approve of, especially when recommending songs to others.
My favorite kinds of songs are the ones that sound like they were made with meaning, or something I can relate to. I really don’t need another song about slashing someone’s tires because they’re a cheater, or another generic love song/breakup song. There are more things in life worth singing about than just relationships and breakups, so a lot of songs that I really like are usually personal to me. And I might start doing occasional song recommendations if that’s something you guys want. Or if it’s just something I wanna do.
Anyway. Let me recommend some songs/artists right now.
Rina Sawayama - Chosen Family
I choose this song because, well. Any LGBT person would look at the title and immediately know what the song is about. Rina Sawayama herself is an LGBT artist, and she makes songs that clearly state that. My favorite lines are probably “We don’t need to be related to relate/We don’t need to share genes or a surname” and “So what if we don’t look the same/we been going through the same thing.” Because your LGBT friends are often people who you relate to more than your own family members. You can grow up in the same house with someone, but your experiences are so incredibly different. And this song kind of hits that feeling for me.
Zolita - Fight Like a Girl
I’m willing to admit that I’m a sucker for girl power songs. Take for example “Run the World” by Beyonce. Everyone knows that song, so it’s not the one I’m recommending. Instead, I’ll recommend this one by another LGBT artist, Zolita. I think Zolita is somewhat well-known, but I still don’t have a single analyst at work who knows of her unless they’re gay.
Also good to note, for anyone who might be interested, she is a witch. So there’s one more thing to love about her.
SHAUN - Way Back Home
And now for something that might be a little more everyone’s cup of Tea. This is a song by a Korean artist, and it’s a beautiful song. There’s a mostly English version of this song, with the English lines being sung by Conor Maynard, and it’s just as beautiful as the Korean version if you’re looking for something that has more lines you can understand but don’t speak Korean.
Yes. It’s a love song. But more than that, it’s a beautiful song with a beautiful melody. This song is on my daily playlist because I’m never not in the mood for the beautiful tune.
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which member of the authority should you pass the aux cord to.
jenny mei sparks: if you want to listen to punk rock bands from like, the 80s-90s underground scene in England then yeah sure; there are some great songs on her playlist by unknown bands and she will let you know who these bands are and their entire history.
shen li-min: definitely pass her the aux cord. her music taste is unmatched honestly; she listens to pretty much every genre it doesnt matter to her, and the playlists are organized in order of very specific moods that she goes through or feels.
angie spica: her music taste is a bit questionable bc theres some artists that she listens to that just.. arent that good but she likes them, and she definitely doesnt have the money to buy premium apps so theres a lot of ads on her spotify, but aside from that if you wanna listen to some trance or any other edm genre, give her the aux cord.
midnighter: if you want to listen to judas priest and djent, some dark synthwave like perturbator and ALEX; his entire "liked songs" playlist is just metal and dark synth, theres hardly any in between, so if you want to listen to songs that make you feel like you're in altered carbon, blade runner, or the 90s ghost in the shell movie, hes the guy to go to.
apollo: his music taste is really fucking goth—you got gothic metal, gothic rock, symphonic metal/rock, darkwave, etc etc. that's all there is to it. so if you wanna sit through the whole 8 minutes of nymphetamine (overdose) or listening to sisters of mercy's temple of love or even just the cure's disintegration album, then go ahead and give him the aux cord. (apollo also made two playlists, one for m and then other for jenny q, just bc he felt like they'd like the songs on those playlists.)
jenny q: hey if you wanna listen to 00s rock & metal bands then yeah sure, why not. that's literally xyr entire music taste.
habib bin hassan: if you want to some arabic songs about longing & yearning, pass habib the cord and both of you can yearn together now. (he does actually listen to pop a lot but he really just. loves tamino fnkdnf)
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daaryaha · 4 years
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✨🎻 May I introduce you to my favorite symphony in the world:
“Sheherazade”, Op. 35, is a symphonic suite composed by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov in 1888 based on "One thousand and one nights“ and is named after one of the main figures. According to modern scholarship, the name "Scheherazade“ derives from the Middle Persian name Čehrāzād, which is composed of the words čehr (lineage) and āzād (noble, exalted), the latter meaning in New Persian "the person whose realm/dominion (شهر šahr) is free (آزاد āzād)".
