tv Euromaxx - Lifestyle Europe Deutsche Welle February 5, 2018 11:30pm-12:00am CET
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on the program to go and he says you can still tell us that our innovations magazine for each of. us from every week and always looking to the future fund w dot com science and research for the show. i want to welcome to our new week of your own max our show is david kay did to the magical moments of music here's a look at what's coming up. culture and forgot to showcase his record covers design by renowned artist. good vibrations a german prisoner poses in his wind to classical music. and time
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to listen to young men play entire records to live audiences. we all know that first impressions count and this applies to album covers as well so musicians often spend just as much time picking out the right album cover as they do recording just the right song and it's not uncommon for famous artists to take part andy warhol damien hirst and gary hart with a star are just a couple of big names who have produced album covers in the past are historian francesco spawn pinata from italy has been following this cooperation for years which he documented in a book. records may be old school but these album combos will never be out of date collector's items designed by a list stars who's one of the best known for this record sleeve for the velvet underground. by andy warhol. this rather be the best
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known that i covered by a visual artist and it was one of the first that's that didn't feature. as it was use it to. a band's mand like photographic bach create something discretions than he chose an every day object like anna. francesco spam is an art historian record collector and author of a book called covers. and fall of presenting five hundred covers an album spy visual artist from the nineteen fifties through to today it's bands many different musical genres and schools about. the earliest album dates from nine hundred fifty five jackie gleason's lonesome echo with a specially commissioned cover by salvador dali.
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that there was not the just seems like a cause of it was not working its own right it so by putting its own seek not to it are already very well visible. and also by publishing what the back call that they fought off ema and gleason shaking and and also a short interpretation off. of the artwork he provided andy warhol signed his velvet underground album from nine hundred sixty seven original self up to one hundred fifty thousand euros. the beatles sergeant pepper's lonely hearts club band of the same. photo collage was pajama hayworth and peter blake and if one of the best album cover grammy. in the sixty's passed the music there is thick as thieves for dad seeing that sort of bands and artists do that all that right. that. they identify that the production
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they want to keep. it deep for the music they make and which is something that may be design or some real estate sometimes it cannot offer that they want something. portrayed for example rock and profound diva patti smith like to work with her close friend the photographer robert mabel full some bands use words of up but already existed sonic youth chose guess how to reach this candle painted five years before daydream nation came after nine hundred eighty eight. others helped themselves to works without asking me artist as with some of the forty covers featuring images by street artist banksy. and the process for whom the album covers were a really important genre keith haring did hundreds. some
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at the start but the core of the thing in doing this for sure this is the way for them they way a working just not just bringing out work to a wider audience but that's all you know to do to expand their messages you know all through different media. francesco works on his own follow g. for almost a decade people hundreds of albums he's a regular at this record shop in his hometown of balon year but also goes far afield on shopping sprees. they bought them and different parts of the war but a lot of them in the nautica and locally in and i book that mean that lean in paddy's depending on where i go when i course some place i always look for that i could start and. i always find some jam. out of three thousand candidate colors he chose five hundred for the book friendship. there's comfort in the real physical records
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and the beautiful covers will enjoy even in the age of streaming i think that the book and i quote that the vine you don't like the. bill it's against these uncanny feeling about the nation that is produced by them at the digital technologies that would ace so in the sense i think that that like oracle that is an art form we've definitely survive. the record sleeve quite possibly one of the twentieth century's greatest canvassers of. he is known as the king of the waltz so it's perhaps only fitting that he should live in a castle by at latest under review doesn't just only castle but he also runs the world's largest private orchestra together with his musicians it's estimated that he has sold more concert tickets then be on say and while some find his shows kitschy and pompous his extravagance is definitely part of the attraction what we
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met up with only a year at home and musters. i. am so you place to adoring audiences the world over but this performance was in his home city of mass taste featuring opulent costumes and lavish backdrops his concerts are always good for a few surprises at all can contact us for good every concert we put on a fresh beginning we can never just go autopilot with the mark we always give it our all and that's what lends us energy that's the and after that concert then we can bask in our success that we need lots of red wine to come back down to earth again. his colleagues describe him a strict that say he has a good sense of humor and he's not only if i list he's also the founder and conductor of the world's largest private orchestra the your hunch tell us what the
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structure which has about fifty musicians. at the listen or the trumpet sounds different this time let's hear the other one the one that thought through it. you want. yes like the other one some more italian brought it all down for. the first violinist funk stein's met you about twenty five years ago the orchestra thrives on a spirit of teamwork and collaboration. in auckland i remember
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once when we were in auckland new zealand we were in a hotel and it was raining without end i went to andres room which had a piano and we started playing me on the piano and him on the violin. or if you haven't we compose four or five waltzes in a single day which we later recorded the video i was in these and. then later the year it was born in one nine hundred forty nine in must next to a musical family he began learning violin at the age of five and went on to play in a number of dutch ensembles the turning point of his career came in one thousand nine hundred five when he performed during halftime of the champions league final between byron munich and i had amsterdam afterwards his album sales sort. of leap years. later the newly anointed king of the waltz moved into a fifteenth century castle and must just. i always wanted
