#amazon music city sessions
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
maneskinofficial: The live EP “Måneskin - City Sessions (Amazon Music Live)” is NOW available!! 🌟 Go listen to it on Amazon Music! - 12.05.2023
#måneskin#maneskin#ethan torchio#damiano david#victoria de angelis#thomas raggi#instagram#may 2023#my posts 💫#loud kids tour#europe 2023#april 2023#wiener stadthalle#backstage#amazon music city sessions#january 2023#america: nyc#austria: vienna
88 notes
·
View notes
Text
Amazon Music City Sessions, NYC 27.01.23
🎥 portaldamiano
#damiano david#ethan torchio#thomas raggi#victoria de angelis#måneskin#maneskin#video#amazon music city sessions#concerts#january 2023#timezone
72 notes
·
View notes
Text
when I say I love the Francesca outro, I mean specifically this part where he's the doing vocal runs
Hozier at Amazon City Sessions you are so important to me!!!
#hozier#andrew hozier byrne#the way he loses himself in the music is one of the most intoxicating thing ever#your honor i love him#amazon city sessions#francesca#unreal unearth
288 notes
·
View notes
Text
There’s going to be a Bastille Presents performance at Manchester’s Aviva Studios on October 15th that is going to be streamed via Prime Video and Amazon Music UK’s Twitch 👁 📺
📃 Music Ally
(🗣thank you, @spooky-stille 🫶🏻)
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
#Amazon Music City Session#måneskin#in NY#nice little gig we have here#damiano david#ethan torchio#thomas raggi#victoria de angelis
31 notes
·
View notes
Text
WALLOWS Live from Amazon Music’s City Sessions at Bowery Ballroom in New York City on May 23rd, 2024.
#wallows#dylan minnette#dminnette#braeden lemasters#cole preston#clay jensen#dailymenedit#mensource#dailymatestaredit#menedit gifs#13rwcast#13 reasons why#13rw#gayedit#mancandykings#mine
1K notes
·
View notes
Text
Måneskin performing Baby Said at Amazon Music's City Sessions
#måneskin#måneskinedit#maneskin#maneskinedit#damiano david#thomas raggi#victoria de angelis#ethan torchio#mine*#this is such a good tune#sounds even better live#now i need to hear 'read your diary' live performance#flashing tw
503 notes
·
View notes
Text
Camille Monfort, The 1896 Legendary Tale of "The Amazonian Vampire”.
Camille Monfort, The 1896 Legendary Tale of "The Amazonian Vampire”.
In 1896, Belém became rich by selling Amazonian rubber to the world, making the farmers overnight millionaires who built their rich mansions with European materials, while their wives and daughters sent their clothes to be washed in the old continent and imported mineral water from London for their baths.
The "Theatro da Paz" was the center of cultural life in the Amazon, with concerts by European artists. Among them, one especially caught the public's attention, the beautiful French opera singer Camille Monfort (1869-1896), who provoked indescribable desires in the rich gentlemen of the region and atrocious jealousy in their wives due to her great beauty.
Camille Monfort also caused indignation for her behavior, which was free from the social conventions of her time. Legend has it that she was seen half-naked, dancing in the streets of Belém while refreshing herself in the afternoon rain. Her solitary night walks also aroused curiosity when she was seen in her long, black, and vaporous dresses under the full moon, on the banks of the Guajará River, towards the Igarapé das Almas.
Soon, rumors began to circulate around her, and malicious comments were made. It was said that she was the lover of Francisco Bolonha (1872-1938), who had brought her from Europe and that he bathed her with expensive imported champagnes in the bathtub of his mansion.
It was also said that she had been attacked by vampirism in London, due to her paleness and sickly appearance, and that she had brought this great evil to the Amazon, having a mysterious craving for human blood, to the point of hypnotizing young women with her voice in her concerts, making them fall asleep in her dressing room so that the mysterious lady could reach their necks. Curiously, this coincided with reports of fainting in the theater during her concerts, which were simply explained as the effect of the strong emotion that her music produced in the audience's ears.
It was also said that she had the power to communicate with the dead and materialize their spirits into dense ethereal mists of ectoplasmic materials expelled from her own body in mediumistic sessions. These were undoubtedly the first manifestations in the Amazon of what would later be called spiritualism, practiced in mysterious cults in Belém palaces, such as the Palacete Pinho.
