25
25
Apr 26, 2024
04/24
by
RUSSIA24
tv
eye 25
favorite 0
quote 0
later, raising a lot of questions. 40 years after the composer's death, his biographer, musician ludwigript in munich. it was an album sheet with notes and an inscription for eliza on april 27 in memory of ludwig van beethovin. nohl published the play, but the manuscript soon disappeared again without a trace. who eliza was is still debated. in the 20th century, the german scholar of beethoven, max unger, suggested that... that zero poorly understood the handwriting and the work is dedicated to the pianist beethoven's student teresa malfati von rohrenbach. the composer wanted to marry her, but was refused. there is even a version that iliza could be the russian empress elizaveta alekseevna, wife of alexander i, nee louise maria augusta badanskaya. in general, the mystery has not been solved, but beethovin’s most romantic piece is now included in the compulsory curriculum of music schools around the world. on april 27, 1918, the all-russian central executive committee of the rsfsr issued a decree with loud name about the abolition of inheritance. the revolutionary document implied that t
later, raising a lot of questions. 40 years after the composer's death, his biographer, musician ludwigript in munich. it was an album sheet with notes and an inscription for eliza on april 27 in memory of ludwig van beethovin. nohl published the play, but the manuscript soon disappeared again without a trace. who eliza was is still debated. in the 20th century, the german scholar of beethoven, max unger, suggested that... that zero poorly understood the handwriting and the work is dedicated to...
22
22
Apr 27, 2024
04/24
by
RUSSIA24
tv
eye 22
favorite 0
quote 0
on april 27, 1810, ludwig van beethoven wrote the piano piece "kalise".nown throughout the world... this simple piece in the key of laminor became known much later, giving rise to a lot of questions. 40 years after the composer's death, his biographer, musician ludwik nohl, discovered the manuscript in munich. it was an album sheet with notes and an inscription for eliza on april 27 in memory of ludwig. zero published the play, here is the manuscript soon she disappeared again without a trace. who eliza was is still debated. in the 20th century, the german researcher of beethoven's work max unger suggested that nohl poorly understood the handwriting and the work is dedicated to the pianist beethoven's student teresa malfati von rohrenbach. the composer wanted to marry her, but was refused. there is even a version that iliza’s wife could be the russian empress elizaveta alekseevna. it will be a relic of past capitalism. after the deceased, their property, regardless of the presence of a will, will go to the state. true, disabled relatives could still recei
on april 27, 1810, ludwig van beethoven wrote the piano piece "kalise".nown throughout the world... this simple piece in the key of laminor became known much later, giving rise to a lot of questions. 40 years after the composer's death, his biographer, musician ludwik nohl, discovered the manuscript in munich. it was an album sheet with notes and an inscription for eliza on april 27 in memory of ludwig. zero published the play, here is the manuscript soon she disappeared again without...
79
79
Apr 16, 2024
04/24
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 79
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> he was talking about ludwig von mises, an austrianom born philosopher. >> economics. i'm sure you're familiar with him. i know we went you're over thoseghter] talking points. >> i think you did very well. yeah, i thought the last place,i but last thing i could watch and feel represented would be.i and i may fight. but everything you said, i was like, yes. now.and also that and also. yes. so now i'm going to watch like i'm a fan now. yes, exactly [appla yeah. every fight ever.ever i'm going to be one accident. i i think every fighter after, the fight they have to make one book recommendation that could serve economics, economics only twitter. this is whatdor. von mises whate said, if history could teach us anything, it would be that private property is inextricably linked with civilizatioopertys n. i think what happened is thats women i said this earlier, women want to feel protectedan. and taylor swift turned on the dams. she went with travis kelsey and, she just shot the beater mail. >> he's dead, you know. so now nowe look people look ats and they're like, try taylo
. >> he was talking about ludwig von mises, an austrianom born philosopher. >> economics. i'm sure you're familiar with him. i know we went you're over thoseghter] talking points. >> i think you did very well. yeah, i thought the last place,i but last thing i could watch and feel represented would be.i and i may fight. but everything you said, i was like, yes. now.and also that and also. yes. so now i'm going to watch like i'm a fan now. yes, exactly [appla yeah. every fight...
