#the royal conservatory
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rookiewhaler · 1 year ago
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have a told you how much i love the Royal Conservatory?
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invisiblestation · 1 year ago
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lexsnotdead · 2 years ago
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aaand one more
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fire-fira · 10 months ago
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Rewatching the atlantean episodes of season 4 of YJA, and while I get why the writers went with making Lori, Topo, Coral, Garth, Ronal, and Beluga representatives of various Atlantean city-states for the sake of convenience (and not having to introduce new characters), at the same time there's a part of me that's less than thrilled about it. :/
Like yes, I can buy them all winding up in official positions that could easily warrant them being included in some sort of council, but being representatives for entirely separate city-states... I dunno.
(Long story short: whenever I get my Atlantean World-Building series going, I'm definitely taking a different approach.)
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betty-cadaver · 2 years ago
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Take this and do with it what you will.
Fuck the royals. Fuck the Tories.
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taecasadilla · 5 months ago
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I'm picking up the piano again after a decade, and though I'm rusty, it's a lot easier than I was expecting.
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opera-ghosts · 1 year ago
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Aureliano Pertile (1885-1952) was a celebrated Italian tenor who enjoyed a 35 year career in major theaters on both sides of the Atlantic. The son of a poor shoemaker and his wife, Pertile was born in Montagnana…just a few blocks away and 18 days after the birth of fellow tenor Giovanni Martinelli. His vocal talents were apparent from a very early age. In 1894, Pertile began singing alto with the choir of the Cathedral of Santa Maria Assunta. At his parents’ insistence, he apprenticed as a goldsmith during his teens, but continued singing. At age 20, he was heard by composer Vittorio Orefice, who invited the young man to study with him in Padua. After five years of work, Pertile made his debut as Lionel in Martha at Vicenza���s Teatro Eretenio on February 16, 1911. In May, he sang the role of Vinicius in the Italian premiere of Jean Nouguès’ Quo Vadis? at Milan’s Teatro dal Verme. Reviews were stellar and the tenor’s career took off quickly. Over the next two years, Pertile made appearances in Brescia, Torino, Asti, Padua and Genoa, with his international debut occurring in Santiago as des Grieux in Manon Lescaut during the fall of 1913. While in South America, the tenor also sang in Buenos Aires and Valparaiso in such works as Un Ballo in Maschera, Mefistofele, Tosca, and La Traviata. Late in 1913, Pertile returned to Italy, where he spent the next few years appearing in Naples, Palermo, Florence, Bologna, and Rome. His La Scala debut occurred on February 22, 1916 as Paolo in Francesca da Rimini, leading to a lengthy association with the company.
By 1921, Pertile had appeared at most of the major theaters of Italy, Spain and South America. Following his Mexico City debut as Faust in Mefistofele in August, Pertile began his only season at New York’s Metropolitan as Cavaradossi in Tosca on December 1. Henderson of the New York Sun reported, “His voice has a tendency toward whiteness, but in its fullest volume it is warmer and resonant. His acting was that of the everyday tenor.” …not exactly the definition of a glowing review. In addition to Cavaradossi, he also sang des Grieux in Manon Lescaut, Grigori in Boris Godunov, Turiddu in Cavalleria Rusticana, Canio in Pagliacci, Radames in Aïda, and Julien in Louise. Sadly, the New York public never quite warmed up to Pertile. After only 13 performances of the aforementioned roles, as well as a pair of Sunday Night Concerts, Pertile was finished in the U.S. His Met career had lasted exactly seven weeks.
Pertile fared much better in his homeland. Arturo Toscanini, who had recently taken the reins at La Scala, invited the tenor to join him for a production of Mefistofele in March. This began a decade long alliance between the two, a highlight of which was Pertile’s creation of the title role of Boito’s Nerone at its premiere on May 1, 1924. Other world premieres entrusted to Pertile during his La Scala tenure were Wolf Ferrari’s Sly in 1927 (under Ettore Panizza) and Mascagni’s Nerone in 1935 (under the composer). The tenor was a superstar at La Scala, with “Pertile Nights” marketed to an adoring public. After Toscanini’s departure in 1929, however, Pertile’s importance in Milan began to diminish. Although the tenor would remain at La Scala until the early 1940s, he was no longer the central figure he had been during the 1920s.
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grandmaster-anne · 2 years ago
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Uploaded 17 February 2021 HRH The Princess Royal, Western Approaches HQ 80th Birthday message.
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catboyrightsdefender · 1 year ago
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first dutch class was fun!
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llitchilitchi · 2 years ago
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I just spent 7 hours playing dh2 please be nice to me my brain is fried
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strazcenter · 9 days ago
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Guest Service Excellence Crosses Industries, Continents
The city sounds familiar but the accent isn’t what you expect. When the Straz’s new senior director of guest services mentions he’s from Boston, you expect the steamrolled vowels endemic to the U.S. city’s natives. Anthony Winter-Brown’s accent is decidedly English, though. He’s from the other Boston, the original, actually, In Lincolnshire. In the U.S., of course, Boston means Bahstahn and…
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invisiblestation · 1 year ago
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hellocanticle · 1 month ago
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Frederick Block (1899-1945) Chamber Music: A New “Music in Exile” Release
CHANDOS CHAN20358 By whom? This is latest release in this fascinating series that seeks to record music that has been neglected. Music in Exile shares a kinship with Decca’s “Entartete Musik” (Degenerate Music) series, among others. That series focused on music and composers judged inferior by the leaders of the Third Reich. Their suppression of music paralleled their suppression of visual art…
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phinni-phouse · 2 months ago
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i had hope for my future then boom the evil royal conservatory of music strikes again
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tfotaandstuff · 9 months ago
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someone please make a time machine so i can go back in time and slap THIS LITTLE MAN
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because he wrote THIS horrible little piece that i (for some reason) chose to do :) (i am in pain)
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chinagmore · 9 months ago
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G-MORE Royal Park Easy DIY Glass Conservatory-GE2604
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For more information about G-MORE Royal Park Easy DIY Glass Conservatory-GE2604 please visit https://www.chinagmore.com/glasshouses/95-en.html
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