#Hotel Arezzo
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Arezzo stitched by Alyson Krumwiede. Pattern designed by Nora Corbett.
“She’s amazing. She is a hand drawn chart so many find her difficult but I loved stitching her. I was also traveling one week a month and had much extra work hours while I was stitching her. She was watching over my little family while I was in various hotel across the country.”
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Nothing like the sweet satisfaction of being on vacation in Italy and finally figuring out the secret to the locked garbage sorting bins on the street so that I can download the app and sort my garbage like a good citizen. The greatest achievement I’ve made as a tourist in Tuscany all week.
It occurred to me, while I was puzzling it out, was that maybe they make it this way because they think people who don’t put in the effort to figure it out are probably not going to sort their garbage properly anyway…? Or at least this is a side effect, whether intended or not.
I’m in Arezzo for a few days, presently. I was last here for a month or so abroad as an undergrad… like 15 years ago. But I didn’t have a good chance to actually explore the city because I was busy with the summer program, it took a long time to get over the jet lag, and then it got hot, and then the hills…!! Because the little school is a half hour walk from the city center, on roads that to this day do not have sidewalks/space for pedestrians. Just you, and the cars, and a tiny road…
I really like Italy.
I really like that the first hotel I stayed at in Florence, near the airport, the staff were straight up using shopping carts to move towels and toiletries etc. I liked the smell of the room, from the material of the building perhaps, which was old but not musty. I liked watching people watching at breakfast and how everyone, including this group of guys, used napkins to hold their pastries, and one fellow downed like three over the course of breakfast, and they were busy making toasted sandwiches with the breakfast spread.
I like that life seems interesting and lively here. Unlike in Germany, where I have been for a year, which is fine, and pleasant. But somehow! Boring. I don’t understand how the boringness can permeate the atmosphere so completely… It is possible that anywhere can become boring given time and familiarity, such as in the rural areas around here in Italy. But golly is Germany boring nonetheless. This was true the day my plane landed, and has been true ever since. Even the Christmas markets started feeling the same after a while…
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Le Colonnine Tesla Supercharger situate presso l'Hotel A Point di Arezzo in Località Battifolle: 24 stalli di cui 16 V3 ed 8 V2, situati nel parcheggio dell'Hotel dotato di comodo bar e bagni https://www.forumelettrico.it/forum/colonnine-tesla-supercharger-a-point-arezzo-park-hotel-arezzo-ar-loc-battifolle-t28654.html #arezzo #tesla #supercharger
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Gran Premio Nuvolari 2023 a Mantova
Manca poco alla partenza del Gran Premio Nuvolari 2023, in programma dal 14 al 17 settembre, che prenderà il via dal centro di Mantova, come omaggio alla leggenda del volante Tazio Nuvolari, icona senza tempo per tutti gli appassionati di motori. La storia di questa gara comincia con la morte di Nuvolari, l'11 agosto 1953, che commosse particolarmente Renzo Castagneto, Aymo Maggi e Giovanni Canestrini, ideatori, con Franco Mazzotti, della Mille Miglia, i quali erano legati al campione da una profonda stima. Per onorarne la memoria decisero di modificare il percorso della corsa più bella del mondo"facendolo transitare da Mantova e nacque così il Gran Premio Nuvolari, che venne istituito da allora e si è disputato dal 1954 al 1957. Alle edizioni storiche sono seguite, poi, a partire dal 1991 a oggi ben trentadue rievocazioni. Per la manifestazione del 2023, la città dei Gonzaga si appresta ad accogliere 275 equipaggi, che si sfideranno in un percorso di 1.130 km che attraversa Lombardia, Emilia-Romagna, Marche, Toscana e Umbria. Parteciperanno 49 case automobilistiche, dalle italiane Alfa Romeo, Ferrari, Fiat, Lancia e Maserati alle inglesi Jaguar, Aston Martin, Bentley e Triumph, dalle tedesche Mercedes, BMW e Porsche alle francesi firmate Ettore Bugatti. Al Gran Premio Nuvolari per regolamento sono ammesse le vetture costruite tra il 1919 il 1976 e saranno più di 100 i modelli anteguerra (1932-1939), accompagnati da numerose auto degli anni Cinquanta, oltre a una rappresentanza di 35 Gran Turismo prodotte dal 1991 al 2023, che prenderanno parte al nuovo Campionato italiano grandi eventi di regolarità moderna. Una delle novità dell'edizione 2023 riguarda le verifiche pre-gara di giovedì 14 settembre, che per la prima volta si terranno presso il Palazzo della Ragione in piazza delle Erbe, mentre quelle tecniche si svolgeranno in piazza Sordello. Seguirà il prologo serale attraverso le strade di Mantova, lungo un percorso di circa 14 km e venerdì 15 settembre le auto partiranno da piazza Sordello, cuore