236
236
Apr 16, 2024
04/24
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 236
favorite 0
quote 0
care to share the appeal ludwig had with you? >> that's a problem. going to -- i wonder if amazon sales went up after -- midnight on saturday night after he won the fight, like oh i have to read this book. -- have to go read a book i just want some money, want to smoke some weed and drink at some point. [laughter] no have to go read a book? >> greg: i think it shows that he's a very diverse individual. i'm also thinking about adding a yvonne to my name. like gregory von got out. don't you think. [laughter] you. [applause] iq. hope you feel smarter. >> one gutfeld is a great -- has a very good ring. >> i'm going to go sell some books. up next,'s show was added so someone mailed him a spread. >> ♪ ♪ everyone. baby: liberty. oh! baby: liberty. how many people did you tell? only pay for what you need. jingle: ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ baby: ♪ liberty. ♪ i'm adding downy unstopables to my wash. now i'll be smelling fresh all day long. [sniff] still fresh. ♪ get 6x longer-lasting freshness, plus odor protection. try for under $5! my psoriasis was all
care to share the appeal ludwig had with you? >> that's a problem. going to -- i wonder if amazon sales went up after -- midnight on saturday night after he won the fight, like oh i have to read this book. -- have to go read a book i just want some money, want to smoke some weed and drink at some point. [laughter] no have to go read a book? >> greg: i think it shows that he's a very diverse individual. i'm also thinking about adding a yvonne to my name. like gregory von got out....
25
25
Apr 22, 2024
04/24
by
BELARUSTV
tv
eye 25
favorite 0
quote 0
among famous graduates of the college, publicist and teacher anastas ludwig kirsnitsa. as well as therian poet adam naruszewicz and the rector of the university of warsaw, karol wyrwicz. by the way, i heard that the jesuits were the first to abandon the stick, that is, corporal punishment, and used awards and distinctions as carrots. it is also curious that in the academic year of the college there were only 190 days; classes, to the envy of today’s students , lasted no more than two hours at a time. today, within the walls of the former collegium there is a children's choreographic school and a museum of belarusian polesye, here is his first exhibit - a tractor-monument. when the front line was approaching the city in 1941, a worker from the town of david dismantled the machine into separate parts, greased it with solid oil and buried it in the ground, but after the liberation of the bssr, the tractor was reassembled and given to him. personal name - captain, do not touch the museum exhibit with your hands. let's take a look inside, here, as if along strings , the historical path of
among famous graduates of the college, publicist and teacher anastas ludwig kirsnitsa. as well as therian poet adam naruszewicz and the rector of the university of warsaw, karol wyrwicz. by the way, i heard that the jesuits were the first to abandon the stick, that is, corporal punishment, and used awards and distinctions as carrots. it is also curious that in the academic year of the college there were only 190 days; classes, to the envy of today’s students , lasted no more than two hours at...
24
24
Apr 25, 2024
04/24
by
RUSSIA1
tv
eye 24
favorite 0
quote 0
based on the score by ludwig minkus, libretto by marius petipa and sergei khudyakov. and numerous historicaln the days of pitipa. the baeder designed by vikhorev seemed to the audience to be drawn out and boring, and the costumes were unsuccessful. this performance was removed from the repertoire. in 2007, sergei vikhorev took on the task of restoring the ballet about... and conveying the style and aesthetics of the era. the ballet was awarded the highest theater prize, the golden mask, but it did not stay in the repertoire. vikharev was upset by the fate of his productions in his native theater, and therefore he decided to leave st. petersburg. for 7 years he headed the novosibirsk ballet company. on balletomanes from all over russia flew in for its premieres. sergei continued scientific research in the field of ancient choreography and revived it. ballet capelia by marius pitep to music by leo de lieb. for this production he was awarded the golden mask award. in 2009, sergei vikhorev transferred the cheerful and playful production to the bolshoi theatre. beautiful music by the french compo
based on the score by ludwig minkus, libretto by marius petipa and sergei khudyakov. and numerous historicaln the days of pitipa. the baeder designed by vikhorev seemed to the audience to be drawn out and boring, and the costumes were unsuccessful. this performance was removed from the repertoire. in 2007, sergei vikhorev took on the task of restoring the ballet about... and conveying the style and aesthetics of the era. the ballet was awarded the highest theater prize, the golden mask, but it...
25
25
tv
eye 25
favorite 0
quote 0
needless to say, the 15,000-seat ludwig spark stadium was packed to capacity with fans.ver, they had no reason to celebrate after 90 minutes of play. marlon ritter opened the scoring with some luck. the hosts' goalkeeper tim schreiber was unable to secure the ball in the near corner, and the malian defender almami toure, who once played for monaco, hit sar bryukin's goal for the second time. at the end, passions ran high and the teams were ready to go down the wall wall, and the referee had to show four yellow cards at once, the result was 2:0 kaiser slautern will play in the german cup final for the eighth time, having achieved success twice on seven previous occasions. participants of the poralia world championship suddenly ended up on safari in kenya, so. spent the day off before the start of the next stage, several pilots and their dedicated navigators went to the masai mara reserve, where they were able to enjoy incredible views, look at the life of lions, elephants, giraffes, hippos and other representatives of the fauna, and for extreme sports fans they also provi
needless to say, the 15,000-seat ludwig spark stadium was packed to capacity with fans.ver, they had no reason to celebrate after 90 minutes of play. marlon ritter opened the scoring with some luck. the hosts' goalkeeper tim schreiber was unable to secure the ball in the near corner, and the malian defender almami toure, who once played for monaco, hit sar bryukin's goal for the second time. at the end, passions ran high and the teams were ready to go down the wall wall, and the referee had to...
