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| I Met The Walrus |
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In 1969, a 14-year-old Beatle fanatic named
Jerry Levitan, armed with a reel-to-reel tape
deck, snuck into John Lennon's hotel room in
Toronto and convinced John to do an interview
about peace. 38 years later, Jerry has
produced a film about it. Using the original
interview recording as the soundtrack,
director Josh Raskin has woven a visual
narrative which tenderly romances Lennon's
every word in a cascading flood of
multipronged animation. Raskin marries the
terrifyingly genius pen work of James
Braithwaite with masterful digital
illustration by Alex Kurina, resulting in a
spell-binding vessel for Lennon's boundless
wit, and timeless message. Tags : walrus lennon beatles short film animation levitan raskin braithwaite kurina girls documentary intervie pornography |
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Affichage : 914542
Durée : 315 s |
| How We Met |
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A touching tale of how two lovers found their
heart! Aaw.
http://www.zoomintosee.com
The music is by Son of Dave.
A stickman and stickwoman drawn on bodies
falling in love. Tags : love art arms disco couple stickman G800 sonofdave |
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Affichage : 8913008
Durée : 100 s |
| Tommy Emmanuel - Since We Met |
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Tommy Emmanuel playing "Since We Met" on
KBS1(TV Channel in Korea) before his concert
in Korea :)
Video Source:
http://blog.daum.net/jsveron23/7096442
Tommy Emmanuel: http://www.tommyemmanuel.com
Thanks Ip-Myung, Jin! :) (video source
webmaster)
Pls feel free to PM me or email me at
guitar4peace@gmail.com if you have any guitar
videos to share! Thanks! :) Regards,
Guitarsoul Tags : Acoustic Fingerstlye Guitar Tommy Emmanuel Since We Met |
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Affichage : 679659
Durée : 207 s |
| Sachiko Kodama: When I Met This Material |
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While most visual artists prefer traditional
materials
such as oil, acrylic, bronze and ceramic,
Tokyo-based
SACHIKO KODAMA prefers FERROFLUIDS. Composed
of
magnetic nanoparticles, ferrofluids often
contain high
levels of iron and, as such, are deeply
affected by
and responsive to the presence of magnetic
fields.
While the NASA-developed ferrofluids are
being used
increasingly for commercial applications - on
everything from compact disks to
weight-responsive car
suspension systems - Kodama is revolutionary
in
applying their widely dynamic qualities to
the fine
arts arena.
Using a computer to manipulate
electro-magnetic fields
in the sculptures, Kodama coerces her
stunning
ferrfluid pieces to grow and disintegrate,
flower and
shed, and constantly reinvent themselves
without the
aid of animatronics or video wizardry. Tags : Kodama Sachiko Ferrofluid Morpho Tower Japan Japanese science NASA ferrofluids electro-magnetic art sculpture casino |
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Affichage : 130894
Durée : 353 s |
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