sábado, 30 de abril de 2011

Sultans of Swing



The best guitar solo of all time. I love Dire Straights and I decided to share with you.Have a wonderful Sunday friends. 



You get a shiver in the dark
It's raining in the park but meantime
South of the river you stop and you hold everything
A band is blowin' Dixie double four time
You feel alright when you hear that music ring
And now you step inside but you don't see too many faces
Comin' in out of the rain you hear the jazz go down
Competition in other places
Oh but the horns they blowin' that sound
Way on down south, way on down south London town
You check out Guitar George, he knows all the chords
Mind he's strictly rhythm he doesn't wanna make it cry or sing
Yes and an old guitar is all he can afford
When he gets up under the lights to play his thing
And Harry doesn't mind if he doesn't make the scene
He's got a daytime job, he's doin' alright
He can play the honky tonk like anything
Savin' it up for Friday night
With the Sultans... with the Sultans of Swing
And a crowd of young boys they're fooling around in the corner
Drunk and dressed in their best brown baggies and their platform soles
They don't give a damn about any trumpet playing band
It ain't what they call rock and roll
And the Sultans... yeah the Sultans play Creole
And then the man he steps right up to the microphone
And says at last just as the time bell rings
'Goodnight, now it's time to go home'
And he makes it fast with one more thing
'We are the Sultans... We are the Sultans of Swing
'

To disconnect or not to disconnect?



Source: Speak Up

THE NEW YORK TIMES

To disconnect or not to disconnect?

That is the question I struggled with before leaving on a week-long trip to Costa Rica.
      Even though there’s increasing evidence to suggest that digital downtime can provide a healthy break for our brains, the thought of not being in constant communication seemed almost too foreign, too scary to enjoy.
      As the days passed before my departure, I tried to decide whether I should simply leave my phone at home or bring it and hide it in the inside pocket on my suitcase. Typically when I travel my iPhone also functions as my camera and my camera and camcorder. But I worried that it would be hard to resist posting a particularly gorgeous photo to Facebook, Twitter, Tumbir and the likes.
      But in the end I didn’t need to worry about it – the decision was made for me. I wasn’t able to get an internet connection on my phone during the entire time abroad.

SHOCK!

      The first time I attempted to switch out of airplane mode, we were a few hours into a road-trip down the Pan-American highway, travelling south in search of a sunny beach.
      Feeling guilty, I switched on data roaming and tried to update my Facebook status to not our journey and received an error message. My mouth fell open and I put my phone away, disappointed. I tried to get online a few more times to check the latest on twitter, see if I was still beating my opponents on Words with Friends Each time , zilch Nada.
      After another day or two, the sites I usually check on a daily basis seemed like a distant memory I found myself easily resisting the temptation to photograph images of each colorful storefront and rocky expanse of golden beach. Without an online audience to immediately share it with, it seemed more worthwhile to simply admire the scenery with my travelling partner and local friends. On our fast day, after an afternoon of surfing in Montezuma, my friend asked me to take a picture of her drinking fresh coconut water, poured directly from its just-cracked green hull. But I couldn’t. I’d left my phone in our room, forgotten until that moment.

ON MY RETURN…

      On the trip back to New York, I was proud of the fat that I’d been reformed, reconditioned to no longer evaluate my experiences by the number of ‘likes,’ ‘favorites’ and ‘shares’ that each photo, update and tweet earned.
      That is of course, until I landed in Miami for a layover. I immediately took out my phone and began checking in, posting updates and missives to Twitter and sending a couple photos through to Tumbir. But I didn’t forget the liberating feeling of no access, the freedom from digital obligations. It’s a lesson I hope I remember the next time I take a trip, even if it’s just a lazy afternoon at the park in my neighborhood. Readers, how do you handle this? Do you find it hard to unplug when you go away, or is it a welcome break from the daily deluge of information? When taking a vacation, do you give your brain a break from technology as well? Or is digital downtime too difficult to maintain? Unless you’re on vacation, I want to hear from you.

William Shakespeare, 1564-1616: An English Poet and Playwright Part I


Source: Voice of America Special English
www.manythings.org/voa/people 

William Shakespeare, 1564-1616: An English Poet and Playwright


I'm Steve Ember.And I'm Barbara Klein with EXPLORATIONS in VOA Special English.
Today, we tell about one of the most influential and skillful writers in the world. For more than four hundred years, people all over the world have been reading, watching and listening to the plays and poetry of the British writer William Shakespeare.
JULIET: "Ay me!"
ROMEO: "She speaks:
O, speak again, bright angel!"

