Posts Tagged ‘music’

Cinema 2009

January 16, 2010 - 5:43 am 25 Comments

1 Year, 342 Movies, Endless hours of hard work, 7 Minutes.
2009 proved that innovation is rewarded; this year we saw great films coming from every direction, so I used more of them for the video. The sequel to the reason most of you subscribed is here: enjoy, leave a comment and take a look at my other work!

I didn’t count them by hand, though. It’s very well possible there are fewer movies in there. I had 342 different movie trailers for footage.

Audio Copyright Notices:
‘Malabar Front’ by If These Trees Could Talk remains courtesy of If These Trees Could Talk, ® 2006.
‘Death’ by White Lies remains courtesy of Polydor Ltd. (UK), ® 2008.
‘Crying Lightning’ by Arctic Monkeys remains courtesy of Domino Records, ® 2009.
‘1901′ by Phoenix remains courtesy of Ghettoblaster under Exclusive Licence to V2 Records, ® 2009.
‘Wake Up’ by Arcade Fire remains courtesy of Rough Trade, ® 2005.

Please support creativity and purchase these tracks in the iTunes Store if you want to download them:
http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewIMix?id=347862695

List of films in order of appearance:
http://docs.google.com/Doc?docid=0AefGcSqotpcgZHp6ODJwNl80Z3g0OGhoZmo&hl=en

Edit © Kees van Dijkhuizen, 2009.

This project was purely non-profit and not aimed at breaking copyright laws.

Duration : 0:7:0

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Playing For Change: Peace Through Music Trailer

December 19, 2009 - 2:22 pm 6 Comments

Extended Trailer from 2008 Tribeca Premiere music documentary showcasing how a small group of independent filmmakers traveled the world in search of hope and inspiration through music, JOIN THE MOVEMENT at www.playingforchange.com…Help connect the world through music!

Duration : 0:3:11

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Ankhiyon Ke Jharokhon Se – Sachin & Ranjeeta

December 7, 2009 - 7:10 pm 25 Comments

Watch Ankhiyon Ke Jharokhon Se – Sachin & Ranjeeta. Unforgettable classic song that is popular even today.
Click on http://www.rajshri.com to watch more

Duration : 0:6:43

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Jimi Hendrix Shotgun Live 1965 Night Train Oldest Known Film

November 5, 2009 - 8:46 pm 24 Comments

Jimi Hendrix Shotgun Live 1965 Night Train Backing Buddy & Stacey. Oldest Known Film Footage of Jimi Hendrix Playing Guitar On Nashville’s Channel 5
“WLAC-TV studios, L & C Tower, 159 4th Avenue North, Nashville
Jimi appears as a guitar player in “The Royal Company” playing in the back-up band for Buddy & Stacy on the WLAC-TV Channel 5 show “Night Train” performing “Shotgun”. On the same show Jimmy Church performs “In The Midnight Hour”, the Wilson Pickett version of the song was released in late June – early July. Billy Cox has said that Jimi left and returned to Nashville several times, this could have been one of those visits…
Please rate, and comment on this and the rest of my stuff. Whats a couple clicks out of your day? Add me to your friends and subscribe! I have a new page @ www.myspace.com/stratevatis
MUCH MORE TO COME
God bless and all the best
BK

Duration : 0:2:33

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BEST HINDI MOVIE SONGS

November 5, 2009 - 8:46 pm 25 Comments

BEST HINDI MOVIE SONGS

Duration : 0:3:41

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Herb Alpert & The Tijuana Brass – Casino Royale

October 29, 2009 - 3:20 pm 25 Comments

Movie full uploaded by MGMDigitalMedia http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upMtEJSj9NA

Any movie directed by 5 different people is bound to be confusing. This was, off course, no exception.

Orson Welles reportedly insisted on including magic tricks into his scenes, a possible source of the friction between him and Peter Sellers.

When Mata Bond swings into action, the background music is “Bond Street” ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hgvu1arJ9YI ) also scored by this film’s composer, Burt Bacharach. The real Bond Street can be seen in the later James Bond movie, Octopussy (1983).

Peter Sellers and Orson Welles hated each other so much that the filming of the scene where both of them face each other across a gaming table actually took place on different days with a double standing in for one the actors.

Peter Sellers often caused interruptions by leaving the set for days at a time.

The rift between Orson Welles and Peter Sellers was partly caused by the arrival on set of Princess Margaret, sister of the Queen. Sellers knew her of old and greeted her in an ostentatious manner to ensure all cast and crew noticed. However, the Princess walked straight past him and made a big fuss over Welles. Nonplussed, Sellers stormed off the set and refused to film with Welles again.

