Lyrics
Chorus:
I’m feeling like an alien baby
Riding around the world
I’m feeling like a stranger lately
Round and around we go
Verse 1:
Where did I come from?
Where do I go?
I’m so far away from home
What am I going for?
How can I know
What I’m fighting for?
Chorus:
I’m feeling like an alien baby
Riding around the world
I’m feeling like a stranger lately
Round and around we go
Verse 2:
So where can I go?
A million miles from home
What am I going for?
How can I know
What I’m fighting for?
Produced by: Plonter Animation Studio
Director: Yoav Aluf.
Art Direction: Hila Einy
Chief Animator: Noy Bar
Storyboarding: Ory Pinchasy
Compositing: Ido Hartmann
Key Animator: Shahar Muller
Clean up Artist: Sapir Danan
Color Artist: Rona Lee Israel
Braschi — Nel mare ci sono i coccodrilli (Official Video) [Sanremo 2017]
Brano in gara alla 67ma edizione del Festival di Sanremo
«Nel mare ci sono i coccodrilli» è disponibile su: apple.co/2jXtOQF
Per ricevere lalbum direttamente a casa visita la pagina: bit.ly/2kNFXaf
Alice Sara Ott interprète le Concerto pour piano et orchestre n°3 en ut mineur, op. 37, de Ludwig van Beethoven aux côtés de lOrchestre philharmonique de Radio France dirigé par Mikko Franck. Enregistré le 27 janvier 2018 à lAuditorium de la Maison de la Radio (Paris).
Le Concerto pour piano n°3 de Beethoven est créé à Vienne le 5 avril 1803, le même jour que l’oratorio Le Christ au mont des Oliviers et la Deuxième Symphonie. Ecrit en ut mineur, tonalité chère à son compositeur, il se découpe en trois mouvements. L’Allegro con brio s’ouvre sur une longue page orchestrale avec l’exposition des deux thèmes principaux, ensuite repris par le pianiste. Au cours du développement, un dialogue s’établit entre soliste et orchestre. Le mouvement s’achève par une cadence au piano, inspirée du premier thème.
Au cœur du Largo, les arpèges du piano soutiennent le chant entonné conjointement par la flûte et le basson, empreint de sérénité. Gérard Condé suggère une « transposition musicale de la scène du balcon de Roméo et Juliette ». Enfin, dans le Rondo, orchestre et soliste conversent avec vigueur.
« Il s’agit à coup sûr du premier «grand» concerto beethovénien […], marquant un progrès très sensible dans l’équilibre entre soliste et orchestre, enfin traités en véritables partenaires », remarque François-René Tranchefort.
00:00 — Début du concert
02:14 — 1er mouvement: Allegro con brio
19:35 — 2ème mouvement: Largo
29:19 — 3ème mouvement: Rondo
42:50 — Bis: Für Elise
The first movement, in C♯ minor, is written in an approximate truncated sonata form. The movement opens with an octave in the left hand and a triplet figuration in the right. A melody that Hector Berlioz called a «lamentation», mostly by the right hand, is played against an accompanying ostinato triplet rhythm, simultaneously played by the right hand. The movement is played pianissimo or «very quietly», and the loudest it gets is mezzo forte or «moderately loud».
The adagio sostenuto has made a powerful impression on many listeners; for instance, Berlioz said of it that it «is one of those poems that human language does not know how to qualify. The work was very popular in Beethovens day, to the point of exasperating the composer himself, who remarked to Carl Czerny, „Surely Ive written better things.
Allegretto
The second movement is a relatively conventional scherzo and trio, a moment of relative calm written in D-flat major, the enharmonic equivalent of C♯ major, the more easily-notated parallel major of C♯ minor. Franz Liszt described the second movement as “a flower between two chasms.»[citation needed] The slight majority of the movement is in piano, but a handful of sforzandos and forte-pianos helps to maintain the movements cheerful disposition.
Presto agitato
The stormy final movement (C♯ minor), in sonata form, is the weightiest of the three, reflecting an experiment of Beethovens (also carried out in the companion sonata, Opus 27, No. 1 and later on in Opus 101) placement of the most important movement of the sonata last. The writing has many fast arpeggios and strongly accented notes, and an effective performance demands lively and skillful playing.
It is thought that the C-sharp minor sonata, particularly the third movement, was the inspiration for Frédéric Chopins Fantaisie-Impromptu, which manifests the key relationships of the sonatas three movements.
Of the final movement, Charles Rosen has written «it is the most unbridled in its representation of emotion. Even today, two hundred years later, its ferocity is astonishing.
Beethovens heavy use of sforzando notes, together with just a few strategically located fortissimo passages, creates the sense of a very powerful sound in spite of the predominance of piano markings throughout. Within this turbulent sonata-allegro, there are two main themes, with a variety of variation techniques utilized.
Beethovens pedal mark
See also: Piano history and musical performance, Mute (music), and Piano pedals#Beethoven and pedals
At the opening of the work, Beethoven included a written direction that the sustain pedal should be depressed for the entire duration of the first movement. The Italian reads: „Si deve suonare tutto questo pezzo delicatissimamente e senza sordino“. (»One must play this whole piece [meaning «movement»] very delicately and without dampers.") The modern piano has a much longer sustain time than the instruments of Beethovens day, leaving for a rather blurry and dissonant tone.
One option for dealing with this problem is to perform the work on a restored or replicated piano of the kind Beethoven knew. Proponents of historically informed performance using such pianos have found it feasible to perform the work respecting Beethovens original direction.