Quantcast
Channel: nostos-music.blogspot
Viewing all 58035 articles
Browse latest View live

ΗΠΑ-ΤΑ ΠΙΟ ΣΗΜΑΝΤΙΚΑ ΜΟΥΣΙΚΑ ΕΡΓΑ-ΣΥΝΘΕΣΕΙΣ ΤΟΥ 20ου ΑΙΩΝΑ

$
0
0

A 

Adagio for StringsAdagio for Strings 
March 13 -- Samuel Barber wrote this classical piece for string quartet, and it was first performed in 1938. Now a standard short piece for orchestra, "Adagio for Strings" endures in part due to its appearance in wo well-known film soundtracks -- Platoon and The Elephant ManAll Things Considered host Noah Adams talks with the directors of both films, Oliver Stone and David Lynch, about why they chose Barber's music for their movies. (9:00) 

Purchase this CD


Ain't That a ShameAin't That a Shame 
Fats DominoMay 1 -- Music historian Nick Spitzer profiles the great Fats Domino and his 1955 song "Ain't That a Shame." Domino was born and raised in New Orleans, and learned to play rhythm and blues piano from an older relative. He had a number of hit songs, including "Blueberry Hill,""Blue Monday," and "Walkin' to New Orleans," among others. "Ain't That a Shame" was his first hit not recorded in New Orleans, and it was also the first to crossover from the R&B charts to the mostly white pop charts of the day. (8:15) 

Purchase this CD


Alexander's Ragtime BandAlexander's Ragtime Band 
March 20 -- NPR's Susan Stamberg reports on the Irving Berlin tune that launched the era of American popular song. The 23-year-old Berlin's instrumental struggled out of the blocks, so he penned lyrics for it and, after superstar Al Jolson sang it on Broadway, it became a huge hit and went on to sell over 1.5 million copies of sheet music. 

Purchase this CD


All or Nothing At AllAll or Nothing At All 
November 28 -- Frank Sinatra's version of this heartfelt ballad was actually a commercial flop when he first released it in 1939, selling fewer than 8,000 copies. But when the young singer's career began to overheat in the early 1940s, he re-recorded the tune for his new label, Columbia Records, and it went to number two on the charts. The track proved to be a turning point both for Sinatra and the American popular music. NPR's Jim Zarroli reports, with comments from the song's lyricist Jack Lawrence. (8:59) 

Purchase this CD


Appalachian SpringAppalachian Spring 
Aaron CoplandNovember 13 -- Aaron Copland once confessed that his famous composition -- written for a Martha Graham ballet -- really had very little to do with Appalachia or spring. Many critics contend it's his best work and arguably the best dance composition ever created by an American composer. Jeff Lunden has an appreciation of music from an American master. (10:30) 

Purchase this CD


As Time Goes ByAs Time Goes By 
March 15 -- Susan Stamberg reports on this unforgettable ballad, written by a 26-year-old Tin Pan Alley writer named Herman Hupfeld in 1931, and made famous by it's central role in the 1942 filmCasablanca. Stamberg speaks to songwriter Gerald Marx, an associate of Hupfeld's, and with Murray Burnette, writer of the unproduced play Everybody Comes to Rick's, which eventually became the basis for Casablanca. (14:56) 

Purchase this CD


B

Back in the Saddle AgainBack in the Saddle Again 
July 24 -- The tune that became "Singing Cowboy" Gene Autry’s theme song was written by Ray Whitley in 1938 for the film Border G-Men, starring George O'Brien. Autry liked it so much that he revived it for his own movies Rovin' Tumbleweeds in 1939, and 1941's Back in the Saddle. Autry then made it part of his regular act on his radio show Melody Ranch, his TV program, and countless personal appearances. All Things Considered host Linda Wertheimer reports. (12:30) 

Purchase this CD


Blowin' in the WindBlowin' in the Wind 
Bob Dylan's The Freewheelin'October 12 -- Perhaps more than any other song of its era, "Blowin' in the Wind" captured the essence of America's youth in the early 1960s and quickly became an anthem of the civil rights movement and the anti-war generation. For all of its import, Dylan claims to have written the song in about 10 minutes. Peter, Paul and Mary made it a huge hit, and it remains the songwriter's most often-covered work.NPR's Brian Naylor investigates the song's origins and enduring influence. (11:24) 

Purchase this CD


Blue Moon of KentuckyBlue Moon of Kentucky 
September 11 -- Often called "the father of bluegrass," Bill Monroe first recorded this hit in 1946, and the song immediately connected with country music listeners. Eight years later, "the king of rock 'n' roll" was in Memphis' Sun Studios trying to come up with a B side for his first commercial single, "That's Allright Mama." Presley and his band recorded "Blue Moon of Kentucky" and the song reached an even wider audience. While Monroe was grateful for Presley's version, he went back into the studio and recorded a new version that was even faster than Presley's. Paul Brown has the story. (12:30) 

Purchase this CD


Blue Suede ShoesBlue Suede Shoes 
Elvis PresleyFebruary 7 -- Music historian Nick Spitzer pays tribute to the song which, in 1956, solidified the career of songwriter Carl Perkins. "Blue Suede Shoes" brought him instant success, but also developed a mutating life of its own as the first million-selling, triple-play crossover that moved from the top of the country charts to those of rhythm & blues, and then pop. (8:00) 

Purchase this CD


Body and SoulBody and Soul 
March 6 -- When jazz saxophonist Coleman Hawkins recorded "Body and Soul" in 1939, it instantly became one of jazz's most influential performances. Hawkins is known as "the father of the tenor saxophone" and for his seamless melodic extensions. Tom Moon, music writer for the Philadelphia Inquirer, offers his appreciation of the piece and the art of Hawkins' approach. (12:00) 

Purchase this CD


Born to RunBorn to Run (LP) 
Bruce Springsteen's 'Born to Run'October 9 -- NPR's Joanne Silberner delivers a true believer's appreciation of the 1975 Bruce Springsteen album Born to Run. The title track took the 24-year-old Springsteen six months to write, and at the time, he described it as his "shot at the title." (8:21) 

Purchase this CD


C

A Chorus LineA Chorus Line (Musical) 
May 22 -- This 1975 show changed the course of musical theater by dispensing with elaborate sets, costumes, and big stars, and involving a gritty element of realism previously absent on Broadway. The plot tells the story of dancers auditioning for a chorus line, pouring their hearts out to the director about why they should be chosen. NPR's Susan Stamberg focuses on lyricist Edward Kleban, who was the least known member of the show's creative team and, according to collaborator Marvin Hamlish, the man who gave the show its voice. (12:30) 

Purchase this CD


Coal Miner's DaughterCoal Miner's Daughter 
April 16 -- This song is country-music star Loretta Lynn's remembrance of her Butcher Hollow, Kentucky, upbringing. Married at 13, she settled in Bellingham, Washington, where her career took off after she performed several times on local radio stations. In 1972, Lynn was the first woman named "Entertainer of the Year" by the Country Music Association. NPR's Liane Hansen talks with Lynn on Weekend Edition Sunday. (12:50) 

Purchase this CD


CrazyCrazy 
Patsy Cline's 'Crazy Dreams'September 4 -- This 1961 hit, written by Willie Nelson and sung by Patsy Cline, is the number one jukebox single of all time. Cline initially didn't want to sing the slow-torch song -- she preferred the more up-tempo fare that she was used to singing. But her producer, Owen Bradley, convinced her that the song was a good fit for her vocal talents and expressive style. All Things Considered Host Linda Wertheimerspeaks with musicians from the original recording session in 1961, Patsy's widower Charlie Dick, country singer Kathy Mattea, and country music historian Paul Kingsburry. (12:30) 

Purchase this CD


D

DjangoDjango 
October 2 -- NPR's Tom Cole tells the tale of this jazz classic written by pianist John Lewis, leader of The Modern Jazz Quartet. Lewis wrote the tune as a tribute to the late gypsy guitarist Django Reinhardt, acknowledged as the first European jazz star. Cole profiles both men, revealing how two very different musical personalities crossed paths in the U.S. after World War II, and how each man's music influenced this legendary standard. (12:59) 

Purchase this CD


Dream a Little Dream of MeDream a Little Dream of Me 
March 26 -- The 1968 recording of this song by Cass Elliot and The Mamas and the Papas sold nearly 7 million copies nearly forty years after its composition by two little-known musicians. NPR's Elizabeth Blair reports on the tune's provenance. (10:16) 

Purchase this CD


DrummingDrumming (LP) 
Steve Reich's 'Drumming'July 17 -- Composed by Steve Reich in 1971, this work is considered a masterpiece of "minimalism" -- a genre that emerged in the 1960s and 1970s and is best described as stripping music down to its most basic elements, like a tone or a pulse, and then reworking it altogether through the repetition and overlapping of that single motif. "Drumming" is scored for keyboard-percussion instruments, voice, piccolo, and bongos -- and, when performed, can last about 70 minutes. NPR's Mark Mobley speaks to Reich about how the song became a turning point in his career and why it's now considered a touchstone of late-20th-century classical music. (12:30) 

Purchase this CD


F 

Fiddler on the RoofFiddler on the Roof 
May 7 -- NPR's Weekend Edition Sunday host Liane Hansen speaks with Jerry Bock and Sheldon Harnick, the team that wrote the lyrics and music for Fiddler on the Roof, which hit Broadway in September 1964. The show, based on the literature of Sholom Alechem, tells the story of Jewish villagers in czarist Russia, was produced by Harold Prince, and directed by choreographer Jerome Robbins. (17:33) 

Purchase this CD


Fine and MellowFine and Mellow 
Billie Holiday's 'Fine and Mellow'April 10 -- CBS's 1957 broadcast The Sound of Jazz invited a number of famous jazz musicians to perform on live television. The list included Billie Holiday, whose performance of this song lives on in the annals of great jazz and live-performance history. Nat Hentoff, Village Voice writer and one of the show's organizers, explains why he, and so many other jazz enthusiasts, consider this concert ground-breaking. (9:38) 

Purchase this CD


Fire and RainFire and Rain 
June 26 -- This pop standard from singer/songwriter James Taylor's 1970 debut album, Sweet Baby James, was the artist's poignant attempt to deal with a friend's recent suicide and his own struggle with drug abuse and mental illness. In a conversation with NPR's Noah Adams, Taylor revisits his feelings about that troublesome time in his life and shares thoughts on the song's longevity. (12:59) 

Purchase this CD


Foggy Mountain BreakdownFoggy Mountain Breakdown 
April 1 -- Written by banjo picker Earl Scruggs, this song was arguably the first tune that introduced wide audiences to bluegrass music. Popularized in the 1967 film Bonnie and Clyde, the song established the leadership role of the banjo. NPR's Paul Brown demystifies the crackling, syncopated style of banjo-playing for which the song, and bluegrass, is now loved. (10:27) 

Purchase this CD


4:334:33 
May 8 -- Writer Will Hermes presents the story behind this elusive musical composition written by avant-gardist John Cage. The piece, premiered in 1952, directs someone to close the lid of a piano, set a stopwatch, and sit in silence for four minutes and thirty-three seconds. Musicians and critics alike initially thought the piece a joke. But its premiere pianist, who never played a note, calls it his most intense listening experience. "4:33" speaks to the nature of sound and the musical nature of silence. (8:19) 

Purchase this CD


G 

Give My Regards to BroadwayGive My Regards to Broadway 
May 29 -- Featured in the 1904 musical Little Johnny Jones, a show which quickly flopped, this tune was penned by George M. Cohan, the successful actor, composer, and musical producer at the turn of the century who also wrote "Yankee Doodle Dandy" and "You're a Grand Old Flag." The song found new life in the film Yankee Doodle Dandy, starring James Cagney and based on the life of Cohan. Our story comes from writer/musician Max Morath, who researched and performed vaudeville for over 50 years. (8:00) 

Purchase this CD


Gone with the WindGone with the Wind (film score) 
December 17 -- The music from one of the most popular American films of all time had a tremendous impact on movie scores in the decades following its 1939 release. Max Steiner's work is instantly recognized today and is emblematic of both musical scoring and the cinema itself. NPR's Andy Trudeau guides us through a masterpiece of composition. (11:00) 

Purchase this CD


Good VibrationsGood Vibrations 
The Beach Boys''Good Vibrations'June 12 -- Written by Brian Wilson, this song epitomized the sound of garage-band rock and featured a theremin, prototype for the modern synthesizer. All Things Considered Director Bob Boilen speaks to Wilson, who tells that the song was stitched together from hundreds of recording sessions. Hear the hit song in its various stages of development and learn about one of the most influential pop bands of our time. (12:30) 

Purchase this CD


GracelandGraceland (LP) 
July 10 -- Paul Simon traveled to South Africa in 1985 after hearing a friend's tape of music from the country. His trip would become a cultural, political, and personal journey. After 10 days of working with local musicians, Simon returned to New York with several South African artists to produce an extraordinary juxtaposition of rhythm and story-based lyrics. NPR's Elizabeth Blair talks to Simon about the making of the album. (12:30) 

Purchase this CD


Grand Canyon SuiteGrand Canyon Suite 
October 29 -- Born in New York, Ferde Grofe quit school at 13 and set off across the country on a series of odd jobs. He first saw the Grand Canyon on a 1916 trip with other workers and completed the Grand Canyon Suite in 1931. Theresa Schiavone profiles Ferde Grofe's classical masterpiece. (10:07) 

Purchase this CD


Great Balls of FireGreat Balls of Fire 
November 3 -- Record producer Don Dixon (REM, The Smithereens) reveals the true roots of "the Devil's music" in this hit by the great Jerry Lee Lewis. Dixon traces the path that led Lewis into Sam Phillips' famous Sun Records studio in Memphis, where conversational outtakes from the "Great Balls of Fire" sessions reveal a tortured soul on the verge of stardom. (7:25) 

Purchase this CD


The Great PretenderThe Great Pretender 
December 2 -- NPR's Loretta Williams reports on "The Great Pretender," second in a string of chart-topping hit songs for The Platters, the first black act to garner popularity from white audiences. Managed by the legendary Buck Ram, who also wrote "The Great Pretender," The Platters were, for a time, the most successful vocal group in the world. (10:30) 

Purchase this CD


Guys & DollsGuys & Dolls (Musical) 
November 25 -- Based on Damon Runyon's short story The Idyll of Miss Sarah Brown, this musical centers on the character of Nathan Detroit, the organizer of the oldest-established, permanent-floating crap game in New York. Guys and Dolls opened at the 46th Street Theatre on November 24, 1950, and enjoyed a run of 1,200 performances. Listen as Weekend Edition Saturday hostScott Simon explores the story behind the musical. (17:54) 

