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tv   Arts and Culture  Deutsche Welle  August 20, 2019 1:45am-2:01am CEST

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just a minute also coming up eating with all the senses see touch smell you can you would you believe and finally taste the food. and in our series 100 german must reads a family story striking parallels between 1930 s. germany and 960 s. race toward america. now this friday a brand new season of concerts kicks off in the ballin film monique with the arrival of the ballina philip monica's new principal conductor carol patrolling co the classical world will be watching of course as the orchestra is considered one of the world's great and patrolling co follows in the footsteps of the likes of habit from carry on how they are bought and simon rattle i'll be chatting to a local orchestra spokesman and principal cellist all off mining after this look of
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the orchestra's new maestro. to train because it intensity is breathtaking. when he's leading an orchestra he gives everything it's hard to imagine why he has a reputation for being shy and reserved in private. the russian austrian prodigy made his conducting debut at age 23 and became general music director at the bavarian state opera in 2013. this friday he's taking over the berlin philharmonic the only 1st class orchestra in the world where the musicians choose their own chief conductor to train to will be a very different leader to his predecessor the great simon rattle who thrived in the limelight. to try and go for his
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part plans on letting his conducting do the talking. it looks like it well and indeed doing the talking is a spokesman of the orchestra with me now and of course the principal challenged manning i thank you for coming in a new season a new conduct after the inaugural concerts in the film only on friday something else new as well in that the ox is going to play open air the brandenburg gate exciting times what then exciting to be honest i think tank with the perfect match of the orchestra and playing at the barn but back to our 9th of beatle thing you can imagine this is all special for the musicians and i think i think for berlin a time before meeting the 1st time the audience and the guys outside it's really the perfect us why you see the perfect choice. i think in
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a way it's it's always about us about the chemistry of an orchestra and the chief contract offer because if this is the perfect match then there is special atmosphere to be created and i think for no cause for having a chief conductor where the your audience hears a concert and comes hours of the concert and it's different than coming into a concert this is what we on the edge making are. electing the chief conductor is very unique to the orchestra because it is done by the orchestra democratically i mean it's a bit like election of a new pope without the white smoke in that you into a into a room somewhere and old mobile phones a cost aside and you have to decide who you want to have as the new conducted that this now happened 4 years ago i was amazed rigid but it didn't it didn't work the
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1st time you had to go back into the room and do it all again and out comes the result carol patrolling co is everybody in the orchestra now right behind him absolutely absolutely and what's working in the 1st time i mean there's some room for for thoughts of course but i think for the orchestra it was the obvious choice and it still is and we played some concerts together in the last season already he came to do already 2 years ago and it's it's the right decision and i think it's a doctrine that we can decide and be responsible for what you can now many of the orchestra have side projects you apart from being the spokesman apart from the digital concert hall which you founded you are one of the 12 cellists of the berlin film monica bellina philip monaco must get the name absolutely right not many pieces specifically written for 2 channels so where does the repartee. so in the
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repertoire eyes there are some pieces played played in composed of the. same cleghorn this was the starting point but i think. nearly 90 percent of the way for tries to write insurance music french music or different stuff ok. and a quick mention of the digital console because we're the founder of it is proved extremely successful why actually though did you get it started richard and i think the idea was hoarding the classical music in the society and also in the media and t.v. broadcasts things of classical music of cons it's got. to do you say it's got down it's hard to get the classical music in society and having every cons that now in the internet streamed through out the world this is fantastic for us all of money thank you very much for coming in i should be there on saturday night. at the
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brandenburg gate and have a wonderful concert on friday as well as the inaugural concert with europe for trying thanks so much now in our series 100 german must reach we have a monumental book which was originally written in full pots and the story encompasses a large part of the 20th century it's called anniversaries and the. song wrote it as a kind of dari now women tend to keep diaries most of the men so this male olfa makes is protectionist a woman is more. dear diary some people think that writing journals isn't for grown up man. i'll show them an entry every day 2000 pages it's going to be a literary classic. and
