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tv   Musica Maestra  Deutsche Welle  December 27, 2023 7:15am-7:30am CET

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for the 1st grand slam of the year, the australian open in melbourne. you're watching dw news from berlin. you can get all the latest news and information any time you want on our website at c, w dot com. i'm terry martin for me and all of us here at the w names. thanks for watching the vacation as an applicant. do they have good weather? i, when i tell me that they don't have violence. can we go sailing? tulsa tissue today, because when they go to that, we set up to, you know, medical people watch stuff with car bama tenants, although i so not because the
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the words people have to say is too much. that's why we listen. we chose to every weekend on d, w. the, my name is the and the mexican conductor, the great musicians, friends from all over the world. the yeah. so i arrived in bremond about 3 days ago and started with orchestra comers 1111. it's wonderful group traveling now is
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the, the 1st concert tonight at the else even you call that? i've heard so much about i have never been there, but it's i've seen pictures and they say it's great and um we have a concert tonight, so will arrive, there will have a sound check or sort of general probate, but it's not really because we have not so much time so it has to be very efficient and just touch on whatever we can to make sure everybody feels comfortable and then the
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yeah. and what's on there? what's on the not, not everybody's going to think that that's what my life is like and it's not the most beautiful and view. yeah, no. oh, of the way to the teacher is like your mother that much.
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so you have time you get this out of the the
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. 6 it was a really nice concert because i had heard so much about this and fill out money. so to be able to, to for fun, there was already special on its own. but i think the most special things, i mean, is the orchestra to check. i'm really kind of the,
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there are really special people and really gift as musicians, but also really kind of open and playful. they're like, like children and all of them in the best possible way the, the architecture and music have always been related. so, and that, that, that the sign isn't itself very musical. it's like wave waveforms. and it's kind of if, if it's the hall was made out of a soft material, you could imagine that the sound waves could create those, those textures and forms and shapes. so it's really inspiring when you're in a beautiful place that says so much and has been done with so much care and
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thoughts, the and the audience felt it. also, the repertoire was ideals for, for them and music i have always loved. so it was definitely a high point for me the,
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i'm here with rotener after a concert with the see fund eventually invest kissing and as part of the kissing and the music. it was fun. we played, he played, i actually just conducted but he did the variations on the theme. i got reason, but i searched gershwin and then the reps, the let me get you that you paid, aggravated from the beginning. some of the 8 or 9 was captivated by this style.
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music from the agents to be something i've always done wrong. how did you transition from being of when they're kenton, someone from the super tightening? there's 220 is the one this competition. in addition, the counter final was that when i was 11 and that was on television and everything . so i got some attention from the concerts came in because i was on the 11th. so i
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want to come from full time counseling 2nd. so my pensions is patients going to manage. ready the, the, the, you know, the piano is such yeah, it's such a, i remember feeling like a slave younger when i was a pianist. i'm of course, as attendance as you were. so it was even higher, i guess, but you just can stop playing. and because if you play is still playing one day 2
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days, you can feel it, you can hear it. yeah. right. how do you feel about that? you really let go? or you always like and see about, you know, i, i think i'm quite good at letting go and i need to have in the next week, i want to keep trying to think about that as well. and when you're not doing that, what do you like to do online for reading? i enjoy like anyone else catching up with netflix and things? i know, i'm sorry. wow. that's from the i see
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a friend to me into multi i call to hiring sue. and i works quite a lot of the kind of price available to you must be so difficult. so i'm thankful that i'm doing this in an age where i can just press a button and speak to people and i just try not to be away from home too long. are you in one stretch where some of the then the,
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the, the in good shape. they do the real heavy lifting them on the sensory organs. our eyes, themes, frames, enough and muscles. how can we still colorado and what helps it's aaron, well, in good shape. next on d, w,
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a mystery of the stone, the giants, artworks that still captivate people today the thousands of years ago the but why? and what did thing with you about the people who make the in 45 minutes. on d w, the interested flips? do you do the same to china? she survived. oh sure. it's thanks to music. he was the nazis favorite conductor. he is martin, the degenerates to musicians under the swastika,
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a documentary about this sounds of power, inspiring story about surviving a whole month to get the tennis. i was the only one what life music in nazi germany, watch now on youtube dw documentary, the look deep into my eyes. what do you see? we can tell through eye contact whether someone is well disposed towards us and what their intentions are. it activates areas in the brain to control social behavior. even baby see guy contact. we find it harder to lie or fit while looking someone in the we find glances of up to 5 seconds pleasant. any more than that can feel intrusive and intimidating.

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