38
38
Apr 21, 2024
04/24
by
NTV
tv
eye 38
favorite 0
quote 0
the great composer ludwig van beethoven had no talent for music, at least not genetically.nal group of scientists used a method which is sometimes used to assess children's musical abilities. it reveals a person’s ability to follow a given rhythm. in this sense, beethoven turned out to have rather mediocre genes, which means that in his case they were not responsible for his success. the authors of the work say that their discovery once again reminds. not all dna tests are particularly connected yet. there is so much to believe in a person's abilities. you are watching a miracle of technology and this is what will happen after a short advertisement. the top line of the world's hot five scientific and technological news. what did we find most interesting this week? and the question of our traditional quiz. as usual, we have prepared something tricky. previously, the temperature was as dry as it was outside, in winter we were freezing, we ran to the stove to warm ourselves, now it’s comfortable and people don’t get sick and productivity has improved, but where are they now? i
the great composer ludwig van beethoven had no talent for music, at least not genetically.nal group of scientists used a method which is sometimes used to assess children's musical abilities. it reveals a person’s ability to follow a given rhythm. in this sense, beethoven turned out to have rather mediocre genes, which means that in his case they were not responsible for his success. the authors of the work say that their discovery once again reminds. not all dna tests are particularly...
70
70
Apr 8, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 70
favorite 0
quote 0
and thank you, judge ludwig, for making that possible. i'm so excited that my friend editor, the great jeffrey goldberg, has come to to talk about the book. you know him one of the great journalists of our generation. he he's read it. and i can't wait to hear what he and to have our conversation. please join me in welcoming jeffrey goldberg. thanks, jeff. all right. i really do feel like we're under the protection of the first amendment tonight. you and judge, you drove this down in your pickup truck, one, one, one slab at a time. it's really quite it's really quite amazing. thank you, jeff. thanks, everyone being here. you all this is the subject of our talk tonight. i guarantee you that in 58 minutes you will be happier than were when you came in here. or at least you'll have self-knowledge that you didn't have before. you lost a path for improvement because this book is actually it's it's not about the pursuit of happiness as we as a society have come to understand the pursuit of happiness. and you talk about in the book, obviously, th
and thank you, judge ludwig, for making that possible. i'm so excited that my friend editor, the great jeffrey goldberg, has come to to talk about the book. you know him one of the great journalists of our generation. he he's read it. and i can't wait to hear what he and to have our conversation. please join me in welcoming jeffrey goldberg. thanks, jeff. all right. i really do feel like we're under the protection of the first amendment tonight. you and judge, you drove this down in your pickup...
33
33
Apr 11, 2024
04/24
by
RUSSIA1
tv
eye 33
favorite 0
quote 0
in his early youth, karl learned to play the violin and even took lessons from the famous virtuoso ludwigr decided to become a pianist. he went to weimar to become a student of the great franz liszt. klinward considered his acquaintance with liszt one of... just like liszt, klinward became an enthusiastic admirer and promoter of wagner’s work. it was he who was entrusted by wagner to perform piano transcriptions of his operas. the transcriptions turned out to be impeccable, but too technically complex. in a letter to klinwart , wakner noted that an ordinary pianist was unlikely to be able to perform this music. later, klinward created a light version of wagner's operas. clinward did an excellent job with piano transcriptions of symphonic works; his transcription of mozart's requiem enjoyed particular success. in 1868 , klinward accepted nikolai rubenstein's offer to move to russia to teach at the moscow conservatory. the famous critic hermann larouche recalled: klinward, invited to moscow as a professor of piano class, did not gain any popularity as a virtuoso. he was a good pianist, but
in his early youth, karl learned to play the violin and even took lessons from the famous virtuoso ludwigr decided to become a pianist. he went to weimar to become a student of the great franz liszt. klinward considered his acquaintance with liszt one of... just like liszt, klinward became an enthusiastic admirer and promoter of wagner’s work. it was he who was entrusted by wagner to perform piano transcriptions of his operas. the transcriptions turned out to be impeccable, but too...