Harry West Vidéos
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2024-05-08
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Storey Bauer Nichols Spence Kempinski Noor Alm 2003 2005 2017
For more videos, pls click the link below. Subscribe, like, share. Tnx! (http•••) ■ MALL OF THE EMIRATES: Mall of the Emirates is a shopping mall in Dubai. Developed and owned by Majid Al Futtaim Group, it opened in November 2005 and is located at interchange four on Sheikh Zayed road. The multi-level shopping mall currently features more than 630 retail outlets, 7900 parking spaces, over 100 restaurants and cafés, 80 luxury stores and 250 flagship stores. It has a total gross leasable area of 255,489m2. In November 2005, it was named the World's Leading New Shopping Mall at the World Travel Awards in London. In 2017, Forbes named Mall of the Emirates as one of the top five shopping malls in Dubai. The project was launched in October 2003 at an estimated cost of AED 800 million (US$218 million), and was scheduled to be completed in September 2005. The architecture in the three-storey complex combines Arabic and Mediterranean elements, with each level connected to a car park. The mall was designed by the American architectural firm F+A Architects. The main building contract was handled by Khansaheb, while the Ski Dubai contract was given to Pomagalski. The chair lifts in the snow park and the structural steel works were handled by Emirates Building System and the piling by Bauer. Shops at the mall include a Carrefour hypermarket, Centrepoint, Debenhams, Harvey Nichols, Home Centre, Jashanmal and Marks & Spence. The mall also hosts a number of family leisure offerings. These include the Magic Planet family entertainment area, a 20-screen VOX Cinema, Ski Dubai, and the 500-seat capacity Dubai Community Theatre and Arts Centre. Ski Dubai is a large indoor skiing facility at Mall of the Emirates, offering snowboarding, ski lessons, children's play area and cafe. It opened in November 2005 and houses the world's largest indoor snow park. It is operated by Majid Al Futtaim Leisure & Entertainment. The mall has over 100 restaurants and cafes including eight restaurants in the Fashion Dome: Two international food courts. Restaurants including St. Maxim's, Salmontini, Karam Beirut and Apres and Sezzam on the first floor, UAE's African-themed diner Tribes at the Fashion Dome, Häagen-Dazs café, 12 new dining options on Level 2 including Omina Baharat, 800 Degrees Neapolitana Pizzeria, Dean & Deluca, Eat Greek Kouzina, Din Tai Fung, Azkadenya, Texas De Brazil & Common Grounds. The Cheesecake Factory, American restaurant, Al Halabi – Lebanese restaurant, P.F Chang's – American Chinese restaurant, Miu Shanghai Tea House and Restaurant offers nosh from Japan, China, Thailand and Indonesia. YO! Sushi – conveyor belt sushi. ■ AL BARSHA 1: Al Barsha is a collection of sub-communities in Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE). Al Barsha is one of the newer residential developments, and is located in west Dubai, south of Al Sufouh. Al Barsha is bounded by E 11 (Sheikh Zayed Road) and E 311 (Sheikh Mohammad Bin Zayed Road). The busy residential and retail district of Al Barsha 1 is centered on prestigious fashion boutiques in the Mall of the Emirates, famous for its Ski Dubai artificial ski slope. The surrounding streets are packed with global restaurants serving curries, tapas, and seafood, while hotels and high-rise apartment buildings overlook Sheikh Zayed Road, with its easy metro connections to Media Cityand Dubai Marina. Familiar buildings and establishment include: Kempinski Hotel, Ibis Hotel, Citymax Hotel, Barsha Star Residence, Grand Excelsior Hotel, Carlton Al Barsha Hotel, Centro Barsha Hotel, Rose Park Hotel, MD Hotel, ASCANA 1 Lodging, Golden Tulip Hotel, Cosmopolitan Hotel, Novotel Hotel, Ibis Dubai Al Barsha, Al Zahra Hospital, Lulu Hypermarket and Day to Day Dept Store. ■ WALK ROUTE: Mall of the Emirates, 22nd St, Sheikh Zayed Rd, Al Barsha 1 Rd & Al Thowima St ■ MORE WALK TOUR VIDEOS: 1. Carrefour to Al Noor: (http•••) 2. Al Noor Tower to Carrefour: (http•••) 3. Carrefour Market to Waterfall: (http•••) 4. Waterfall to Business Bay MS: (http•••) 5. B.Bay MS to Burj Khalifa MS: (http•••) 6. Dubai Water Canal Boardwalk-Part 1: (http•••) 7. Dubai Water Canal Boardwalk-Part 2: (http•••) ■ REFERENCE: (http•••) (http•••) (http•••) ■ REMARKS: Please don't forget to like, share, subscribe and leave a comment to my channel and click on the notification bell for the latest video updates. Thanks!
