Anthology featuring the surviving radio & television broadcast sessions by the legendary Jack Bruce recorded between 1970 & 2001. The set features all the surviving BBC radio and television appearances made by Jack between 1970 and 2001, along with a wonderful un-broadcast session recorded for the German TV show Beat Club by Lifetime (also featuring Tony Williams, John McLaughlin and Larry Young) filmed around the time of the album ‘Turn it Over’. The BBC material includes two legendary In Concert recordings. ‘Smiles & Grins’ is the most comprehensive collection of Jack’s broadcast sessions ever released and it includes an illustrated booklet and essay – a fitting celebration of the musical legacy of Jack Bruce, a much-missed master of his craft.
This stage performance is based on the play by Mikhail Durnenkov written specifically for the actress Julia Aug. She plays the role of a woman named Vera, a fan of Alla Pugacheva. For her, the image of the singer is a cherished Soviet myth without which it is impossible to imagine Russia. After finding out that the Diva has left the country Vera experiences a terrible shock and ends up in a psychiatric hospital.
The title is "What if history?" Starting with a man making a phone call from a public phone, Heisei office workers using shoulder phones, bubble-era women using mobile phones, gangster gals using flip phones, and other representative people of the time. Let's connect through dance. The song is sung by Thelma Aoyama, who became popular with the Docomo commercial "Soba Iru Ne". From there, the era progressed further with smartphones and VR, and finally to the present. All the people who have appeared so far will take to the stage and deliver the 30-year history of Moshi Moshi through song and dance, conveying Docomo's commitment to connecting people with energy.
Even after 25 years since the death of Mitar Subotić Suba, his music colors every corner of the life of those who listen to it, his talent embellishes the thought that everything is possible, and his words and spirit encourage that everything we do has meaning.
A woman outgrows her old patterns in body and soul, finding her identity. She is an inspiring role model for a growing generation of women who follow her example.
The story of Miroslav Čangalović, the greatest Serbian bass baritone of the National Theater Opera in Belgrade during its so-called Golden Age, from the 1950s to the 1970s.
A music documentary "Power in the Head" tells about the scene that was born in Slavonska Požega in the mid-1970s, and is also an autobiographical documentary film by Dalibor Platenik.
Pious restraint comes face to face with sensuous hedonism in Camille Saint-Saëns’s grand-opera retelling of the Bible story of Samson and Delilah. Multi-Olivier Award winning director Richard Jones returns to The Royal Opera to stage this spectacular fin-de-siècle masterpiece, not performed at Covent Garden since 2004. Elina Garanca stars as the Philistine Dalila, SeokJong Baek as the inspiring Jewish hero Samson and Antonio Pappano conducts the full forces of the Orchestra of the Royal Opera House. With superb singing in solos and duets of great intimacy and fervour, gorgeous music with thrilling orchestral interludes, and splendid choral numbers for the Royal Opera Chorus – this is a performance to remember.
Scored by Australian electronic music group The Avalanches and produced by Junk Food Dinner, SINCE I LEFT YOU is a visual essay about synchronicity, electricity, and sending signals with complicated computers.