Purchase this CD


H 

Hellhound on my TrailHellhound on my Trail 
June 5 -- NPR's Peter Breslow talks about the profound impact this song had on his life. Breslow's first exposure to the blues, "Hellhound on my Trail" was written by Robert Johnson and appeared on vinyl in 1937. A somewhat mysterious figure among of Mississippi Delta blues musicians, Johnson only recorded a few songs and very little biographical information on him exists. There are plenty of myths, however, including the story that he sold his soul to the Devil to play the guitar better. (12:30) 

Purchase this CD


Hello, DollyHello, Dolly 
July 30 -- Louis Armstrong thought so little of the song when he recorded it in late 1963, that when fans first clamored for it at his shows concerts year later, he had to ask a sideman what they were talking about. Armstrong rarely listened to popular radio, much preferring tapes he carried with him everywhere. By May 1965, the song had pushed The Beatles out of the top spot on the pop charts for the first time in three months and at 63, Armstrong had become the oldest artist to produce a number one hit. Murray Horwitz, NPR's Vice President for Cultural Programming, offers an appreciation of the biggest hit of Armstrong's long career. (12:30) 

Purchase this CD


His Eye is on the SparrowHis Eye is on the Sparrow 
September 3 -- By the mid-1950s, a woman with "a voice like an angel" had emerged as a leading light of American gospel music. Mahalia Jackson fashioned a string of hit songs out of gospel standards, from "Move on Up a Little Higher" to "He's Got the Whole World In His Hands." Deborah Williams offers an appreciation of Jackson's definitive rendition of the spiritual "His Eye Is On The Sparrow." (10:05) 

Purchase this CD


Hoochie Coochie ManHoochie Coochie Man 
April 3 -- When it came out as a single in 1954, this song, written by Willie Dixon and tracked by Muddy Waters, hovered near the top of the R & B charts for 13 weeks. Over the course of his long career, Waters re-interpreted the song numerous times, each one capturing the changes in the blues. NPR's David Welna reports. (9:37) 

Purchase this CD


Hound DogHound Dog & Don't be Cruel 
January 10 -- First released in 1956 on opposite sides of one 45-rpm record, Elvis Presley's two hit singles shot to top of the popular-music charts and fostered the birth of rock and roll. NPR's Elizabeth Blair reports on Presley, Mike Leiber, Jerry Stoller and Otis Blackwell -- the people behind the music. (8:00) 

Purchase this CD


I 

I Got RhythmI Got Rhythm 
May 28 -- Art Hilgart, host of the public radio series Broadway Revisited, looks at the various interpretations of George and Ira Gershwin's classic "I Got Rhythm." In analyzing the version recorded by classical composer William Bolcom, Hilgart explores the nature of jazz composition, songwriting, and the 12-bar blues. (11:58) 

Purchase this CD


I Walk the LineI Walk the Line 
December 23 -- NPR's Alice Winkler has the story of Johnny Cash's first big hit. Songwriter Rodney Crowell, who was married for a time to Cash's daughter Rosanne, talks about how the song affected him the first time he heard it. Cash himself, in an archival interview from Fresh Air® with Terry Gross reveals how was first playing gospel music, until he realized that legendary Memphis record producer Sam Phillips wouldn't record that style, so Cash changed up to country. (14:00) 

Purchase this CD


I Wanna Be SedatedI Wanna Be Sedated 
The Ramones''Greatist Hits [Live]'December 4 -- The debut album by The Ramones, one of America's first widely recognized punk rock bands, contained 14 songs, the longest of which clocked in at a breezy 2:35 -- the entire disc was less than 30 minutes. The band's short, fast and loud songs, of which "Sedated" is the prototype, became their trademark sound, a very different approach to rock music in 1976. Village Voice rock critic Robert Christgau wrote "It blows everything else off the radio...just perfect, a minor classic." All Things Considered Director Bob Boilen offers this appreciation for the band and their song. (8:30) 

Purchase this CD


I'm So Lonesome I Could CryI'm So Lonesome I Could Cry 
April 24 -- NPR's Noah Adams tells the story of this Hank Williams song which, recorded in 1949, foreshadows Williams' death at age 29. Adams travels to Oak Hill West Virginia, where Williams died in a 1953 car accident on the way to one of his Ohio shows. Adams speaks with music historian John Lilly. (12:55) 

Purchase this CD


In the MoodIn the Mood 
July 29 -- NPR's Alice Winkler discovers a few interesting coincidences about "In the Mood," Glenn Miller's 1939 recording of the swing classic. She speaks with DJ and swing authority David Miller (no relation) about the difficulty of nailing down the real writer of a song from that era. (15:35) 

Purchase this CD


(Goodnight) Irene(Goodnight) Irene 
August 19 -- This sentimental tune was a favorite of the folk and blues artist Leadbelly. In the 1930s, the fabled enertainer used it to open and close most of his concerts, in a conscious attempt to soften his rough-hewn image. In 1950, Pete Seeger revived the song and turned it into a major pop hit. Hannah Lord reports. (12:15) 

Purchase this CD


K 

Kind of BlueKind of Blue 
January 24 -- Critics and jazz fans alike consider Miles Davis' Kind of Blue an improvisational tour de force. Davis cultivated an atmosphere of creative instability by rolling tape his ensemble's first takes and refusing to rehearse. They turned out a collection of tunes that changed jazz history with an uncompromising sense of grace and invention. Critic Tom Moon offers his appreciation.(9:00) 

Purchase this CD


King Porter StompKing Porter Stomp 
October 16 -- Jelly Roll Morton wrote "King Porter Stomp" back in the early 1900s, when he was just a teenager playing piano in the clubs of his hometown, New Orleans. The composition incorporates all kinds of musical and cultural elements that were part of that scene, from ragtime and blues to classical and parlor songs, and to African and Caribbean music. Music historian Nick Spitzer reports that Morton was the first to use "riffs" as musical building blocks. (12:59) 

Purchase this CD


KokoKoko 
August 27 -- Charlie Parker and his group were trying to do a cover of the popular jazz tune "Cherokee" when the session producer asked Bird to do a different song due to copyright issues. His variation became "Koko," a song that almost single-handedly gave rise to bebop. Tom Vitale has an appreciation of Parker's breathless, breakneck jazz classic. (12:00) 

Purchase this CD


L 

La BambaLa Bamba 
The Ritchie Valens StoryJuly 15 -- 17-year-old Richie Valens inadvertently became a legend with "La Bamba." An old Mexican wedding dance with African roots, the song was given a rock and roll twist and released in 1958 on the flip side of a record released to feature Valens' second hit, Donna. The B-side recording was messy and expected to be used only as filler and forgotten. But "La Bamba's" unexpected success made it the first Latin crossover hit in rock and roll history. NPR's Rolando Arrieta reports the story behind the song that catapulted Valens to stardom. (9:30) 

Purchase this CD


Let's Stay TogetherLet's Stay Together 
June 4 -- When a young Al Green met with Hi Records producer Willie Mitchell, Mitchell realized the great potential in Green's seductive voice (while all Green wanted was to be liberated from his only big hit, "Back Up Train"). They turned the idea of soul music on its head in 1971, with the release of "Let's Stay Together" (after more than 100 takes). Green's career then took off and, for years, Mitchell remained his producer. NPR's Elizabeth Blair speaks to Green and co-writer/producer Mitchell. (7:50) 

Purchase this CD


Light My FireLight My Fire 
The Best of the DoorsAugust 28 -- In 1965, Ray Manzarek, John Densmore, Robbie Krieger, and the late Jim Morrison came together in Venice, California, as The Doors. Their sound drew from a variety of influences, including jazz, blues, classical, British psychedelic rock, and the surf music of Southern California. Two years later, they recorded "Light My Fire," a seven-minute opus that many in the music industry were convinced could never achieve success at that length. But by July 1967, it was the number one song in America. NPR's Guy Raz talks with the three surviving members of The Doors. (12:30) 

Purchase this CD


Like a Rolling StoneLike a Rolling Stone 
November 9 -- Bob Dylan's raucous performance of this song on an electric guitar with The Band at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival made Joni Mitchell say "The American folk song has grown up."Marcie Sillman of member station KUOW profiles this 1960s hit. (8:30) 

Purchase this CD


A Love SupremeA Love Supreme 
October 23 -- NPR's Eric Westervelt has the story of this classic 1964 recording by John Coltrane. Trane's four-part jazz masterpiece was a soul-searching attempt to express his faith in God through music following a long battle with drug and alcohol abuse. (12:56) 

Purchase this CD


M 

Mack the KnifeMack the Knife 
October 22 -- The swinging tune made popular in the United States by Louis Armstrong and Bobby Darin is actually an import from a rather bleak German musical, The ThreePenny Opera. Kurt Weill provided the music with lyrics by the great playwright Bertolt Brecht. The song's dark and graphic lyrics were softened for American audiences. Murray Horwitz, NPR's Vice President for Cultural Programming, has the full story. (8:14) 

Purchase this CD


MaybelleneMaybellene 
July 2 -- Chuck Berry's 1955 song was recorded the first time he entered a professional studio, while he was working at his father's construction company and training to be a hairdresser. His daring mix of blues, R&B, and country led to a rock 'n' roll song, and "Maybellene" became a tremendous crossover hit. Jesse Wegman reports on the making of the song, revealing the racial tensions behind Berry's success and shows him to have been the first real all-in-one entertainer: singer, songwriter, musician, and choreographer. (11:30) 

Purchase this CD


Mood IndigoMood Indigo 
November 6 -- Duke Ellington was a master at creating an element of surprise in his compositions. The unique voicing of instruments on "Mood Indigo" is an example of the composer's subtle sophistication. Lou Santacroce, host of NPR's At the Opera, tells the story behind this classic hit tune. (8:00) 

Purchase this CD


My Fair LadyMy Fair Lady (musical) 
July 15 -- NPR's Jeff Lunden reports on Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe's "perfect musical," which opened on Broadway in 1956. The piece includes remarks from actor Rex Harrison, Alan Jay Lerner and Kitty Carlisle Hart, wife of the show's director, Moss Hart. (14:09) 

Purchase this CD


My Funny ValentineMy Funny Valentine 
February 14 -- With the music of Richard Rodgers and the lyrical wit of Lorenz (Larry) Hart, this song orginally came from the 1937 musical Babes in Arms. A perennial favorite come Valentine's Day, the analysis of its words, however, shows that they don't exactly evoke a sappy ode to love. NPR's Elizabeth Blair charts the song's scope and reports on the troubled, talented man who penned phrases famous to couples everywhere. (12:30) 

Purchase this CD


My GirlMy Girl 
June 4 -- This 1964 song is so universally popular that when the Temptations tried to cut it from their standard concert set a few years ago, audiences booed them. R&B legend Smokey Robinson wrote it specifically for the group in collaboration with Barry Gordy, head of Motown Records. NPR's Elizabeth Blair, executive producer of the NPR 100, has the story. (10:16) 

Purchase this CD


N 

Night and DayNight and Day 
June 25 -- One note, repeated 35 times over eight bars of music. That's the unlikely beginning to one of the greatest love ballads ever written. Cole Porter once claimed to have referenced a Moroccan prayer call when writing the song, or the melody might have come one night at New York's Ritz-Carlton hotel, the lyrics working themselves out on a Newport, Rhode Island, beach, the next day. NPR's Melissa Block tells the story of a song written for Fred Astaire that gets "under the very hide" of our feelings about passionate -- and even obsessive -- love. (14:13) 

Purchase this CD


A Night in TunisiaA Night in Tunisia 
September 3 -- Straddling swing and bebop, trumpet sensation Dizzy Gillespie "lived in a dream for a moment" during a break from a 1942 New York performance. The melody he knocked out at the piano became "A Night in Tunisia" and marked the arrival of Afro-Cuban rhythms in American jazz. Margot Stage reports that "Tunisia" became Gillespie's most popular and enduring works. (12:34) 

Purchase this CD


O

Oklahoma!Oklahoma! (Musical) 
April 29 -- The Broadway musical Oklahoma!, premiered in 1943, and was expected to flop. Richard Rodgers wrote it without his long-time lyricist Lorenzo Hart (its librettist, Oscar Hammerstein, was only, at that time, famous for his failures). As NPR's Jeff Lunden tells it, however, the show did a little better than expected: it launched a revolution in American musical theater and turned a huge profit. (16:00) 

Purchase this CD


Once in a LifetimeOnce in a Lifetime 
March 27 -- From the 1980 Talking Heads album, Remain in Light, this song marks a change in the way bands wrote songs: jamming in the studio, recording the product, and creating tunes around improvised minimalistic riffs which caught their ears on the playback. NPR's Rick Karr talks to the band members and producer Brian Eno about Talking Heads'"sampling" songwriting revolution. (12:30) 

Purchase this CD


One O'Clock JumpOne O'Clock Jump 
August 21 -- Tom Vitale reports on this tune, recorded in 1937 by the Count Basie Orchestra. The song, with its driving rhythm section, became Basie's signature theme, and the band played it at the end of their performances for more than 50 years. (10:30) 

Purchase this CD


Oye Como VaOye Como Va 
September 25 -- Written by the late Latin jazz percussionist Tito Puente, "Oye Como Va" reached its widest audience when it was recorded by the San Francisco rock band Santana. Their 1970 album Abraxas spent six weeks at the top of Billboard's Album Chart and thirty weeks in the Top Ten. "Oye Como Va" got significant Top 40 airplay, helping solidify Carlos Santana's place in history as one of the fathers of Latin rock. NPR's David Welna reports. (9:00) 

Purchase this CD


P 

Papa's Got a Brand New BagPapa's Got a Brand New Bag 
July 29 -- James Brown was a concert sensation in the black America during the early 1960s. But until "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag" climbed the charts in 1965, he was largely unknown to white fans. The song, Brown's first Top Ten hit, was a metaphor for the changing times. It also represents Brown's first attempt to capture the rhythms of his live performances in a studio recording. All those breaks in the melody gave him a chance to execute his intricate dance moves. Dan Bindert of member station WCPN in Cleveland has the story behind this ground-breaking hit from the "Godfather of Soul." (10:30) 

Purchase this CD


Peggy SuePeggy Sue 
December 8 -- NPR's David C. Barnett reveals that Buddy Holly's classic tune "Peggy Sue" didn't begin life as a keeper at all. It wasn't until the Crickets added a few paradiddles and changed the chorus from "Cindy Lou" to "Peggy Sue" that the song finally made it out of the studio onto the charts. (8:37) 