Christine Abbotts was struck 13 times to the back of the head with the ceramic kitchen utensil on her 29th birthday in a flat in Crawley, West Sussex. Financial consultant Zahid Naseem was jailed for at least 19 years after he was convicted over the brutal, prolonged attack. To Find Out More Please Click Above Street Crime UK Asks You To Join Us As We Take A Look Into Real UK Crimes And UK Criminal History With In-Depth UK Crime Documentaries Our Mission Is To Help The Younger Generation Learn From The Mistakes Made In The Past And To Hopefully Show That No Matter How Bad Your Situation Or Circumstances There Is Always A Way To Change And Do Good We Are Dedicated To Pushing The Boundaries When Bringing New Media And Content To Our Audience. Stay Connected Via Our Website, YouTube channel, and Facebook. We Hope You Enjoy It! @StreetCrimeUK @streetcrimeusa @streetcrimeaustralia Join This Channel And Help Support Our Cause (http•••) Stay Connected Via Our Website, YouTube channel, and Facebook. Website - (http•••) Facebook - https:(http•••) Merch://(http•••) Instagram: (http•••)
Feodor Ivanovich Chaliapin Clarke Bourdon Dmitri Usatov Gounod Sergei Rachmaninoff Mussorgsky Boito Arturo Toscanini Sir Thomas Beecham Pabst Private Opera Bolshoi Theatre Scala Metropolitan Opera 1847 1872 1873 1894 1896 1899 1901 1907 1913 1914 1918 1921 1926 1927 1929 1931 1932 1933 1937 1938 1943 1984
Feodor Chaliapin sings - in English - 'The Blind Ploughman,' with orchestra conducted by Rosario Bourdon, recorded by Victor in the Church Building at Camden, New Jersey, on 18 March 1927. From Wikipedia: Feodor Ivanovich Chaliapin... February 13 [O.S. February 1] 1873 – April 12, 1938) was a Russian opera singer. Possessing a deep and expressive bass voice, he enjoyed an important international career at major opera houses and is often credited with establishing the tradition of naturalistic acting in his chosen art form... Feodor Chaliapin was born into a peasant family...His vocal teacher was Dmitri Usatov +••.••(...)). Chaliapin began his career at Tbilisi and at the Imperial Opera in Saint Petersburg in 1894. He was then invited to sing at the Mamontov Private Opera (1896–1899); he first appeared there as Mephistopheles in Gounod's Faust, in which role he achieved considerable success. At Mamontov Chaliapin met Sergei Rachmaninoff +••.••(...)), who was serving as an assistant conductor there and with whom he remained friends for life. Rachmaninoff taught him much about musicianship, including how to analyze a music score, and insisted that Chaliapin learn not only his own roles but also all the other roles in the operas in which he was scheduled to appear. With Rachmaninoff he learned the title role of Mussorgsky's Boris Godunov, which became his signature character. Chaliapin returned the favour by showing Rachmaninoff how he built each of his interpretations around a culminating moment or 'point.' Regardless of where that point was or at which dynamic within that piece, the performer had to know how to approach it with absolute calculation and precision; otherwise, the whole construction of the piece could crumble and the piece could become disjointed. Rachmaninoff put this approach to considerable use when he became a full-time concert-pianist after World War I. On the strength of his Mamontov appearances, the Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow engaged Chaliapin, and he appeared there regularly from 1899 until 1914. During the First World War of 1914-1918 Chaliapin also appeared regularly at the Zimin Private Opera in Moscow. In addition, from 1901, Chaliapin began touring in the West, making a sensational debut at La Scala that year as the devil in a production of Boito's Mefistofele, under the baton of one of the 20th century's most dynamic opera conductors, Arturo Toscanini. At the end of his career, Toscanini observed that the Russian bass was the greatest operatic talent with whom he had ever worked. The singer's Metropolitan Opera debut in the 1907 season was disappointing due to the unprecedented frankness of his stage acting; but he returned to the Met in 1921 and sang there with immense success for eight seasons, New York's audiences having grown more broad-minded since 1907. In 1913 Chaliapin was introduced to London and Paris by the brilliant entrepreneur Sergei Diaghilev +••.