Dear God, but this is a fantastic track. Sir Duke, from the album Songs in the Key of Life Stevie Wonder's salute to the great Duke Ellington, and does both men credit. It topped the charts around the world and is rightly regarded as a classic.
It's an incredible song, here performed live and even better for that.
Simon Cowell please take note. Proper talent can sing and play live and doesn't need Autotune.
Hard to believe this movie is 39 years old. It's still regarded as the daddy of SF movies, and though it was eclipsed in publicity terms by the likes of Star Wars, 2001 managed where all others failed. It was taken very seriously as a movie, and not dismissed as a comic book flight of fancy.
When people think of Arthur C Clark they will always think of 2001.
A moment of satirical genius that makes a very clever commentary on the mundanities of our lives and just how seriously we take them.
the original film is Der Untergang(2004) [The Downfall: Hitler and the End of the Third Reich]
In the case of Michael Moschen the word that comes to mind is mesmeric. Most people today only think of him as the hands of David Bowie in Labyrinth, but there is so much more to him. He's so skilled, and thinks completely in his own way. This piece is hypnotic. Enjoy
One of the most imaginatively conceived and beautifully choreographed contortion/balance routines ever staged. Vasylyuk is an incredibly expressive artiste.
Remember those crazy Filipinos in orange jumpsuits who did the Thriller dance routine in the prison exercise ground?
Well they're at it again, this time to MC Hammer and Soulja Boy.
It's a funny old world.
Hard to believe John Landis's groundbreaking horror is a quarter of a century old. Still more entertaining and scary than many so called horrors released recently
Oh and Jenny Agutter is in it too...
This is the [very] American trailer for the screen adaptation of John Osbourne's groundbreaking play Look Back in Anger.
It misses the whole point of the play and the character of Jimmy Porter, but it is fascinating to watch.
If you get a chance, watch the film. It is magnificent.
A Night in Fantasia is Australia's premier orchestral concert of music from some of the most well-known Japanese animation and electronic games ever created.
In 2006 the focus was on Studio Ghibli
and it's composer Joe Hisaishi. this piece - Journey to the West from the haunting and majestic score of Princess Mononoke - was a feature of the concert
I have absolutely no information on either performer or piece beyond the fact that it is abolutely breathtaking.
If anyone can fill in the blanks or knows the artist, please do chime in.
If you are the artis, please get in touch.