
祝日 / Permanent Vacation

if i look back, i am lost

Kaledo Art
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hello vonnie
Three Goblin Art

Origami Around
Claire Keane
KIROKAZE
AnasAbdin
One Nice Bug Per Day
dirt enthusiast
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

Love Begins
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

No title available
todays bird
noise dept.
Stranger Things

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@driosvz
¡ES VERDAD!
Sesenta mil soldados aliados murieron por liberar Italia del régimen fascista, casi ciento cuarenta mil italianos murieron durante la ocupación nazi, y aún así se ha escrito poco sobre las batallas para salvar Italia que los historiadores han llegado a llamarlo "el frente olvidado".
¡Es verdad!
Pino Lella vive todavía, después de ayudar a muchos judíos, de luchar por su vida y la de otras personas, después de presenciar atrocidades inimaginables, esta historia de supervivencia en varios sentidos es real. Bajo un cielo escarlata es una historia que merece ser contada y conocida, resulta que compré este libro por curiosidad y me atrapó desde el principio porque está tan bien escrito que cada página te motiva a no dejar de leer lo que viene después.
El libro en sí está lleno de música, de historia, de aventuras es una obra llena de amor y como siempre pasa con el amor, deforma en el corazón el sentido del tiempo de una manera verdaderamente apasionante.
"Una persona muy sabia me dijo una vez que al abrir nuestros corazones y mostrar nuestras cicatrices nos volvemos humanos, imperfectos y completos"
¿Crees estar preparado para ser completo? Comienza por leer, Bajo un cielo escarlata.
"Nessun dorma"
#bajouncieloescarlata #marksullivan #leer #leeresvivir #megustaleer #tumeagradesmolt #mipiacimolto #pinolella #pinolellaisatruehero #italia
Nessun dorma.
Mi amiga la tentación
BUEN DÍA HDTPM!
(Hoy Dios tiene planes maravillosos)
Nuestra cabeza es redonda para permitir que nuestros pensamientos cambien de dirección.
Joan Miró.
#JOANMIRO
Noche estrellada (1889)
Aunque "Starry Night" es una de las pinturas más famosas de Vincent Van Gogh, es probable que pocos sepan que la imagen no se creó al aire libre, sino en el hospital psiquiátrico de Saint-Rémy, según la visión de Van Gogh desde su habitación en la misma institución, el 8 de mayo de 1889, apenas más de un año antes de su suicidio, estaba plagado de desórdenes mentales que solo se pueden suponer a título póstumo como depresión, ansiedad, pánico y episodios delirantes.
Recurriendo a la pintura como modo de escape y consuelo, esta obra permite al espectador ver el mundo a través de los ojos de quizás el mejor artista de la historia en una de sus horas más oscuras.
Pero incluso esta oscuridad se rompe por la luz de las estrellas y la luna, que se convierten así en el símbolo del último rayo de esperanza de un alma desesperada.
"La estrella muy brillante" que veía Van Gogh en realidad es Venus.
Van Gogh no encontraba atractiva la pintura, pensaba que era un fracaso, alegando que "no le trasmitía nada"
Te amo mamá 🖤
El café no quita lo pendejo...
Pero te hace un pendejo más despierto, concentrado y eficiente.
Buen provecho.
Marilyn Monroe and Maria Callas at JFK’s birthday gala, 1962.
Lady Gaga for the 2019 MET Gala (Theme: Camp)
The Dark Side of the Moon: Explained
An in-depth blog post on my favorite album of all time was long overdue. Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon is still to this day arguably the best album ever made. I’d highly recommend listening to this album if you haven’t already, but if musical masterpieces aren’t really your thing, this is not the album for you. I constantly come across articles that explain how the album was made, but hardly any on analyzing the album’s meanings song by song. That is what I have challenged myself to do today.
“Speak to Me”
Speak to Me is not a song you’ll hear at a music festival. There aren’t really any lyrics, as it mainly consists of random clips of conversations and various sound effects. When I took the time to really listen to the song, I started to understand its deeper meaning. In the 65 second song you hear the heartbeat sound effect used in “Eclipse”, the clock ticking heard in “Time”, the manic laughter of Peter Watts used in “Brain Damage”, the cash register in “Money”, the helicopter noise in “On the Run”, and vocalist Clare Tony’s scream in “The Great Gig in the Sky” towards the end of the song. Once the screaming stops, the song leads into “Breathe”. So what do all these noises communicate? I feel it gives a very dramatic summary of what themes and sounds the album contains. In this song particular, the theme of insanity is very prominent, as it’s quite the stressful song to listen to.
“Breathe (In the Air)”
Breathe is one of the prettier songs in this album. After the psychotic screams in the intro, it eases into a slow-paced rich guitar medley with David Gilmour’s blues-based chords and solos. Aside from the beautiful instrumentals, the lyrics are what really makes the song worth knowing. The song is full of mixed themes. The beginning tells you to relax and live life, as it’s the only life you get. Then it tells you to get a job and focus on that instead of the beauties of life. It warns you that work is a never-ending cycle. Later some of the lines expose our materialistic society convincing us we are happy when really we’re chained to a vicious cycle of consumerism. One of my favorite lyrics in the song is “All you touch and all you see Is all your life will ever be” as it really enforces one of the harsher realities of life.
