#Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr
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good-in-space · 6 days ago
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"Some people are always grumbling because roses have thorns; I am thankful that thorns have roses."
Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr
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lukaszrygalo · 24 days ago
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To, co nas pociąga
To, co w kobiecie pociąga, rzadko nas do niej przywiązuje. Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr
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linusjf · 10 months ago
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Alphonse Karr: Uncertainty
“Uncertainty is the worst of all evils until the moment when reality makes us regret uncertainty. ” —Alphonse Karr. Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
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aperint · 3 months ago
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Frases Célebres
Frases Célebres Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr(1808-1890) #aperturaintelectual #frasescelebresaintelectual
“Nos gusta llamar testarudez a la perseverancia ajena pero le reservamos el nombre de perseverancia a nuestra testarudez.” Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr (1808-1890) Crítico literario, escritor, novelista y periodista francés. Sigue Apertura Intelectual en todas nuestras redes: WordPress Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Mastodon Te invitamos a que califiques esta…
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itsguysnightitsironic · 1 year ago
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Changed.
"The more things change, the more they stay the same" Les Guêpes (1849) by Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr
Not his war horse dressed on the Duchess reins to show that even after the change the horse still acts the same, that still under the red eyes still lives the same good friend that Marius knew, that even changed he's still the same after all, don't touch me-
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dangermousie · 1 year ago
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"Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose."
-Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr
GOD, I LOVE THIS DRAMA SO MUCH!
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waltfrasescazadordepalabras · 10 months ago
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La amistad entre dos mujeres comienza o acaba por ser un complot contra una tercera.
(Jean Baptiste Alphonse Karr)
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doriangray1789 · 2 years ago
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Fransız yazar Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr zamanında şu unutulmaz sözü söylemişti: "Bazı şeyler ne kadar değişirse değişsin, hep aynı kalır!" "Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose!" .
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literally-just-there · 3 months ago
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• Mary Magdalene in the Cave, Hugues Merle, 1868 • Young Mother Fleeing with a Child in her Arms, Artist Unknown, c. 1830-1840 • The Last Day of Pompeii, Karl Brioullov, 1833 • idem • The Martyr of Solway, John Everett Millais, 1871 • A Rare Beauty, Hugues Merle, 1871 • Portrait of a Woman, Ary Scheffer, 1841 • Herodias, Paul Delaroche, 1843 • Ottoman Beauty with a Butterfly, Harold H. Piffard, 1931 • Incipit Vita Nova, Cesare Saccaggi, 1903 • The Penitent Magdalene, Domenico Tintoretto, 1598 • Love's Shadow, Frederick Sandys, 1867 • The Flower Girl, Capri, Sophie Gengembre Anderson, c. 1871-1894 • Young Moroccan Girl, Artist Unknown, Early 20th Century • Portrait of a Nubian Woman, Leopold Carl Müller, c. 1873-1884 • Girl with a Book, Pietro Antonio Rotari, c. 1756 • Saint Apollonia, Carlo Dolci, c. 1670 • Judith Beheading Holofernes, Caravaggio, c. 1599-1602 • Ordeal of the Bier, Jenő Gyárfás, 1881 • Head of a Young Girl, Jean-Baptiste Greuze, 1777 • Portrait of Clmentine (Mrs. Alphonse) Karr, Henri Lehmann, 1845
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it's all in the eyes
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alonewolfr · 17 days ago
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La gente si occupa assai poco d'essere come bisogna essere, ma pensa continuamente a come bisogna parere.
|| Jean Baptiste Alphonse Karr
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anumberofhobbies · 8 months ago
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Finally, after another hold caused by a stuck fuel pump outlet valve
Stuck valve eh?
The more things change, the more they remain the same. “plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose" Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr, 1849
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good-in-space · 1 year ago
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"Some people are always grumbling because roses have thorns; I am thankful that thorns have roses."
- Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr
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lukaszrygalo · 24 days ago
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Odgadują wszystko
Kobiety odgadują wszystko; jeśli się mylą – widać rzecz przemyślały. Alphonse Karr
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plungermusic · 1 year ago
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Même si ça change, c'est encore la même chose*
Plunger caught up with Connor Selby again at the Half Moon, Putney, more than five years since we last saw him and, not surprisingly, there have been a few changes since then: from profile-raising support slots for The Who and Pearl Jam to signing with Provogue/Mascot Records; and from collaboration with session men du jour Redtenbacher’s Funkestra; and a slick, don’t-frighten-the-horses makeover.
Those last two events left Plunger a little worried that Connor might have taken a different musical direction to that of the long-haired, Clapton-is-God-t-shirt-wearing artist we’d witnessed. But this show proved our fears were baseless: as evinced in the opening southern soul-influenced pairing of I Can’t Let You Go and Falling In Love Again, the former displaying rather Warren Haynesish guitar phrasing and the latter some lovely interplay between Connor and Joe Anderton in a brief but tasteful guitar-off.
After the slow but swinging blues of I Shouldn’t Care, a long and impressive organ solo from Stevie Watts introduced the soulful amble of If You’re Gonna Leave Me before a new song, Truth Comes Out Eventually provided a splash of snare-on-three Caribbean-spiced 60s blues-soul.
Connor’s deft touch with various shades of blues was shown in the echt, slow, slow-blues of Love Letter To The Blues featuring some highly Larry McCray-like tone and phrasing; a rather funky Bobby ‘Blue’ Bland-inspired version of Goin’ Down Slow with tight snare-and-bass underpinning, and era-correct Fender Rhodes-y electric piano; and a fabulously swinging The Deep End, drawing on one of Connor’s heroes Ray Charles, with rim-shots for that late-night smoky-dive vibe, and excellent jazzy piano throughout.
Much to Plunger’s delight there was plenty ‘southern soul’ in a 70s vein (of the kind that reeled us in on our first hearing of Connor): the melodic keys and guitar of a mellow Man I Ought To Be were reminiscent of solo Gregg Allman - not least in Connor’s fine-grained-sandpaper voice - topped off nicely by a delightful tremolo-laden chordal break from Joe; and Hear My Prayer’s Derek & The Dominos/Delaney & Bonnie brisker jangle included anthemic piano, ride cymbal-led drums, Joe and Stevie adding bvs, and a sweet southern-fried closing solo from Connor.
The closing pair of tracks reminded Plunger of the modern day torchbearers of that whole 70s southern soul thing, Tedeschi Trucks Band: the relaxed opening of That’s Alright with ticking rim-shots and swirly organ shifted up a gear with a full-band break-in with three part bvs, while the lithe TTB funk-soul of Show Me A Sign, with its Stax-y insistent-snare chorus and bustling bass lines, was the opportunity for solo spots from all, most notably a fiery British Invasion break from Joe, and a cracking keys outing featuring some surprisingly Jon Lordesque touches including a smattering of Bach! Connor’s own solo (perhaps the longest in a night where brevity and restraint were watchwords) ranged from clucking muted funkiness to soaring southern bends and all points in between.
An inevitable encore saw Connor switch from Les Paul to SG for an old Plunger favourite, Emily - a loping D&B southern soul-rocker with hints of the Louie Louie riff, a Wasted Words-style descending organ wash, and fabulous Billy Powell-style piano… a cracking finale to a cracking evening.
Some things may have changed but the accomplished songwriting, restrained non-grandstanding (but still highly fluid) playing and wonderfully soulful vocal are all still there, as good as they were, if not better.
* “Even if it changes it’s still the same thing” - with apologies to Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr
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homelessly · 3 years ago
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I don’t seem to get Cyrano de Bergerac (الشاعر) and Sous Les Tilleuls (ماجدولين) out of my head… I don’t want to!
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nima-words · 4 years ago
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Cuanto mas cambian las cosas, mas siguen siendo las mismas
Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr
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