Purchase this CD


Porgy & BessPorgy & Bess (Opera) 
October 8 -- NPR's Jeff Lunden has an appreciation of this classic Gershwin brother's opera. Based on a story by DuBose Heyward, it was first performed in October 1935 and was orinally met with mixed reviews. Its tunes have developed such acclaim, however, that often virtuosos like violinist Jascha Heifetz transcribed them as instrumental encores, and people still whistle them today. (16:45) 

Purchase this CD


Psycho (Film Score)Psycho (Film Score) 
October 30 -- In 1960, Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho created an entertainment sensation: no one could be seated after the film began, the star of the movie was killed ten minutes into the story, and the stark black-and-white images served to heighten the film's chilling plot. Using only strings due to a tight production budget, composer Bernard Hermann created a soundtrack to accompany the horror on screen that was equally terrifying. NPR's All Things Considered host Robert Siegel talks with critics, composers, and Hermann's biographer about the musician and his unforgettable score. (12:55) 

Purchase this CD


Purple HazePurple Haze 
September 18 -- Guitarist Jimi Hendrix wrote Purple Haze on December 26, 1966, during a gig at a club in London. He said that the lyrics were based on a dream he had after reading a science fiction novel. Jesse Wegman reports on how the Jimi Hendrix Experience came together and recorded the hit song. (12:30) 

Purchase this CD


R 

Rapper's DelightRapper's Delight 
December 29 -- Elizabeth Blair, executive producer for the NPR 100, reports on this unforgettable rap classic. Tracing the history of the hit, she spoke with members of Sugar Hill Gang -- Big Bank Hank, Wonder Mike and Master Gee -- and other major players in the earliest old school days of rap, including Kurtis Blow, Kurtis Brown (aka Grandmaster Caz, who wrote many of the rhymes for "Rappers Delight"), and Village Voice reporter Harry Allen. (9:00) 

Purchase this CD


RespectRespect 
November 26 -- Commentator Evelyn C. White describes the life-affirming effect Aretha Franklin's powerful anthem had on her and other young black women growing up in the turbulent 1960s. The song was written and first recorded by the late Otis Redding. (5:30) 

Purchase this CD


Rhapsody in BlueRhapsody in Blue 
February 13 -- NPR's Jeff Lunden tells the story of George Gershwin's most identifiable masterpiece. At age 25, Gershwin took only three weeks to compose one of the most enduring pieces of American music. Used for the film score to Woody Allen's Manhattan, this episodic and jazzy one-movement piano concerto evokes the hustle-bustle of New York's grand metropolitan aura. (14:18) 

Purchase this CD


Rock Around the ClockRock Around the Clock 
July 1 -- Bill Haley was a Swiss yodeler from the Philadelphia suburbs who, at the very least, made an unlikely rock star. But after this song was written -- with dubious authorship -- Haley seemed destined for fame. Unfortunately, his group The Comets, ran into endless problems with clueless musicians, bad blood with various recording studios, lack of studio time, and shoddy recordings. When the song was finally released in 1954, it received attention only after it was included in the soundtrack for the popular movie Blackboard Jungle and went on to sell over a million copies. NPR's David C. Barnett uncovers the trials and tribulations behind what has been called the very first rock n' roll song. (10:30) 

Purchase this CD


`Round Midnight`Round Midnight 
November 20 -- Thelonious Monk probably composed this song in 1938, though no one knows for sure as it comes early in Monk's career when he worked in relative obscurity. Monk soon became known as a great jazz innovator, one of a small group of musicians who were part of the bebop revolution of the 1940s. His piano playing and compositions were challenging and inspiring to peers like Miles Davis, Sonny Rollins, and John Coltrane. He was known for angular melodies with odd stops and starts and dissonant clusters of notes. (9:15) 

Purchase this CD


Route 66(Get Your Kicks On) Route 66 
May 6 -- Bobby Troup wrote it, Nat King Cole sang it, and it, predictably, became a classic. Route 66 is the most famous highway in American transportation history. But its representation in this hit song is only one part of the piece's musical success. NPR's Hannah Lord reports.(9:15) 

Purchase this CD




St. Louis BluesSt. Louis Blues 
January 16 -- W.C. Handy, a middle-class African American, wrote "St. Louis Blues" in 1914, a time when Tin Pan Alley's popular songs began to fuse with folklore to explore the blues, the form that led to the full-fledged birth of American jazz. NPR's Margaret Howze reports on the song's background and its definitive 1925 recording by Bessie Smith with cornet accompaniment by Louis Armstrong. (15:30) 

Purchase this CD


Theme from ShaftTheme from "Shaft" 
Shaft SoundtrackDecember 18 -- In 1969, Isaac Hayes was the top songwriter for soul label Stax Records in Memphis when an opportunity came to audition for the lead role in a new movie about a tough black police detective. At first, he patiently waited for a call-back, but finally telephoned the production's casting agent who kindly told him the bad news -- Richard Roundtree had been chosen for the part. The good news was that Gordon Parks wanted Hayes to score the film, resulting in his number one hit. NPR's Karen Michel has the story. (8:53) 

Purchase this CD


Showboat (musical)Showboat (musical) 
April 17 -- Written by Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein, Showboat opened on Broadway in 1927 and presented a challenge to the average musical, which, at that time, was little more than frivolous entertainment. Kern and Hammerstein conceived of a musical hybrid -- a show that marries opera and musical comedy with songs that function as narratives and themes both dramatic and comedic. NPR's Jeff Lunden reports. (12:39) 

Purchase this CD


Sing, Sing, SingSing, Sing, Sing 
January 31 -- On January 16, 1938, Benny Goodman and his musicians took to the Carnegie Hall stage for the first swing music concert in the hall's history; for scholars, the concert would eventually mark the birthplace of the genre's legitimacy. "Sing, Sing, Sing," was the program's last number and what Goodman called a "killer diller." Goodman biographer Ross Firestone references the song's first recording with the comments of audience member Turk van Lake and Goodman himself.(22:19) 

Purchase this CD


Singin' in the RainSingin' in the Rain 
July 16 -- Here at NPR, we're certain that Metro Goldwyn Mayer's signature song, "Singin' in the Rain," deserves to be on the NPR 100 list. The song appeared in a total of seven MGM musicals, including an Academy Award-winner and a movie in which it was the title song. The question that remains, however, is one about the song's origins, which are shrouded in folklore. When the song was actually written, and for what purpose, remains unknown, even though it is sometimes called Hollywood's finest work. The only definite information is about the composer and lyricist, both of whom are long dead. Surrounded by myth, mystery, and long-forgotten memories, Tony Sarabiaof member station WBEZ in Chicago investigates the origins of this American classic. (10:30) 

Purchase this CD


Sittin' On the Dock of the BaySittin' On the Dock of the Bay 
September 17 -- Steve Cropper, guitarist with Booker T & the MG's and co-writer of "Dock of the Bay", tells Weekend Edition Sunday host Liane Hansen about the creation of Otis Redding's last and biggest hit and the struggle to finish it after the singer's untimely death. (13:00). 

Purchase this CD


Smells Like Teen SpiritSmells Like Teen Spirit 
May 15 -- NPR's Guy Raz profiles the 1991 song that shot Seattle rock band Nirvana to the top of the charts. Written by bandleader, the late Kurt Cobain, its quick popularity marked the rising appeal of so-called "grunge" music, which, produced over the synthesized sounds of late-1980s pop, changed the direction of rock and significantly influencing the "alternative" culture of the 1990s. (7:30) 

Purchase this CD


Stand By Your ManStand By Your Man 
October 28 -- Sometimes it's hard to be a woman...and sometimes it's hard to figure out how a song will affect the public. Tammy Wynette and producer Billy Sherrill cut "Stand By Your Man" in just a few minutes to wrap up a 1968 album. Wynette, who wrote the song, never really liked it all that much, even though it became her signature tune. Feminists didn't like it, either, and the artist had to defend the song the rest of her life. Anita Bugg of member station WPLN in Nashville has the story. (11:31) 

Purchase this CD


StardustStardust 
December 11 -- Special Correspondent Susan Stamberg has the story of "Stardust," written by Hoagy Carmichael in 1927 while he was attending Indiana University. The song started off as an up-tempo dance instrumental but later, as its popularity grew, lyrics were added and the rhythm of "Stardust" slowed to a ballad. By the end of the 1930s, the tune was a certifiable American classic. (12:30) 

Purchase this CD


Symphony of PsalmsSymphony of Psalms 
December 24 -- Igor Stravinsky wrote his "Symphony of Psalms" in 1929 for the 50th anniversary of the Boston Symphony. Last year, Time magazine named it the best piece of the century. Like most of Stravinsky's music, it created a fresh kind of beauty while stretching the boundaries of the genre. NPR's Anya Grundmann tells the story of this inspirational work. (10:47) 

Purchase this CD


T 

Take FiveTake Five 
November 19 -- The best-selling jazz single of the century came very close to not getting released at all, but "Take Five" by the Dave Brubeck Quartet turned out to be one for the ages. The song's catchy, syncopated melody has lured countless music lovers to jazz. Tony Sarabia of Chicago Public Radio has the story of this ground-breaking track. (10:27) 

Purchase this CD


Take My Hand, Precious LordTake My Hand, Precious Lord 
Jauary 17 -- "Precious Lord," gospel's most-recorded song, played an important role in the culture of black Americans -- it was played at the funeral of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. All Things Considered host Linda Wertheimer speaks with Dr. Michael Harris, Professor of History at Manhattan's Union Theological Seminary, whose book, The Rise of Gospel Blues, The Music of Thomas Andrew Dorsey in the Urban Church, tells the story of the song's author. (12:30) 

Purchase this CD


Take the A TrainTake the A Train 
June 12 -- In 1938, Billy Strayhorn, a Pittsburgh soda jerk, drugstore delivery boy, and composer in his free time, knocked out this classic. When he swung a meeting with jazz great Duke Ellington, however, a professional composing career finally became a reality. With vision, Ellington turned his song, about one of New York's unreliable subways to Harlem and Sugar Hill, into a famed jazz standard. NPR's Brooke Gladstone talks to Strayhorn's biographer, who tells the story of a bold kid who dared to challenge the great Duke Ellington and, in turn, became one of his closest friends. (7:50) 

Purchase this CD


Talking BookTalking Book (LP) 
December 29 -- NPR's Deborah Williams explores the story behind this transformational Stevie Wonder album, a touchstone for the artist that he has often referred back to throughout his long career. It represents Wonder's professional and musical coming of age in the early 1970s when he left the Motown hit-making formula that had defined his sound and witnessed the emergence of his more holistic approach to making records as a singer, writer and producer. (11:59) 

Purchase this CD


TapestryTapestry (LP) 
August 24 -- NPR's Elizabeth Blair, executive producer for the NPR 100 series, reports on Carole King's album Tapestry. With her husband, Gerry Goffin, King started out as a songwriter in the Brill Building, penning hits for artists Little Eva, Aretha Franklin, and others. King didn't sing her own songs until after her divorce, but when she did, she sold 15 million copies. (8:40) 

Purchase this CD


This Land is Your LandThis Land is Your Land 
July 3 -- Woody Guthrie was originally from Oklahoma, but he loved traveling: he walked, hitch-hiked, and rode the rails all around the country. He was also a prolific writer, and scribbled the words to "This Land Is Your Land" down on a loose-leaf sheet of paper in 1940. Guthrie recorded the song for Mo Asch, founder of Folkways Records, in New York City in 1944, but the song wasn't released until 1951. By that time, "This Land Is Your Land" had become something of a leftist national anthem, sung at rallies, political events, and in schools. Folklorist Nick Spitzer pays tribute to Guthrie and his quintessentially American song. (12:30) 

Purchase this CD


Tom DooleyTom Dooley 
July 31 -- This traditional folk song was made a hit by The Kingston Trio in 1958, but its roots hail from North Carolina nearly a century earlier. The title character was hanged for the murder of a woman named Laura Foster. All Things Considered host Noah Adams traveled to western North Carolina, where the real Tom Dooley lived and died, to investigate the origins of the song. His report includes a version of the song as sung by Frank Profit Jr., whose great-grandmother witnessed the hanging of Tom Dooley when she was a child in the town of Statesville. (12:30) 

Purchase this CD


V 

The Velvet Underground and NicoThe Velvet Underground and Nico (LP) 
November 12 -- Critics have long marveled at how the influence of the 1967 album The Velvet Underground and Nico is so remarkably out of proportion with its sales figures. NPR's Rick Karrprofiles the radical debut LP of the group led by rock pioneer Lou Reed and pushed toward fame by pop art legend Andy Warhol. (10:30) 

Purchase this CD


W 

Warner Brothers Cartoon MusicWarner Brothers Cartoon Music 
November 27 -- The musical scores of Carl Stalling, who worked for Warner Brothers during the 1930s, `40s, and `50s, were fast, complex, and adventurous, and borrow from a variety of genres including classical, pop, folk, and jazz. In her report, Linda Wertheimer speaks with Greg Ford, who compiled a 2-disc anthology of Stalling's music. (12:30) 

Purchase this CD


We Shall Overcome We Shall Overcome - part onePart 1 | We Shall Overcome - part twoPart 2 
NPR's Noah Adams reports that "We Shall Overcome" began life as a work song and was then adopted by organized labor before becoming a civil rights anthem in the early 1960s. The piece is presented here in two parts. (12:30, 8:00) 

Purchase this CD


West End BluesWest End Blues 
August 6 -- NPR's John Burnett travels to the Crescent City of New Orleans in search of the jazz masterpiece "West End Blues." Joe King Oliver wrote the song, but it was Louis Armstrong's 1928 recording that put the it in the jazz pantheon. (13:00) 

Purchase this CD


West Side StoryWest Side Story (Musical) 
August 14 -- The work of four men, West Side Story married popular jazz and Latin rhythms with a classical score. Composer Leonard Bernstein, lyricist Stephen Sondheim, director and choreographer Jerome Robbins, and playwright Arthur Laurents all had a hand in the 1960s Broadway smash. NPR music critic Tom Manoff spoke with Laurents and actress Chita Rivera, who created the role of Anita, to tell the story of this extraordinary collaboration. (12:30) 

Purchase this CD


What'd I SayWhat'd I Say 
February 21 -- All Things Considered host Robert Siegel talks to pianist/composer Ray Charles about his famous 1959 song which, Charles maintains, is really "about nothing" -- the lyrics "don't make sense," he says, and reduce to a call-and-response exercise between soloist, singers, and audience. Improvised on stage one night, while on tour in 1959, Charles stills plays "What'd I Say" as an encore for most of his concerts and considers it his trademark song. (8:00) 

