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tv   Hart aber fair  Deutsche Welle  September 23, 2020 7:00am-8:01am CEST

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you know. this is g.w. news to live from berlin a devastating milestone in the united states the corona virus a pandemic that claims more than 200000 american lives the highest a death toll in the world but as that means for the presidential election it's just weeks away also coming up. as the united kingdom battles a 2nd wave of coronavirus prime minister boris johnson called on britain to do their best either and here to new restrictions or risk a 2nd lockdown. and it was a mystery that had conservationists scratching their heads experts finally find out
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what was behind the deaths of hundreds of elephants last one. i'm going to richardson welcome to the show the u.s. the death toll from cove at 19 has passed at the grim milestone of more than 200000 people according to johns hopkins university it's the highest number for any country so far accounting for more than one in 5 coronavirus deaths worldwide the u.s. house of representatives held a moment of silence for the victims led by speaker nancy pelosi rise for a moment of silence and remember it's of those more than 200000 americans who have passed away from the coburg 19 virus. palosi has a blames at the deaths on of the does information and negligence of the white house
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the president on all trump insists the united states is rounding the corner in the pandemic the high death toll is putting his handling of the coronavirus outbreak in the spotlight as he campaigns for a 2nd term in office. well on this a dark day for the u.s. let's speak now it to our correspondent stephanie simons in washington d.c. stefan we are only 6 weeks away from elections in the u.s. what have the presidential candidates promise to do to try to get the coronavirus under control. well the president didn't promise anything now today or yesterday or last week or the week before that the president is busy campaigning saying that he did everything possible and more. than that to curb the threats and the. outcome of this covert 19 pandemic or cope with 19 infections here in the united states so part of the president everything is done very very
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well and he's saved the lives of millions in his mind however the other side of it president the president joe biden of course criticizing the president democrats are serious about how the president handled this covert 19 crisis here and say 200000 death. in just doubling the number this number just doubling in 2 or 3 months is a clear sign that the president mishandled 'd this crisis this pandemic in a very very very very large and significant way well in terms of public perception of how this has been handled i know that each of you has been talking to us citizens in denver colorado about what they had to say about today's tragic landmark of 200000 deaths from cope at 19 let's take a look around at another form of a recall from court in the world could have. been for public health. right if we
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had a real leader here. number of be much smaller we think that there's any good job. i think that there is that as story on the other side that wants to say how that he's handled it but nobody knew where nobody knew where it was coming from in the beginning or what it was all about well we have course i just heard the numbers prove otherwise but you see from those interviews that there's a split in perception in the united states do you think this tragic milestone in any way could be a wake up call that could help unite opposing voices in the u.s. on how to actually deal with this pandemic. no i don't think so i think the united states they stayed to be polarized like this i think division in the country in society in between the us the people in the united states will remain on the high level and will remain on this topic as they are all of those who say this is all a hoax actually there is thousands of people coming to rally events and campaign
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events off donald trump no social distancing no mask wearing or largely no mass wearing and on the other hand you have a lot of people who say like this is unbelievable it really takes only 2 to wear a mask to keep social distancing 6 feet away and do not mingle with a large number of people to actually save thousands of lives there is no i can't foresee any scenario that the united states at the moment will unify after those numbers after today after this milestone passing 200000 to combat this coronavirus pandemic in any other way and the world will certainly be watching and if the coming weeks and months stephens i'm in washington d.c. thank you very much. and meanwhile in europe it's the united kingdom reporting the highest official coronavirus death toll nearly 42000 people there have died from cove at 19 and as new daily infections surged prime minister boris johnson has called on the nation and to observe
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a stricter rules on masks and social gatherings if the new measures are flouted johnson is that he could not rule out introducing even tighter restrictions. britain's shouldn't expect a return to normality this year just weeks ago workers were being encouraged back to their offices but the government stuck change in tone full is a dramatic surge in coronavirus cases as a trade off to entering a 2nd lockdown prime minister bars johnson announce new restrictions aimed at keeping the climbing caseload at bay on deeply spiritual reluctant to make any of these impositions or infringe anyone's freedom. unless we take action the risk is that we will have to go for tougher measures later when the deaths have already mounted and we had a huge caseload of infection such as we had in the spring. the u.k.
