tv Euromaxx - Lifestyle Europe Deutsche Welle December 29, 2017 5:02am-5:30am CET
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there is no children which makes her feel worthless and to complain. in a society that expects them to be children this is a burden many childless women karcher suffer from a very personal film about the suffering of childless women karcher the fruitless tree starting january fourteenth on t.w. . thanks for tuning in i'm larry's house and then i'll be taking you through the show based on the top twenty five reports of twenty seventeen today we reached number ten to six and here's
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a little overview. rock of ages the british band deep purple is still going strong. on set in motion a painted film pays tribute to dutch artist vincent van gogh. and colorful characters a savvy in body paint a is a living work of art. smoke on the water it's a song known around the world just like the band who sung it deep purple first formed in one nine hundred sixty eight which means come next year that we celebrating their fiftieth anniversary gerry in that time they've sold over one hundred thirty million records with their latest album only being released in april the band might be aging but the choose are as strong as that. oh it's back four years after the band's last album now what they had. released
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in. the band to record it quickly and have it sounds like. we've always been a kind of live. recording side of our careers second rate survive. so bringing that into the studio was a very wise decision and that's why i think you sound so fresh we don't do hardly ever more than one or two three maybe even three takes and that's it the key to that of course is that you have to be able to play. it is a job with let's make a rock record right everybody there been it was recorded in nashville tennessee.
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this time around the band less than a month. and board. when it comes to music. nashville is hard to beat. they still have great. big studios and if you want to capture the sound you need a biggish room this room is alive you know and i know when i hit this drum it's going to go back it's not going to go. when the room is great the atmosphere in the studio is great everybody enjoys playing because they know immediately the sound is there when you have to do his capture.
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and pretty much every guitar player. but it's more than that. in the early one nine hundred seventy s. deep purple helped bring heavy metal into the mainstream and released groundbreaking albums after year seventy two we did. two albums six tours of america. i mean in one year i can't imagine that now the time if my is to stay together for four or five years that was quite a long time and manages being what they all this. while the fat goose laying the golden eggs was not allowed to have a rest over its close to fifty year history the band's lineup his change considerably guitarist steve morse has been with deep purple since one thousand nine hundred four. and keyboardist
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joined in two thousand and two replacing the legendary john. because it's a style that we've adopted is because we actually have a very natural band we play in a very natural way and whatever natural talent. that's that's the sound just a blend of those talents there's change because people have changed but the instruments are still there i want to be good. that's an integral part of a better. term . took to the road again on the long goodbye to work that might sound rather final
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but the tour has no fixed end date. how long is a piece of string. that's how long the tours we don't know it's just we're just putting everyone on notice that they're we all of our age and we will stop at some point we just don't know when. but if this is going to be the last my dettol then we want to go everywhere we can play to everybody who wants to see it and that takes a long time. so hard rock and heavy metal bands missed the opportunity to catch them in action this time around. while the tour dates currently stand up to july twenty eighth so you have some time
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and as they said who knows if it will be even longer we turn now to the film one knee which also took longer than plans to build construction in total to ten years on the new council hall in hamburg and it ended up costing ten times more than was originally estimated finally though locals and tourists alike were delighted when the building opened and early twenty seventy. hamburg's feel how many concert hall in the city's harbor district is the latest landmark on the city's arising. almost ten years under construction it opened with a gala concert in january. the heart of the ensemble is of course the grand hall none of the twenty one hundred concert goers sits more than thirty meters from the orchestra thanks to the design by star architect the shock so. the music is in the center surrounded by the audience we took inspiration from the theater
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carved out of stone in epidaurus greece. football stadiums to. they have spectator seating going right up to the top. and it's that verticality that defines the space for the musicians. the site has only recently been devoted to the performing arts in one thousand nine hundred eighty six a red brick warehouse for coffee tea and cocoa was built here but the rise in container shipping methods of performers get shut down and stood empty. him half the building stands out here in the harbor there are a lot of red brick buildings here on the docks but this one from the sixty's the ending here so defiantly. was a great basis for the new film monye which is entirely different. over.
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the construction of the new concert hall began in april two thousand and seven but was soon interrupted by numerous problems and postponements for a time clashes over the soaring costs led to a complete halt in construction. work eventually resumed in two thousand and thirteen albeit with a new projected cost to the taxpayer of seven hundred eighty nine million euros almost ten times the original budget but the controversy has been largely forgotten . as well vinnie. it's a great and i'd say it was worth it right now perhaps not strictly speaking in financial terms but certainly in terms of ah global image or an implied putting the cost to side it's hugely impressive it's what i call more true it's a work of. great. cost a bit more but beautiful things tend to do that over.
