Thứ Bảy, 28 tháng 10, 2017

Waching daily Oct 28 2017

first day off i've been there alone

stood outside the house with a lonely frown

frozen to the bone, it is well known

that i hate it on my own

suddenly a big man showed up

said he'd give me cake if i'd move up

told me i'm a good girl with a smile

since then it's been a while

quietly he laughed as i cried aloud

he surely felt so proud

we have no excuses for the pain and death of us

look me in the eyes and hear my quiet cries, we won't ever see the skies

is it something out there? this is the last moment that we both share

you can run but you can't hide, get ready for a ride!

helping them, i felt so so sad

where is your mom and where's your dad?

where's the silly smile that you once had?

it makes me really mad

i can give you life but i can't give you peace

i'll build you a body piece by piece

you will live forever, i think that's really clever

for you to get revenge

quietly i laughed as they start to stand

everything goes as i planned!

we have no excuses for the pain and death of us

look me in the eyes and hear my quiet cries, we won't ever see the skies

is it something out there? this is the last moment that we both share

you can run but you can't hide, get ready for a ride!

we've lost so much time of our happy little youth

look me in the eye and see my little smile, now you know the truth

is it something out there? this is the last breathe of this heavy air

thank you for the care, it is only fair, this is our last prayer

Hello everybody! CortezAnimations here, i just wanted to give you here short informations!

First of all, remember to check out Flannyr! She makes really awesome music! (as you can see here lul)

+ srsly, remember to check out all the animators from this collab! They did really awesome job on their collabs, just try to give them "some love":D

What can i say more? See you on my next videos! Also i wish you scaaaaryyy~ Halloween! >:D

Cya!

For more infomation >> [SFM FNAF] "Is it something out there?" | Collab | Song by Flannyr - Duration: 4:01.

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THIS IS FOR THE new subscribers. welcome HOME - Duration: 0:23.

Oh

I stay because you're actually making you're actually growing my channel little. Do you know because when you comment and you like?

dislike

All of that is going in their system and the more likes and the more views and the more comments

You post it bumps me up in the search engine, so thank you

For more infomation >> THIS IS FOR THE new subscribers. welcome HOME - Duration: 0:23.

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Hungarian Lesson with Zsuzsi - Where is..? - Hol van? - Duration: 4:03.

Hi,

Welcome to my home.

I would like to introduce my friend, my cat, Frigyes

We will explain how to use the postpositions and some suffixes related to the directions,

and we will learn some words in the flat.

Let's start it!

table,

chair,

wardrobe,

glass,

knife,

fork,

spoon,

sofa,

pen,

phone,

computer,

ball,

shelf,

suitcase,

picture,

book,

mirror,

newspaper,

bag,

slippers,

plant,

fan,

door,

plate,

television,

cat,

cat,

box,

lamp,

watch/clock

Postpositions:

under,

above,

next to,

behind,

between

Endings:

in, on

Questions:

What's this?

This is a book.

Where is the book?

The book is under the table.

What's this?

This is a box.

Where is the box?

The box is next to the computer.

What's this?

This is a ball.

Where is the ball?

The ball is between the box and the computer.

What's this?

This is a picture.

Where is the picture?

The picture is above the sofa.

What's this?

This is a fan.

Where is the fan?

The fan is behind the mirror.

What's this?

This is a cat.

Where is the cat?

The cat is on the sofa.

What's this?

This is a phone.

Where is the phone?

The phone is in the bag.

Thank you for watching this episode.

Visit my webpage and subscribe to my channel!

New episodes will be uploaded soon.

Bye bye!

For more infomation >> Hungarian Lesson with Zsuzsi - Where is..? - Hol van? - Duration: 4:03.

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What Is Attraction Marketing? - Duration: 2:08.

What is attraction marketing?

You may have heard this term being thrown around,

but you're like, "What exactly is it?"

Hey there, I'm Tracey Rose, and I use attraction marketing

in my business to attract clients and team members

to my network marketing business,

and you can do this in any niche.

In fact, lots of more traditional businesses do this

without you even realising.