“One Thousand and One Nights” 🕯🌙
(Arabic: أَلْف لَيْلَة وَلَيْلَة‎, ʾAlf layla wa-layla and Persian: هزار و يک شب hazār-o-yek shab) is a collection of folk tales from the eastern world. The work was collected over many centuries by various authors, translators, and scholars across #West, #Central, and #South #Asia and North #Africa. Some tales themselves trace their roots back to ancient and medieval #Arabic, #Persian, #Greek, #Indian, #Jewish and #Turkish folklore and literature. In particular, many tales were originally folk stories from the #Abbasid and #Mamluk eras, while others, especially the frame story, are most probably drawn from the Pahlavi Persian work Hezār Afsān (Persian: هزار افسان‎, lit. A Thousand Tales), which in turn relied partly on Indian elements. 🌏 🗺
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Tagged by the lovely @the-moon-loves-the-sea! 
rules: “answer 15 questions and tag 10 ppl”  
1. you may call me: SA is my preference around here :)
2. i live with: my silent self :)
3. countries I’d like to travel around in: That I haven’t been to yet? India, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, Italy, Switzerland, Japan. That I’ve seen and would like to go back to? Syria, Ireland, more of Germany, more of France. Jordan again. England some more. 
4. some good scents: frost in the night air in autumn, wood fires, that smell that all spas have, Earl Grey tea, cookies baking. 
5. when i made this blog: 2013
6. favorite things about winter: coziness, Christmas parties, Christmas music (less the mall stuff, more the church stuff), Christmas in general, skiing (cross-country and downhill), hot cups of tea, not going outside. Although: walking in the falling snow is pretty great, too. :)
7. some favorite drinks: Bailey’s is pretty great, though I don’t drink much alcohol anymore... tea. All the tea. Also: coffee. 
8. some current celebrity crushes: Benedict Cumberbatch (shocker, I know!!!), Chris Hemsworth, Danai Gurira, Eva Green, Cate Blanchett, Jon Stewart, Stephen Colbert. 
9. I was raised on: hymns, some symphonic music, and way too much oldies music (barf) (sorry)
10. song I was recently reminded that I 😍: Almost everything by Greg Macphearson, and I don’t expect you to have heard of him. :P Also: Love of my life, by Queen. 
11. play at my funeral: Barber’s Agnus Dei (aka a choral version of his Adagio for Strings), but only if the choir is good enough for it, plus Gerald Finzi’s Fear no more the heat o’ the sun sung by a very good bass, and also Benedict could just come and recite Keat’s Ode to a Nightingale. (You’re welcome for that link!) 
12. some of my tribes: Johnlockers, Anglicans, especially liturgical nerds, my non-heteronormatives (which includes hetero folk who can think outside the mommy-daddy-kids box!), fellow non-kid-havers, multilinguists, fic writers, Tolkien geeks (huge points for Silmarillion folk particularly!), Song of Ice and Fire folk, too, opera folk, activists. So many more. 
13. rec a fic: Honestly, one of the best pieces of fiction I’ve ever read was a fanfic, and those honours go to Duinn Fionn’s Harry/Draco story A Thousand Beautiful Things. 
14. how I keep my hair: I let it run wild, lol. It’s long, kind of a dark golden blond (I’m old enough to regularly colour the roots, but that is its own colour) and it’s very fine and wavy. I just let it air dry and it does what it likes. I used to blow dry it and straighten it all the time, but when I was living in Québec City, the humidity just became too much to handle and I just stopped trying to control it. Life lesson there, lol. 
15. christmas or halloween: Christmas, hands down. I’m not a huge Halloween fan, possibly relating to my enormous and therapy-worthy phobia of those things with eight legs. Christmas, on the other hand, is wonderful. Except for mall music, which can go directly to hell. I just spent this past Christmas season doing carolling gigs, which covered both the traditional classics of both the sacred (Silent Night, O Come all ye Faithful, etc) and secular (Let it snow, Silver Bells, etc) varieties, but also a heap of the seriously cheesy newer ones (think Holly Jolly Christmas and its ilk). The latter can just go. Lol. 
Tagging: @chained-to-the-mirror, @wtgilsa, @ardentlittlefire, @yaycoffee, @sussexhoneybeeinchelsea, @mycakeotp, @hpswl-cumbercookie, @johnlocklover221, @bagofthumbs, @thewhippedcreamhand, @jazzthecat00, @haikitteh, @averyplumplum, @constancecream, and @chinike. Just if you want to. :)
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metalshockfinland · 2 years
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Lebanese KIMAERA Release New Album in Honour of Frontman JP Haddad
Lebanese KIMAERA Release New Album in Honour of Frontman JP Haddad
KIMAERA, the Arab world’s trailblazing symphonic death metal band, have released their new album IMPERIVM. Stream and listen here: https://linktr.ee/Kimaera The band release their album in honour and recognition of frontman and founder JP Haddad, who tragically has passed away at the age of 39. JP was a true pillar of metal in the Middle East – leading Kimaera as the first metal band from…
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annahagenharpist · 2 years
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A thousand and one notes!
A thousand and one notes!
This Sunday I’m playing one of my absolute favorite pieces, Scheherazade, with the Elkhart County Symphony! This pieces hits my two sweet spots, a great story and great musical word painting! Camels galloping, Ships splashing, Sultan’s shouting… Rimsky Korsakov composed this epic symphonic piece to dramatise the arabic myth of One Thousand and One Nights. In the original book, a brave woman…
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