tv Arts.21 Deutsche Welle December 11, 2022 11:30pm-12:01am CET
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oh is, is that daniel leaders, kent constructs are more than just buildings. he is the son of jewish holocaust survivors. how lucky that i was able to build to just using berlin. his architecture is a celebration of democracy and i, and architect of emotional. daniel starts december 25th on d w. oh, you either raise your 5th or you say, hallelujah. i try to do both. ah
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. it's dry with when it comes to music. taste differs white. some prefer jobs, others love techno, but one thing's for sure. beautiful sounds make us feel something. and that's what today's show is the one about the power of music to elicit emotion, loud chaotic, aggressive heavy metal fans or angry rowdy people right wrong. let's challenge this assumption. metal heads are actually some of the happiest and most peaceful people around it. even scientifically proven that listening to heavy metal has a positive impact on mental health house that you ask. well, reason number one is that metal heads feel like they're part of one big community.
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and what better place to see that, that in metal meta backin, the small town and she spent holstein, northern germany is home to just 2000 people. but in august, every year, metal fans from around the world flocked to vac and some 65000 have been waiting for this moment. the opening of the so called promised land. and now it's all for
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this cry any worse. these talk, looking, making friends aren't afraid to express their emotions as they share a moment with joy. ah, oh, the big festivals, but back in that's really huge people. everything is every one is friendly. everything is awesome. and really like, ah, finally of 75000 people. oh, buck in with it. so friendly, everyone's always rarely welcome and, and it's different from festivals in the u. k. festivals in the u. k. can be a bit erratic in a bed and it's not very nice, railey, and hair. it's always rarely warm. ah, and how the locals feel about who would have party go is invading their little town every year. they stuck on my backroom.
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i always say, these are the most lovable people you'll ever find under how they all stick up for each other and help each other out of china. there are no brawls. it's just great and it sounds like the metal had to switch the locals of their fate. and that they really are happier people but why would heavy metal of old genres have such easy going fans? why not folk music or some other genre? ah. is there something special about metal? it might have to do with reason number 2. metal provides an outlet for stress and angle, but not one about, sorry. i'm convinced that metal elicits in effect analysis that the ancient greeks knew about and used in great today's integrity on us. it's the theory of catharsis . you can translate that very roughly as cleansing middle i any going to buy that
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from the theory of catharsis originated with aristotle's theory of tragedy. the ancient greeks held the view that the audience sympathizes with the protagonist in his fight to cleanse themselves of negative emotions. such as fear, anger, and grief, respond that, and our metro music is. yeah, the exciting thing about metal music is that it benches. it's a very dark places that more than others on the i got on the one hand you've got is very aggressive. often foss based dominant music, which i think is unique to metal on it, on the other right. there's very little other music who's lyric speak of the murder, manslaughter, death, and with devil, i'm mod. unfortunately, that's why i think this music can elicit this cleansing effect. this being dotted isn't, was it guided is or isn't it, isn't that i and again, the effects our center liter. rosa is one of the leading experts to positive psychology and germany, metal musicians, the firm, his theory of heavy metals,
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cleansing effect, such as the members of the ukrainian band i t i can compare it with the people whom i study some to like sport like box at most of people who are boxing, they are, were polite, gently, people in their regular life because all their aggression, they looked at the trainings though, maybe the same thing happens with the rock music you listen were a powerful aggressive sounds. after that, you don't need that aggression to your regular life. it's just you put it to where you can allies it, it some kind of way. you don't let your aggression on your family on your friends. you just listen to harmony. heavy mental then can function as a kind of st space. negative emotions can be let loose on stage or in the mosh pit . and it does look more fun and more liberating than a therapy session. which brings us to reason number 3. measurement leads to
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feelings of joy and empowerment. a team of research is it? look laura universities, music lab in sydney van a study to see if fans of death metal music had become desensitized to violence. the research is findings. we found that in fact, the bias is the same for fans and non fans of violent music, which suggests that there is no desensitization to violence among fans of death metal music bed, just as empathetic that just is sensitive to violent depictions. they care just as much about violence outside of the musical context to outside as heavy metal may, will sound aggressive and intimidating. metal primarily makes it and fans happy to everyone else. it can indeed sound intimidating, which negates the positive effect. but don't worry, fans of the other shawn was,
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can experience the healing affix their own music. research is in montreal, conducted a study in 2021 and found that music has a great effect on the friends reward system. when we listen to our own favorite music, the same areas of the brain are activated as when we consume narcotics. a, to sum up, the power of music is great. and especially the power of heavy metal. the mental head community sees itself as one big family. everyone gets on and whenever necessary, any aggression or other negative vibes could be head banked into oblivion. catchy songs, drenched and sold, the las based band gabriel's has a front man with the voice of an angel, a