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to live in a car song i was always my dream. i read tintin as a boy and in one of the books he and the professor sold an invention and bought a car so with the income. even then i thought oh how lovely i want to do that too it. doesn't that's where you go. the money well you have a dream you should make it reality. it's the best thing in life and i try to make my dreams a reality every day so. let us leave you found out dreams can go right in two thousand and eight he had a replica at the end as shouldn't one palace don't as a backdrop for a global tour it took more than two hundred containers to ship it to australia. that's what's that's that's what it was too much they cost too much and i went bankrupt. later i was here in this very room with a bank guards who were saying. one else can we take away with us but one of them
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said no let him keep performing that's the only way we'll ever get our money back. again i promised my wife i'd never overdo things again. today to use operation is back on its feet again over the past few years he's toured on five continents that's meant hiring four separate teams each in charge of their own stage back to your designs his own costumes which are then made to measure in multiple copies his son who's also his manager says it's a far cry from the early days. i still remember how we used to paint the music stands in our living room thirty years ago for i was five. when then later when he started orchestra around that time my mother brother and i made sandwiches. for the
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intermission. among them. to boot. it's certainly possible we travel with seven chaps. until you has turned his passion for music into a multi-million euro business the king of the waltz and its true life fairytale careen. own music evokes all sorts of emotions as we know and when you're in love it seems every song on the radio resonates with your heart and the same goes for when you're in heartbreak hotel well scientists have researched how music also affects non-human entities and now some vineyards are using classical music to help with the fermentation process of their wines. germany is home to many good wines and some are being produced with the aid of classical music.
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one grower custom books from the town of holeshot has been using this method since twenty eleven he took over his parents' vineyard in two thousand and six and later turned the operations around completely his musical line now accounts for more than half his production. we have a twenty fourteen pino blog a dry white wine with there was treated with classical music and natural acoustics this treatment makes the wine creamy and full body to make but also fruity a fine for about ten weeks the wine tanks are exposed to selected compilations of music by for example brahms mozart or fifth ulti christiane boats calls his wine compositions a.p. sound inside his method makes use of special technology. to come from all out to be perfectly normal audio cd and this ultra sound converter transposes the frequencies into ultra sound waves go solve it in. a vibration transmitter conveys
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these ultra sound waves directly into the from entering line the frequency of the waves is about two hundred thousand hertz ten times higher than what a conventional loudspeaker can produce. thanks to this vibration transmitter and the round stainless steel tank that the vibrations are reflected take this as a mixing effect the keep stirring the yeast during the fermentation process keeps the yeast and bacteria in suspension. and the result is that during fermentation the wine takes on a creamy air quality woods as is and the creamy. nice to screw shell for wine production it's what turns juice into alcohol. because jim brooks now has quite a selection of wines treated this way in addition to rose and red wine he also markets a recent. japanese scientist was a rule
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a motto has investigated the effects of my parishioners on liquids exposed water to music and is convinced that this process produce different crystalline structure of the wine is altered making it smoother and more harmonious with more delicate food noticed that's the perceptible effect confirmed in wine tastings where people aren't told what they're drinking which they. call the bad. a friend of the vintner came up with the idea of enhancing wine sound waves the musician and alternative health practitioner had already successfully treated his patients with vibrations. of. what works for the body influencing it with vibrations could also work with wine and i thought it must be more effective if you influence the molecules directly during the fermentation process. to do this we use the trick of apply ultrasound frequencies so that we can intervene much more intensely and deeply in these molecular structures.
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using sound studio software code that puts together various pieces of music to play to the wind to intensify the effect white noise is laid over the music then his composition is ready. other venues for example in south africa and italy also expose their lines to classical music they all have their own methods there's no scientific evidence that such wines are actually better but they do seem to be a hit with customers that's often been functional it is experience outlined tastings he's been to some and he and lecture online and health for more than fifteen years. carry out wine tastings with people from all over the world. when the tasting includes wines treated with sound in about ninety five percent of all cases of london who are for instance that was exposed to music unfolds its qualities better. people taste the fruit much more intensely.
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but with or without music in the end what counts is what the wine tastes like to hear. the flute as we know it is an instrument normally associated with. classical music but when british musician nathan league got his hands on one he saw another possibility namely beat boxing or is he calls it a clue boxing league combines beat boxing with playing the flute and he showed us how he does it. when nathan lee plays it first sounds like classical flutes but not for long. he calls his mix of melodic tones and beatbox rhythms slow thoughts and it's
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something very few musicians have mastered i've seen one of them will. not like he used to meet box in and crazy man. i was much appreciated here. at the box using your mouth to imitate sounds and instruments is as much a part of london's underground culture as street art but nathan really developed his on the usual flute technique entirely on his own. i want to. bring you know. under the next. book so i was up. for. the difference. for two decades now believe he has been the pioneer of the flu vaccine he and his
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band the clinic perform regularly. with nathan lee used to be a construction worker his music career began when he was twenty and a friend gave him a flute. it's just there was an accident but it's played flo well i picked it up and then i thought. this is amazing it's just such that you know some people think instruments that it's a nice thing to touch it's a nice thing to learn about. an instrument. it was a. conduit for more creativity. namely loves to work with other artists most recently he teamed up with the british band asian job foundation.
