Edith Hall Epic

Vitagraph Comedies (1907-1919) [Disc 1/3]  Movies

Posted by RSU75 at June 10, 2024
Vitagraph Comedies (1907-1919) [Disc 1/3]

Vitagraph Comedies (1907-1919) [Disc 1/3]
BDRip 1080p | MKV | AVC, 1920x1080, ~ 4.1 Mbps | ~ 229 Min | ~ 10,2 Gb
English: AC3, 2 ch, 448 kbps \ English: DTS, 2 ch, 1510 kbps \ English: AC3, 2 ch, 192 kbps
Subtitles: English
Genre: Comedy

The history of screen comedy did not begin with Charlie Chaplin or Buster Keaton. Prior to their appearances on the American screen, an entire generation of comedians was already establishing (and breaking) the boundaries of this rapidly evolving genre. While working at the Vitagraph Studios, music hall artists such as John Bunny, Frank Roberts, and Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Drew retooled their brands of comedy into something uniquely cinematic, advancing the art form and setting the stage for the slapstick explosion. This three-disc collection, presented by the Library of Congress, showcases the bold innovation of these overlooked pioneers, including the ingenious trick film The Disintegrated Convict, the gender-bending irrereverence of Edith Storey, and the epic scale of Larry Semon’s The Sawmill. Vitagraph Comedies also provides precious glimpses of comedians (e.g. Flora Finch or the comedy duo Montgomery and Rock) who are virtually forgotten today, because so little of their work has survived.

Vitagraph Comedies (1907-1919) [Disc 1/3]  Movies

Posted by RSU75 at June 14, 2024
Vitagraph Comedies (1907-1919) [Disc 1/3]

Vitagraph Comedies (1907-1919) [Disc 1/3]
Blu-Ray | BDMV | AVC, 1920x1080, ~40.0 Mbps | ~ 229 Min | 45,5 GB
English: DTS-HD Master Audio, 2 ch, 1558 kbps \ English: AC3, 2 ch, 192 kbps
Subtitles: English
Genre: Comedy

The history of screen comedy did not begin with Charlie Chaplin or Buster Keaton. Prior to their appearances on the American screen, an entire generation of comedians was already establishing (and breaking) the boundaries of this rapidly evolving genre. While working at the Vitagraph Studios, music hall artists such as John Bunny, Frank Roberts, and Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Drew retooled their brands of comedy into something uniquely cinematic, advancing the art form and setting the stage for the slapstick explosion. This three-disc collection, presented by the Library of Congress, showcases the bold innovation of these overlooked pioneers, including the ingenious trick film The Disintegrated Convict, the gender-bending irrereverence of Edith Storey, and the epic scale of Larry Semon’s The Sawmill. Vitagraph Comedies also provides precious glimpses of comedians (e.g. Flora Finch or the comedy duo Montgomery and Rock) who are virtually forgotten today, because so little of their work has survived.

Dalida - Exclusive (2024 Remastered) (2024)  Music

Posted by Fizzpop at April 10, 2024
Dalida - Exclusive (2024 Remastered) (2024)

Dalida - Exclusive (2024 Remastered) (2024)
WEB FLAC (Tracks) 358 MB | Cover | 01:24:16 | MP3 CBR 320 kbps | 195 MB
French Pop, Chanson | Label: DMI

In the course of a career lasting just over 30 years, Dalida earned 45 gold record awards and a pair of platinum records for her sales in Europe, the Middle East, and Japan. A superstar in France and much of the rest of Europe, Dalida enjoyed hit records in three different decades, despite an increasingly troubled personal life after the early '60s.