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loss, grief death, but also love and hope. these are just some of the themes and the music of the us faced trio. gabriel's yes, during the process of the album, ah, ryan lost his mom. i lost his grandmother and i lost a few of my really close friends. my uncle actually suicide. ah, this is kind of like i catch a little bit of a tribute album to him a but also a tribute album, canada every one else in the world to as well. like keep going hang on her girlish fun in the groups. highly anticipated debut album is titled angels and queens lee. the 1st installment was released in september 2022, maryland singer jacob lusk is the art angel of the gabriel's, the group's dynamic,
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visual and vocal center. pc i raised in a deeply religious family and the rapp mac of compton. in los angeles, the church became his 2nd home growing up. i was this kid, i had all these tools in my tool box. i could thing really high saying really low. so any time i got the chance saying i would get really excited to be back. oh i it was not good. it was not good at all. but now i've gotten older. have learned how to use it a little better. scrolling down they taught the woman by the waterfall, ah tough bud, ah morton. in 2011 jacob lusk was a contestant on the reality, television series, american idol. he then worked as a backing singer and directed a church choir while working on
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a commercial. he met film composer, ariba lucien and director ryan hope they formed gabriel's producing music that merges soul gospel, jazz, electronic music, and r and b. we just became friends in just it. we would get together may every 3 or 4 months and just stay together for 3 or 4 days and just write music just for fine jest for our soul really. and i think that's why the music is a little different and why it hits people differently. when we're close to 3 musicians opened up to each other, exploring their identities through their lyrics. at that time, jacob last did not consider himself to be especially political. he hadn't yet engaged with the black lives matter movement either. but then everything changed. now. oh, boy, started to think to myself while jacob, you a black boy from compton and your mother and grandmother with the for steph. and you haven't participated in this movement at all like you a park,
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like that's what i thought to myself. and so i got invited, it was actually brianna. taylor's birthday over. ha ha, at a protest in honor of brianna taylor, the woman shot dead by white police officers in 2020. he sung billie. holidays iconic song, strange fruit. oh, fellow, band member ryan hope later incorporated some of the footage into a gabriel's music video. gabriel's is a sparkling blend of different music genres, merging the personal with the political. it's also the story of an extraordinary friendship. we are an example of when you have real love, an honest conversation in truth and trust what the world really can look like. i think we've gotten caught up sometimes in the bad of the world that we forget to see that there is good, like there are good people there really are. ah,
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his soundtracks, unforgettable classics film compose ano, marconi left, an indelible mark on cinema history. o. any american is haunting schools to once upon a time in the west and the good, the bad and the ugly are as famous as the films themselves. ah, blue. whether it's the sound of the west and come by, written by an italian who never learned to speak english. ah
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laura coney composed all his music here in rome, mostly in his clotted apartment near the center of the city. doubt, it will not cover that. i will sheeka to me, this is an unparalleled house of my father's music roller. i have memories of directors coming here to talk to my father when they started project, and returning to listen to what he had composed in a william maria. and you marconi tru unsurprising, often counter intuitive sounds, a musical stones to evoke the films unspoken, seen, ah, choral music and a soaring soprano express. the ecstasy of the bandit. finally finding his buried gold in the good, the bad, and the ugly. ah ah, a haunting pamphlet, became
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a cry of the lost innocence. and once upon a time in america, when a child gangster is shot dead, ah, ah, and marconi solo violin over the final scene of cinema paradiso. it's the films called theme of childhood wonder love and the magic of the movie. 6 ah, born in rome and 928 laura county study trumpet, classical composition and direction here as the acclaimed national academy of center to tilio. but he drew a ration from everything around him in that he was speed up to you like to say it was perspiration, the sweat of hard work?
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i mean personally, i think it was an issue of culture of mindset. he had a classical musical background and then he studied experimental 20th century music very mean that it was, you know, he had this idea of always trying something new. him, but it should come quite cause the mobile problem. i called to i got up to the stick. that really is the essence of maestro monte connie's music. his ongoing search for new elements or novelty, february marconi son compose himself, recalls how inspiration would strike them. jimmy sean de la boy. i can remember when he composed the oboe theme for the mission the level already, because there were some renovations being done in the room here and there was a lot of dusts and noise and the piano and other instruments had been moved out of the way. poor very but when my father composed that thing,
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he immediately knew he done something special, a bit of a he called us all in and he played it for us because we were the 1st to hear that piece of music that now the whole world, nobody else got our room. i wonder i was at home on the telephone rang. kennimore said ellen. yes, a queen you t o n u yes. ah, and a recent documentary director, ron and chelsea wrinkles her marconi run to hum him the tune, bought up ahm da, da da da da da da da da da m. 2 i could feel my head doing news or so. i saw the film in the music.