della città di Tazio, per raggiungere l'autodromo di Modena attraversando la Pianura Padana. Dopo una sosta per il pranzo, le auto si dirigeranno verso le colline emiliano-romagnole, con arrivo a Cesenatico. Il giorno successivo, sabato 16 settembre, si snoderà lungo un tracciato inedito che da Rimini conduce verso le Marche, l’Umbria e la Toscana, con passerelle attraverso piazza Duomo ad Arezzo e piazza del Campo a Siena prima di percorrere le strade del Chianti. Nel pomeriggio ci saranno prove cronometrate a Pieve Santo Stefano, verso il passo di Viamaggio, e nella Repubblica di San Marino con l’arrivo a Rimini, dove si chiuderà la giornata con il gala dinner in onore di Tazio Nuvolari nella cornice del Grand Hotel. Domenica la carovana tornerà verso Mantova, dove i pilori affronteranno le ultime sfide, le prove cronometrate di Meldola, passando poi da Faenza, ospiti della Scuderia di Formula 1 Alpha Tauri, e solcando il circuito dell'Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari di Imola e, dopo aver attraversato piazza Ariostea, a Ferrara, ci saranno i controlli a timbro di Conselice, Argenta, Poggio Rusco e Revere, che precedono l'arrivo a Mantova. Read the full article
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From Rome to Florence, part 2
We left the winery, drove back down the long gravel road to the highway, and headed for our next stop: Cortona.
Cortona is another little hill town with winding streets; we parked in a lot at the foot of the town and hiked up the steep hill to the center of town. It's an artsy town, full of little shops where artists sit inside painting and doing pottery.
I tried (and failed) to befriend a cat.
Once we'd gotten our fill of Cortona, we got back into the car and headed for our final Tuscan town, Arezzo.
Arezzo was also an extremely hilly town, but it afforded very nice views of the countryside.
We stopped by a bakery for some tiny sfogliatelle: lemon and pistachio. They were delicious.
At this point it was (say it with me) extremely hot and we were very tired, so we got back to the car and headed to Florence. And this is where things started to go downhill.
The plan was to return the car at the Florence airport, so that we could avoid having to drive into the city. First, of course, we stopped at a gas station near the car return, so that I could fill the tank. Challenge one was opening the gas tank, which required using the car key and turning it in a particular way. Challenge two was operating the gas pump, which did not have an integrated payment set-up, and which only had instructions in Italian. I used my phone to translate the instructions, which said that you should pump your gas and then pay at the cashier. So I put the nozzle in the car, pulled the trigger, and... nothing. I went to the little store area to ask for help, but of course it was closed and abandoned. I returned to the pump and continued looking around. There were other, newer instructions saying that I should pay at the pay station before pumping the gas. So then I had to find the pay station, which was a little ATM-like thing located between the pumps. And then I had to find a payment card that it would accept. And then, once I had authorized my card, I still couldn't figure out how to get the pump to work. (The problem, it turns out, was that I had left the nozzle in the car, and it had to be back in the cradle in order for the pump to activate. Which I discovered after about five despondent minutes.)
Okay, so eventually I filled the tank and we headed for the car return. Challenge three. I see a little Avis building, so I park the car by the curb outside it and try to find a way into the building. This entails wandering in a circle around the building and discovering a door propped open in the back. We go in; there's no one there. Then a woman comes running in and informs us that actually this is a staff building, and we were supposed to park in row A or B of the lot and then drop the keys in the drop box (hand them to her? of course not), and I have to go move the car, and no we can't leave our luggage here, this is only for staff. So Jilli stood in the sun with our luggage while I got back in the car and did a loop around the car return place and parked the car in the appropriate location.
Challenge four: getting to the hotel. The airport is pretty close to the city proper, so it seemed like it would be easy to get to our hotel from there. First we had to take a shuttle bus from the rental car area to the airport, which for some reason had to go in a big 2km loop even though the airport was only like 500m away. Then, Google maps was saying we should take a bus, which would drop us right by the hotel. Getting to the bus stop involved crossing a confusing variety of lanes of traffic, and when we got to the stop, a bus pulled up that was not the bus Google maps was telling us to take, and when I asked the driver about the bus we were supposed to take, he had never heard of it. He drove off and I realized we could have taken his bus, and that the bus Google maps was telling us to take wouldn't come for another hour.