At the end of 1896, a terrible cholera outbreak devastated the city of Belém, turning Camille Monfort into one of its victims, who was buried in the Cemetery of Solitude.
Today, her tomb is still there, covered in slime, moss, and dry leaves, under a huge mango tree that makes her grave sink into the darkness of its shadow, only illuminated by rays of sun that penetrate through the green leaves.
It is a neoclassical mausoleum with a door closed by an old rusty lock, from which a white marble female bust can be seen on the wide lid of the abandoned tomb, and attached to the wall, a small framed image of a woman dressed in black.
On her tombstone, you can read the inscription:
"Here lies Camila María Monfort (1869-1896) The voice that captivated the world."
But there are still those who say today that her tomb is empty, that her death and burial were nothing more than an act to cover up her case of vampirism, and that Camille Monfort still lives in Europe, now at the age of 154.
10 notes
·
View notes
Text
In 1896, Belém became rich by selling Amazonian rubber to the world, making the farmers overnight millionaires who built their rich mansions with European materials, while their wives and daughters sent their clothes to be washed in the old continent and imported mineral water from London for their baths.
The "Theatro da Paz" was the center of cultural life in the Amazon, with concerts by European artists. Among them, one especially caught the public's attention, the beautiful French opera singer Camille Monfort (1869-1896), who provoked indescribable desires in the rich gentlemen of the region and atrocious jealousy in their wives due to her great beauty.
Camille Monfort also caused indignation for her behavior, which was free from the social conventions of her time. Legend has it that she was seen half-naked, dancing in the streets of Belém while refreshing herself in the afternoon rain. Her solitary night walks also aroused curiosity when she was seen in her long, black, and vaporous dresses under the full moon, on the banks of the Guajará River, towards the Igarapé das Almas.
Soon, rumors began to circulate around her, and malicious comments were made. It was said that she was the lover of Francisco Bolonha (1872-1938), who had brought her from Europe and that he bathed her with expensive imported champagnes in the bathtub of his mansion.
It was also said that she had been attacked by vampirism in London, due to her paleness and sickly appearance, and that she had brought this great evil to the Amazon, having a mysterious craving for human blood, to the point of hypnotizing young women with her voice in her concerts, making them fall asleep in her dressing room so that the mysterious lady could reach their necks.
Curiously, this coincided with reports of fainting in the theater during her concerts, which were simply explained as the effect of the strong emotion that her music produced in the audience's ears.
It was also said that she had the power to communicate with the dead and materialize their spirits into dense ethereal mists of ectoplasmic materials expelled from her own body in mediumistic sessions. These were undoubtedly the first manifestations in the Amazon of what would later be called spiritualism, practiced in mysterious cults in Belém palaces, such as the Palacete Pinho.
At the end of 1896, a terrible cholera outbreak devastated the city of Belém, turning Camille Monfort into one of its victims, who was buried in the Cemetery of Solitude.
Today, her tomb is still there, covered in slime, moss, and dry leaves, under a huge mango tree that makes her grave sink into the darkness of its shadow, only illuminated by rays of sun that penetrate through the green leaves.
It is a neoclassical mausoleum with a door closed by an old rusty lock, from which a white marble female bust can be seen on the wide lid of the abandoned tomb, and attached to the wall, a small framed image of a woman dressed in black.
On her tombstone, you can read the inscription:
"Here lies Camila María Monfort (1869-1896) The voice that captivated the world."
She embedded fear and share power to her subordinates by selling rubber to the people of Europe and the world at large but when are in her home she always gave you a new kind of fear
But there are still those who say today that her tomb is empty, that her death and burial were nothing more than an act to cover up her case of vampirism, and that Camille Monfort still lives in Europe, now at the age of 154.