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recorded nearly 5000 new cases in shoestring the highest daily rise since early my the figure is now 4 times what it was just a month ago. in response pubs and restaurants were now close a 10 pm masa now mandatory more public spaces people are being urged to work from harm where possible pasha penalties have also been introduced for those caught flashing the new measures to a greater police presence to monitor compliance too with the possibility of putting soldiers on the streets is back up. to new rules have been met with mixed reactions . nor can work from home and i think it means. you can't make a blanket start that we need to do everything. that has to be done but i'd rather they look at other options i don't want it to be another knocked out of they think anybody does but if that's going to save lives then that it should have been issued
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and. experts are now worried about the increased risk winter poses especially if the new measures fail to bring the latest outbreak under control. now it's worth remembering it wasn't so long ago when johnson spoke of a return to normality by christmas we asked our correspondent in london barry get mass what she made of the prime minister's speech that was one of the most striking messages from bros johnson today that he said perhaps we're looking at restrictions for about 6 months so really paulse christmas and this is not the usual optimistic . the people of the u.k. have voted for you somebody who. who usually or quite often is ridiculed in what he calls do. you always tries to put us on the specter of on things in this instance his message was very very stern about the country has to
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brace itself pull further restrictions and pull quotes of all time. that was back at mass in london let's take a look now at some of the other stories making news around the world in brazil a flash floods have hit the city of rio de janeiro turning roads into rivers residents have been struggling to make their way through the waterlogged streets after a trench all rain lashed neighborhoods in the south of the city. thousands have taken to the streets of seoul garia for an independence day march against the government people gathered outside parliament in sofia to demand the resignation of prime minister boyko borisov and his cabinet they accuse them of corruption and having links to all of arcs. the european union is set to unveil its a long awaited pact on migration a new pact will require member states to take in more migrants from nations on the front line of europe's migration crisis the aim is to put an end to overcrowded
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refugee camps like the one at moria on the island of which burned down to reach the go by the pact is facing tough resistance from some e.u. members among them poland a new life in poland mohammed najib is syrian after studying in the united arab emirates he moved to cracow for his masters degree while he has been welcomed by some he has also faced animosity from others. they joked a little bit about so if i'm carrying a bomb or not i told them that no i left it at home because you know if i'm coming to study here for example i had the hands go away of my face with an angry i had. not replying. mohammed is worried about the anti immigrant rhetoric of poland's conservative government this rhetoric targets one group in particular refugees while the country has welcomed an estimated 2000000 people from ukraine
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since 2015 it has refused to relocate refugees from the count's increase and it's only. going to receive if you stay legal if he's not going to go through the legal power of the status of refugees to be a refugee by the international law you have to flee to the 1st safe country do you think that syria is our neighbor but according to anna wilkins got an expert on muslim migration relocation refugees to poland is legal that's because e.u. countries are obliged to take in a share of asylum seekers even if they 1st arrived in greece for example she says politicians are using the migrants as scapegoats. it's very easy to get people scared about the things that they don't know easy to tell a lot of bad stuff about them to gain votes to gain political power poland is expected to oppose the upcoming e.u. migration pact the government says it doesn't want to be forced to take refugees