Dalida - Exclusive (Remastered) (2024) [Official Digital Download]  Vinyl & HR

Posted by delpotro at July 14, 2024
Dalida - Exclusive (Remastered) (2024) [Official Digital Download]

Dalida - Exclusive (Remastered) (2024)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/44,1 kHz | Front Cover | Time - 84:13 minutes | 740 MB
Pop, Chanson, Female Vocal | Label: DMI, Official Digital Download

In the course of a career lasting just over 30 years, Dalida earned 45 gold record awards and a pair of platinum records for her sales in Europe, the Middle East, and Japan. A superstar in France and much of the rest of Europe, Dalida enjoyed hit records in three different decades, despite an increasingly troubled personal life after the early '60s.
Dalida - Les Annees Orlando, Versions Originales 1970-1997 (1997) 2CDs

Dalida - Les Années Orlando, Versions Originales 1970-1997 (1997) 2CDs
EAC | APE | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 861 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 316 Mb | Scans included | 02:11:48
French Pop, Vocal Pop, Chanson, Disco | Label: Barclay/Orlando | # 537 264-2

Yolanda Cristina Gigliotti, better known as Dalida (Arabic: داليدا‎‎), was an Italian then French singer and actress who was born in Egypt. She performed and recorded in more than ten languages, including Arabic, Italian, Greek, German, French, English, Japanese, Hebrew, Dutch and Spanish. She spent most of her career in France and acquired French citizenship in 1961 upon marriage, while maintaining her original Italian one. Twice honoured with the Oscar mondial du succès du disque (the "World Oscar of Recording Success"), she is the only European singer to have won this award more than once. Dalida ranks among the 7 biggest singers of all time. Her 30-year career began in 1956 and ended with her last album in 1986, half a year before her death, while continuing to hold concerts until her last days. Her suicide led to an iconic image as a tragic diva and renowned singer. She received more than 70 gold records and was the first singer to receive platinum and diamond discs. She sold more than 170 million albums worldwide.

Vitagraph Comedies (1907-1919) [Disc 3/3]  Movies

Posted by RSU75 at July 10, 2024
Vitagraph Comedies (1907-1919) [Disc 3/3]

Vitagraph Comedies (1907-1919) [Disc 3/3]
Blu-Ray | BDMV | AVC, 1920x1080, ~40.0 Mbps | ~ 140 Min | 37,9 GB
English: DTS-HD Master Audio, 2 ch, 1558 kbps \ English: AC3, 2 ch, 192 kbps
Subtitles: English
Genre: Comedy

The history of screen comedy did not begin with Charlie Chaplin or Buster Keaton. Prior to their appearances on the American screen, an entire generation of comedians was already establishing (and breaking) the boundaries of this rapidly evolving genre. While working at the Vitagraph Studios, music hall artists such as John Bunny, Frank Roberts, and Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Drew retooled their brands of comedy into something uniquely cinematic, advancing the art form and setting the stage for the slapstick explosion. This three-disc collection, presented by the Library of Congress, showcases the bold innovation of these overlooked pioneers, including the ingenious trick film The Disintegrated Convict, the gender-bending irrereverence of Edith Storey, and the epic scale of Larry Semon’s The Sawmill. Vitagraph Comedies also provides precious glimpses of comedians (e.g. Flora Finch or the comedy duo Montgomery and Rock) who are virtually forgotten today, because so little of their work has survived.
Gidon Kremer - Philip Glass: Violin Concerto; Ned Rorem: Violin Concerto; Leonard Bernstein: Serenade (1999)

Gidon Kremer - Philip Glass: Violin Concerto;
Ned Rorem: Violin Concerto; Leonard Bernstein: Serenade (1999)

EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 351 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 183 Mb | Scans included
Genre: Classical | Label: Deutsche Grammophon | # 445 185-2 GH | Time: 01:18:30

Here are three 20th-century violin concertos written within a 30-year period in three totally different styles, played by a soloist equally at home in all of them. Bernstein's Serenade, the earliest and most accessible work, takes its inspiration from Plato's Symposium; its five movements, musical portraits of the banquet's guests, represent different aspects of love as well as running the gamut of Bernstein's contrasting compositional styles. Rorem's concerto sounds wonderful. Its six movements have titles corresponding to their forms or moods; their character ranges from fast, brilliant, explosive to slow, passionate, melodious. Philip Glass's concerto, despite its conventional three movements and tonal, consonant harmonies, is the most elusive. Written in the "minimalist" style, which for most ordinary listeners is an acquired taste, it is based on repetition of small running figures both for orchestra and soloist, occasionally interrupted by long, high, singing lines in the violin against or above the orchestra's pulsation.