So we dragged ourselves and our luggage back across the ridiculous lanes of traffic to the airport, where we got on the tram instead. The tram left us off about a 10-minute walk from the hotel, so we dragged ourselves and our luggage along the cobblestones in 99-degree heat, exhausted and dehydrated and starving. It was 8pm and I just wanted to eat something and drink a gallon of ice water and shower and fall asleep.
Anyway, we got to the hotel eventually, and got to our room, and I was very cranky for the rest of the evening, but at least we made it to Florence. The end.
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Mostra fotografica
DEA GRATIAS
Ritualità, ritratti e testi inediti
Di Flavia Gramaccioni.
A cura di Gea Testi
Direzione Claudia Cambria
Arezzo, dal 26 novembre al 9 gennaio 2022
Hotel l’Aretino
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Badia di Pomaio hotel, Tuscany, Italy | Alisa Anton
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Back in Paris, in my budget hotel, and thinking that this is a nicer budget hotel than my last budget hotel. I’m in an Ibis, and though like all other places I’ve stayed in Paris, the room is small, I think this one is slightly bigger – or at least better laid out – than at the other hotel I booked, and though it is a little more out of the way, I’m still rather pleased with my choice on booking.com. The Ibis Place d’Italie Butte aux Cailles has a comfy bed, a clean room, and feels nice in general. Now if only my cold will let me get some decent sleep, because this room is certainly appointed for it!
The past three days have been two hectic days of sight-seeing, followed by one quieter day just bussing back to Paris. The first day started early in Rome, with an excellent city guide, Vito. We went to the colosseum, but only to the outside, which was fine by me – I’ve already been inside, and the outside is the most interesting part. Vito talked about how the colloseum would have looked like back in the day, and how it worked, and then it was on to more sights, such as through the Pantheon, the church we’d seen in Angels and Demons, and the Castle of the Angels as well. We also stopped by the Trevi fountain, which I love. I threw another coin in, hoping to lead me back again. And then I ate delicious gelato.
Trevi fountain
From there, we walked toward the Vatican, where we had lunch nearby. I had another plain margarita pizza at a cafe, since I was feeling like something plain, but had learned from Vito that the pizza had been made for the queen Margarita back in the day, because she loved cheese. Pizza had had only tomato on bread, but a cook added cheese because she loved it, and basil, so between the red, green, and white, it is like the Italian flag. Also, I do love a good margarita pizza.
After lunch, we toured through the Vatican museum, then into the Sistine Chapel. You can’t take pictures, because it is a chapel they want to respect, but I truly gained a new appreciation for it. There were pieces, earlier in the museum, that looked like they were carved into the marble when really they were painted, the 3D look an amazing bit of genius, and for the first time I saw that in the chapel, how the painting, when looked at from the right places looms away from the wall, as though statues and not flat paint. I’ve never been able to see those 3D images in those old pictures that were trendy in the 90s, but I saw it here, as though my eyes were finally able to shift from their stringent focus.
After that, it was into St. Peter’s Basilica. I looked for a place to light a candle for my Nana, but there wasn’t one. I didn’t miss it – I asked one of the staff members. They don’t do that in St. Peter’s. Then it was on to Arezzo for the night, and we were all glad – we walked about 12 kilometres!
A perfect copy of Michaelangelo’s David.
The next day was more Italy. Florence was lovely, though rainy. My shoes soaked through (I’d brought a spare pair to throw away for Venice in case they got wet and uncomfortable there, as an alternate to heavy boots) but it was nice nonetheless. We saw some historical highlights, like the copy of the statue of David and other originals in an outdoors sort of museum, went to a leather factory, then had a Florentine menu with an enormous 2 kg steak (shared by four people, but still a massive amount of meat!). We also went to see the Leaning Tower in Pisa after that, where I did not spent 18 euros to go in and walk up seven flights of stairs, but I did watch about 7 hundred tourists take the “pushing the tower” selfie.
A view of Monaco.
Overnight we were near Genoa, then into France the next day. Our Monaco stop was unfortunately a no-go; the roads that could support our bus were all closed, with only the roads open to vehicles at 7.5 tonnes open for access into the country. Disappointing, but no one’s fault, and certainly not going was better than collapsing a road.
