Sunday, 24 June 2012

JOSE FELICIANO ~ Guantanamera ~


Uploaded by on Oct 29, 2009
Jose Feliciano ~ GUANTANAMERA ~ Jose Marti



Uploaded by on Nov 21, 2008
una cancion dedicada para la mujer de guantanamo cuba




Bill Withers - Ain't No Sunshine


Uploaded by on Jul 22, 2007
Bill Withers in 1971, playing "Ain't No Sunshine"




Uploaded by on Jul 26, 2006
Not possible!







George Harrison - My Sweet Lord





Uploaded by on Aug 13, 2008
Live Concert

Friday, 15 June 2012

BONEY M - Rasputin (Live @ La Sberla 1978 - Long 12'' Version)


Uploaded by on Jan 1, 2011
Live at the italian show "La Sberla" 1978 (Long 12'' Version).

Tuesday, 12 June 2012

Angela Gheorghiu/Placido Domingo - L'elisir d'amore: Esulti pur la barba...



Uploaded by on Feb 22, 2011
Live in Prague, 1994
Angela Gheorghiu / Placido Domingo
Conductor - Eugene Kohn
Czech Symphony Orchestra

Concert program
•Mozart - 'Dalla sua pace' taken from 'Don Giovani'
•Mozart - 'Porgi amor qualche ristoro' from 'The Marriage of Figaro'
•Meyerbeer - 'O Paradis' from 'L'Africaine'
•Catalani - 'Ebbene? Ne Andro Lontana' from 'La Wally'
•Rossini - 'Barber of Seville'
•Donizetti - 'Esulti pur la Barbara' from 'L'Elisir d'Amore'
•Puccini - 'E Lucevan le Stelle' from 'Tosca'
•Puccini - 'Tu, che di gel sei cinta' from 'Turandot'
•Verdi - 'Gia nella notte densa (love duet)' from 'Othello'
•Bernstein - 'Candide'
•Torroba - 'Amor, vida de mi vida, Maravilla'
•Grigoriu - 'Muzica' from 'Vaurille Dunari'
•Penella - 'Me Lambas Rafaeliyo' from 'El Gato Montes'
•Sorozabel - 'No puerde ser' from 'La Tabernera del Puerto'
•Lara - 'Granada'
•Verdi - Brindisi from 'La Traviata'

Joyce Di Donato Barbiere di Siviglia



Uploaded by on Nov 4, 2006
Joyce di Donato sings "Una voce poco fa" from Rossini´s Il BArbiere di Siviglia

Barbara Eden sings Power On - I Dream of Jeannie

Uploaded by on Oct 27, 2011
http://www.youtube.com/user/jcbsebrigh

A United States astronaut finds his life vastly complicated when he stumbles on to a bottle containing a female genie.
Jeannie (Barbara Eden) sings Power On. Jeannie's twin sister causes havoc at a nightclub. and Major Nelson thinks its Jeannie causing all the havoc.
PLEASE READ BELOW:
This video is not mine and it's rights are the sole property of its owners.

Category:

Monday, 4 June 2012

Skye Edwards - Feel Good Inc., Call me


Uploaded by on May 2, 2007
Gorillaz cover




Uploaded by on Nov 9, 2008
Song from 2008 "Hollywood, Mon Amour" album. (Blondie cover)



Sunday, 3 June 2012

Skye Edwards (Morcheeba) - Rome Wasn't Built In A Day, Not broken


Uploaded by on Jul 26, 2008
Lead single from their third album, 'Fragments of Freedom, released in 2000. Director: Malcomn Venville. Morcheeba's just not the same without Skye Edwards




Uploaded by on Oct 18, 2009
New song by former Morcheeba vocalist Skye Edwards, from forthcoming album Keeping Secrets.

Melody Gardot: Who Will Comfort Me? on David Letterman


Melody Gardot: Who Will Comfort Me?
on David Letterman
Uploaded by on Jun 1, 2009

Melody Gardot - "The Accidental musician" (Parts.1, 2, 3 & 4)







Melody Gardot - Ain't No Sunshine (Live in Paris) [& bio]


 Melody Gardot doing the cover of Bill Withers "Ain't No Sunshine"
Uploaded by on Oct 25, 2010

Accident and therapy

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melody_Gardot

While cycling in Philadelphia in November 2003[10] she was hit by a Jeep Cherokee whose driver had ignored a red traffic light. In the accident she suffered serious head and spinal injuries and her pelvis was broken in two places. Because of these severe injuries she was confined to her hospital bed for a year and had to remain lying on her back. As a further consequence of her injuries she had to re-learn simple tasks such as brushing her teeth and walking. The most noticeable effect of the neural injuries she suffered is that she was left hyper-sensitive to both light and sound, therefore requiring her to wear dark sunglasses at nearly all times to shield her eyes.[7] The accident also resulted in both long and short term memory problems and difficulty with her sense of time. Gardot has described coping with this as like "climbing Mount Everest every day" as she often wakes with no memory of what she has to do that day.[4]

Initially prompted by an attending physician who believed music would help her brain injury drastically improve, Gardot began writing music after her accident[11] and since then often speaks and advocates in favour of using music for therapy. The accident had damaged the neural pathways between the brain's two cortexes which control perception and higher mental function, and made Gardot (in her own words) "a bit of a vegetable."[12] As well as making it very hard for her to speak or communicate properly, she found it difficult to recall the right words to express her feelings.

Music involving listening and making a verbal attempt to sing or hum is thought[who?] to help the brain form new pathways.[citation needed] At first, Gardot learned to hum and was eventually able to sing into a tape recorder. She made good progress and was eventually able to write original songs that sometimes referred to her rehabilitation.[12]

Gardot's doctor at the University of Medicine of New Jersey, Richard Jermyn, compared her condition to a computer. The computer was still intact and the memory was there but she could not access it. “That's what a brain injury does - It takes your ability to access that away”, Jermyn stated.[13]

For several years after the accident Gardot traveled with a physiotherapist and carried a TENS machine strapped to her waist which released pain reducing impulses.[7] While onstage Gardot explains, "the first maybe half a dozen times experiencing this, that was the only 30 minutes in my life that I did not feel pain for that moment. And it was addictive." And so from her accident to her first performances, her music career was born. “It was a most unusual start, but when you come from a place where things are tough it makes it that much easier to appreciate the times when life is easy”, she said.[14]

After her accident, Gardot could not listen to the music she had listened to before, as she could not tolerate anything above a whisper. Because of this, she had to find quieter, more soothing music to listen to. She recalls that while on the treadmill learning to walk again, she would listen to Stan Getz's The Bossa Nova Years album.[15] Because Gardot could not sit comfortably at a piano, she learned to play guitar on her back while in the hospital and shortly after began to write her own music.[16] During her recovery, she wrote material that later became part of a five song EP, “Some Lessons: The Bedroom Sessions” that Gardot produced herself.[17] Gardot was reluctant to record her songs at first, stating that they were too private for the public to hear. However she soon relented and her songs were soon being played on a Philadelphia radio station.[18]

She was introduced to macrobiotics by a friend who lent her a book on its benefits. She began to experiment and cook for several hours a day. As well as reducing her pain levels, she believes that macrobiotics helped her mental ability to cope with pain, helping her relax as the routine of cooking helped take her mind off her physical condition and she also found that she was able to sleep more easily.[19]