8 notes
·
View notes
Text
ykaaar: Just another ig post - 30.01.2023
#måneskin#maneskin#damiano david#instagram#my posts 💫#january 2023#baldiano#thomas raggi#damià & er cobra#thomas with his guitar 🎸#👅#america: nyc#amazon music city sessions#ethan torchio#ethan drumming 🥁#club della salsiccia#black & white
86 notes
·
View notes
Text
Amazon Music City Sessions, NYC 27.01.23
🎥 portaldamiano
#damiano david#ethan torchio#thomas raggi#victoria de angelis#måneskin#maneskin#video#amazon music city sessions#concerts#january 2023#baby said
49 notes
·
View notes
Text
Måneskin - City Sessions (Amazon Music Live) – audio files to download
BABY SAID - City Sessions (Amazon Music Live)
THE LONELIEST - City Sessions (Amazon Music Live)
GOSSIP - City Sessions (Amazon Music Live)
BLA BLA BLA - City Sessions (Amazon Music Live)
How to add your files to your Spotify playlist?
49 notes
·
View notes
Text
Who’s watching 👀
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
Camille Monfort, The 1896 Legend of "The Amazonian Vampire”.
In 1896, Belém became rich by selling Amazonian rubber to the world, making the farmers overnight millionaires who built their rich mansions with European materials, while their wives and daughters sent their clothes to be washed in the old continent and imported mineral water from London for their baths.
The "Theatro da Paz" was the center of cultural life in the Amazon, with concerts by European artists. Among them, one especially caught the public's attention, the beautiful French opera singer Camille Monfort (1869-1896), who provoked indescribable desires in the rich gentlemen of the region and atrocious jealousy in their wives due to her great beauty.
Camille Monfort also caused indignation for her behavior, which was free from the social conventions of her time. Legend has it that she was seen half-naked, dancing in the streets of Belém while refreshing herself in the afternoon rain. Her solitary night walks also aroused curiosity when she was seen in her long, black, and vaporous dresses under the full moon, on the banks of the Guajará River, towards the Igarapé das Almas.
Soon, rumors began to circulate around her, and malicious comments were made. It was said that she was the lover of Francisco Bolonha (1872-1938), who had brought her from Europe and that he bathed her with expensive imported champagnes in the bathtub of his mansion.
It was also said that she had been attacked by vampirism in London, due to her paleness and sickly appearance, and that she had brought this great evil to the Amazon, having a mysterious craving for human blood, to the point of hypnotizing young women with her voice in her concerts, making them fall asleep in her dressing room so that the mysterious lady could reach their necks. Curiously, this coincided with reports of fainting in the theater during her concerts, which were simply explained as the effect of the strong emotion that her music produced in the audience's ears.
It was also said that she had the power to communicate with the dead and materialize their spirits into dense ethereal mists of ectoplasmic materials expelled from her own body in mediumistic sessions. These were undoubtedly the first manifestations in the Amazon of what would later be called spiritualism, practiced in mysterious cults in Belém palaces, such as the Palacete Pinho.
At the end of 1896, a terrible cholera outbreak devastated the city of Belém, turning Camille Monfort into one of its victims, who was buried in the Cemetery of Solitude.
Today, her tomb is still there, covered in slime, moss, and dry leaves, under a huge mango tree that makes her grave sink into the darkness of its shadow, only illuminated by rays of sun that penetrate through the green leaves.
It is a neoclassical mausoleum with a door closed by an old rusty lock, from which a white marble female bust can be seen on the wide lid of the abandoned tomb, and attached to the wall, a small framed image of a woman dressed in black.
On her tombstone, you can read the inscription:
"Here lies Camila María Monfort (1869-1896) The voice that captivated the world."
But there are still those who say today that her tomb is empty, that her death and burial were nothing more than an act to cover up her case of vampirism, and that Camille Monfort still lives in Europe, now at the age of 154.
12 notes
·
View notes
Text
Listen, idk how Hozier doesn't cry while singing songs off of his new album bc atm I'm watching the Live on City Sessions with Amazon Music and im bawling my eyes out.
8 notes
·
View notes
Text
You guys are killing me
#hozier#whyhozierwhy#i carrion (icarian)#good omens#good omens s2#go2#crowley good omens#good omens fandom#good omens season 2#aziraphale good omens#good omens 2 spoilers#aziraphale#good omens 2#i carry your heart with me#inefabble husbands#inaffable husbands#ineffable partners#innefable husbands#ineffable divorce#ineffable fandom#good omens meta#good omens analysis
8 notes
·
View notes