Purchase this CD


What's Going OnWhat's Going On 
August 7 -- This 1971 song begins with the friendly, bustling sounds of a Vietnam veteran's homecoming party, but, all the while, an uneasy vibe lurks beneath the good times. The veteran was Marvin Gaye's much-changed brother Frank and "What's Going On" reflected a similar change in the singer's career. His personal life and the nation's struggle to come to grips with divisive social issues made Gaye realize that singing simplistic love songs for Motown Records was something he could no longer do. Music reviewer Tom Moon reveals how the song marked a resurrection of sorts for Gaye and influenced Motown to allow other artists in their stable to take creative liberties in their work. (5:45) 

Purchase this CD


White ChristmasWhite Christmas 
December 25 -- NPR's Jeff Lunden speaks with Jody Rosen, who is writing a book about this Irving Berlin classic, and the composer's daughter, Linda Emmit. Rosen reveals that a big part of the song's success was its inclusion on the 1942 playlist of Armed Forces Radio and suggests that it ushered in the era when performers became more popular than songwriters as the main creative vehicle for American pop music -- Tin Pan Alley had passed into history. (12:30) 

Purchase this CD


Wildwood FlowerWildwood Flower 
December 14 -- Dick Spottswood, a former record producer and current radio host at WAMU in Washington, D.C, recounts the history of "Wildwood Flower". The song, like many recorded by the country music group The Carter Family, was passed down from generation-to-generation, without the benefit of written lyrics. Though its words are peculiar, its melody has kept the song popular and it has been recorded by many artists over the years. (6:30) 

Purchase this CD


The Wizard of OzThe Wizard of Oz (Film Score) 
December 18 -- NPR's Noah Adams talks with John Fricke, author of several books on The Wizard of Oz, about the film's songs, written by Harold Arlen and lyrics were by Yip Harburg, and the score, written by Herbert Stothart. Fricke reveals inside details about the material, including the fact that "Over the Rainbow" was almost taken out of the film after several test screenings. (12:45) 

Βρέθηκε ο νεκρός στην Αμφίπολη

$
0
0

Τάφος με ολόκληρο σκελετό

Βρέθηκε ο νεκρός στην Αμφίπολη -Τάφος με ολόκληρο σκελετό

Στον τρίτο θάλαμο της Αμφίπολης βρέθηκε μεγάλος αυτοσχέδιος τάφος, κατασκευασμένος από πωρόλιθους, 1,60 μ. κάτω από το δάπεδο του τρίτου θαλάμου. Εντός του τάφου παρατηρήθηκε επιμήκης βάθυνση πλάτους 0,54 μ. και μήκους 2,35 μέτρων. Κατά την ενημέρωση των δημοσιογράφων αποκαλύφθηκε ότι εντός του τάφου υπήρχε ξύλινο φέρετρο, κάτι που αποδεικνύεται από περίπου 20 διάσπαρτα σιδερένια και χάλκινα καρφιά, όπως επίσης οστέινα και γυάλινα διακοσμητικά του φερέτρου.
Μέσα βρέθηκε σκελετός, σχεδόν ακέραιος. Το γενετικό υλικό θα μεταφερθεί σε ειδικό εργαστήριο για έλεγχο προκειμένου να προκύψουν τα πρώτα στοιχεία σχετικά με την ταυτότητα, αλλά και τη διακρίβωση της ακριβούς ηλικίας του.
Oλόκληρη η ανακοίνωση του ΥΠΠΟ έχει ως εξής:
1. Συνεχίστηκαν οι εργασίες από την Εφορεία Αρχαιοτήτων Σερρών, στον λόφο Καστά και συγκεκριμένα στον τρίτο θάλαμο. Σε βάθος 1,60μ. από τους σωζόμενους λίθους του δαπέδου, αποκαλύφθηκε μεγάλος κιβωτιόσχημος τάφος, κατασκευασμένος από πωρόλιθους.
2. Οι εξωτερικές διαστάσεις του τάφου είναι μήκους 3,23μ., πλάτους 1,56μ. και σωζόμενου ύψους 1 μ. Ωστόσο, βρέθηκαν, κατά την ανασκαφή, ορθοστάτες από την ανωδομή του τάφου, που μας επιτρέπουν να θεωρήσουμε ότι το ύψος του έφτανε τουλάχιστον στο 1,80μ.
3. Εντός του τάφου δημιουργήθηκε μια επιμήκης βάθυνση πλάτους 0,54μ.και μήκους 2,35μ. Πρόκειται για τη θέση στην οποία τοποθετήθηκε ξύλινο φέρετρο. Βρέθηκαν, διάσπαρτα, σιδερένια και χάλκινα καρφιά, καθώς και οστέινα και γυάλινα διακοσμητικά στοιχεία του φερέτρου. Επισημαίνεται ότι το συνολικό ύψος του τρίτου θαλάμου από την κορυφή της θόλου έως τον πυθμένα του τάφου είναι 8,90μ.
4. Εντός και εκτός του τάφου, βρέθηκε ο σκελετός του νεκρού. Είναι προφανές ότι το ανθρωπολογικό υλικό θα εξεταστεί από ειδικούς επιστήμονες. Είναι, εξίσου, προφανές ότι θα γίνουν όλες οι έρευνες τις οποίες απαιτεί η σύγχρονη επιστήμη.
5. Το ταφικό συγκρότημα στον λόφο Καστά είναι ένα δημόσιο έργο, που για την κατασκευή του χρησιμοποιήθηκε η μεγαλύτερη ποσότητα μαρμάρου, που έχει ποτέ χρησιμοποιηθεί στη Μακεδονία. Υπενθυμίζονται τα στοιχεία της μοναδικότητάς του: Τύμβος ύψους 33μ, και επ΄αυτού το βάθρο με το υπερμέγεθες λιοντάρι, συνολικού ύψους 15,84. Οι σφίγγες, οι καρυάτιδες και το υπέροχο ψηφιδωτό με την αρπαγή της Περσεφόνης, αλλά και τα μαρμάρινα ζωγραφισμένα επιστύλια, τα οποία, αυτή τη στιγμή, συντηρούνται στο εργαστήριο του Μουσείου Αμφίπολης. Επισημαίνεται το πρωτοφανές ύψος του συνόλου της κατασκευής.
6. Επομένως, αυτό το μνημείο αποτελεί μοναδική και πρωτότυπη σύνθεση ποικίλων χαρακτηριστικών. Είναι μια εξαιρετικά ακριβή κατασκευή, το κόστος της οποίας είναι προφανώς απίθανο να είχε αναληφθεί από ιδιώτη.
7. Πιθανότατα, πρόκειται για μνημείο αφηρωϊσμένου νεκρού, δηλαδή, θνητού στον οποίον αποδόθηκαν λατρευτικές τιμές από την κοινωνία της εποχής του. Ο νεκρός ήταν εξέχουσα προσωπικότητα, καθώς μόνον έτσι εξηγείται η κατασκευή αυτού του μοναδικού ταφικού συγκροτήματος.
8. Προκειμένου να δρομολογηθούν οι εργασίες αποκατάστασης του μνημείου, μελετώνται συστηματικά τα διάσπαρτα αρχιτεκτονικά μέλη, τα οποία έχουν ταυτιστεί και αποδοθεί στον περίβολο. Πρόκειται για 500 περίπου μαρμάρινα μέλη, που βρίσκονται στην γύρω περιοχή, εκεί όπου σήμερα είναι τοποθετημένο το λιοντάρι, ενώ καθώς αποσύρθηκαν, προ ολίγων ημερών, τα νερά της λίμνης Κερκίνης, αποκαλύφθηκαν περισσότερα από εκατό μέλη του περιβόλου, όπως γείσα, ορθοστάτες και στέψεις. Είχαν μεταφερθεί, το 1936 από την Ούλεν, η οποία είχε αναλάβει την κατασκευή του φράγματος της Κερκίνης.
9. Στο πλαίσιο των αρχαιολογικών ερευνών στον τύμβο έγινε έλεγχος και δειγματοληψία των ιζημάτων, εσωτερικά και εξωτερικά του τάφου, όπως και γεωτρητικός έλεγχος του υπεδάφους του, ώστε να διαπιστωθεί το γεωλογικό υπόβαθρο. Τα ιζήματα αποτελούνται από εναλλαγές άμμου και μάργας, λιμναίας προέλευσης.
10. Για τις επόμενες ημέρες προβλέπεται η ολοκλήρωση του κοσκινίσματος των χωμάτων, η ολοκλήρωση των υποστυλωτικών εργασιών και η συνέχιση των εργασιών συντήρησης στο μνημείο , αλλά και των ευρημάτων στο εργαστήριο του Μουσείου της Αμφίπολης. Ιδαίτερη έμφαση δίνεται στη συντήρηση των τμημάτων του ελλείποντος μέρους του ψηφιδωτού.
11. Στις 22 Νοεμβρίου, ο υπουργός Πολιτισμού και Αθλητισμού κ. Κ. Τασούλας θα δώσει συνέντευξη στο Μουσείο της Αμφίπολης, στη μία το μεσημέρι σχετικά με τα ευρήματα και την επόμενη φάση των εργασιών στο τύμβο Καστά.
12. Στις 29 Νοεμβρίου, ημέρα Σάββατο και ώρα 11.00 θα παρουσιαστούν τα αποτέλεσματα της ανασκαφικής περιόδου στον λόφο Καστά, από την έφορο Αρχαιοτήτων Σερρών Κ. Περιστέρη και τους συνεργάτες της, στην Αθήνα, στο Αμφιθέατρο του Υπουργείου Πολιτισμού.
13. Γεωφυσικές διασκοπήσεις
1. Η γεωφυσική διασκόπηση θα γίνει από το Αριστοτέλειο Πανεπιστήμιο Θεσσαλονικής, ειδικότερα από το εργαστήριο Εφαρμοσμένης Γεωφυσικής, το οποίο διευθύνεται από τον καθηγητή Γρηγόρη Τσόκα, μετά από πρόταση του πρυτάνεως καθηγητή Περικλή Μήτκα. Σημειώνεται ότι το ΑΠΘ έθεσε στη διάθεση του Υπουργείου Πολιτισμού όχι μόνον την τεχνογνωσία του, αλλά και πόρους του Πανεπιστημίου.
2. Για τη διερεύνηση του Τύμβου Καστά θα χρησιμοποιηθεί, κυρίως, η μέθοδος της ηλεκτρικής τομογραφίας, στην ανάπτυξη της οποίας έχει συμβάλλει καθοριστικά το συγκεκριμένο εργαστήριο. Η μέθοδος συνίσταται στην ηλεκτρική απεικόνιση του υπεδάφους, παρόμοια με την ιατρική τομογραφία. Εχει δε αποδώσει σε εξερεύνηση άλλων τύμβων- πχ. Απολλωνία, Κιλκίς, Βεργίνα, Αργολιδα κ.α) Αποτελέσματα από την διερεύνηση του τύμβου Καστά σε επόμενη ενημέρωση.



ΣΑΝ ΣΗΜΕΡΑ ΣΤΗΝ ΜΟΥΣΙΚΗ-13 ΝΟΕΜΒΡΙΟΥ

$
0
0

1963, The Beatles recorded a television interview at Westward Television Studios in Plymouth, Devon, for a local teen program "Move Over, Dad". Due to a large crowd of excited fans outside, The Beatles had to be smuggled from their dressing-room at the ABC Cinema, where they were scheduled to appear that night, into an adjacent building, then through a tunnel, to get to Westward Studios for the interview taping.
1964, Decca Records released The Rolling Stones’ Little Red Rooster. Written by Willie Dixon (as The Red Rooster), and previously recorded by Howlin’ Wolf and Sam Cooke, the single was recorded at Chess Studios in Chicago. The single was a No.1 hit in the UK and remains the only time a blues song has ever topped the UK pop chart. More on The Rolling Stones
1965, The Castiles, which featured a young singer called Bruce Springsteen appeared at The Fire House, Hazlet, New Jersey. The night was billed as a Teenage Go, Go Dance.
1968, Rolling Stone Brian Jones bought 'Cotchford Farm' in Sussex. The author AA Milne who wrote Winnie The Pooh had owned the house. More on Brian Jones
1968, Hugo Montenegro was at No.1 in the UK singles chart with 'The Good The Bad And The Ugly', the soundtrack from a Clint Eastwood spaghetti western film. The first instrumental No.1 since 1963.
1969, Crosby Stills Nash & Young played the first of four nights at Winterland Ballroom, San Francisco, California.
1973, Jerry Lee Lewis Jr was killed in a car accident near Hernando, Mississippi. Lewis had been working as the drummer in his father's band.
1976, Led Zeppelin scored their seventh UK No.1 with the film soundtrack double album The Song Remains The Same, peaking at No.2 on the US chart. The tracks were recorded at Madison Square Garden, New York City in 1973.
1976, Rod Stewart started an 8 week run at No.1 on the US singles chart with 'Tonight's The Night'. It was Rod's second US No.1; it made No.5 in the UK after being banned by many radio stations due to song being about the seduction of a virgin. The song features whispers from actress Britt Ekland who was Stewart's girlfriend at the time.
1976, The Melody Maker announced UK dates for the first major punk tour with The Sex Pistols and the Ramones co-headlining along with Talking Heads, The Vibrators and Chris Spedding. The 14-date tour which was due to start at Newcastle City Hall on Nov 29th never took place. More on the Sex Pistols
1981, U2 kicked off a 23 date North American 'October' tour at JB Scott's in Albany, New York.
1982, Men At Work started a 15-week run at No.1 on the US album chart with their debut album 'Business As Usual', which went on to sell over five million copies in the US.
1982, Former Equals singer Eddie Grant started a three week run at No.1 on the UK singles chart with 'I Don't Wanna Dance', his only UK chart topper.
1990, Patricia Boughton filed a lawsuit against Rod Stewart claiming that a football he kicked into the crowd during a concert at Pine Knob Music Theatre had ruptured a tendon in her middle finger. And as a result the injury had made sex between her and her husband difficult.
1992, Ronnie Bond drummer with The Troggs died. Scored the 1966 US No.1 & UK No.2 single 'Wild Thing' and 1966 UK No.1 ‘With A Girl Like You.’ More on The Troggs
1996, On the last leg of their Ballbreaker World Tour, AC/DC played the first of four sold out nights at Sydney Entertainment Center in Sydney, Australia.
1999, A report showed that The Spice Girls were the highest earners in pop during the 90's with their debut album 'Spice' selling over 20 million copies. Elton John was second with 14 million sales from 'The Lion King'.
1999, It was announced that Cliff Richard had signed up with Internet company Remotemusic.com, making him the first major artist to sign a deal with an online company.
2000, The Beatles launched their first official website www.thebeatles.com. The site went live on the same day as the release of their retrospective 'Compilation 1' album.
2004, Rap artist Ol' Dirty Bastard, (real name Russell Jones), collapsed and died at a Manhattan recording studio in New York aged 35. A spokesman for his record company, said the rapper, had complained of chest pains, was dead by the time paramedics reached him. ODB was a founding member of the Wu-Tang Clan in the early 1990s.
2005, Simon Cowell was named Show Business personality of the year by the Variety Club at the show business charity's annual awards show in London. Katie Melua won recording artist of the year at the event, hosted by singer Myleene Klass. More on Simon Cowell
2012, The original collage that was reproduced and included in copies of The Beatles' 1967 classic ‘Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band’ record sold for $87,720. The piece, which was designed by Peter Blake, was sold to an unnamed bidder as part of an auction of modern British art at Sotheby’s in London. More on Sgt. Pepper
November 13th: Born on this day
1934, Born on this day, Timmy Thomas, US singer, (1972 US No.3 & 1973 UK No.12 single 'Why Can't We Live Together').
1949, Born on this day, Roger Steen, guitar, The Tubes, (1977 UK No.28 single 'White Punks On Dope', 1983 US No.10 single 'She's A Beauty').
1951, Born on this day, Bill Gibson, Huey Lewis and the News, (1985 US No.1 & UK No.11 single 'The Power Of Love').
1953, Born on this day, Andrew Ranken, drums, The Pogues, (1987 UK No.8 single 'The Irish Rover').
1960, Born on this day, Wayne Parker, Glass Tiger, (1986 UK No.29 single 'Don't Forget Me, When I'm Gone').
1979, Born on this day, Nikolai Fraiture, bass, The Strokes, (2001 UK No. 14 single, 'Last Nite' 2001 UK No.2 album 'Is This It?').
1980, Born on this day, Monique Adrienne Coleman, American actress and singer from High School Musical, as part of the cast had the 2006 US No.1 ‘High School Musical’ album and 2007, US No.1 ‘High School Musical 2’ album. Over 17 million viewers in the United States watched the TV premier of High School Musical; making it the highest rated basic cable broadcast in U.S. history.