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the complex also includes a plaza with restaurants and a platform offering panoramic views of the city the elbe river and. the harbor. also attached to the concert hall is a hotel with around two hundred fifty rooms and suites. one end of the building contains new luxury apartments costing from fifteen to twenty five thousand euros per square meter this apartment boasts four hundred square meters of living space. but of course the for now money is ultimately about music. from a single block is the conductor of the resident n.p.r. for no money orchestra for him this is a very special place of work. to me that the phenomenal thing about the whole is that you can play everything here and the audience can hear it very well not even
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a fortissimo will produce a muddy it sounds like at the same time it's quick to create a wonderful intimacy in quieter sections here. and intimacy that lovers of exceptional music can now enjoy for themselves. what a stunning building imagine if it was covered up christo of all gary an artist has done this with many landmarks he covered them in white sheets and they see it we came across a polish artist who covers up buildings and objects with crochet her name is ole and how works always make a statement even though the big bold colors she uses are enough to get anyone's attention. i gotto oleksiak scrushy it art installations may look harmless enough books can be deceiving.
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i'm all that i'm an artist and sometimes electrical myself an old fashioned lay the whole course of the choice too. in a decade now the polish born artist has traveled the world covering anything and everything she can live a layer of colorful yarn. i believe as art is there is most that bracing between life and i don't think that enters my logic chris shouldn't i should text messages from my ex lovers so natural way for me to express myself physically if you will know me. eventually you can be part of my work. one i put my first piece on the street i realize how the place changes in our
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nation today in a violent and also how people are not dissing the. book. most people are afraid to for some reasons to go inside a gallery or museum they don't feel saved or maybe they'll feel they're free but entered spaces so in the moment on the street it's really for everybody you know there's a minute if you're educated it doesn't matter if you have any knowledge about the art it is for you to experience it. got to the stage to the most spectacular intervention to date on christmas eve of twenty ten she'd learned the famous charging bull statue on wall street had been installed there without permission in one nine hundred eighty nine so decided to honor the beast with a semi legal installation of her own. actually the legal piercers are much more the god to make than their legal piss is to me and it is a because then your across is always like
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a killing buying to. levels i mean further stress there's police but this turns it's really for artists to be able to finish that and to me to be able to play with their peers of course time but also the material the contract takes time to put there are all the pieces before. me and pray that are going to get. selected to run away with you. quickly. in many places all next interventions constitute property damage and are punishable with fines or even jail but she doesn't like the fact the term public travels the world to expose social problems and then just spy covering things up when necessary with official
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permission. in twenty fourteen all that plunged into the gulf of mexico to protest against the destruction of the bush economic ecosystem. in march twenty sixth she joined women in india for a protest performance to celebrate international women's day. later that year she traveled to finland to create our pink house with refugees from ukraine and syria the project's message was everybody should have a home. my peace is there not just to decorate a city of a whole day there bring awareness of certain issues that are very important to anybody who universal side talk about for a door and what human rights women rights you know like about environmental crisis right now so all those pieces has some meaning behind the course of the scheme.
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which no lack of seems to inspire new works it's clear to all that the actual go right on crochet. from crozet we tend to painting but how you would usually see it this is the first time ever that we can see a painted feature film yes the other work of visit van gogh artists from all around the world were hired to paint thousands of frames for the maybe it's called loving vincent and i can tell you firsthand it is a must see i was in all the whole way through it and you'll soon see why. this is the world as vincent van gogh saw it or at least how the makers of the film loving vincent imagine he did. they've created this animated feature as in a march to the dutch artist it's comprised of around sixty five thousand frames each painted in oil by hand. the film had its world premiere in very picture
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rest surroundings in south eastern france loving vincent was shown as a part of the renowned international animation film festival. when you put these paintings together and put the letters together that almost create like you know storyboard so. so that was their main reason and also he fascinated me as an artist with his incredible bravery and their passion that you know still briefs life into what we do in. the film storyline is based on around eight hundred letters that vincent van gogh wrote to his brother tito it covers the last year of the artist's life including his struggles with mental illness and his eventual suicide. in concert with a girl i reckon was out of his league in the next go. around one hundred
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paintings provided the basis for the film's art work. ethic challenge for us to be unified. team of painters because they're very different people with their artistic background but also different style. and all of sudden they all had to just live their air live all of that behind first the scenes were filmed using actors these images served as templates for the painters who recreated them frame by frame. own signature style the traces. i know that. the artists worked at three different locations most painted their works in good done poland some five thousand people from around the world had applied to take part in the project around one hundred may degrade to make the artist's work easier