JULIET: "O Romeo, Romeo! wherefore art thou Romeo?
Deny thy father and refuse thy name;
Or, if thou wilt not, be but sworn my love,
And I'll no longer be a Capulet."
You just heard part of a famous scene from a movie version of "Romeo and Juliet." This tragic play remains one of the greatest, and perhaps most famous, love stories ever told. It tells about two young people who meet and fall deeply in love. But their families, the Capulets and the Montagues, are enemies and will not allow them to be together. Romeo and Juliet are surrounded by violent fighting and generational conflict. The young lovers secretly marry, but their story has a tragic ending.
"Romeo and Juliet" shows how William Shakespeare's plays shine with extraordinarily rich and imaginative language. He invented thousands of words to color his works. They have become part of the English language. Shakespeare's universal stories show all the human emotions and conflicts. His works are as fresh today as they were four hundred years ago.
(MUSIC)
William Shakespeare was born in fifteen sixty-four in the town of Stratford-upon-Avon. He married Anne Hathaway at the age of eighteen. The couple had three children, two daughters and a son who died very young. Shakespeare moved to London in the late fifteen eighties to be at the center of the city's busy theater life.
Most people think of Shakespeare as a writer. But he was also a theater producer, a part owner of an acting company and an actor. For most of his career, he was a producer and main writer for an acting company called the King's Men.
In fifteen ninety-nine Shakespeare's company was successful enough to build its own theater called the Globe. Public theaters during this time were usually three floor levels high and were built around a stage area where the actors performed. The Globe could hold as many as three thousand people. People from all levels of society would attend performances.
The poorer people could buy tickets for a small amount of money to stand near the stage. Wealthier people could buy more costly tickets to sit in other areas.
Often it was not very important if wealthy people could see the stage well. It was more important that they be in a seat where everyone could see them.
It was difficult to light large indoor spaces during this time. The Globe was an outdoor theater with no roof on top so that sunlight could stream in. Because of the open-air stage, actors had to shout very loudly and make big motions to be heard and seen by all. This acting style is quite different from play-acting today. It might also surprise you that all actors during this period were men. Young boys in women's clothing played the roles of female characters. This is because it was against the law in England for women to act onstage.
Shakespeare's theater group also performed in other places such as the smaller indoor Blackfriars Theater. Or, they would travel around the countryside to perform. Sometimes they were asked to perform at the palace of the English ruler Queen Elizabeth, or later, King James the First.
(MUSIC)
Shakespeare is best known for the thirty-nine plays that he wrote, although only thirty-eight exist today. His plays are usually divided into three groups: comedies, histories and tragedies. The comedies are playful and funny. They usually deal with marriage and the funny activities of people in love. These comedies often tell many stories at the same time, like plays within plays.
"Much Ado About Nothing" is a good example of a Shakespearian comedy. It tells the story of two couples. Benedick and Beatrice each claim they will never marry. They enjoy attacking each other with funny insults. Their friends work out a plan to make the two secretly fall in love.
Claudio and Hero are the other couple. They fall in love at once and plan to marry. But Claudio wrongly accuses Hero of being with another man and refuses to marry her. Hero's family decides to make Claudio believe that she is dead until her innocence can be proved. Claudio soon realizes his mistake and mourns for Hero. By the end of the play, love wins over everyone and there is a marriage ceremony for the four lovers.
Shakespeare's histories are intense explorations of actual English rulers. This was a newer kind of play that developed during Shakespeare's time. Other writers may have written historical plays, but no one could match Shakespeare's skill. Plays about rulers like Henry the Fourth and Richard the Third explore Britain's history during a time when the country was going through tense political struggles.
Many Shakespearian tragedies are about conflicting family loyalties or a character seeking to punish others for the wrongful death of a loved one. "Hamlet" tells the story of the son of the king of Denmark. When Hamlet's father unexpectedly dies, his uncle Claudius becomes ruler and marries Hamlet's mother. One night a ghostly spirit visits Hamlet and tells him that Claudius killed his father.
Hamlet decides to pretend that he is crazy to learn if this is true. This intense play captures the conflicted inner life of Hamlet. This young man must struggle between his moral beliefs and his desire to seek punishment for his father's death. Here is a famous speech from a movie version of "Hamlet." The actor Laurence Olivier shines in this difficult role.
HAMLET: "To be, or not to be: that is the question:
Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer
The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune,
Or to take arms against a sea of troubles,
And by opposing end them?"
Shakespeare also wrote one of greatest collections of poems in English literature. He wrote several long poems, but is best known for his one hundred and fifty-four short poems, or sonnets. The English sonnet has a very exact structure. It must have fourteen lines, with three groups of four lines that set up the subject or problem of the poem. The sonnet is resolved in the last two lines of the poem.
If that requirement seems demanding, Shakespeare's sonnets are also written in iambic pentameter. This is a kind of structure in which each line has ten syllables or beats with a stress on every second beat.
Even with these restrictive rules, the sonnets seem effortless. They have the most creative language and imaginative comparisons of any other poems. Most of the sonnets are love poems. Some of them are attacks while others are celebrations. The sonnets express everything from pain and death to desire, wisdom, and happiness.
Here is one of Shakespeare's most famous poems. Sonnet Eighteen tells about the lasting nature of poetry. The speaker describes how the person he loves will remain forever young and beautiful in the lines of this poem.
Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?
Thou art more lovely and more temperate:
Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,
And summer's lease hath all too short a date:
Sometimes too hot the eye of heaven shines,
And often is his gold complexion dimmed;
And every fair from fair sometimes declines,
By chance or nature's changing course untrimmed;
But thy eternal summer shall not fade,
Nor lose possession of that fair thou ow'st;
Nor shall death brag thou wander'st in his shade,
When in eternal lines to time thou grow'st:
So long as men can breathe, or eyes can see,
So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.
Next week, we will explore the many ways that Shakespeare's work has influenced world culture over time. This program was written and produced by Dana Demange. I'm Steve Ember. And I'm Barbara Klein.