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from the camps especially after accepting millions of ukrainians. we believe that every country of the e.u. should be involved in resolving the crisis and migration crisis but not every country in the same way we are now and directing a. little bit different geographical direction but this is a european problem as well the conflict in the crane the conflict in stretching the east is a problem you also face backing cracow mohammed has made a home for himself with good friends that is why he'd like poland to open its doors to more migrants. it's unfair for the syrians who would like to have a life like like myself he hopes the e.u. will find common ground on the migration pockets. the mysterious death of more than $300.00 elephants in botswana earlier this year had conservationists scratching
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their heads and now they appear to have solved the they say the killer was a toxic bacteria found in watering holes whose massive growth seems to have been caused by climate change. the mysterious mass elephant diet in botswana has had experts battles for months poaching was ruled out because the tusks hadn't been removed poisoning was also discounted but now the puzzle may have been solved. took tests that show that the way this was potentially could produced some of these toxins which are certain. experts suspects the elephants had drunk water containing the toxic cyanobacteria at watering holes but there's more to the story although these toxic bacteria can occur naturally they have never before course such devastating effects killing over $300.00 elephants in just a few months but this is not the phenomenon that was just seen and now the disharmony
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that happens with the earth is a very mental changes it appears that in several places in the okavango delta higher temperatures cause the bacteria to increase massively climate change therefore seems to be directly threatening elephants but why would they the only creatures killed it appears their survival strategy became their downfall they are still able to find water even when the watering hole is almost dry. we know the elephant to really be the only on in my for example that is drinking below the softness of the what and where the depths it's a challenge it's clearly shows the possibility of this species being able to suck the snubbed which is really where the growth of the sun about tuna ease majority of the time that involved ranges want to test the water quality more regularly in teacher but with temperatures into doing to rise quickly in southern africa
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preventing further bacteria outbreaks may prove almost impossible. that's your news update at this hour i'm directed in barely enough for me and the entire news team thanks for watching. and for. language courses. any time.
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you. look to be fun beethoven challenge his musicians technically like no other composer did before i'm very happy that he did because he wrote fantastic solos for the horn a world without beethoven i can't even begin to imagine lute weak from beethoven shaped entire musical genres pushing boundaries and even breaking them he was
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a pioneer and not just when it came to music. what one world without beethoven looked like that's what i wanted to find out. ok one more time. in 816 beethoven revolutionized the tradition of leader songs with poetic lyrics.
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that was very beautiful by jumma good. but let's do the transition one more time. ok here. this is john. yeah. they switch transition. for some it's a song cycle for others it's the world's 1st concept album beethoven's and he found a good 6 songs tell the story of unrequited love 15 minutes.
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and the biggest invention is for sure the shelley believe that he curated readers also does the 1st in music history of it so. there he was composing a very long song but it was this kind of its mission speed and know for sure not interested there it kind of powerful nashville and but in fact you have you have different kind of songs different kind of effort pursuits and he is really. telling a long story this is really for sure the biggest invention in the in the spectral day for this song repertoire. and he found that the leap that became the model for all great song cycles of classical and romantic music. france schubert adopted the close connection between piano and singing voice from beethoven.
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stuff mahler expanded the idea and had the singer accompanied by an orchestra. 150 years later the idea was picked up in a completely different place in the mid 1960 s. pop music was revolutionized in the hills north of hollywood this is where the 1st concept albums were created shedding pumps teenybopper image and making it into a global $1000000.00 business. hollywood's lights camera action home of the movie industry and also home of some of the most iconic pop songs ever produced.