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. it takes some serious kohona is to publish a 2000 page diary even if it's fiction author over your own son's epic novel anniversaries originally came out in for all you the protagonist. starts her year long journal in august 19th 67 is a german woman who's been living in new york for 6 years with her daughter marie she's got quite a biography growing up under the nazis then the east german regime ben her escape from the baltic sea so the hudson river she writes down everything she can to pass it along to her daughter. in the beginning you wanted to go back to germany believe me but after just 6 months you stared at the supermarket girl's mouth the 2nd time she showed you a $1.00 bill and asked you if you knew the name of the man on it and you said george washington and she said do you like him and you said yes ma'am. interweaves her personal life with quotes from the new york times about the vietnam war or the
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u.s. civil rights movement because he was diary entries jump through time and space from new york in the sixty's to her tiny german village in the twenty's and thirty's when the nazis are gaining support author over your own zone lived in new york himself which is where he started writing anniversaries it took him more than 15 years to complete it so one calculated that if you spent a half an hour reading this book every day it would take you half a year to finish it so if you do decide to go for it you'll be spending lots of time with great literature and if you actually finish anniversaries you'll have something to brag about. the kitchen. theory design studio in london designs what it calls immersive food for all the senses it's not just about taste and presentation by can say a star restaurant touching smelling and even hearing also involved
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working with an experimental psychologist top chef joseph youssef is making the dining experience a feast for all the senses. do you mushrooms taste more like they came from a forest when they served on a wooden platter. is sauté 18 out of a shell sweet also to eat. the sauce or is it abstract. at the london restaurant kitchen theory menus are designed to speak to all of our senses and to experiment with how sounds color or even the shape of the african influence eating experience each time we eat as a multi-sensory activity but it depends on how much mindfulness perhaps is going towards that petfinder required for the 1st course a plate of jellyfish chef just a few surf is a way that many people find jellyfish off putting and yet. it has more than a journey it's kind of texture it has
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a kind of bite to read not something that my team and i discovered when we 1st tried it and it had a kind of say thing by for crunch to remove all this is actually really really present. ok but what's it like with the sound you hear it. when you eat it you can hear the noises making when you're eating it but also in hoxton you know an. experimental psychologist's child spence is head of the cross my lab at oxford university he's here to study diana's experiences. too much testing in the science lab it's not like releasing sticking people on a brain scan to see which part of the brain lights up you can find things out. nothing like a social dining experience so we try to capture people in the wild as much as possible back in the wild the main course squid risotto is served with calligraphic designs projected on to the table that impact its taste intensity. the
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very fact that your brain can't quite make sense of what you're seeing what's the food what's the out and which was leading the other is kind of attention capturing say more like he's pay attention to everything. turns out the more people really focus on what they're reading most flavors they take in. but the biggest shock comes lost with desire as ships were interested generally in this idea of emotional engagement through food how can you kind of engage people any kind of stimulate certain emotions and one emotion that we thought was kind of under rated dining experience is it's. a. fish. would you eat it it's the glass shards even if it is made of sugar. such a different texture and you get something very kind of hard and as you can hear it
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does sound like the crunching of glass and the 1st mouthful was that shocked me but now that i know it's ok. one thing's for sure all those who die in a kitchen theory leave you with a whole new awareness of how the different sensory experiences come together when we age. i think our senses might get a bit confused anyway that's all from us in culture about.
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to go. back. to the bundesliga season stop. media. spin class back. to the things he. wants him to augment. the 1st weekend of. strong women in africa. the battle against horrific violence. physical and sexual abuse and cool tradition. in many countries in africa women and girls are still subject to terrifying atrocities. but they're fighting. the fight.
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every journey begins with the 1st step and every language but the 1st word published in the. rico is in germany to learn german why not come with hammers and simple online on your mobile and free stuff from d w z e learning course nikos fake german made easy. welcome to the but is the game here or did. we have plenty to talk about its. coverage. let's have a. v.w. i.
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heard. dangerous. droughts climate change become the main driver of mass migration. right. now to. climate exodus starts september 5th. defense ministry says 3 people have been killed and 12 wounded and. military convoy in northwestern syria a human rights group says the syrian regime and allied russian warplanes hit rebel held in the province blocking the line of military vehicles to prevent the convoy advancing. germany has agreed to take in 4 children.
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that's been living in a.

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