My sea glass finds!
Instead, we spend a little extra time at the Fragonard Perfume factory, where I learned more about perfume and may have made a couple of purchases. Then we went to Nice, where I had a nice lunch, before spending some time on the beach, listening to the waves and then combing through the rocks when I realized there were bits of sea glass in it.
After Nice, it was on to Cannes, where we made a red carpet stop. It was raining in Cannes, so I was glad of the relatively short stop (about 45 minutes to an hour, I cannot remember). I got my silly red carpet photo, checked out the handprints of the movies stars, and walked along the harbour to look at rich people’s yachts. Then it was onto the bus, and to the hotel for the night.
I wasn’t really red carpet ready – see hiking boots in place of Jimmy Choo shoes.
As today was all bus, stopping only at the gas stations to use the bathrooms and get some food (gas station food in Europe is pretty nice, actually). I napped a little and watched the movies Tim put on for us. Then it was off the bus, saying our goodbyes, and on to my hotel for the next few nights.
I’m looking forward to doing laundry tomorrow, believe it or not. Several days on the move has meant I’m nearly out of clean clothes, but that will not be an issue after tomorrow! Not sure what tomorrow afternoon will bring, but I am thinking I might go to the aquarium, since I just learned Paris has one, and I love aquariums!
EU Go, Girl! Adventures in Europe: Part # 8 Back in Paris, in my budget hotel, and thinking that this is a nicer budget hotel than my last budget hotel.
#arezzo#cannes#Europe#france#genoa#goEugo#goEUgo tours#group tour#ibis hotel#Italy#leaning tower of pisa#nice#pisa#Rome#Solo Travel#the vatican#Travel#vatican city
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Lucignano (AR) | Arezzo.Click Promozione del Patrimonio Culturale Artistico e Territoriale della Provincia di Arezzo All'interno della nostra guida troverai le informazioni aggiornate su cosa vedere, dove dormire o sulle migliori zone per mangiare. #lucignano #arezzo #toscana #tuscany #vacanzeintoscana #visittuscany #hotel #farmhouse #bb #restaurant #museum (presso Lucignano) https://www.instagram.com/p/CaYNdZ0M4Za/?utm_medium=tumblr
#lucignano#arezzo#toscana#tuscany#vacanzeintoscana#visittuscany#hotel#farmhouse#bb#restaurant#museum
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Mystery Island testers wanted :3
Okay, ready for some test files?
My Mystery Island is finally on the edge of being done. There’s still some lots that need to be finished and the world itself needs a little tweaking. I have encountered problems myself lately, like realizing I can’t ad a lot on top of CAW items or they’re gone, no big deal, but I can’t seem to be able to place my diving spot. I have before, but the world has taken me over two years to get this far, and I have probably forgotten a massive amount of things and changed so many things, that I don’t know where the problem is. Maybe I have accidentally raised the sea level?
Anyway, I would love to get some feedback and ideas at this point. I’m getting so bored with this world, but I want to get in done. More info and pics below the cut. Don’t look at the crappy pics if you still want to keep it as a secret!
So you were interested enough? Awesome ;)
The community lots are ment to be played with rabbit hole rugs, that are not used in these lots atm. I try to keep the CC to a minimum. I’ve cleaned the lots from Arezzo bathroom counter with Custard, but the lots contain items from Fana build set. The other CC should be package files, and they are hopefully all listed down in a file. Some lots like Majakkamestarin tupa and Villa Haave are not ready indoors. I have huge problems with style in Villa Haave. If you have ANY ideas how to make it look like it’s a bit expensive sea side hotel in the 90′s in Finland, give me a hint. I’m currently not liking at all :D
I have had to make some massive compromises in this world, because I don’t want a load of compulsory CC and anyway, it’s just a life simulator, it can’t be how I want it..... And of course I want it to be playable to a certain extent. This is ment for my storytelling purposes (like I ever get that far) and I appreciate more scenery and realisticness over smooth play, but I would like to upload the ready world to be playable. Villa Haave has some routing errors and the world is due to have some anyway, but I’d like to lessen it as much as possible. The cabins are furnished just for this reason, but they might not be really working because they are so tiny.