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one driving force was brian wilson of the beach boys his goal was to write many symphonies for kids. for his concept album smile he heidi young lyricist the arranger and composer fan dyke parks. i read about your good vibrations session you suddenly said we got to put a cello in there under challenge and it's now triplets it's fundamental and it's a no preference how did you come up with that idea god gave me a plan and god gave me a plan that instead i would be a good a rancher come up with a good idea for us something that had a baby in a 2 and a half minute time lapse a signature like the red river slip or something to distinguish. the bank decks
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hand shake. play it again say and brian wilson and fan dyke parks shared an ambitious vision rather than a simple collection of tracks smile was to be a song cycle telling the history of the united states carefully composed right down to the last detail smile wasn't released in its entirety until decades later but the idea was quickly copied by the world's most successful band right next door in laurel canyon frank zappa created his concept album freak out. and in england the beatles were also inspired by smile they invented a fictitious music group sergeant pepper's lonely hearts club band. the british band the who released a rock opera called tommy. and in and pink floyd's concept album the dark side of the movie about
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a descent into madness became one of the most successful albums in music history and this is something you've used in your music ever since beethoven wrote the very 1st song cycle ever and he found it in the funnily enough and this is why i really want to talk to you about this is what you've been doing this is what you did immediately after your your album the song cycle well ok this is interesting that that was imposed upon me by the medium the medium was the album and the album had a constituent of lapsed time this concept it's fun album yeah that concept album did come out of laurel canyon to be sure all of those people. and to no mercy mention all those out i was there and that's the cabin which is burned to the ground other groups of joni mitchell and crosby stills and nash and all of the stuff everybody and rock and i had the idea that there's a concept album that is since people were now listening to the album it was
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a technological advancement we were at the gilded age of analog recording and that album form provided that continuity. that people say so sought and became a discipline and out a pro-forma everything had to be just so for example your new thought had to think about the 1st cut you had to think about the last card you had to think about the amount of time thinking about the amount of time it would take to turn it over again to the b. side what the 1st cut would be the how what and then did you want to build or or evaporate your most recent album spangles it's also a concept that you decided to put famous pan-american songs together with a reason and what has kept you on this track in my case is with some people around gaby modano one of the people around found like parkes is grammy winner gaby marino a singer songwriter from guatemala she and fund group the concept album spangles
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the song cycle evokes the time when there was still a life the cultural exchange between latin america and the usa with neither hatred nor boredom. there's a blade that was. me. believe political. and let's just look. at this idea of having a concept is this something you've consciously tried to do in your own stuff or has it did this come through the work with with fans like parks i've always thought that you know it it's important for me to think of of an album like from from
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beginning to end like ideally in an ideal scenario you want people to listen to it from beginning to end did you have the concept before or did the concept come while you were looking for the piece and i remember at 1st there was a lot of songs in spanish so moving getting started sending me that one which ended up on the record you start and i'm odd and then. i can remember. quite well but i think he just he just sent me across the border line just a song written by wright cooter and john hiatt in the 1980 s. so he sent me that song and i was like and something like something sparked in me and said ok. i get it we get it this is the concept we're going to do a record that celebrates not only the cultures in latin america but also the u.s. and try to like unite the north and south in that and central america and think of it because in one of my i would say that like in guatemala he teaches that the continent this america you know one continent. so it was important for me to like
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just reflect that on this record where we're celebrating the the wonderful music that comes from all these different parts of. america singer songwriting legend jackson brown joined the celebrations. good. politics is another thing that really. appeal to me and beethoven's maverick status it encourages cheered and encouraged me. her.
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and her beethoven some cycle and he found it was a wonderful concept which is still being copied by composers and arrangers today. with this next completely different idea beethoven shake an entire genre and chanted an audience of millions. to to. get. my. my was my was. 'd in
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1908 looked like fun beethoven began to create images in the minds of his listeners he gave his 6 symphony descriptive movement names such as awakening of cheerful feelings on arrival in the countryside to each he began to describe images using the orchestra for the country outing he featured woodwind instruments who were usually more in the background of the music. they are at. beethoven's new ideas were a success the 1st movement conjures up associations with excursions and it delivers country life. but that it ill is disturbed thunder storm is the title of the 4th movement here bras and percussion dominate the idea of program music music with a meaning
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a concept was born with the 6 that for me and quickly became an important jonna of romantic music. man. in his some funny fantastic from 830 hector barely owes chose the same instrumentation for the same movement as beethoven had done 20 years earlier. in richard strauss's monumental alpine symphony beethoven's instrumentation is still a mistake and leave the model for strauss's 915 program music. the idea of using sounds to create moods and associations with landscapes took over hollywood with the introduction of sound in films movie soundtracks became elaborately orchestrated or at.