“On the Run”
This is the second song in the album that uses sound effects and voice clips as it’s structure. The song gives the setting of a man running late for his flight and trying desperately to make it. There isn’t a lot I really have to say about this song, but it definitely adds to the albums exposure of how messed up adulthood is by showing how stressful it is.
“Time”
Time opens with extremely loud clips of different types of clocks ringing. Once all the clocks stop, there is a slow and deep guitar solo along with a fast-paced drum solo in the background. The song describes what time has to do with the tough transition from youth to adulthood. When we’re young we think we have all the time in the world. We don’t realize how quickly time passes by until we’re out of time and full of regret. You wasted your life trying to be comfortable, rather than living the crazy fun life you dreamed of when you were young. And now that you want to live that life, it’s too late. You’re out of time and luck. The song seems to be a great depiction of a rock ‘n’ roll midlife crisis.
“The Great Gig in the Sky”
This song is a lyrical Interpretation of death, sorrow, happiness, joy, and pain, all at the same time. It opens with a man saying “ And I am not frightened of dying -Any time will do, I don’t mind -Why should I be frightened of dying? There’s no reason for it, you’ve gotta go sometime-If you can hear this whispering you are dying“. Deep, I know. The rest of the song is Clare Tony’s emotional and powerful vocals growing more and more with the music, till the piano slows and her voice calms. I feel this represents the angry and fearful feeling felt toward death escalation until finally, it’s accepted.
“Money”
Money is one of my all-time favorite Pink Floyd songs. This is a fun rock/jazz song with a catchy bass riff and iconic guitar solo but, like every other song on this album, it’s got a much deeper meaning. When you first take a look at the lyrics, you may think “Wow, Pink Floyd sure did love being millionaires”. That’s exactly what Waters wanted you to think when he wrote the song. When Gilmour sang “Money, it’s a hit. Don’t give me that do goody good bullshit”, it exposed the arrogance of the upper class. You don’t have to be filthy rich to associate yourself with some of the songs lyrics, as everyone has had some connection to greed. The overall theme of this song is how we evolve in our relationship with money.
“Us and Them”
The conversation closing Money then leads into the calming musical introduction of Us and Them. Most people think the songs only theme is war. I’d argue that it’s not about war so much as it is about the tendency of humans to fight with each other. Not just on the battlefield, but in everyday situations. In an interview Waters discusses a bit of the meaning behind Us and Them: that we are constantly fighting each other and separating ourselves into an “us vs. them” mentality. The point is that we unnecessarily divide ourselves based on every little thing, concentrate on our differences, and forget to think about all the ways we’re all in this thing together. So, yes, on a small scale, it’s about war, but it’s more about human nature in general. Not just the political idea of one country against another, but the very simple idea of one human against another. The powerful background vocals and sax solos communicate the importance of the theme of the song.
“Any Colour You Like”
This song is beautiful, but I haven’t quite discovered it’s meaning yet. There are no lyrics for me to analyze in this song. The only thing I can really comment on in the song is the fact that I feel like I’m on an insane psychedelic acid trip.
“Brain Damage”
This song describes a man’s final descent into insanity. The whole album itself poses the question “Can everyday life make you go insane?”. The themes expressed in Time, Money, Us and Them, and so on all lead up to this when this normal person finally goes insane from his normal life. Finally, at the end of the song, you hear that manic laugh again. The lunatic really is in this guys head. I’d also like to add that some would argue this album was based on what Syd Barrett was going through with drug addiction. Wish You Were Here was without a doubt an ode to Syd, but I think the deep meanings this album presents are beyond Pink Floyd’s co-founder.
“Eclipse”
The final song in The Dark Side of the Moon is Eclipse. There are infinite themes and metaphors you can obtain from this song. Here’s how I see it. It’s saying that everything in the universe is in perfect harmony and balance. It is only us humans that are messed up. The moon represents the chaos and madness of our minds that eclipses the god-giving light of the sun. That’s why Dark Side of the Moon is really the dark side of human nature, as it blinds us, but it’s also what makes us unique. As the last lines show, there is no dark side of the moon, it’s all dark. It’s only the sun that makes it bright. So in fact, everyone is crazy, and that is our purpose.
I hope this post cleared up some of the confusion on what this album was communicating. In the end, only the writers of this album will know the true meaning.
Por la belleza infinita de conjugar todos los verbos que acaben en "ARTE"