Yo Beyonce (& Everyone Else) Listen Up!
Amazing vlogger @NineteenPercent says this about her pro-feminism vid: It's a song. I get it. It's just a song. Continue Reading.
This video is not about Beyonce.
It's not even really about this song.
Amazing vlogger @NineteenPercent says this about her pro-feminism vid: It's a song. I get it. It's just a song. Continue Reading.
This video is not about Beyonce.
It's not even really about this song.
Lucinda Williams (born January 26, 1953) is an American rock, folk, blues and country music singer and songwriter.
She recorded her first albums in 1978 and 1980 in a traditional country and blues style and received very little attention from radio, the media, or the public.
She has since become much more well-known, for obvious reasons. If you don't know who she is or what those reasons are, you will after you listen to this tune…
The three Ahn sisters (cellist Maria, pianist Lucia, violinist Angella) breathe new life into the piano trio with their passionate musicmaking. At TEDWomen, they start with the bright and poppy "Skylife," by David Balakrishnan, then play a gorgeous, slinky version of "Oblivion," by Astor Piazzolla.
With cello, piano and violin, sisters Maria, Lucia and Angella Ahn are constantly redefining the art and architecture of chamber music.
Born in Seoul, Korea, and educated at Juilliard, cellist Maria, pianist Lucia, and violinist Angella Ahn are breathing new life into the standard piano-trio literature.
They’ve commissioned works from visionary composers such as Michael Nyman, Maurice Jarre, Pat Metheny, Paul Schoenfield, Mark O’Connor, Kenji Bunch, Nikolai Kapustin and Paul Chihara.
The trio’s latest CD is Lullaby for My Favorite Insomniac, a showcase of this vibrant and original music.
Music teacher Tala Badri is the founder and executive director of Centre for Musical Arts,
a non-profit organization dedicated to providing high-quality and affordable
music instruction for people of all ages and walks of life in the UAE.
She has personally experienced the transformational power of music through her own life as well as that of her young daughter who has Asperger's syndrome.
Badri began her talk with a video clip of her daughter playing the violin, then later shared a heartwarming to camera talk of the youngster explaining what it means to have Asperger's.
It was both touching and personal.
You'll never sing again, said her doctor. But in a story from the very edge of medical possibility, operatic soprano Charity Tillemann-Dick tells a double story of survival -- of her body, from a double lung transplant, and of her spirit, fueled by an unwavering will to sing.
A powerful story from TEDMED 2010.