ΠΟΛΥΤΕΛΕΙΣ ΣΟΥΙΤΕΣ ΓΙΑ ΗΓΕΤΕΣ

$
0
0

Η συνάντηση των ηγετών των 20 πλουσιότερων χωρών του πλανήτη θα πραγματοποιηθεί το ερχόμενο Σαββατοκύριακο στο Μπρίσμπεϊν της Αυστραλίας. Για τη διαμονή τους οι επικεφαλής του G20 επέλεξαν πολυτελείς σουίτες, εκ των οποίων οι περισσότερες σε ξενοδοχεία του Κουίνσλαντ.
Η πιο ακριβή από όλες προορίζεται για τον Πρόεδρο των ΗΠΑ Μπαράκ Ομπάμα, ο οποίος θα διαμείνει στην προεδρική σουίτα του Mariott έναντι 1.747 ευρώ τη βραδιά. Η σουίτα εκτείνεται σε 131 τ.μ., βρίσκεται στον τελευταίο όροφο του πολλών αστέρων ξενοδοχείου της οδού Κουίν και προσφέρει πανοραμική θέα στον ποταμό του Μπρίσμπεϊν. Την πολυτέλεια συνθέτουν τα μαρμάρινα μπάνια, το king size κρεβάτι, το τεράστιο γραφείο.
Ηδη έχει αναπτυχθεί αστυνομική δύναμη γύρω από το ξενοδοχείο όπου θα διαμείνει ο Αμερικανός Πρόεδρος

Ακολουθεί ο Κινέζος πρόεδρος Ξι Τζινπίνγκ ο οποίος επέλεξε τη σουίτα Stamford του Stamford Plaza έναντι 1.180 ευρώ τη βραδιά.
Ο Βρετανός πρωθυπουργός Ντέιβιντ Κάμερον θα μείνει στη σουίτα του Treasury Hotel, έναντι 880 ευρώ τη βραδιά.
Ο Ρώσος Πρόεδρος Βλαντιμίρ Πούτιν θα διαμείνει στο Hilton, στη βασιλική σουίτα, η οποία προσφέρεται έναντι 427 ευρώ τη βραδιά. Ο βασιλιάς της Σαουδικής Αραβίας Αμπντουλάχ μπιν Αμπντούλ Αζίζ Αλ-Σαούντ θα μείνει στη σουίτα Gold Coast Sanctuary Cove, έναντι 344 ευρώ τη βραδιά. Ο Αυστραλιανός πρωθυπουργός Τόνι Άμποτ θα μείνει στη βασιλική σουίτα του Rydges, με 217 ευρώ τη βραδιά.
Πάντως, ήδη στα περισσότερα ξενοδοχεία όπου θα διαμείνουν οι ηγέτες της Ομάδας των 20 έχουν αναπτυχθεί αστυνομικές δυνάμεις και έχουν ενισχυθεί τα μέτρα ασφαλείας.

Article 16

$
0
0

 οι 5 πιο επικίνδυνες πολιτείες των ΗΠΑ 

Αυτές είναι οι 5 πιο επικίνδυνες πολιτείες των ΗΠΑ [εικόνες]

Δυστυχώς υπάρχουν ακόμα πολλές πόλεις στις ΗΠΑ που μαστίζονται από την εγκληματικότητα. Πρόσφατα το FBI δημοσίευσε τη λίστα με τις πιο επικίνδυνες πόλεις της χώρας.
Η λίστα βασίζεται σε πρόσφατα στοιχεία Εγκληματικής Εκθεσης του FBI καταμετρώντας τέσσερα βίαια εγκλήματα: φόνο, βιασμό, ληστεία και επιβαρυντική κακοποίηση, για να καταλήξει σε συνολικά ποσοστά βίαιων εγκλημάτων σε πόλεις με περισσότερους από 200.000 κατοίκους, ενώ στην κορυφή της λίστας δεσπόζει το Ντιτρόιτ για μία ακόμη χρονιά
Η επίμαχη λίστα με τις 5 πιο επικίνδυνες πολιτείες των ΗΠΑ διαμορφώνεται ως εξής:
5. Κλίβελαντ – Οχάιο

4. Σαιντ Λούις – Μισούρι

3. Μέμφις – Τενεσί

2. Οκλαντ – Καλιφόρνια

1. Ντιτρόιτ

Article 15

$
0
0

Τζίμι Φοντάνα
1934 – 2013

Τζίμι Φοντάνα


Συνθέτης και τραγουδιστής της χρυσής εποχής του ιταλικού ελαφρού τραγουδιού, γνωστός για τις επιτυχίες του Che sarà και Il Mondo.
Ο Ενρίκο Σμπρίκολι, όπως ήταν το πραγματικό του όνομα, γεννήθηκε στις 13 Νοεμβρίου του 1934 στην κωμόπολη Καμερίνο της Κεντρο-Ανατολικής Ιταλίας. Σπούδασε λογιστικά στην πατρίδα του και στη συνέχεια ξεκίνησε σπουδές οικονομικών στο Πανεπιστήμιο της Ρώμης. Παράλληλα, άρχισε να παίζει σε τζαζ ορχήστρες ως κοντραμπασίστας και άλλαξε το όνομά του από Ενρίκο Σμπρίκολι σε Τζίμι Φοντάνα (Το Τζίμι, από τον ιταλοαμερικανό κλαρινετίστα της τζαζ Τζίμι Τζούφρι τον οποίο θαύμαζε και το Φοντάνα, ανοίγοντας τυχαία τον τηλεφωνικό κατάλογο).
Στα τέλη της δεκαετίας του '50, τότε που το ιταλικό τραγούδι έμπαινε στη χρυσή εποχή του, ο νεαρός με τη φωνή τενόρου, τα χοντρά γυαλιά και το ιταλοαμερικάνικο όνομα, άρχισε σόλο καριέρα. Έκανε κάποιες επιτυχίες, κέρδισε την τρίτη θέση στο φεστιβάλ της Βαρκελώνης και το 1961 πήρε μέρος και στο περίφημο Φεστιβάλ του Σαν Ρέμο.
Το καλοκαίρι του 1965 γνώρισε τη μεγαλύτερη επιτυχία του ως τραγουδιστής, με το Il Mondo (Ο Κόσμος), μία δική του σύνθεση σε ενορχήστρωση του Ένιο Μορικόνε. Εκείνη την εποχή, όλη η Ιταλία και η Ευρώπη τραγουδούσε για έναν κόσμο που γυρνάει στο Σύμπαν, γεμάτος αγάπες που μόλις γεννήθηκαν ή μόλις τέλειωσαν.
Ακολούθησε το 1968 το La nostra favola (Η Ιστορία μας), διασκευή του τραγουδιού του Τομ Τζόουνς Delilah και το 1971 το δικό του τραγούδι Che sarà (Τι θα γίνει), που έγινε η αιτία της αποχώρησής του από το τραγούδι για πολλά χρόνια. Η δισκογραφική εταιρεία RCA του αρνήθηκε να το τραγουδήσει ο ίδιος στο Φεστιβάλ του Σαν Ρέμο και προτίμησε το ανερχόμενο τότε συγκρότημα Ricchi e Poveri, που τη δικαίωσε και κέρδισε το πρώτο βραβείο.
Ο Φοντάνα χολωμένος εγκατέλειψε τη Ρώμη και άνοιξε μπαρ στην πατρίδα του. Επανήλθε στο τραγούδι το 1979 και παρέμεινε ενεργός μουσικά σχεδόν μέχρι το τέλος της ζωής του, αλλά δεν γνώρισε την επιτυχία της δεκαετίας του '60. Εκτός από το τραγούδι, ο Φοντάνα διακρίθηκε και ως ηθοποιός, κυρίως τη δεκαετία του '60.

Μεγάλο πάθος του τα όπλα. Η συλλογή του ήταν τεράστια και ανάμεσα στα εκατοντάδες κομμάτια της υπήρχε κι ένα υποπολυβόλο Skorpion, που του δημιούργησε αρκετά προβλήματα. Το είχε αγοράσει νόμιμα το 1971, αλλά το 1988 βρέθηκε σε μια γιάφκα των Ερυθρών Ταξιαρχιών και συνδέθηκε με τρομοκρατικές ενέργειες. Ο τραγουδιστής υποστήριξε ότι το είχε πουλήσει σε έναν αστυνομικό το 1977. Αυτός αρνήθηκε, ο οπλοπώλης που μεσολάβησε στην αγοραπωλησία δεν θυμόταν και το θέμα ποτέ δεν ξεκαθαρίστηκε πλήρως.
Ο Τζίμι Φοντάνα, κατά κόσμον Ενρίκο Σμπρίγκολι, πέθανε στις 11 Σεπτεμβρίου του 2013 στη Ρώμη, σε ηλικία 78 ετών.

JIMMY FONTANA-Il mondo

ΧΡΙΣΤΟΦΟΡΟΣ ΓΕΩΡΓΙΟΥ

$
0
0
Christopher George

Birth: Feb. 25, 1931
Death: Nov. 28, 1983

Actor. American motion picture and television figure of the 1960s to the 1980s.
 He starred in the hit 1960s TV series "Rat Patrol," and was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for his role of 'Sgt. Sam Troy.' He was married to actress Lynda Day George. He was the Uncle of "Wheel of Fortune" game-show model Vanna White.
 He served in the U.S. Marine Corps and was given a full military funeral at the Greek Orthodox Church he and his family attended and at Westwood Cemetery.

Family links:
 Parents:
  Vaseleke George (1908 - 2003)

Cause of death: Heart attack
 
Burial:
Westwood Memorial Park
Los Angeles
Los Angeles County
California, USA
Christopher George
 
Christopher George
 
Christopher George

ΜΕ ΗΧΟΥΣ ΒΑΓΓΕΛΗ ΠΑΠΑΘΑΝΑΣΙΟΥ Η ΠΡΟΣΕΔΑΦΙΣΗ ΣΤΟΝ ΚΟΜΗΤΗ

$
0
0
Ο Βαγγέλης Παπαθανασίου «προσεδάφισε» τη Rosetta -Υπό τους ήχους του η αποστολή [βίντεο]

Ενας Ελληνας μετείχε με τον τρόπο του στην ιστορική στιγμή της πρώτης προσεδάφισης σε κομήτη. Είναι ο Βαγγέλης Παπαθανασίου, υπό τους ήχους του οποίου ολοκληρώθηκε με επιτυχία η πρωτοποριακή διαστημική αποστολή του Rosetta.
Ο διεθνούς φήμης μουσικός συνέθεσε μία τριλογία, γραμμένη ειδικά για αυτή την αποστολή, έπειτα από αίτημα της Ευρωπαϊκής διαστημικής υπηρεσίας ESA. Δεν είναι η πρώτη φορά που ο Βαγγέλης Παπαθανασίου «ντύνει» μουσικά ένα επιστημονικό επίτευγμα.
Το άλμπουμ «Μυθωδία» ήταν το μουσικό θέμα της αποστολής Mars Odyssey το 2001, ενώ το 2003 τιμήθηκε με το Μετάλλιο Δημόσιας Προσφοράς της NASA.