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the end composers who had fled here up such as eric wolfgang korngold book beethoven's legacy to american films creating a new lasting stand the. music in the style of beethoven intensified the effects of a delay clan scapes and romantic love scenes was. one you know like that helped. if you like. it was wrong that the bearer of the arbitron. and when the enemy approaches we can hear rolls of thunder korngold cannonballs can be heard from a fog man. hours. and even the greatest modern day film composer makes clever use of beethoven formulas.
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in the star wars films the forces of good and body by prince's lair and luke skywalker are played by woodwind instruments. evil with its imperial march is dominated by bras instruments coincidence. we are at one of the greatest music festivals in the world the tanglewood music festival in lenox massachusetts and one of their yearly highlights is film night where of course they play the music of the legendary john williams. the composer of jaws indiana jones jurassic park harry potter star wars and many many others has influenced the film music industry of the last decades more than anyone else and won many oscars and grammys along the way. the typical john william sound touches
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millions of fans around the world and me especially as a horn player. as
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a moviegoer i could not imagine a world without john williams and this is what we're talking about today a world without without beethoven it's also impossible to imagine this so basically when was the 1st composer to actually write program attic music in a 6 that for me he gave each each movement a title so that the listeners would know exactly what they were listening for yes a 6 am today is maybe the normally to have that he thought he might have been making entertainment he said in an interview that you felt that beethoven was one of the greatest organizers of sound question your idea of organizing sound was instruments in this case into shapes and eventually into things that will. exchange emotions is hard to imagine like life without beethoven
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i had a conversation about the submitting with you was an elderly doctor friend of mine and very for them and i said to work. what is your answer to what would the world be like without being told and he said very quickly to me what would life be like if we'd never seen a rainbow. but how do you decide which instrument is going to be the one to portray principally which is internet it can be the one to make to make us care and is that something you have a a program you've worked out over the years there's a tradition in cedar and in film if you have a villain you probably have in the old days you would have a diminished 7th chord played from blondel somewhere or there is an expectation culturally of certain kind of things where the horn is. established as the hero we like that.
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these connections. apply their historical their culture all the forms of structure within which you have some freedom you know in the 7th symphony in the 3rd movement . and then the trumpets and mongol. and then he took this. well. and then it goes into the intervening if i see a shark i see this shot i don't see a shark. a lot and when i went cyrus i had
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terrifying sharks and we've always wondered if that was the precursor to the jaws i think so yes i think i think they had been swimming. the drama in beethoven's music has been an endless source of inspiration for film scores but his influence is also seen in the success of a somewhat on the remarkable invention. for some it's an instrument of torture for others an indispensable companion for rehearsing and performing the metronome providing the correct tempo at all times.
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in 1819 beethoven caused another sensation in the music world he wrote an article praising the previously unknown invention by his friend johann nipple hook made the metronome. since then life in music without a metronome has become hard to imagine. playing . few feet.
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because me through norm is include a metronome is basically the click track tool that is embedded in the recording software nama software and your vote is. as there is a musical grid so to speak i know i need the colleges there are certain time signatures a certain tempo but the best time to talk to often just of this temple wouldn't be if i could start a record when i hear this for example good if somebody does hear her on the book and beautiful. and click track can mark apart from the fact that it delivers a very stable tempo simple a click track also works as a synchronous reference your eyes seem claim that a front ends. pop and the many pop and rock music productions are done as
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multi-track recording all someone over each instrument in a song is recorded one at a time which made a guitarist it's one for example drums are often recorded 1st and then a week later guitars to plays along and then in another studio a singer sings his lines the separate tracks are held together by this click reference. beethoven published metronome markings for his symphony in a light signal using journal he left nothing to chance. before that composers had used italian tempo markings from largo slow to presto fast but they were approximate markings thanks to metoo no markings every conductor knows the precise tempo beethoven wanted for his symphonies.