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ah, maria. any school for the mission was one of 6 schools nominated for an oscar. he and 2 academy awards a lifetime achievement in 2007. and finally, at age, 87 and oscar for the school to the hateful 8 from director and number one, marconi fan, quentin tarantino. maria kind of composed the school without seeing the movie. but his growling the soon and drums, if i both the western setting in the vines to come murray county soundtracks, one who oscars grammy's and golden gloves. but his greatest passion was performing his music by speaking to dorothy then in 2017 marconi said live concerts. where he felt most free. ah, lucy, did she the film music i watch as constrained by the cinematic images,
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years exact lens dark like a stop while caroll metal. he, carol, when it comes to interpreting music, that's a kind of a prisoner. at a concert i have more freedom. i haven't been dug faster or slower, love and be more independent. sure. and the audience loved current trends. so the again, ah, before his death in 2020 marconi curated a new show, a concert of his greatest hits company by classic film clips and behind the scenes footage to be conducted by his son, andrea america. ah . n u maria coney. the official concert celebration has kicked off. it's ter in europe, an absolute must for fans of the late, great meister been now to
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a song that's been covered countless times, but it's still guaranteed to give you goosebumps, hallelujah. i've told with the for the 5th, the minor fall, major them the battle a paper saying that word for thousands of years just to affirm our little churn here. i wasn't much couldn't she leonard cohen's best friends song about the beautiful and frightening truths of human existence? you look around and you see a world that is impenetrable. that cannot be made sense. so
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you either raise your service or you say hello you. i try to do both a song as the psych, a graph of an artist this documentary has captured. it's very estimate. and basically, everything that preoccupied leonard cohen are being horny and sexual, being by romantic, about some sense of pure love being a spiritual seeker and a, and a jew with a serious judy, the jewish practice. but also being somewhat prone to doubt with leonard cohen tennis, all of his off melancholic songs to unravel life speech questions that granted they help you through the night, the wanna know governor with horn into a jewish family and montreal cohen attended synagogue and became immersed and
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biblical stories are critics of his early songs had the work of a dark romantic, a world weary poets. you know, or one of the early critics said in a leonard cohen, the songwriter who write songs that you want to slit your wrists to susan cohen carved out his path with l. s. d and women love pain lost. his relationship fell upon a new baby born in the early 19 eighties he met the french photographer, dominique, his them on. the pair lived in paris, one place where the song hallelujah, took shape. when i asked him said that he had been working 2 years already on the new yet, you know, he was often starting with the song in the morning 1st scene coffee then working on a living, amuse?
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oh, it's a modern prayer. the credo of a self doubter flitting between sanctity and desire. you really want music. do there are, i don't know how distinguish they are, but there were a lot of versus to the song. hello you. oh, they go like this. baby i've been here before. i know this room, my wife is laura law. i used to live alone. he reworked the song for 7 years or ah, it's an exploration of of everything that makes us human. whether it's the most base on the, the most um, despairing, the deepest darkest questions that we might have ah, to the most exalted and the feeling that one gets 11 does kind of open one's heart
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and do the word whole. yeah, ah, record album never came out. the space didn't know columbia records of issues with love. remember that he was crushed after that, only swaps he did so tans and doing something so precise and so beautiful and say, oh no, no, i'm not interested in a 2 count just uses have covered the song. although jeff buckley's rendition is among the most popular, at some point though, even cohen had heard enough of course, what was happy that the song was being used with. i think people, oh, stop singing for a little while. there's a reason why there you 2 clips of people singing it in kevin ukraine. you know, there are people singing in all sorts of moments of great danger and sorrow and
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still the song is communicating this combination. as leonard says, you can raise your fist or say hello your or do both of those is leonard cohen was still touring the world in his seventies, singing of the beauty and burdens of line for his last work. you want to talk her was released in 2016 by then leonard cohen. johnny was nearing its destination. i'm ready, my car. think about that last album, which was in the clearly confronting his mortality and came out just a few weeks before he died. but when you get a song like you want a darker, which is a 1000 candles burning, you want it darker, we killed the flame. well, that's if you're going to go there, it's beautiful,
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and what are the benefit? read with on d, w. for this christmas cake. people would gladly go to jail. kind of a is a long standing tradition in italy and some of the nation's best come from a bakery at a maximum security prison in pad a confection that's enjoyed by all of italy. the k come jail, your ro, max in 60 minutes on d, w. o, a niko is in germany to learn german lodge, benita, why not learn with him online,
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