Article 11

$
0
0
The World Chart is a weekly tabulation of the popularity of songs on worldwide radio airplay, based on input from hundreds of Hit Radio stations.
November 8, 2014 | Chart n. 14-45

L2W
LW
TW
Artist
Title
Country
WOC
111MEGHAN TRAINORAll About That BassUSA10
632CALVIN HARRIS feat. JOHN NEWMANBlameUK4
543THE SCRIPTSuperheroesIreland11
1064IGGY AZALEA feat. RITA ORABlack WidowAustralia/UK7
755PITBULL feat. JOHN RYANFireballUSA8
1196SAM SMITHI'm Not The Only OneUK9
987BECKY GShowerUSA9
228TAYLOR SWIFTShake It OffUSA8
17149SIGMA feat. PALOMA FAITHChangingUK4
121110ZHUFadedUK10
3711DAVID GUETTA feat. SAM MARTINLovers On The SunFrance/USA13
151312MARLON ROUDETTEWhen The Beat Drops OutUK5
191713SHEPPARDGeronimoAustralia7
1815145 SECONDS OF SUMMERAmnesiaAustralia7
201915NICKI MINAJAnacondaUSA7
20N16ECHOSMITHCool KidsUSA2
81017ARIANA GRANDE feat. ZEDDBreak FreeUSA/Russia/Germany12
34N2718MAROON 5AnimalsUSA3
19NAVICIIThe DaysSweden1
28N20ONE DIRECTIONSteal My GirlUK2
41221KATY PERRYThis Is How We DoUSA10
131622JESSIE J, ARIANA GRANDE & NICKI MINAJBang BangUK/USA11
302523FALL OUT BOYCenturiesUSA4
162124MAROON 5MapsUSA16
141825ENRIQUE IGLESIAS feat. SEAN PAUL, GENTE DE ZONA & DESCEMER BUENOBailandoSpain/Jamaica/Cuba12
36N2926ALESSO feat. TOVE LOHeroesSweden3
212227THE VAMPS feat. DEMI LOVATOSomebody To YouUK/USA17
222428CHARLI XCXBoom ClapUK16
232629USHER feat. NICKI MINAJShe Came To Give It To YouUSA8
30NLORDEYellow Flicker BeatNew Zealand1
242331LILLY WOOD & THE PRICK AND
ROBIN SCHULZ
Prayer In CFrance/Germany15
263032TROYE SIVANHappy Little PillRSA5
323133DUKE DUMONTWon't Look BackUK6
38N34THE MAGICIAN feat. YEARS & YEARSSunlightUK2
333235U2The Miracle (Of Joey Ramone)UK4
36NCOBRA STARSHIP feat. ICONA POPNever Been In LoveUSA/Swedeen1
273437LENNY KRAVITZThe ChamberUSA13
40N3938SHIFT K3YI KnowUK3
40N39FENCES feat. MACKLEMOREArrowsUSA2
2533405 SECONDS OF SUMMERDon't StopAustralia17
Hits on the Horizon
PIXIE LOTTBreak Up SongUK
ELLA HENDERSONGlowUK
Border Breakouts
ALI CAMPBELLI Want YouUK
MIDNIGHT REDTake Me HomeUSA

EVENTS OF TODAY IN THE PAST

$
0
0

[edit]

Births[edit]

Deaths[edit]

Holidays and observances[edit]

Article 9

$
0
0
Rita Hayworth

Birth: Oct. 17, 1918
New York
New York County (Manhattan)
New York, USA
Death: May 14, 1987
New York
New York County (Manhattan)
New York, USA

Actress. She achieved fame during the 1940s as one of Hollywood's top stars, appearing in 18 movies during that era. Born Margarita Carmen Cansino, she was the oldest child of parents who were dancers. Her father was a Spanish immigrant and her mother was of Irish-English stock who had performed with the Ziegfeld Follies. Her father wanted her to become a professional dancer, while her mother hoped she would become an actress. Her paternal grandfather, Antonio Cansino, was a world famous classical dancer in Madrid, Spain. Taught dancing at an early age by her uncle, she started performing publicly at the age of six. In 1926 at the age of eight, she was featured in "La Fiesta," a short Warner Brothers film. In 1927 her father moved the family to Hollywood, California, with the hope that dancing could be featured in the movies and that his family could be part of it. He established his own dance studio, where he taught such Hollywood luminaries as James Cagney and Jean Harlow. During the Great Depression, he lost all his investments, as musicals were no longer trendy and commercial interest in his dancing classes waned. He partnered with his daughter to form "The Dancing Cansinos". Because California law prevented her from working in bars and nightclubs because of her age, her father took her with him to work across the border in Tijuana, Mexico as it was a popular tourist spot for people from Los Angeles, California. Due to her working, she never graduated from high school, but she had completed ninth grade at Hamilton High School in Los Angeles. She took a bit part in the film "Cruz Diablo" (1934) at age 16, which led to another in "In Caliente" (1935) with the Mexican actress, Dolores del Río. She danced with her father in such nightspots as the Foreign and the Caliente clubs. When Winfield Sheehan, the head of the Fox Film Corporation, saw her dancing at the Caliente Club, he arranged for her to do a screen test a week later. Impressed by her screen persona, she was signed her for a short-term six-month contract at Fox, under the name Rita Cansino, the first of two name changes for her film career. While at Fox, she appeared in five pictures in non-notable roles. By the end of her six-month contract, Fox had merged into 20th Century Fox, with Darryl F. Zanuck serving as the executive producer. Dismissing Sheehan's interest in Hayworth, Zanuck did not renew her contract. Feeling that she had screen potential, the salesman and promoter, Edward C. Judson, whom she would marry in 1936, got her the lead roles in several independent films and arranged a screen test with Columbia Pictures. The studio head Harry Cohn signed Hayworth to a long-term contract, and cast her in small roles in Columbia features. In 1935 she appeared in "Dante's Inferno" with Spencer Tracy, "Paddy O'Day," in which she played a Russian dancer, "Under the Pampas Moon" as an Argentinean, and an Egyptian beauty in "Charlie Chan in Egypt." In 1936, she took her first starring role as a 'Latin type' in "Human Cargo." Cohn believed that her image was too Mediterranean, which reduced her opportunities to being cast in "exotic" roles, more limited in number. With Cohn and Judson's encouragement, she changed her hair color to dark red and her name to Rita Hayworth. By using her mother's maiden name, she led people to see her British-American ancestry and became a classic "American" pin-up. In 1937 she appeared in five minor Columbia pictures and three independent movies and the following year she appeared in five Columbia B-movies. In 1939 Cohn convinced director Howard Hawks to use her for a small but important role as a man-trap in the aviation drama "Only Angels Have Wings," in which she played opposite Cary Grant and Jean Arthur, and it put her on the road to success. In 1940 she appeared in "Music in My Heart,""The Lady in Question," and "Angels Over Broadway." That year, she was first featured in a Life magazine photo. She was loaned to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studios to appear in "Susan and God" opposite Joan Crawford. While on loan to Warner Brothers, she appeared as the second female lead in "The Strawberry Blonde" (1941) opposite James Cagney and Olivia de Havilland. As the film was a big box-office success, her popularity began to rise and she became one of Hollywood's hottest properties. So impressed was Warner Brothers that they tried to buy her contract from Columbia, but Cohn refused. Her success led to a notable supporting role as the seductive 'Dona Sol des Muire' in "Blood and Sand" (1941) opposite Tyrone Power and Linda Darnell. Returning to Columbia Pictures, she was cast in the musical "You'll Never Get Rich" (1941) opposite Fred Astaire in one of the highest-budgeted films Columbia had ever made. The picture was so successful that the following year the studio produced and released another Astaire-Hayworth picture, "You Were Never Lovelier." In 1942 she also appeared in two other pictures, "Tales of Manhattan" and "My Gal Sal." The same year, she divorced Edward C. Judson and married Orson Welles a year later. In 1944 she made one of her best-known films, the Technicolor musical "Cover Girl" with Gene Kelly, which established her as Columbia's top star of the 1940s. For three consecutive years, starting in 1944, she was named one of the top movie box office attractions in the world. She continued with "Tonight and Every Night" (1945, with Lee Bowman) and "Down to Earth" (1947, with Larry Parks). Her erotic appeal was most noted in Charles Vidor's black and white film noir "Gilda" (1946, with Glenn Ford), which caused censors some consternation. The role, in which she wore black satin and performed a legendary one-glove striptease, made her into a cultural icon as a mysterious and seductive woman. In 1947 she appeared in "The Lady from Shanghai," directed by Orson Welles, was critically acclaimed. The film's failure at the box office was attributed in part to Welles' having had her famous red hair cut short and dyed platinum blonde for the role. The same year, she was featured in a Life magazine cover story, which led to her nickname as "The Love Goddess". Her next film, "The Loves of Carmen" (1948, with Glenn Ford), was the first film co-produced by Columbia and her production company, The Beckworth Corporation (named for Rebecca, her daughter with Welles) and it was Columbia's biggest moneymaker that year. She received a percentage of the profits from this and all her subsequent films until 1954, when she dissolved Beckworth to pay off debts. In 1948 she traveled to Cannes and was introduced to Prince Aly Khan, a Pakistani by nationality, and son of Sultan Mahommed Shah, Aga Khan III, the leader of the Ismaili sect of Shia Islam, and they began a year-long courtship, which received enormous world press coverage. Because she was still legally married to Orson Welles (they finally divorced later in 1948), she received some negative backlash for her courtship with the prince, causing some American fans to boycott her pictures. They were married in May 1949, marking the first time a Hollywood actress became a princess. Hayworth left Hollywood and moved to France, breaking her contract with Columbia. Although she was anxious to start a new life abroad away from Hollywood, Khan's flamboyant lifestyle and duties proved too difficult for her. She did not get along with his friends, and she struggled to learn French. Khan was also known in circles as a playboy, and it was suspected that he had been unfaithful to her during the marriage. She had a daughter with Khan and in 1951 she relocated with her and her daughter by Welles to New York City, New York and they were finally divorced in 1953. She returned to Hollywood and starred in her "comeback" film, the highly publicized "Affair in Trinidad" (1952, with Glenn Ford). In 1953 she was featured in two films, "Salome" with Charles Laughton and Stewart Granger, and "Miss Sadie Thompson" with José Ferrer and Aldo Ray, which won her critical acclaim. For the next four years, she did not make a film appearance, due mainly to a tumultuous marriage to the singer Dick Haymes, whom she married in 1953. During her marriage to Haymes, she was involved in much negative publicity, due to his physical abuse and lawsuits with his previous wives over back child support and other outstanding debts (including the IRS) which significantly lessened her appeal, and she divorced him in 1955. By the time she returned to the screen for "Fire Down Below" (1957, with Robert Mitchum and Jack Lemmon) she had been replaced by Kim Novak as Columbia's top female star. Her last musical was "Pal Joey" (1957, with Frank Sinatra and Kim Novak), after which she parted ways with Columbia Pictures. She received good reviews in "Separate Tables" (1958, with Burt Lancaster and David Niven), and "The Story on Page One" (1960, with Anthony Franciosa). In 1958 she married film producer James Hill but divorced in 1961. In 1962 her planned Broadway debut in "Step on a Crack" was cancelled for undisclosed health reasons. She continued to act in films until the early 1970s. She made a well-publicized 1971 television appearance on The Carol Burnett Show. Her last film was "The Wrath of God" (1972). By this time, her physical and mental health began to deteriorate, which became evident in the filming of "The Wrath of God, as she could not remember her lines and they had to film her scenes one line at a time. In 1973 she agreed to do one more movie, the British "Tales That Witness Madness" but due to worsening health, she abandoned the movie set, and returned to the US, never to return to acting. She struggled with alcohol throughout her life and her alcoholism hid symptoms of what was eventually understood to be Alzheimer's disease, which she was diagnosed in 1980. In July 1981 her health had deteriorated to the point where a judge in Los Angeles Superior Court ruled that she should be placed under the care of her daughter, Princess Yasmin Khan of New York City. She lived in an apartment next to her daughter, who arranged for care for her mother through her final years. In February 1987 she lapsed into a semi coma and died from Alzheimer's disease a few months later at the age of 68. During her career, she appeared in over 60 films, some in uncredited roles and some credited as Rita Casino. She is one of six women who have the distinction of having danced on screen with both Fred Astaire and Gene Kelly. In 1964 she received a Golden Globe nomination Best Actress in a Motion Picture Drama in "Circus World" and in 1977 she received a National Screen Heritage Award. In 1983 actress Lynda Carter portrayed her in the television movie "Rita Hayworth: The Love Goddess." A fund raiser for the Alzheimer's Association is named in her honor by her daughter, Yasmin Aga Khan, who has been the hostess for these events and a major sponsor of Alzheimer's Disease charities and awareness programs. She is listed by the American Film Institute as one of the 100 Greatest Stars of All Time.

Family links:
 Parents:
  Eduardo Cansino (1895 - 1968)
  Volga Hayworth Cansino (1897 - 1945)

 Spouse:
  Dick Haymes (1918 - 1980)

 Children:
  Rebecca Welles (1944 - 2004)*

 Siblings:
  Rita Hayworth (1918 - 1987)
  Eduardo Cansino (1919 - 1974)*
  Vernon Cansino (1922 - 1974)*



Cause of death: Alzheimers Disease
 
Burial:
Holy Cross Cemetery
Culver City
Los Angeles County
California, USA
Rita Hayworth
 
Rita Hayworth
 
Rita Hayworth

Ετσι ήταν η αρμάμαξα που μετέφερε τη σορό του Μεγάλου Αλεξάνδρου

$
0
0


Ετσι ήταν η αρμάμαξα που μετέφερε τη σορό του Μεγάλου Αλεξάνδρου -Τα χρυσά κιονόκρανα και η τροπαιοφόρος Νίκη [εικόνες]

Η χθεσινή ανακοίνωση των αποτελεσμάτων από την πορεία των ανασκαφών στην Αμφίπολη προκάλεσε δέος. Έπειτα από τρεις μήνες βρέθηκε ο νεκρός του τάφου και πλέον όλος ο πλανήτης περιμένει με κομμένη την ανάσα την ανακοίνωση των αποτελεσμάτων της εξέτασης DNA που θα γίνει στα οστά τα οποία βρέθηκαν και θα δώσει στοιχεία για την ταυτότητα του νεκρού.
Αμέσως μετά την ανακοίνωση των ευρημάτων η αρχαιολόγος Ντόροθι Κινγκ εξέφρασε ξανά την άποψη ότι ο τάφος ενδέχεται να ανήκει στον Μέγα Αλέξανδρο (κάτι το οποίο, βέβαια, σχεδόν απέκλεισε η επικεφαλής της ανασκαφής στην Αμφίπολη, Κατερίνα Περιστέρη). Οπως και να έχει, τα σενάρια για την ταυτότητα του νεκρού φούντωσαν από χθες το μεσημέρι και σίγουρα η πιθανότητα να ανήκει στον μεγάλο στρατηλάτη σαγηνεύει ολόκληρο τον πλανήτη. Ετσι, και με αυτή την ευκαιρία, παρακάτω παρουσιάζεται η αρμάμαξα που θεωρείται ότι μετέφερε τη σορό του Μεγάλου Αλεξάνδρου, σύμφωνα πάντα με τις ιστορικές αναφορές που υπάρχουν γύρω από το θέμα αυτό.
Σύμφωνα, λοιπόν, με τις ιστορικές αναφορές, το 321 π.Χ., σχεδόν δύο χρόνια μετά τον θάνατο του Μεγάλου Αλεξάνδρου, ο Αρριδαίος ολοκλήρωσε την κατασκευή της αρμάμαξας που θα μετέφερε τη σορό του Αλεξάνδρου από τη Βαβυλώνα στο μαντείο του Άμμωνα, όπως ήταν η επιθυμία του.
Η σαρκοφάγος ήταν από σφυρήλατο χρυσό και γεμάτη με αρώματα, για να συντηρείται η μούμια, ενώ ήταν σφραγισμένη με εφαρμοστό χρυσό κάλυμμα. Πάνω της ήταν τοποθετημένη μια χρυσοποίκιλτη φοινικίδα (κόκκινη πολεμική σημαία) και δίπλα της τα όπλα του νεκρού.
Η αρμάμαξα είχε θολωτή οροφή πλάτους 8 πήχεων (3,7 μ.) και μήκους 12 πήχεων (5,55 μ.) με λιθοκόλλητες ψηφίδες. Τη βάση της καμάρας περιέτρεχε παραλληλόγραμμος θριγκός με ανάγλυφες προτομές τραγελάφων (φανταστικών ζώων), απ’ τις οποίους κρέμονταν χρυσοί κρίκοι διαμέτρου 2 παλαμών (περίπου 14,8 εκατοστών), όπου ήταν περασμένο πομπικό στέμμα στολισμένο μεγαλόπρεπα με όλων των ειδών τα χρώματα. Στις άκρες υπήρχαν δικτυωτά κρόσσια με μεγάλα κουδούνια, για να φτάνει ο ήχος τους πολύ μακρυά.
Στις 4 γωνίες της καμάρας στεκόταν από μία χρυσή τροπαιοφόρος Νίκη, και η κιονοστοιχία που στήριζε την καμάρα ήταν χρυσή με ιωνικού ρυθμού κιονόκρανα.


