Dante Zucchi Video
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2024-05-14
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Ii «De Rien» sono un gruppo musicale made in Bergamo di matrice cantautoriale che hanno prodotto un disco «Canzoni profane e d’amor» con l’aiuto di Luca Severino. Il duo è formato da Marco Pesenti e Flavio Fucili. Nell’album ci sono molte collaborazioni: con il trombettista Fabio Brignoli (ed il sassofono di Pasquale Brolis) e poi i video con la partecipazione degli artisti Monsieur David e Fra Martò. Diego Zucchi, invece è l’autore delle illustrazioni e della copertina.
Zucchi Mazzocchi Giulio Briccialdi Casali 2021
0:00:00 FOCUS DANTE - INFERNO 0:03:28 recital INFERNO da Dante Alighieri con Marzia Ubaldi, Augusto Zucchi, Daniele Procacci, Chiara Mazzocchi 0:27:45 consegna del Premio Gastone Moschin a Marzia Ubaldi 0:46:08 film L’INFERNO di Francesco Bertolini, Giuseppe De Liguoro, Adolfo Padovan colonna sonora eseguita dal vivo a cura dell’Istituto Musicale “Giulio Briccialdi” di Terni sotto la supervisione del maestro Ludovico Fulci 1:57:50 Incontro con Maria Laura Moraci regista del cortometraggio "Eyes" 2:20:06 Finale con Arnaldo Casali, Riccardo Leonelli e Maria Laura Moraci
Una web serie per rivivere oggi la #FirenzeDiDante! 12 episodi per ripercorrerne i luoghi e le vicende lungo un percorso che si sviluppa nelle vie della città fra targhe e luoghi legati alla sua storia. Un progetto realizzato dall'Ufficio Firenze Patrimonio Mondiale e Rapporti con UNESCO-Comune di Firenze e MUS.E con la partecipazione di Federica Berti, Carlo Francini e Valentina Zucchi Grazie a Unicoop Firenze, Aquila Energie e al Comitato per le celebrazioni del settecentenario dantesco ???? Per tutto l'anno vi proporremo ogni domenica (alle ore 10:00 - solo per soci Unicoop- e alle ore 11:30) le #PasseggiateDantesche per scoprire il contesto storico, urbanistico e politico in cui il poeta visse e restituirne la dimensione di vita quotidiana. I percorsi sono gratuiti ma con prenotazione obbligatoria️ La prenotazione deve essere inviata via mail •••@••• indicando nome, cognome, numero di telefono, giorno scelto. Il servizio è attivo dal lunedì al sabato ì dalle 9.30 alle 13.00 e dalle 14.00 alla 17.00. La domenica e festivi dalle 9.30 alle 12.30. Sarà possibile prenotare solo un incontro per volta, dal lunedì precedente alla data prescelta. Si prega di attendere conferma via mail dell’avvenuta prenotazione.
Thomas Campion Harris Leighton Zucchi 1773 1805 2010
This was poem of the week in The Guardian, 22 March 2010. It drew more than 100 comments: (http•••) It's a loose translation of Catullus 5: (http•••) When Catullus and Thomas Campion lived, death was possible at any time. In fact, you were more likely to die young. Now we think the opposite, that we will grow old and then die. Then, half of the children born would die before they were five years old. As you got older, death became less likely. Life expectancy increased. Human life span was the same as it is today - maybe even better - about 100 years. But life expectancy was short - perhaps 20 years. As an aside, this is true of some species. Song birds, for example, can live for 30 years. Yet most of them die in the first 6 months. If they get through the first six months of life unscathed, then their life expectancy increases greatly. Lesbia was his pet name for Clodia, his mistress and the wife of Metellus (http•••) He named her because of her passionate nature, after Sappho, the poetess from the Isle of Lesbos who was the first Lesbian - er, the first to be associated with that name, I mean. Lesbia's nickname had nothing to do with a preference for women. It was more a reference to her sensitive sensual nature. People weren't classified according to their sexual preferences back then. The word Lesbian was first used to mean female homosexuality in Victorian times - and that usage became current in the 20th century. . In Catullus' time and for centuries afterwards the word Lesbian would merely mean somebody from Lesbos. (http•••) "What praises would be best Wherewith to crown my girls? The rose when she unfurls Her balmy, lighted buds Is not so good So fresh as they When on my breast They lean and say All that they would Opening their glorious, candid maidenhood". Victorian verse doesn't get more explicit than this . It was written about Sappho by a poet called Michael Field, who turned out to be two lady poetesses, Katherine Harris Bradley and Edith Emma Cooper. (http•••) Paintings and Sculpture: Acme and Septimus, by Frederic Leighton Lesbia, by John Reinhard Weguelin Courtship the Proposal, by Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema Sappho by Giovanni Duprè Madame Recamier, 1805, by Francois Gerard Catullus Comforting Lesbia, 1773, by Antonio Zucchi My sweetest Lesbia, let us live and love, And, though the sager sort our deeds reprove, Let us not weigh them: heaven's great lamps do dive Into their west, and straight again revive, But, soon as once set is our little light, Then must we sleep one ever-during night. If all would lead their lives in love like me, Then bloody swords and armour should not be, No drum nor trumpet peaceful sleeps should move, Unless alarm came from the camp of love: But fools do live, and waste their little light, And seek with pain their ever-during night. When timely death my life and fortune ends, Let not my hearse be vexed with mourning friends, But let all lovers, rich in triumph come, And with sweet pastimes grace my happy tomb; And, Lesbia, close up thou my little light, And crown with love my ever-during night.
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- cronologia: Cantanti lirici.
- Indici (per ordine alfabetico): Z...