LIBRA HOROSCOPE SIGNS
Sunday, May 15, 2011
Friday, April 8, 2011
Sean Connery Workout Regime
Sunday, April 3, 2011
Boobs In Transparent Bra
until we were thrown clear on the carpet
but not for
rain and I get bored of seeing
roof lines so I turn to look at the mites
and see if they can create civilization
60 percent of dirt from the carpet
are the cells that detach from the skin
Saturday, March 5, 2011
Ikusa Otome Suvia Ending
- And in his spare time composing like crazy.
- Aha.
- Free, free time, go irony.
- No way.
- But hey, the man did what he could. He wrote at night, sometimes for food, usually in the bathroom.
- Oh.
- Yes, it's politically incorrect to reveal the intimacies of great men, but from the auction of JD Salinger toilet things have changed in the world.
- course.
- He composed symphonies, string quartet pieces, waltzes. Typical. Of course, tarnished with a martial air, autumn, and of nostalgia for the glorious days of the Czar.
- That must have caused problems.
- had them, yes, did.
- can specify more about these problems.
- First, in the chair Harmony and Composition at Boch to bring out the theories of Adam Smith. You can imagine the horror of the board members of the Conservatory.
- course, the most ardent capitalist theoretician ...
- Not to mention bestiality to make an analogy between the counterpoint of Bach and chaos theory applied to the Stock Exchange, which, moreover, was walking pretty bad then ...
- As always. I read somewhere that had also been banned for not being able to compose a sonata using a translation of Marx's initial enigmatic scale.
- Marxism was never easy.
- And how the story ended, how it was with the composition on the sly.
- basically good. Towards the end of his life, having spent many economic fortunes, having seen his work censored and endure the scorn government, received a public apology from the Congress after the regime ended, and winter of 91.
- course.
- So, in conclusion, his life was a constant struggle to build an independent work while adapting to the political circumstances, dealing with censorship, and maintain a balance between the hours of reading and composition in the bathroom. It was not easy.
- And what finally happened.
- wrote twenty symphonies, ten pieces for string quartet, 12 waltzes and blues.
- Would you say that the end of his life was good?
- Yes, he was happy to receive awards and accolades from all sides. The most excited him was the Black Ant prize of the Russian Association of Proletarian Musicians. Sure, they gave him two days after the end of the scheme. He had won. Not everyone lost 25 kilos in two months without passing through Siberia.