Aleksandr Morozov Podcasts
Russian singer and opera singer
Anniversaries 1954 Anniversaries (Birth: Aleksandr Morozov)
- bass
- Soviet Union, Russia
- opera singer
Last update
2024-05-14
Refresh
Sofya: Galina Vishnevskaya Lyubka: Nina Lebedeva Frosya: Elena Obraztsova Khivrya: Veronika Borisenko Semyon's mother: Nina Novosyolova First woman: Nina Fomina Second woman: Galina Borisova Third woman: Nina Grigoryeva Semyon: Vladimir Atlantov Mikola: Aleksandr Arkhipov Tsaryov: Yuri Mazurok Von Vichrov: Vladimir Valaitis Tkachenko: Artur Eizen Ivasenko: Stanislav Frolov A worker: Aleksey Maslennikov A translator: Vitali Vlasov Old men: Boris Morozov and Yuri Korolyov First Gaydamak: Vladimir Filippov Second Gaydamak: Anatolit Mishutin Conductor: Gennady Rozhdestvensky Bolshoi Opera visiting La Scala 6 November 1973 In-house recording
The Process: a podcast about creativity and making music
This episode features Vessels to Motherland (Danica Borisavljevic and Nikita Morozov). We Listen to "Oiseau" from their debut album Machine Lieder and talk about the primal urge to create, the world of new music, and creative freedom.
2014-01-19 05:00:00
Duration (h:m:s): 58:02
Few people would argue with the wonders of connectivity, communication and access to infinite quantities of information that the Internet has enabled. But our understanding of the digital future is shaped by those who are making it, and they often have a vested commercial interest in a mass audience buying what they offer. If we take off our rose-coloured glasses, we see that the wonder-gadgets and techno-solutionism can become just another way to sell us things and if we're not the customer, we're generally the product. The lofty ideals of the early Internet have been hijacked to give every digital touchpoint an illusory benevolence. But the reality is much more ambiguous. The digital future has not been written. We need to avoid utopian complacency and think about our digital lives so we can make sure the Internet lives up to its promise, not its darkest possibilities. Evgeny Morozov is a Belarusian writer and researcher whose commentary on technology has appeared in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, The Economist, and New Scientist. He is the author of The Net Delusion: The Dark Side of Internet Freedom, and most recently, To Save Everything, Click Here: The Folly of Technological Solutionism.
2014-01-19 05:00:00
Duration (h:m:s): 58:02
Few people would argue with the wonders of connectivity, communication and access to infinite quantities of information that the Internet has enabled. But our understanding of the digital future is shaped by those who are making it, and they often have a vested commercial interest in a mass audience buying what they offer. If we take off our rose-coloured glasses, we see that the wonder-gadgets and techno-solutionism can become just another way to sell us things and if we're not the customer, we're generally the product. The lofty ideals of the early Internet have been hijacked to give every digital touchpoint an illusory benevolence. But the reality is much more ambiguous. The digital future has not been written. We need to avoid utopian complacency and think about our digital lives so we can make sure the Internet lives up to its promise, not its darkest possibilities. Evgeny Morozov is a Belarusian writer and researcher whose commentary on technology has appeared in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, The Economist, and New Scientist. He is the author of The Net Delusion: The Dark Side of Internet Freedom, and most recently, To Save Everything, Click Here: The Folly of Technological Solutionism.
or
- timeline: Lyrical singers (Europe).
- Indexes (by alphabetical order): M...