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parvo why do you think it was so important to beethoven to promote this new idea the metronome it's like evolution you're like a fish coming out of the water and realizing we need feet you know and then they go feet and then they started walking and so. i think that probably that has something to do with it because all of a sudden the control goes from the hand of a composer into the hand of a stranger who has nothing to do with the creation of pieces and this whole recreated process to interpret in process was born. partho yeah it's one of the world's top conductors and he is a great fan of beethoven's metro markings.
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he published the metronome markings probably because he wanted to make sure that people are in the right area of tempe and of course. so much controversy. it's to this day there are these these natural markings and and the main problem really is that they are very fast a lot of the run much faster than the traditional baton interpretation that we know now are comfortable. and in a way i think that that's exactly why he published them because because he sort of could foresee that things would get slower more romantic you know there is a there is a kind of a
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a slowing down the grand ness the wagner effect if you will. the metronome which beethoven so appreciated makes it possible to set the same tempo any time and anywhere since $8095.00 a german company has been producing meltzer's metronomes and selling them all over the world they are based in the well hidden it is a town of is me. in calgary in south germany there is the most famous metronome manufacturer in the whole world victor metronomes i never thought i could get so excited about metronomes but look at this one. metronomes are high tech. before a model is sold it has to path and endure and stress test. i
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think you've been vote that is metronome was sick how can a metronome be thick concrete. almost but you have to bear in mind that the state of technology in those days what does the metronome is a highly precise mechanical device which is giving it the slightest deviation by in term of dimensions we're talking about a weight discrepancy of one or 2 grams that would cause a different matter and i speak. for. we conveniently as post facto sort of speak we can say well you know he was deaf
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and his national was broken and there is even some kind of a story somewhere in the letter where it says that you'd better know rose was not functioning correctly i mean i think it's all nonsense i mean that's what it was def he wasn't stupid. beethoven's insistent on exact tempos set standards with his special feeling for rhythm he inspired a completely different genre long after his time. later in his life beethoven moved further and further away from what his listener. as expected to hear some critics even considered him crazy syncopations piano cascades what sounds like
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a jazz piece from an american bar around 1920 is actually beethoven's last piano sonata opus 111 composed almost 100 years and. it seems like he shortens the notes as he goes along to create is the sort of jazzy effect yeah i think he paid programs in this this natural momentum so you each variation. against more notes probate whereas the the meter itself doesn't change. with the board had he tried everything else beethoven wrote a set of variations in this piano sonata he very not only the melody in the harmonies as others had done before him he varied the rhythm. this piece remains a challenge for every pianist it's really unique because beethoven what the way he
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writes it with these with these following passages they really swings naturally and he creates this one i mean he really writes it in there and to go along with it you have some some blues now that simpson blues tones and it's really brilliant what he does. in 822 you can only imagine how confused the music critics were. what it sound like if you played it more and more classical more more like it's exactly written is it even possible that the speed of. it becomes an engineer and it does it takes the fun out of it. for a long time this is a nod to was considered unplayable because of its tempo about
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a century later musicians on a different continent discovered how much fun playing syncopation at a high speed could be just.