So the definition of attraction marketing is

to attract customers and prospects to you by adding value,

providing solutions, serving your target market,

and creating content that addresses

your target market's top challenges.

So let me give you some examples.

Let's think about Tony Robbins, big motivational speaker,

super famous, and he does podcasts,

he provides videos, there's free training on YouTube,

there's free training you can get on his website,

but ultimately, you get that,

and then you are taught by him, you're attracted to him,

and ultimately, obviously, he's wanting

to sell his products, so his audio programmes,

maybe one of his seminars, or private coaching with him.

You know, ultimately, Mark Zuckerberg even does this

with Facebook.

You know, we are attracted to this platform

because we are able to use it for free,

interact with our friends.

He's given us something that solves our problems,

and that's connecting more and maybe growing our business

or something like that.

And, ultimately, what he's wanting us to do

is spend money on what?

Advertising, or sell our information to other companies.

So attraction marketing is nothing new.

In fact, it's a really, really smart way to do business.

So, think about your target market's number-one challenge,

and then go solve that problem.

Share it with them in the form of maybe a video,

a blog post, a podcast,

a webinar, a seminar.

So I hope that cleared things up about attraction marketing,

and if you know someone that will find this really helpful,

please share this with them.

I'll see you in the next video.

Bye.

(mellow music)

For more infomation >> What Is Attraction Marketing? - Duration: 2:08.

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Why this awful sounding album is a masterpiece - Duration: 10:04.

This is Trout Mask Replica. On the album cover is Captain Beefheart, a fish on his

face and a top hat on his head. The image is surreal, it's grotesque, and it's the

perfect visual depiction of the music you're about to hear.

My smile stuck. I cannot go back to your frownland.

the 80 minutes of music on Trout Masks Replica by Captain Beefheart and his

magic band have been compared to rusty barbed wire, and the New York Times once

said that Captain Beefheart's voice makes Tom Waits sound like Julie Andrews.

But, here's the thing, 41 years after its release in 1969 this cacophonous double

album was inducted into the Library of Congress's National Recording registry

right alongside Al Green's classic "Let's Stay Together" and the American standard

"Take Me out to the Ball Game". Not only that, a number of iconic musicians, visual

artists, and creative thinkers have named Trout Mask Replica a shining point of

inspiration for their work. How can an album that sounds like the musical

equivalent of barbed wire be recognized as such a significant piece of American

culture?

Let's start with Don Van Vliet known as Captain Beefheart. He grew up in

California on the edge of the Mojave Desert and by the age of 10 was an

incredible sculptor. Growing up he became captivated by the blues perfected by

musicians like Muddy Waters and Howlin wolf some 2,000 miles away in the

Mississippi Delta just as much he was entranced by the free jazz of Ornette

Coleman and John Coltrane by the late 1960s he had an album and a small-time

hit a cover of Bo Diddley's "Diddy Wah Diddy." For his next project he signed to

his former high school classmate, Frank Zappa's, label with the clear request for

unbridled creative freedom to do whatever the hell he wanted for his next

project. By 1969 Trout Mask Replica was created and those years were a glorious

mess for everyone involved in its making.

This is Samuel Andreyev. He's a composer who studied composition and music

analysis at the Paris Conservatory. A number of things, first of all it's an

album that I'm personally obsessed with. I think it's a phenomenal work of art.

it is mind-bendingly creative and honestly pretty difficult to listen to,

but its uniqueness can be discovered within its songs, especially Frownland.

Well the purpose of Frownland as an album opener is to just plunge you

headfirst into a maelstrom of just absolute strangeness.

Here's something interesting you can do as an experiment: compare it to a piece

like "You really got me" by the Kinks. Okay so the main guitar riff in that song da

da da dum da da da da that's two notes okay and that's what the song is built

out of. The most important thing is at the rhythm guitar, lead guitar, bass, drums,

and vocals are all locked into one rhythm - they are playing in sync. So

contrast that with "Frownland" where in minute 40 seconds you have no fewer than

I think like 23 individual motifs - it's actually 21 but that's still a whole lot -

and these 23 motifs are all individually rather complex. Added to that is the fact

that they're all heard stacked on top of each other all the time. Not only that

the traditional roles of rock instrumentation found in songs like you

really got me we'e just completely thrown out the window. Just listen

closely to the first five seconds of the track.