An enormous Taj Mahal-type set was designed for the film but never built. The real Taj Mahal can be seen in the later James Bond movie Octopussy (1983).

The gadget used by Le Chiffre to cheat at Baccarat was a pair of infra-red sunglasses with x-ray capabilities. X-ray sunglasses would also be seen in the later James Bond movie The World Is Not Enough (1999).

The West German street Feldmanstrasse seen in the film is a name parody of the film’s producer Charles K. Feldman. This is the location of the Mata Hari Dance & Spy School.

The first thing seen in the movie which is the graffiti seen on the Paris pisoir at the film’s beginning read: “Les Beatles”.

Orson Welles attributed the success of the film to a marketing strategy that featured a naked tattooed lady on the film’s posters and print ads.

A carpet beater can be seen hanging from the side of Orson Welles’s chair. This is a link to the original Casino Royale novel, in which Le Chiffre tortures Bond by thrashing his testicles with a carpet beater.

At least two gags involving Peter Sellers in this film later resurfaced in the Pink Panther films of the 1970s: a sight gag involving Sellers wearing a Toulouse Loutrec costume, and a joke involving a driver running away when being asked to “follow that car.” That man was Stirling Moss, one of the greatest race car drivers of all time.

The name for the organization SMERSH is derived from “Smiert Spionam” which means “death to spies”. “Smiert Spionam” is the the full phrase from which the acronym of the Soviet counterespionage organization SMERSH took its name. It existed as early as World War II, and was a branch of the NKVD (later KGB).

Le Chiffre is a French word which translates into English as “The Cypher” or “The Number”. Other translations in different languages include “Die Nummer”, “Herr Ziffer”, and “Mr. Number”.

In his first scene David Niven is seen bouncing up and down in a chair whose seat is fixed to what appear to be accordion bellows. This is a “chamber horse”, a home exercise machine that was popular in 18th-century Britain.

In the “vault” scene towards the end, Bond says, “Careful, it’s vaporized lysergic acid, highly explosive”. Lysergic acid is actually used in the synthesis of the hallucinogen LSD, and is not an explosive.

In the German spy school, Polo mentions some of the former students, among them Peter Lorre. Peter Lorre played Le Chiffre in the original, made-for-TV version of Casino Royale on “Climax!” (1954).

The Le Chiffre agent killed in a Berlin phone booth is played by Vladek Sheybal, who previously played an enemy agent in From Russia with Love (1963).

More: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0061452/trivia

Duration : 0:2:37

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Peace Through Music Film Trailer | Playing For Change

October 20, 2009 - 1:40 pm 25 Comments

http://playingforchange.com – Playing For Change: Peace Through Music is a story of hope, struggle, perseverance and joy. Directors Mark Johnson and Jonathan Walls, along with the Playing For Change team, traveled the globe with a single minded passion to connect the world through music. Their ambitious journey took them from post-apartheid South Africa, through the ancient sites of the Middle East, to the remote beauty of the Himalayas and beyond. Using innovative mobile technology, they filmed and recorded more than 100 musicians, largely outdoors in parks, plazas and promenades, in doorways, on cobblestone streets and amid hilly pueblos. Each captured performance creates a new mix in which essentially the artists are all performing together, albeit hundreds or thousands of miles apart. Playing For Change: Peace Through Music is the story of this unparalleled international musical collaboration and its remarkable power of redemption.

Duration : 0:1:25

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Peace Through Music Film Trailer | Playing For Change

October 20, 2009 - 1:40 pm 25 Comments

http://playingforchange.com – Playing For Change: Peace Through Music is a story of hope, struggle, perseverance and joy. Directors Mark Johnson and Jonathan Walls, along with the Playing For Change team, traveled the globe with a single minded passion to connect the world through music. Their ambitious journey took them from post-apartheid South Africa, through the ancient sites of the Middle East, to the remote beauty of the Himalayas and beyond. Using innovative mobile technology, they filmed and recorded more than 100 musicians, largely outdoors in parks, plazas and promenades, in doorways, on cobblestone streets and amid hilly pueblos. Each captured performance creates a new mix in which essentially the artists are all performing together, albeit hundreds or thousands of miles apart. Playing For Change: Peace Through Music is the story of this unparalleled international musical collaboration and its remarkable power of redemption.

Duration : 0:1:25

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The Films – Black Shoes

October 20, 2009 - 1:40 pm 25 Comments

Video for the first Single from the Album ‘Don´t Dance Rattlesnake’

Duration : 0:2:53

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The Films – Black Shoes

October 20, 2009 - 1:40 pm 25 Comments

Video for the first Single from the Album ‘Don´t Dance Rattlesnake’

Duration : 0:2:53

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