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to find out just little things about movie company to hear the absolute temple of jack white house of jazz in new york city and who better to speak to about this but . wynton marsalis is one of the most famous trumpet players in the world he's a 19 grammys and he is the artistic director of the house of jazz at lincoln center . something people have credited beethoven with there's this palace an art or his very last found it's not
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a 100 number 211 and people say it was stravinsky that came up with the quote it was a pretty echo of boogie woogie because of the snappy bass lines and and and the syncopation in there what would you say as a master of jazz i think that is just a dot is 16. the consciousness of it is the ground rhythm that does not change so even pass a car you know it's kind of forms where the bass repeats and the challenge of playing is maintained to be dooby dooby dooby dooby dooby doo long span. the challenge of stride in jazz styles is can you keep that left hand in strict march time and play these figures on top. so you have a dotted 60 no rhythm is really people are hearing that today and saying oh that
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must that what it what it was but it it's a big credit to beethoven that something he did then people are still analyzing you know being to do so much more than that that doesn't reduction of you know. i feel a just beethoven's modernity like the the person in the 20th century who most resembles beethoven as louis armstrong who is on strong actually gave you a sense of what it meant to be modern it would have meant to be free beethoven in terms of him as a relation of jazz just his freedom him in improvisation. of course we don't recall as him but every account of his playing is what he could do was go from really thunderous bombastic virtuosic playing to the most tender beautiful. melodic and also how you traversed an abyss written down when he just stood just to go on with it and he does go with it feel it be out there you don't want to separate and you find rhythm all over beethoven's music and you think. you know beatles music he
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understands the 3 in the environment of 2 which is which comes from african music which he probably got it from through through middle eastern music what they would call turkish music or so is when you when you're in a 2 rhythm don't don't don't don't don't you put 3 on top of the digging tick tick tick tick tick dean dean dean dean dainty she was in her 3rd symphony does that sort of syncopated awful line has. been some of those. guys like you have no grouped into. bone so you're in 3 but he's grouping on the notes into. this is this is a kind of ultra syncopation what i love about it is that he's using it as a sick patient for that the same reason we use syncopation is i'm giving you a time and your body has the expectations of his time and plan that you would to time so in in this string quartet that i love f.
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major over $135.00 it's a movement in 3 it's fair for vijay to put he. did it the bomb bomb bomb bomb bomb bomb bomb. beethoven's rhythms are also a challenge for the army to quartet from germany. did it did it took to. get to that in particular to get to rock city talking to each other.
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we didn't like that. and i love that. they serve and also played around with the rhythm and his last string quartets in the 2nd movement he hides the 1st speech of the bar which would usually be the most important beat in european music. so what's the difficulty of playing this vivace for you is it playing against each other you start but not on the one you're on the 3 what's so hard about that. well basically it's like playing contemporary music everyone has got his patent and has to stick to it and yet as a group we still have to feel
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a common pulse otherwise we'd lose ourselves because it actually goes against our natural need for structure to stick to a pattern which is actually against the beat king attacked us then why don't you take this apart slowly and play it for me so that i can see where the 3 years and where the one is. i. hear you found each other on the one finally can you play it again fast the way it should be. so he's as like a football player jukes you or does some kind of fake soccer player will do they'll be playing the mic you think they're going this way and they do it he's doing it with the rhythm.
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it's incredible how much beethoven has shaped our music world whether in jazz film scores or rock music his innovations and ideas are everywhere. a world without beethoven. an imaginable.
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a world without beethoven is actually know what well everyone we've spoken to no
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one can imagine it i don't know i mean is a lot in the world always think about any person whatever they did you could take it out the world of the world 5 i mean you can do a lot of people never heard of the 2 you know in the in their labs are not bad. global food waste. mediately after the harvest. fresh fruit exotic end up in the garbage instead of the supermarket. that should change with the appeal to the liquid that increases the self life of food. is this the way to avoid food waste. 3000. and 30 minutes on.
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the morning. i cannot sleep because you're bored isn't love. in the war swallow on. the moon. there's no use no love. for the word. does a. word piercing the heard the. arguments new. earth closely. the currents.
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the boat. this is c w news live from for latin the u.s. reaches a week milestone more than 200000 americans have now died from code 19 president trump calls the death toll a shame but says it could have been worse his management of the crisis as a line of attack for us democrats with the presidential election just 6 weeks away . also coming up at the un general assembly trying to uses his pulpit to pass blame on to china. we must hold accountable the nation which unleashed this plague onto the world.

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