You'll immediately notice that the rhythm is off-kilter. That's because the

rhythm guitar and the lead guitar are playing a five over seven polyrhythm.

That means one guitar is playing five beats per measure at the same time the

other is playing seven. Okay so try clapping five beats in one hand and the

same time you clap seven. Not only is a piece polyrhythmic, it's also

polytonal. Both guitars are playing in different keys throughout the piece

against each other and often they're changing keys. Typically the bass would

ground the harmony and the rhythm but here it's treated like a third guitar so

it lives in its own world as well. And, it's playing chords which just rarely

happens in rock music. And on top of that you have these insanely virtuosic drums

that have another function altogether. The drummer is trying to take elements

of what the guitar is doing and what the bass is doing and basically glue them

together so that the piece coheres. In the end you have a really condensed song

with multiple instruments constantly changing keys tempos and time signatures

and across the entire album this happens. Trout Mask Replica is a masterpiece

because it does something that is almost impossible hard to do, it comes from a

very rare place of art making. So art scholars talk about the sentimental

versus the naive. On one end of the spectrum you have sentimental art - art

that comes from a place of a lot of formal training. At the other end you

have naive art - art that is almost childlike. It exists purely because the

compulsion to make it was so strong. The great thing about Trout Mask Replica is

that they literally splice together naive impulses into a structure. So it

sounds totally improvised it sounds like they're making it up on the spot but

they rehearsed these pieces, that's really hard. So how do you teach these

musicians to play your music? A kind whip. A kinda quip. A kind well

hell you know tape with the piano. A tape. Captain Beefheart was the singular

creative force behind Trout Mask Replica and he composed every song on the piano

without knowing how to play it. He pretty much didn't play any

instrument, but he had his magic band which consisted of remarkable young

musicians like Zoot Horn Rollo, Drumbo, Antennae Jimmy Semmens, and Rockette Mornton.

Their job? translate Captain Beefheart's avant-garde approach into a

blues and free jazz inspired rock album based on the music he created on an

instrument he really didn't know how to play. Let that sink in for a second. A

piano has 88 keys and with two hands you can easily play the lowest and the

highest keys at the same time if you wanted to.

Don Van Vliet expected those same sounds from his two guitarist and a bassist

who's instrument ranges were just vastly different. Here's Bill Harkleroad, you

might remember him as Zoot Horn Rollo. Oh I think it was just that there were

parts and then well why can't you play those notes what's wrong with you? Why

can't you play that note that's not on the guitar or seven notes at a time?

So there was no choice but to do it. He used to say you think you got a hard job man

I got a sing to that shit. And that is John French, the drummer. He had the

arduous task of helping other members of the band learn everything that came out

Don's piano. Sometimes I wondered I wondered if he knew that it was in a

different time signature you know, but he didn't know what time signature was.

They painstakingly rehearsed over the course of a year until they were able to

record the entire double album all the way through in just a few hours.

When I first came across Trout Mask Replica, I was instantly captivated by

the sound of those three words strung together. Every song title made me laugh

and so I listened to it and it instantly expanded my understanding of what music

could be. For some people it can be offensive it sounds like they're

deliberately flaunting the rules I don't think I don't view it that way I don't

think anyone's deliberately flaunting the rules I think I don't think it's

contrarian for the sake of being contrarian I think rather what it is is

its artistic for the sake of being original. Hey all thanks for watching

first I want to give a huge shout out to Samuel andreyev he was sort of the

inspiration for this video he made a 30-minute video about the

music theory of frownland that's linked below you should really really

check it out if you want to know more about that specific song in addition

he's the one that conducted the two interviews with John French and Bill

Harkleroad they're also on his YouTube channel thanks so much for watching and

I'll see you in a couple of weeks

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