••(...)), at which point he began giving well-received solo recitals in which he sang traditional Russian folk-songs as well as more serious fare... Chaliapin toured Australia in 1926, giving a series of recitals which were highly acclaimed...[He remained] perpetually outside Russia after 1921. He still maintained, however, that he was not anti-Soviet. Chaliapin initially moved to Finland and later lived in France. Cosmopolitan Paris, with its significant Russian émigré population, became his base, and ultimately, the city of his death. He was renowned for his larger-than-life carousing during this period, but he never sacrificed his dedication to his art. Chaliapin's attachment to Paris did not prevent him from pursuing an international operatic and concert career in England, the United States, and further afield. In May 1931 he appeared in the Russian Season directed by Sir Thomas Beecham at London's Lyceum Theatre. His most famous part was the title role of Boris Godunov (excerpts of which he recorded 1929–31 and earlier)... Largely owing to his advocacy, Russian operas...became well known in the West. Chaliapin made one sound film for the director G. W. Pabst, the 1933 Don Quixote. The film was made in three different versions – French, English, and German, as was sometimes the prevailing custom. Chaliapin starred in all three versions, each of which used the same script, sets, and costumes, but different supporting casts... In 1932, Chaliapin published a memoir, Man and Mask: Forty Years in the Life of a Singer... Chaliapin's last stage performance took place at the Monte Carlo Opera in 1937, as Boris. He died the following year of leukaemia, aged 65, in Paris, where he was interred. In 1984, his remains were transferred from Paris to Moscow in an elaborate ceremony. They were re-buried in the Novodevichy Cemetery... I transferred this side from an Australian laminated pressing of HMV DA 993.
María Teresa Carreño García Sena Chopin Émile Sauret Giovanni Tagliapietra Tagliapietra Teresita Tagliapietra Carreño Eugen Albert 1853 1862 1863 1866 1873 1875 1876 1882 1885 1889 1891 1892 1895 1902 1905 1917
Welte Mignon piano roll, 1905 María Teresa Carreño García de Sena (December 22, 1853 / June 12, 1917) was a Venezuelan pianist, singer, composer, and conductor. Born into a musical family, she was at first taught by her father and her talent was recognized at an early age. In 1862 her family emigrated to New York City, and at the age of 8 she made her debut at Irving Hall that same year. In 1863 she performed for Abraham Lincoln at the White House. In 1866 she moved to Europe, and began touring, making her debut as an opera-singer in 1876. It wasn't until 1885 that she returned to Venezuela, and then only for a short period. In 1889 she returned to Europe for more touring, settling in Berlin as her home base. She mounted two world tours in the early years of the twentieth century, but her health deteriorated and she died in 1917, in her apartment in the Della Robbia at 740 West End Avenue on the north east corner at 96th Street in New York City. Teresa Carreño married four times: 1873-1875 to violinist Émile Sauret by whom she had a daughter, Emilita 1876-1891 in a common-law union with Italian opera-singer Giovanni Tagliapietra, by whom she had two surviving children, Giovanni and Teresita (born 24 December 1882); the latter also became a famous pianist, under the name of Teresita Tagliapietra-Carreño 1892-1895 to pianist Eugen d'Albert, himself oft-married, and together they produced two more daughters, Eugenia and Hertha 1902-1917 to Arturo Tagliapietra, the brother of her former common-law husband Giovanni Tagliapietra. Plaque commemorating Teresa Carreño at the place of her deathTeresa Carreño was also a composer; she composed at least 40 works for piano, 2 for voice and piano, 2 for choir and orchestra, and 2 as chamber music. She also left many incomplete works. On April 2, 1905, she recorded 18 pieces for the reproducing piano Welte-Mignon. (Wikipedia)
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- chronologie: Chefs d’orchestre.
- Index (par ordre alphabétique): W...