Article 7

ΣΥΜΜΑΧΙΑ ΥΠΟΥΡΓΕΙΟΥ ΤΟΥΡΙΣΜΟΥ ΜΕ ΔΕΘ-HELEXPO

$
0
0

ΟΛΓΑ ΚΕΦΑΛΟΓΙΑΝΝΗ-ΤΑΣΟΣ ΤΖΗΚΑΣ
Σε στρατηγική «συμμαχία» με το υπουργείο Τουρισμού προχωρά η ΔΕΘ-Helexpo, με την υπουργό Τουρισμού, κα Όλγα Κεφαλογιάννη και τον πρόεδρο του εθνικού εκθεσιακού φορέα, κ. Τάσο Τζήκα, να υπογράφουν σήμερα μνημόνιο συνεργασίας για την από κοινού συμμετοχή σε διεθνείς εκθέσεις του εξωτερικού. 
Η συνεργασία αυτή ανακοινώθηκε σε σημερινή συνέντευξη Τύπου της υπουργού Τουρισμού, κ. Όλγας Κεφαλογιάννη, με την αφορμή της 30ης Philoxenia και της Hotelia, που άνοιξαν σήμερα τις πύλες τους. 
Οι δύο φορείς ενώνουν τις δυνάμεις τους με σκοπό αφενός να αξιοποιήσει το υπουργείο Τουρισμού την εκθεσιακή τεχνογνωσία και εμπειρία της ΔΕΘ-Helexpo και αφετέρου να χρησιμοποιήσει ο εθνικός εκθεσιακός φορέας τη διεθνή δικτύωση του υπουργείου  για την προβολή της Θεσσαλονίκης ως εκθεσιακού και συνεδριακού προορισμού. 
 «Το υπουργείο Τουρισμού, ο ΕΟΤ και η ΔΕΘ-Helexpo  θα συνδυάσουν την τεχνογνωσία και την πολύχρονη εμπειρία τους και θα καταρτίσουν πρόγραμμα συμμετοχής σε μεγάλες διεθνείς εκθέσεις του εξωτερικού» σημείωσε η κα Κεφαλογιάννη. Τόνισε δε πως στόχος είναι να επιτευχθεί η υψηλότερη δυνατή κάλυψη των αγορών. «Πρόκειται για ένα μοντέλο συνεργασίας που μόνο οφέλη θα προσπορίσει στον ελληνικό τουρισμό» σημείωσε.
Από την πλευρά του ο πρόεδρος της ΔΕΘ-Helexpo, κ. Τάσος Τζήκας, υπογράμμισε την ταχύτατη ανταπόκριση του υπουργείου Τουρισμού στην πρόταση του εθνικού εκθεσιακού φορέα για συνεργασία. Ο δε διευθύνων σύμβουλος της εταιρείας, κ. Κυριάκος Ποζρικίδης, εξήγησε πως η ΔΕΘ-Ηelexpo θα αποτελέσει ουσιαστικά τον εκτελεστικό βραχίονα του ελληνικού τουριστικού προϊόντος σε νέες και παλαιές αγορές και την ίδια στιγμή θα ενταχθεί στο δίκτυο του ΕΟΤ για να τονώσει τον επαγγελματικό τουρισμό της Θεσσαλονίκης.

Σήμερα στις 20:00 η υπουργός Τουρισμού θα εγκαινιάσει τις Philoxenia και Hotelia στην αίθουσα «Αιμίλιος Ριάδης» στο Διεθνές Εκθεσιακό Κέντρο Θεσσαλονίκης.


ΕΚΔΗΛΩΣΗ ΓΙΑ ΤΟ ΠΟΛΥΤΕΧΝΕΙΟ ΣΤΟ ΛΙΤΟΧΩΡΟ

$
0
0
 στις 17 Νοεμβρίου, ημέρα θα πραγματοποιηθεί μια μικρή συμβολική εκδήλωση στο Λιτόχωρο για την επέτειο της εξέγερσης του Πολυτεχνείου. 
Το πρόγραμμα για την εκδήλωση είναι το εξής:
11:30 π.μ. Συνάντηση έξω από το Δημαρχείο και πραγματοποίηση πορείας μέσω της οδού του Πάρκου μέχρι το Ηρώον.
11:50 π.μ. Κατάθεση στεφανιών από εκπρόσωπο Δήμου Δίου – Ολύμπου και αντιπροσωπείες σχολείων.

12:00 π.μ. Ομιλία από εκπρόσωπο μαθητικής κοινότητας.

ΤΡΕΙΣ ΕΠΙΜΟΝΟΙ ΘΕΣΣΑΛΟΝΙΚΕΙΣ

$
0
0

Τρεις προσωπικότητες με έργο που εκκινεί από τελείως διαφορετικές  αφετηρίες, αλλά με σημείο τομής τον ανθρωποκεντρικό προσανατολισμό, προτείνει στο κοινό ως «Επίμονους Θεσσαλονικείς» το Μορφωτικό Ίδρυμα της Ένωσης Συντακτών Ημερήσιων Εφημερίδων Μακεδονίας-Θράκης.


Στις 28 Νοεμβρίου 2014, ο αστροφυσικός Γιάννης Σειραδάκης, καθηγητής στο ΑΠΘ, θα αναπτύξει τα νεότερα δεδομένα για τον Μηχανισμό των Αντικυθήρων.


Στις 15 Δεκεμβρίου 2014 ο π. Γερβάσιος Ραπτόπουλος συνομιλεί με δημοσιογράφους, ερευνητές και συμπολίτες του που παρακολουθούν την ανθρωπιστική δράση του για την ανακούφιση φυλακισμένων.


Στις 21 Ιανουαρίου 2015 ακολουθούμε τον θεατρολόγο και δημιουργό της Πειραματικής Σκηνής της Τέχνης Νικηφόρο Παπανδρέου στη διαδρομή που με αφετηρία τη Θεσσαλονίκη ανανέωσε τον θεατρικό χάρτη της Ελλάδας.


Όλες οι εκδηλώσεις θα γίνουν στην αίθουσα του Μορφωτικού Ιδρύματος της ΕΣΗΕΜ-Θ (Μορκεντάου 1) και θα αρχίζουν στις 19.00



Η σειρά εκδηλώσεων «Επίμονοι Θεσσαλονικείς» εγκαινιάστηκε από το Μορφωτικό Ίδρυμα της ΕΣΗΕΜ-Θ πέρυσι και αφορά πρόσωπα τα οποία με την προσήλωσή τους στην παραγωγή έργου μέσα στο ασταθές (άλλοτε γόνιμο κι άλλοτε εχθρικό) περιβάλλον της νεότερης Θεσσαλονίκης κόμισαν χαρακτηριστικά στοιχεία στο πρόσωπο της πόλης, και εκείνη, σε μια διαδικασία αλληλεπίδρασης, διαμόρφωσε στοιχεία της δικής τους ταυτότητας.

ΔΩΡΕΑΝ ΙΑΤΡΙΚΕΣ ΕΞΕΤΑΣΕΙΣ

$
0
0

Ο κεντρικός Ροταριανός Όμιλος Θεσσαλονίκης συμπληρώνοντας φέτος 80 χρόνια αδιάλειπτης και συνεχούς προσφοράς, σε συνεργασία με τον Όμιλο Γυναικών  INNER WEEL και τον Όμιλο των νέων τους ROTARACT  οργανώνει στη Θεσσαλονίκη υπό την αιγίδα του Υπουργείου Μακεδονίας και Θράκης, της Περιφέρειας Κεντρικής Μακεδονίας και του Δήμου Θεσσαλονίκης, από 15 - 22 Νοεμβρίου 2014 δωρεάν προληπτικές ιατρικές εξετάσεις για όλους τους ανασφάλιστους, πολύτεκνους, άνεργους και άπορους  Θεσσαλονικείς, σε όλες σχεδόν τις ιατρικές ειδικότητες. Το πρόγραμμα αυτό προσφοράς και αλληλεγγύης πραγματοποιείται για δεύτερη συνεχή χρονιά, με την ευγενική συμμετοχή και προσφορά ιατρών, κορυφαίων επιστημόνων, πολλών ιατρο-φαρμακευτικών επιχειρήσεων, του Ιατρικού Διαβαλκανικού Θεσσαλονίκης, της κάρτας υγείας ΕΥ CLUB, της φαρμακευτικής BAYER και του Οδοντιατρικού Συλλόγου Θεσσαλονίκης.

Από 15 έως 22 Νοεμβρίου όσοι Θεσσαλονικείς έχουν ανάγκη εξετάσεων μπορούν να απευθύνονται στον Ροταριανό Όμιλο Θεσσαλονίκης, στις κτιριακές του εγκαταστάσεις (Πλ. Φαναριωτών 2, Π. ΜΕλά και Μητροπόλεως γωνία, απέναντι από τα "Ηλύσια") και να προσέρχονται στον ειδικά διαμορφωμένο χώρο των ιατρείων για Kαρδιολογικές εξετάσεις (ηλεκτροκαρδιογράφημα, ακρόαση καρδιάς και πνευμόνων, μέτρηση αρτηριακής πίεσης), για Ογκολογικές εξετάσεις (παθήσεις μαστού, χειρουργικές παθήσεις στομάχου και παχέως εντέρου, μελανώματα δέρματος), Διαβητολογικές εξετάσεις (μέτρηση σακχάρου, διατροφική - συμβουλευτική για απώλεια βάρους), Ορθοπαιδικές εξετάσεις (οστεοπόρωση, πλατυποδία, βλαισοποδία), Οδοντιατρικές εξετάσεις (εξέταση οδόντων, ούλων, στοματικής κοιλότητας στην ειδική Κινητή Μονάδα του Οδοντιατρικού Συλλόγου Θεσσαλονίκης που θα σταθμεύει στον χώρο της πλατείας Φαναριωτών 2 με γιατρούς μέλη του συλλόγου), Ουρολογικές εξετάσεις (προστάτης, ακράτεια ούρων), Εξετάσεις πλαστικής χειρουργικής (καλοήθεις και κακοήθεις όγκοι του δέρματος, εγκαύματα - συγγενείς ανωμαλίες, παθήσεις άκρας χειρός, μετατραυματικές βλάβες, μετεγχειρητικές βλάβες), Οφθαλμολογικές εξετάσεις (μυωπία, πρεσβιωπία), Ακκοολογικές εξετάσεις (έλεγχος ακοής), Ωτορινολαρυγγικές εξετάσεις (λάρυγγος, στόματος, αφτιών), Γυναικολογικές εξετάσεις(γενικές εξετάσεις), Αγγειολογικές εξετάσεις (γενικές εξετάσεις), Παιδιατρικές εξετάσεις (γενικές εξετάσεις), Mικροβιολογικές εξετάσεις (Σάκχαρο, χοληστερίνη, τριγλυκερίδια), Ψυχολογικές εξετάσεις (κατάθλιψη, αλτζχάϊμερ, ψυχολογική υποστήριξη), Παθολογικές εξετάσεις(γενικές εξετάσεις),  Συμβουλευτική βάσει ευρημάτων και Ψυχοκοινωνικής υποστήριξης. Καθημερινά κατά τις ώρες 09:00 - 13:00 και 17:00 - 21:00 όσοι από τους ανασφάλιστους συμπολίτες θέλουν να εξετασθούν εντελώς δωρεάν σε έναν ή και περισσότερους από τους παραπάνω τομείς της ιατρικής επιστήμης, μπορούν να τηλεφωνούν για να κλείσουν ραντεβού με τους γιατρούς στα τηλέφωνα: 2310-266578, 2310- 533751 και 2310- 914088 ή στο 6977 621803.

Ο Πρόεδρος του Ροταριανού Ομίλου Θεσσαλονίκης κ. Θεόδωρος Ασπασίδης στη χθεσινή Συνέντευξη Τύπου προς τους εκπροσώπους των Μέσων Μαζικής Ενημέρωσης τόνισε ότι "Όπως και στην περυσινή μας επιτυχημένη διοργάνωση , θα λειτουργήσει και φέτος με την υποβοήθηση πολλών φαρμακοποιών της πόλης μας και το πρώτο "Ροταριανό Φαρμακείο" που θα διαθέτει δωρεάν φάρμακα σε όσους είναι άποροι, άνεργοι, πολύτεκνοι και ανασφάλιστοι.Η προσπάθειά μας φέτος ενισχύεται με τις σημαντικότατες προσφορές μεγάλων νοσοκομείων και κλινικών της Θεσσαλονίκης, όπως αυτή του Ιατρικό Διαβαλκανικού Θεσσαλονίκης που προσέφερε έναν μεγάλο αριθμό ακριβών εξετάσεων δωρεάν για τους ανασφάλιστους και άπορους Θεσσαλονικείς που θα γίνουν με παραπεμπτικό των γιατρών του προγράμματος μέσα στις εγκαταστάσεις του, με πλήρη και υψηλή ιατρική και τεχνολογική επιστημονική υποστήριξη. Όπως η προσφορά της φαρμακευτικής BAYER που προσέφερε ένα πακέτο 500 εξετάσεων διερεύνησης του ζαχαρώδους διαβήτη. Όπως ο Οδοντιατρικός Σύλλογος Θεσσαλονίκης που διαθέτει γιατρούς μέλη του για την καθημερινή λειτουργία της Κινητής Μονάδας του που θα βρίσκεται στον χώρο της πλατείας Φαναριωτών όλες τις μέρες και τέλος την κάρτα υγείας "ΕΥ CLUB"που στηρίζει τα μέγιστα την προσπάθειά μας αυτή. Εκ μέρους του Ροταριανού Ομίλου Θεσσαλονίκης ευχαριστούμε όλους όσους ανταποκρίθηκαν στο πρόγραμμα προσφοράς και αλληλεγγύης που σκοπό έχει να συμβάλει στην ανακούφιση εκείνων που ιδιαίτερα επλήγησαν αυτά τα δύσκολα χρόνια για όλους μας από την οικονομική κρίση."