If you really bother downloading and installing these, please give me direct feedback! The island is totally not how I visioned it to be, and naturally there are some reasons it can’t be totally realistic, but because of having to compromise I fear the result is just blah boring. And of course all the lots are on different chunks, so they’re not perfectly loaded when taking pictures, which is my pet peeve in Sims 3 :(
These pictures reveal it all but the worlds name, but you shall find out.
Random world items. There’s a lot on the port, but the shed disappears if a lot is placed on it, so it’s just as it is in CAW.
Majakkasaari (The lighthouse island): Majakkamestarin tupa, Majakanvartijoiden tupa (ment to be a base camp), and sauna. There’s also a wood shed, toilet and a small empty lot, where I’m putting a CC ticket sale booth to the lighthouse). (You guessed it, majakka means lighthouse.)
Kirnusaari: Saaristolaismuseo and mökki 1
Kokkosaari: Luotsitupa, Kahvila, mökki 1, mökki 2
Ranta (why on earth the stairs look blue?)
Lintusaari: Merentutkimuslaitos, mökki 1, kalastusmaja
And finally the link to SFS: https://simfileshare.net/folders/edit/131914/
Thank you for your interest! <3
Edit: Oh no! I have used the letter "ä" on the lot names! 🤦🏼♀️ I hope that doesn't cause any problems... 🙈 I remembered to change it to an "a" in the world name only 😅
Edit: spotted some missing windows in the cafe and wall endings in kalastusmaja from the photos, oops... 🙈
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@parasympathic
Much like the language, Emil insisted that Italy itself was the true heart of romance. Every sight and smell something sensual, every taste divine, and every sound background music to envelop it all in the constant thrum of life and pleasure around them. Old but not antiquated, lively but not overwhelming, and charming without being contrived. It was the perfect place to fall in love or be in love or simply appreciate love, and if it was a point Monty tried to contradict, it was one Emil had every intention of making him agree to by the end of the trip.
It wasn’t a hard argument to win when Firenze was dressed for celebration, lights draped between the roofs of every street to paint the sky with a new set of stars, but Emil still carefully catered each day to show the very best of the city. Hidden gems tucked away from tourists and local restaurants with recipes lovingly preserved from generations passed. Every new attraction a personal one, paired with stories and memories and the kind of adoration he usually saved only for Monty. A deep and obvious love for the city that carved her Greek tragedies into marble and made art out of the austere. And so the days passed too quickly even when they took them all at the leisurely pace Italy demanded.
“You’re sure you don’t just want to swing by for dinner? We could be in a hotel in Siena tonight if we took the last train out,” Emil tempted, not sure if he was trying to convince Monty or himself at this point as they disembarked from the train at Arezzo. For once, their English stood out from the surrounding chatter, a marked shift from the tourist center of Firenze even in its off-season, and unlike the bigger city, Emil could navigate this one without so much as a second glance to the surrounding signs. “Just saying, you’re only one safe word away from art and vineyards.”
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Martina Rossi non morì per una caduta accidentale, ma nel tentativo di sfuggire a uno stupro. Un tentativo di violenza sessuale per cui la Cassazione ieri ha condannato a tre anni Alessandro Albertoni e Luca Vanneschi, due coetanei della provincia di Arezzo appena conosciuti. Le condanne sono ora definitive e per “fortuna” non sono andate tutte in prescrizione (ma qualche reato sì: ecco perché la pena è così bassa). Dopo oltre dieci anni da quel tragico 3 agosto 2011, la Corte di Cassazione ha scritto la parola fine: Martina Rossi morì precipitando dal sesto piano di un hotel a Palma di Maiorca perché stava fuggendo da un tentativo di stupro. E non certo per suicidio. Questa sentenza non darà certo pace ai genitori di Martina, persone di rara bellezza e meraviglia, ma dà loro se non altro un po’ di giustizia. A titolo personale, provo imbarazzo all’idea che due soggetti simili appartengano alla mia provincia e saranno di nuovo presto liberi. Per chi ci crede (io no), auguro loro di imparare qualcosa da questa abominevole vicenda, che li rende ai miei occhi (magari sbaglio io) imperdonabili per sempre. Permettetemi poi di dire che tre anni di condanna definitiva, per una vicenda così tremenda e una morte così straziante, mi paiono numericamente ridicoli. E quasi imbarazzanti. Chi capisce la giustizia italiano è bravo. Un abbraccio ai genitori bellissimi di Martina. Andrea Scanzi
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Per Mitch B. grandi risultati su Traxsource e tanti dj set in tutta Italia a dicembre
3 brani in Top Ten e sempre 3 nelle diverse Hype Charts, ben 12 in Top 100; un brano in Essentials e ben 60 presenti nelle Dj Charts... avete appena letto i numeri del 2021 del dj producer romagnolo Mitch B. su Traxsource, uno dei siti di riferimento per i dj che per i loro set cercano musica particolare, di qualità assoluta. E se i risultati dei dischi di Mitch B. sono davvero importanti, pure i dj set continuano, senza soluzione di continuità.