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these special studios were set up each one is equipped with a monitor and a projector. when required the template can be projected onto the screen. from ukraine specializes in fortress. vince vaughn god is one of her idols. i use his experience for my work and from my life and now i. do. think it's. very important and he. would call us about styles about. landscape it's my for him. every painting was photographed and pieced together to create a film sequence it took twelve paintings to produce just one second to film their style how to remain as close as possible to the goss but at times they had to get
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creative. various camera sizes so you know sometimes we had to invent a little bit to the right or to laugh sometimes for the reasons other there of reasons we actually had the trains of the season so we had to change a little bit the color scheme and some of the paintings are better but you know we tried to show most of the paintings as true to the original at some point in the film as we count. at the animation film festival in all see the film found its audience. that everything is animated and that they're all paintings is just i can hardly believe it and the play of light and shadow and that everything is painted in impressionist. yeah. you were really caught up in the paintings that it's sometimes called this film was very touching and poetic and you had the impression of being caught up in the
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artist emotional torment of. the film rights to loving vincent were sold to twenty countries even before it premiered and it recently won the european film award for best animated feature. and it's already been nominated for next year's golden globes awards too so i predict that being more of what's to come now we finished the show where the report that fell into the sixth place in popularity this year the key cust you know if you look about off on you you will be there for hours the illusions of this survey a makeup artist a phenomenal money on a kick up the loss of it literally paints her own body and then creates illusions by standing against a black backdrop i've never seen anything quite like it so let's check it out. the illusions are mind boggling. not just because they're nearly perfect fodder but because they're actually a body. committee on a mineral ship which. has seen her you tube channel get millions of clicks by
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viewers worldwide. she set up a little studio in her apartment and spread to over fifty kilometers from the serbian capital belgrade. she liked to draw as a child and taught herself to paint today illusionist videos are her trademark. i live challenges and that's why i choose to do it lucian and it's very funny when you make an up and not in your stomach or you are i'm enjoying to do this because every day i'm someone. launched her own video channel in two thousand and sixteen are going to. national breakthrough came with wooden prompted a video that one or a top makeup artists award in serbia. she also made an appearance on spanish television. more than one hundred thirty thousand friends have subscribed to her
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you tube channel and regularly watch your videos she can't believe her look. i'm so happy i am told people you know from all over the world and you're talking when they write he says for rosie o. . i have that feeling that i was there or i you know so it's a very special feeling. can spend two days preparing her designs scrutinizing them in the mirror to see what works and what doesn't like the knot on her stomach. she can work on a new body painting for up to eight hours drawing inspiration from music and her own experience. i had a problem with my way and. i couldn't eat i lost my appetite and. i felt that my stomach is you know not you know. the tricky part for the makeup artist is holding her
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breath for long stretches while she paints soon the fine details. of her works of art involve magic of some kind and blackwall. coke. and bread that are. not bad. in the body painting illusionist can do more than tires off and not she can put a spring in her belly. it was part of her wooden property illusion one of her biggest challenges so far. that spring gave me some whole watch trouble because it's very difficult on your stomach on your skin on star trek because you can't you want to make picture. perfect. it's motivated to keep perfecting her body paintings by her dream of what
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the future could hold my dream we is. one day to be on the red carpet and. cold alaska. hollywood may or may not be on the horizon in the meantime she's busily creating body painted are done tutorials for her fans. among those who shared keep those videos is american actor charlie sheen but she remains dedicated to perfecting her art and she certainly isn't the time to lose or head over her success. but is that we have time for on this a that i've been joined us some arafat's help five all of the air on your back i can now. because. coming up in our next euro max special gonna be dixon is
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a talented profiteer from britain. the world's slowest porsche takes to the road. and the man from croatia and his loyal simple compact this and more in our next euro max special countdown. why do elephants need. the plastic model turned into a paving stone why do algae make it clear. good idea kill working in the winter and there are people developing smart solutions everywhere. let's
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inspire each other in the environment magazine to go at africa next d.w. . the fight against crime in a criminal era. crime fiction set during the third riots would ensue. three european authors tell stories about hard boiled investigators and spectacular murder cases during the nazi era. they're all bestsellers but what makes them so successful crime novels and the third reich in forty five minutes on g.w. . what does a football loving country need to reach its goals. we'll tell you how german soccer made it back to the top. in our web special w dot com. football made in germany. beat the germans new and surprising
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