sexta-feira, 29 de abril de 2011

THE THEATRE OF DREAMS...OLD TRAFFORD

Source: Speak Up
OLD TRAFFORD


THE THEATRE OF DREAMS

THE HOME OF MANCHESTER UNITED

Manchester United for “Man Utd” is one of the top three football clubs in the world along with Real Madrid and Barcelona. The team know internationally as the “Red Devils” is one of the most successful in the history of the game but its origins were decidedly humble.

NEWTON HEATH

The club began life in 1978 as Newton Health LYR Football Club. It was formed by the Carriage and Wagon department of the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway at its depot at Newton Heath in north-east Manchester. Originally an amateur team, in 1892 it joined the Fist Divison of the Football League (which had been formed in 1888), but was relegated to the Second Divison after only two season. The team now known  and loved worldwide almost never happened, because in January 1902, with debts of £2.670 (the equivalent to £210.000 in 2010, but nothing compared with its current debt of £520 million!, it was practically bankrupt. Fortunately for future fans, four local businessmen paid £500 each to buy the club, and then changed its name. On April 26th 1902. Manchester United was officially born and, following its first league title in 1908 and the FA Cup a year later. Old Trafford was named as the team’s future home United played their first match thee on February 19th, 1910, against Liverpool, who beat them 4-3 (today Liverpool, rather than Manchester City, are United’s most bitter rivals). Last  year marked Old Trafford’s centenary.

BOBBY CHARLTON

The original plan for Old Trafford included room for 100.000 spectators, but it was eventually revised to 77.000. on March 25th 1939 the stadium registered a record attendance of 76.962, no for a home team match, but for an FA Cup semi-final between Woverhampton Wanderers and Grimsby Town, which resulted in a draw. Old Trafford got its nickname when Bobby Charlton, one of Manchester United’s most famous players, called it “The Theatre of Dreams.” Fans may never get to play on the hallowed ground – they aren’t even allowed to touch it – but they come to see it from all over the world. “It’s the wow factor they get as they step out into the stadium and sees it live at the first time,” says Alan Bradshaw, one of the tour guides. “. “Most of them will have seen it many, many times on television but just to be in one of the stands or to sit in the manager’s box, where they’ve seen Sir Alex Ferguson sit during a match, is magical for them.”

Another bit thrill is the visit to the home team’s changing rooms, where shirts with each player’s name hang from hooks in the wall. Everyone wants to have their photograph taken alongside the jersey of a favorite player. Sadly the shirts are copies, but at least fans may dream.

MUNICH

The tour also acknowledges that tragic dy in the late 1950s when British European Airways flight 609 crashed on take off from Munich. On board were the “Busby Babes.” A nickname given of the young player because of their manager. Matt Busby (a Scotsman, like Ferguson). Of the 38 passengers, 19 died with another three dying later in hospital as a result of their injuries. Eight of the victims were players, including another United legend, 21 –year-old Duncan Edwards, although (20-year-old) Bobby Charlton survived. One of Old Trafford’s more touching monuments is a clock with features the date of the disaster, “Feb 6th 1958.”

For more information visit: http://www.manutd.com .

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FAMILY ALBUM, 77




SOURCE: FAMILY ALBUM