Il 7 dicembre è al White Beach di Cervia, con Hilary voice e qui porta io suo sound anche il 12 (all'ora di pranzo), il 18 e il 21. Già confermato anche il Capodanno in questo spazio d'eccellenza: con Danny Pee alla voce e Luca Gardini al sax.
Venerdì 10 dicembre, invece, Mitch B.torna al Grace di Arezzo, con Conte Max alla voce e Luca Signorini al sax. Il 19 invece propone un sofisticato aperitivo balearico al Fellini Scalinocinque, in centro a Ravenna.
//
Mitch B. è in console fin dal lontano 1998. E' anche produttore e la sua musica la pubblica su diverse label, tra cui la francese Jango Music e la spagnola Shamkara. Sul palco e in studio spazia soprattutto tra house, deep house ed elettronica balearica. Alessandro Bruno, questo il suo vero nome, è nato nel 1982, vive a Ravenna e da oltre vent'anni fa ballare molti dei più importanti club e dei luoghi di ritrovo di tutta Italia, da Courmayeur ad Agrigento. Miglior resident dj ai Dance Music Awards 2018, in Italia si è esibito spesso al Pineta di Milano Marittima, mentre tra l'estate 2020 e 2021 ha regalato il suo sound soprattutto a: White Beach – Cerva (RA), Byblos – Riccione (RN), BBK Pleasure Beach (Marina di Ravenna), Donna Rosa 38 (Marina di Ravenna), Lido Me Beach (Lido Adriano – RA), Top Club (Rimini), Alto (Cervia RA), Paparazzi (Milano Marittima – RA) (…). Guest dj per party legati a brand prestigiosi (Ducati, Shiseido, Jean Louis David, L'Oréal), Mitch B. suona spesso anche in giro per il mondo: ad esempio all'Hollywood Vip Room e allo Zazada di Patong in Thailandia, al Bali Beach Club e al Pacha Hotel a Ibiza, a Formentera al Pineta e al Beso Beach (…). Per quel che riguarda le produzioni musicali di Mitch B., il 2020 è stato un anno di grandi risultati: le sue canzoni sono state ascoltate quasi 150.000 volte su Spotify, da 78.000 persone, in 73 paesi nel mondo. In totale, ben 6.100 ore di musica ascoltata. "Strike it Up", uscita nel 2020 e prodotta con i Meters Follow ha superato da tempo gli 80.000 ascolti solo su Spotify. E su Traxsource, il sito di riferimento per i dj che cercano musica di qualità? Uno dei brani prodotti da Mitch B. è finito in top ten e ben 8 si sono classificati in Top 100 nel corso del 2020. Tra le sue produzioni uscite nell'autunno inverno 2021 / 2022 ecco "I Love the Nightlife" e "Get Up and Boogie", entrambe prodotte con Marcello Mazzoli ed interpretate dalla voce di Martina Feeniks.
Mitch B., Marcello Mazzoli, Martina Feeniks - "Get Up and Boogie" https://www.instagram.com/p/CWSY0RYMP2T/
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#repost @villalaborghettaresort nel cuore della #toscana, #hotel a 4 stelle lusso in una posizione privilegiata a soli 20 minuti da #firenze, 30 minuti da #arezzo, 1 ora da #siena. Luogo ideale dove trascorrere momenti speciali. #villa #resort #hotel #relax #specialtime #spa #honeymooninitaly #tuscany2019 #eventplanner #eventplannertuscany #tuscanyevent #coutryside #holiday #italyvacation #weddingplanningtime #casamentos #relax #specialevents (presso Tuscany, Italy) https://www.instagram.com/p/Bvu4TIwBhnt/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=d95liak5hrql
#repost#toscana#hotel#firenze#arezzo#siena#villa#resort#relax#specialtime#spa#honeymooninitaly#tuscany2019#eventplanner#eventplannertuscany#tuscanyevent#coutryside#holiday#italyvacation#weddingplanningtime#casamentos#specialevents
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