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the boxer likes asian dubs mixture of musical styles he doesn't want to be pinned down to a single genre i feel that while i play. with a lot of my i don't know i like to put a lot of blue and a lot of dark in my in my tongue and a lot. of. energy energy that. good for me it's a good place for me to play with ideas. you know. namely his way of playing fascinates people whether on the street at home in london or on the internet videos of his performances have been seen millions of times. but nathan says he actually doesn't care too much what i just think about his music. public consumption it's just it's a meditation it's something a lot to do something on. nothing. nathan lee says he will never stop playing the flute whether at home or on stage with other musicians.
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do you remember the days when you would have friends over to listen to a new album on a record player from start to finish you couldn't just hit the fast forward button or pick and choose which songs should be downloaded to your digital device now those certainly were the days but. to tell you the truth i honestly cannot remember the last time i actually listen to a vinyl album however there is a place right here in berlin where people can sit down switch off and simply enjoy the music. back in the days when vinyl was synonymous with records many people listened to l.p.'s from start to finish those days seem long gone.
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marching in heart and we still remember them they founded a company called play time. we. can run to sixty or seventy minutes today listening to an entire work is a unique experience. reintroducing that to people and culture was our original idea . when it's a play time is on the biliteral german cinema that's here at the babylon movie theater in berlin visitors pay five euros to listen to a record in the company of others this evening's auditory treat is bob dylan's double album blonde on blonde. listening to an entire album requires time and leisure these days few people make the effort.
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today we're barely able to perform any activity for a long time we live into our cycles every two hours there has to be a new impetus whether it's going to the theatre the cinema resting friends or having dinner everything sinked to this to our rhythm then we need something new. the longing for life to slow down is growing people are doing lots of things to us . stress visiting spartans taking holidays on farms and leaving their cellphones behind when they go on a hike. this desire for things to slow down has become a train. that's a serious no it's certainly still an issue trend but i think it'll become more important as people are already noticing that many things in our time change too quickly perhaps the multi option society of the last few decades has overtaxing to
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quite before dark. back into babylon cinema and berlin the album is about seventy minutes long not including the pauses needed to change the record yet none of the visitors leave before it's finished. which can the citrine pleasant to listen to an album at the cinema and also it's very nice to be able to do it at the right volume of the arms of the home you sit down and get distracted by some screen your mobile phone or whatever you're using to listen to the music. you just get to listen to the music movies music i think this brings back an idea of music that we need to keep alive. in this super interesting. play times inventors plan to present their concept in other major european cities they want to keep the wheels turning but not for.
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the hour that it's time to sign off from this musical edition of your own mark but our wheels will be turning once again tomorrow and if you can't wait until then and just go to our website or watch any of the reports again or follow us on social media for me and the rest of the crew here at euro max as always thanks for joining us and we're seeing again thing. on the next episode of duramax special to the table on a push from c. the vignette was named the world's best female shot. off the ranks find out what's cooking at a roller coaster restaurant in indiana. and from the cow on a london pastry chef turns high fashion into sweep the lights all this and more next time i'm sure i'm back special.
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to. the fast pace of life in the digital mobile shift as the lowdown on the web showing new developments and providing useful information though which is funny and interview. as with the makers and users. shift in fifteen minutes to. kick off the windows legal highlights. peter shergold shocks former teammates of the cyclone nailing down three points for his new club. shall good luck at home. losing some play men in the final minutes.
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of him. entering the conflict zone this week on conflict zone i miss them both to talk to russia come back to myself took his ruling class be the a.k.p. she speaks for apology on schumer and his close so close confidante the president out of the government pursues military operations in syria and continues to crackdown on civil liberties through his principle conflicts all along t.w. . tells us stirring stories. it makes us laugh. and cry playing tremble and smile. magical images and emotions.
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cino the magazine every weekend on d w. we like to think it's cheaper to burn the fossil fuels that is to get the energy of the way it is the real cost of doing things is the fact of the world around us is warming. at all to read late fifty years from now this. levels will rise and we'll have the problems here in almost all coastal countries the world. requires the governments to begin to act because try to tax. me tax the car with at least three of us really it's one of the ways of trying to slow down the use of fossil fuels and encourage people to move to the other fuels moving to other fuels actually creates jobs it actually creates an entirely new industry.
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germany's biggest political parties have extended their deadline for concluding coalition talks first second time the negotiations between chancellor angela merkel's conservatives on the social democrats were supposed to be wrapped up on sunday but the parties are still struggling to find a deal on labor.
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