Την επίσημη έναρξη της Εβδομάδας Προληπτικής Ιατρικής στη Θεσσαλονίκη, το Σάββατο 15/11/2014 στις 12:30 το μεσημέρι, θα κάνει στις εγκαταστάσεις του Ροταριανού Ομίλου Θεσσαλονίκης, η Υφυπουργός Υγείας και Κοινωνικής Αλληλεγγύης κ. Αικατερίνης Παπακώστα - Σιδηροπούλου. Στην εκδήλωση αυτή, θα παρευρεθούν ο Υπουργός Μακεδονίας και Θράκης κ. Γιώργος Ορφανός, ο Περιφερειάρχης Κεντρικής Μακεδονίας κ. Απόστολος Τζιτζικώστας, ο Δήμαρχος Θεσσαλονίκης κ. Γιάννης Μπουτάρης, βουλευτές, πρόξενοι και εκπρόσωποι μεγάλων νοσηλευτικών ιδρυμάτων της πόλης. Στην εναρκτήρια εκδήλωση συμμετέχει και η χορωδία της Στέγης Πολιτισμού και Κοινωνικής Συμπαράστασης Θεσσαλονίκης "Ο Αριστοτέλης"υπό την διεύθυνση του μαέστρου κ. Δημήτρη Μπάσογλου.

Την ίδια ημέρα εξ άλλου, στο ξενοδοχείο GRAND HOTEL PALACE ο Ροταριανός Όμιλος Θεσσαλονίκης παραθέτει  π ρ ο ς   τ ι μ ή ν   της Υφυπουργού Υγείας και Κοινωνικής Αλληλεγγύης κ. Αικατερίνης Παπακώστα - Σιδηροπούλου  επίσημο δείπνο-ομιλία με κεντρική ομιλήτρια την ίδια και με θέμα που άπτεται των σημαντικότατων ζητημάτων υγείας που απασχολούν σήμερα τον κλάδο, αλλά και την κάθε Ελληνική οικογένεια. Στην εκδήλωση αυτή είναι προσκεκλημένες οι Αρχές της πόλης, επιχειρηματίες του κλάδου υγείας και φαρμάκων, κλινικάρχες και διευθυντές εκπροσώπους – ιατρούς όλου του τομέα της δημόσιας υγείας. Στο πρόγραμμα της βραδιάς περιλαμβάνεται και η εμφάνιση του διεθνούς φήμης τενόρου Φίλιππα - Τζών Μοδινού τον οποίο θα συνοδεύσει στο πιάνο ο γνωστός μαέστρος της διεθνούς φήμης χορωδίας "ΑΡΜΟΝΙΑ"Θεσσαλονίκης δικηγόρος κ. Νίκος Κυριακού. 


Ο 'ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΣ'ΣΤΟ ΜΕΓΑΡΟ ΜΟΥΣΙΚΗΣ ΑΘΗΝΩΝ

$
0
0
“Alexander the Great”: Μετά το θρίαμβο της Θεσσαλονίκης, ραντεβού στο Μέγαρο Μουσικής Αθηνών!
Σε εξέλιξη ο σχεδιασμός της διεθνούς περιοδείας σε Αυστραλία, ΗΠΑ, Καναδά, Μεγάλη Βρετανία, Γερμανία

Πρωτόγνωρες στιγμές έζησε το Κρατικό Θέατρο Βορείου Ελλάδος με την παράσταση «Alexander the Great. Rock Opera» που έγραψε ο Κώστας Αθυρίδης και σκηνοθέτησε μαζί με τον Καλλιτεχνικό Διευθυντή του ΚΘΒΕ Γιάννη Βούρο. Έχοντας ως συνδετικό κρίκο την πρωτοπορία, η προσπάθεια –η οποία έφερε ένα καινούργιο είδος στη σκηνή του Βασιλικού Θεάτρου, πολλούς νεαρούς συντελεστές από τη Θεσσαλονίκη στο προσκήνιο και το φρέσκο πρόσωπο του ΚΘΒΕ- εξέπληξε το κοινό, που γέμισε 9 βραδιές το θέατρο, χαρίζοντας θερμό χειροκρότημα στους συντελεστές καθόλη τη διάρκεια της παράστασης.
Το γεγονός ότι η πρεμιέρα του έργου συνέπεσε με τις σπουδαίες αρχαιολογικές ανακαλύψεις στην Αμφίπολη και η δημόσια συζήτηση που ακολούθησε, ενέτειναν το ενδιαφέρον της ροκ όπερας «Alexander the Great», η οποία προσεγγίζει, με σύγχρονο ήχο και μουσική, τη μαγεία, το όνειρο και την ανθρώπινη φύση του Αλέξανδρου.   
«Είμαι πολύ ικανοποιημένος γιατί το ΚΘΒΕ πρωτοτυπεί, καινοτομεί και το δείχνει στην πράξη με ένα εντυπωσιακό πολυθέαμα, όπου ο χορός, το τραγούδι και η υποκριτική συνομιλούν πάνω στη σκηνή και γεννούν πολύ δυνατά συναισθήματα στους θεατές. Αισθάνομαι καλά γιατί ο κόσμος ανταποκρίθηκε με το παραπάνω, με τη μεγάλη συμμετοχή του, με το θερμό χειροκρότημά του, με τα θετικά του σχόλια. Ανυπομονούμε αυτή η παραγωγή να αξιωθεί να συναντηθεί το διεθνές κοινό και να προβάλλει τον ελληνικό πολιτισμό μέσα από μια προσωπικότητα, όπως ο Μέγας Αλέξανδρος, που ακόμη και σήμερα προσελκύει το παγκόσμιο ενδιαφέρον»δηλώνει ο καλλιτεχνικός διευθυντής και σκηνοθέτης της παράστασης Γιάννης Βούρος

Οι δυνατές ερμηνείες από νέους καλλιτέχνες, η εκπληκτική μουσική του Κώστα Αθυρίδη, οι χορογραφίες της Άσπας Φούτσηκαι το άρτιο και ιστορικά τεκμηριωμένο κείμενο με την υπογραφή της διευθύντριας του Αρχαιολογικού Μουσείου Θεσσαλονίκης Π. Βελένη, τα λιτά σκηνικά του Γιάννη Μετζικώφ, τα πάνω από 200 κοστούμια της Ιωάννας Τιμοθεάδου, το εικονικό περιβάλλον με video του Στάθη Μήτσιουπου ταξίδεψε το κοινό στη διάρκεια του έργου, οι φωτισμοί του Λευτέρη Παυλόπουλουκαι η πρωτοποριακή σκηνοθεσία με την υπογραφή του καλλιτεχνικού διευθυντή Γιάννη Βούρου και του Κώστα Αθυρίδη ήταν μόνο μερικά από τα στοιχεία χάρη στα οποία η παράσταση μπορεί να χαρακτηριστεί ως ένα μοναδικό υπερθέαμα. 
Ο Μέγας Αλέξανδρος Δημήτρης Τικτόπουλος, η Ολυμπιάδα Χαρίκλεια Χατζησαββίδου, ο Φίλιππος Θωμάς Βλιαγκόφτης, ο Αριστοτέλης Θοδωρής Βουτσικάκης, η αφηγήτρια Γεωργία Βεληβασάκη, η τροφός Ρούλα Μανισάνουκαι οι υπόλοιποι 35 ηθοποιοί, τραγουδιστές και χορευτές, με τη συνοδεία 10μελούς μπάντας υπό τη διεύθυνση του Κώστα Τζούνη, έδωσαν πνοή στους ρόλους και αποθεώθηκαν από το κοινό σε κάθε παράσταση. 
Αξίζει να σημειωθεί ότι οι δύο παραστάσεις που δόθηκαν από το ΚΘΒΕ για κοινωνικό σκοπό, με ελεύθερη είσοδο για ανέργους, ΑΜΕΑ και πολύτεκνους, πραγματοποιήθηκαν με γεμάτο θέατρο, πετυχαίνοντας απόλυτα το στόχο που τέθηκε εξαρχής. 
«Ήταν μια τολμηρή επιλογή, η οποία δικαιώθηκε. Το κοινό αγκάλιασε την προσπάθειά μας αλλά αυτό είναι μόνο η αρχή της περιπέτειας. Εκ μέρους του δ.σ. του ΚΘΒΕ θέλω να ευχαριστήσω τον κόσμο που συμμετείχε καθώς και τα Μέσα Μαζικής Ενημέρωσης για την υποστήριξη. Η περιπέτεια όμως τώρα αρχίζει. Είναι μια περιπέτεια, μια εκστρατεία, μια καμπάνια, που αφορά όλη την πόλη, τους δήμους, τους φορείς, τους επιχειρηματίες. Αφορά την ίδια την πολιτεία. Βάλαμε τον πήχη ψηλά και πρέπει να τα καταφέρουμε μέχρι το τέλος» δηλώνει η Πρόεδρος του ΚΘΒΕ Μένη Λυσαρίδου.


Στην ιστοσελίδα alexanderrockopera.grπου δημιουργήθηκε για να υποστηρίξει τη διεθνή περιοδεία του «Alexander the Great. Rock opera”, μπορεί κανείς να βρει ενδεικτικά σχόλια θεατών, καθώς επίσης και τις πρώτες κριτικές που γράφτηκαν για την ροκ όπερα του ΚΘΒΕ. 

ΑΜΦΙΠΟΛΗ-ΤΑ ΕΥΡΗΜΑΤΑ ΣΥΝΔΕΟΝΤΑΙ ΜΕ ΤΗΝ 'ΣΑΡΚΟΦΑΓΟ'ΤΟΥ Μ.ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΥ

$
0
0
Συγκλονιστικά είναι τα νέα ευρήματα που έφερε στο φως η αρχαιολογική ανασκαφή στον τύμβο Καστά της Αμφίπολης και θα απασχολήσουν για καιρό, αν όχι για χρόνια, τους αρχαιολόγους.
Ορισμένοι αρχαιολόγοι επισημαίνουν ότι τα νέα ιστορικά ευρήματα του τάφου της Αμφίπολης συνδέονται με την περίφημη «Σαρκοφάγο του Μεγάλου Αλεξάνδρου», η οποία εκτίθεται στο Αρχαιολογικό Μουσείο της Κωνσταντινούπολης.
Σύμφωνα με πολλούς αρχαιολόγους, η σαρκοφάγος δεν συνδέεται με τον Μακεδόνα στρατηλάτη αλλά με τον σπουδαίο στρατηγό της Αμφίπολης Λαομέδοντα, ωστόσο η ομοιότητα των ευρημάτων -όπως φαίνεται και στις φωτογραφίες- είναι απίστευτη.
Τα γυάλινα και ξύλινα διακοσμητικά που βρέθηκαν στην ανασκαφή της Αμφίπολης είναι ολόιδια με τα μοτίβα που κοσμούν τη «Σαρκοφάγο του Μεγάλου Αλεξάνδρου». Πιθανόν να πρόκειται για μια παρόμοια τεχνοτροπία, ωστόσο τα ευρήματα της Αμφίπολης αρχίζουν όλο και περισσότερο να συνδέονται με στρατηγό του Μεγάλου Αλεξάνδρου.
Αυτή είναι η λεγόμενη «Σαρκοφάγος του Μεγάλου Αλεξάνδρου», η οποία ανήκει μάλλον στον στρατηγό Λαομέδοντα:


Ποιος ήταν ο Λαομέδων
Ο Λαομέδων της Λέσβου (έζησε από τα παιδικά του χρόνια στην Αμφίπολη, αλλά η καταγωγή του ήταν από τη Μυτιλήνη -και, μάλιστα, είχε και το προσωνύμιο Μυτιληνιός) ήταν διερμηνέας και φρουρός στις εκστρατείες του Μεγάλου Αλεξάνδρου στην Ασία.
Σύμφωνα με τον ιστορικό Διογένη Λαέρτιο, ο Λαομέδων είχε αρχικά εξοριστεί από τον Φίλιππο Β’ -πατέρα του στρατηλάτη- και επέστρεψε στη Μακεδονία όταν ανέβηκε στον θρόνο ο Μέγας Αλέξανδρος. Μετά τον θάνατο του Μ. Αλεξάνδρου ο Λαομέδων κυβέρνησε μία μικρή σατραπεία στη Συρία. Κατά τη διάρκεια αλληλοεξοντωτικών πολέμων που ξέσπασαν στην αυτοκρατορία του Μ. Αλεξάνδρου, ο Λαομέδων εκδιώχθηκε από τον Νικάνορα. Αργότερα δραπέτευσε στην Καρία, με κάποιους ιστορικούς να πιστεύουν ότι στην Καρία ο Αλκέτας τού προσέφερε την Αμφίπολη!
Συσχέτιση του Λαομέδοντα με το μνημείο του Λέοντος στην Αμφίπολη περιγράφεται και από τον πρώτο ανασκαφέα του χώρου, τον Δημήτρη Λαζαρίδη. Στο αφιέρωμα-έκδοση του υπουργείου Πολιτισμού «Αμφίπολις», ο Δημήτρης Λαζαρίδης σημειώνει:
«Στην Αμφίπολη εγκαταστάθηκαν οι τρεις πιο αξιόλογοι ναύαρχοι του Μεγάλου Αλεξάνδρου: ο Νέαρχος που καταγόταν από την Κρήτη, ο Ανδροσθένης από τη Θάσο και ο Λαομέδων από τη Λέσβο.
Ο τελευταίος είναι ο αφοσιωμένος σύντροφος του Αλεξάνδρου, τριήραρχος και διοικητής των αιχμαλώτων αρχικά, σατράπης της Συρίας αργότερα. Στον Λαομέδοντα, πιθανώς, αποδίδεται το μνημείο, και αυτού τη δόξα, την πολεμική αρετή και το θάρρος συμβόλιζε».

Viewing all 58035 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images