Vitagraph Comedies (1907-1919) [Disc 3/3]  Movies

Posted by RSU75 at June 27, 2024
Vitagraph Comedies (1907-1919) [Disc 3/3]

Vitagraph Comedies (1907-1919) [Disc 3/3]
BDRip 1080p | MKV | AVC, 1920x1080, ~ 4.1 Mbps | ~ 140 Min | ~ 6,26 Gb
English: AC3, 2 ch, 448 kbps \ English: DTS, 2 ch, 1510 kbps \ English: AC3, 2 ch, 192 kbps
Subtitles: English
Genre: Comedy

The history of screen comedy did not begin with Charlie Chaplin or Buster Keaton. Prior to their appearances on the American screen, an entire generation of comedians was already establishing (and breaking) the boundaries of this rapidly evolving genre. While working at the Vitagraph Studios, music hall artists such as John Bunny, Frank Roberts, and Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Drew retooled their brands of comedy into something uniquely cinematic, advancing the art form and setting the stage for the slapstick explosion. This three-disc collection, presented by the Library of Congress, showcases the bold innovation of these overlooked pioneers, including the ingenious trick film The Disintegrated Convict, the gender-bending irrereverence of Edith Storey, and the epic scale of Larry Semon’s The Sawmill. Vitagraph Comedies also provides precious glimpses of comedians (e.g. Flora Finch or the comedy duo Montgomery and Rock) who are virtually forgotten today, because so little of their work has survived.

Vitagraph Comedies (1907-1919) [Disc 2/3]  Movies

Posted by RSU75 at June 13, 2024
Vitagraph Comedies (1907-1919) [Disc 2/3]

Vitagraph Comedies (1907-1919) [Disc 2/3]
BDRip 1080p | MKV | AVC, 1920x1080, ~ 4.1 Mbps | ~ 213 Min | ~ 10,2 Gb
English: AC3, 2 ch, 448 kbps \ English: DTS, 2 ch, 1510 kbps \ English: AC3, 2 ch, 192 kbps
Subtitles: English
Genre: Comedy

The history of screen comedy did not begin with Charlie Chaplin or Buster Keaton. Prior to their appearances on the American screen, an entire generation of comedians was already establishing (and breaking) the boundaries of this rapidly evolving genre. While working at the Vitagraph Studios, music hall artists such as John Bunny, Frank Roberts, and Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Drew retooled their brands of comedy into something uniquely cinematic, advancing the art form and setting the stage for the slapstick explosion. This three-disc collection, presented by the Library of Congress, showcases the bold innovation of these overlooked pioneers, including the ingenious trick film The Disintegrated Convict, the gender-bending irrereverence of Edith Storey, and the epic scale of Larry Semon’s The Sawmill. Vitagraph Comedies also provides precious glimpses of comedians (e.g. Flora Finch or the comedy duo Montgomery and Rock) who are virtually forgotten today, because so little of their work has survived.

Vitagraph Comedies (1907-1919) [Disc 2/3]  Movies

Posted by RSU75 at July 1, 2024
Vitagraph Comedies (1907-1919) [Disc 2/3]

Vitagraph Comedies (1907-1919) [Disc 2/3]
Blu-Ray | BDMV | AVC, 1920x1080, ~40.0 Mbps | ~ 213 Min | 40,8 GB
English: AC3, 2 ch, 448 kbps \ English: DTS, 2 ch, 1510 kbps \ English: AC3, 2 ch, 192 kbps
Subtitles: English
Genre: Comedy

The history of screen comedy did not begin with Charlie Chaplin or Buster Keaton. Prior to their appearances on the American screen, an entire generation of comedians was already establishing (and breaking) the boundaries of this rapidly evolving genre. While working at the Vitagraph Studios, music hall artists such as John Bunny, Frank Roberts, and Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Drew retooled their brands of comedy into something uniquely cinematic, advancing the art form and setting the stage for the slapstick explosion. This three-disc collection, presented by the Library of Congress, showcases the bold innovation of these overlooked pioneers, including the ingenious trick film The Disintegrated Convict, the gender-bending irrereverence of Edith Storey, and the epic scale of Larry Semon’s The Sawmill. Vitagraph Comedies also provides precious glimpses of comedians (e.g. Flora Finch or the comedy duo Montgomery and Rock) who are virtually forgotten today, because so little of their work has survived.