Mini Magazine January 2018

Mini Magazine - January 2018  Magazines

Posted by Shor at Dec. 8, 2017
Mini Magazine - January 2018

Mini Magazine - January 2018
English | 116 pages | True PDF | 34.3 MB

NXT Magazine - January 2018  Magazines

Posted by Pulitzer at Dec. 8, 2017
NXT Magazine - January 2018

NXT Magazine - January 2018
English | 148 pages | True PDF | 21.9 MB

RPM Magazine - January 2018  Magazines

Posted by Pulitzer at Jan. 16, 2018
RPM Magazine - January 2018

RPM Magazine - January 2018
English | 116 pages | True PDF | 115.7 MB

BBC Top Gear Magazine – January 2018  Magazines

Posted by Inshuf at June 16, 2023
BBC Top Gear Magazine – January 2018

BBC Top Gear Magazine – January 2018
English | 172 pages | PDF | 70.4 MB
Rachel McAdams - Drew Barrymore Photoshoot for Vs. Magazine Fall/Winter 2012

Rachel McAdams - Drew Barrymore Photoshoot 2012
6 jpg | up to 3000*10001 | 16.92 MB
Canadian actress

Lonely Planet India - February 2018  Magazines

Posted by Pulitzer at Jan. 2, 2018
Lonely Planet India - February 2018

Lonely Planet India - February 2018
English | 144 pages | True PDF | 52.8 MB
Christian Poltera, Ronald Brautigam - Felix Mendelssohn: Works for Cello and Piano (2017)

Felix Mendelssohn: Works for Cello & Piano (2017)
Christian Poltéra (cello), Ronald Brautigam (piano)

EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 259 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 142 Mb | Artwork included
Classical | Label: BIS | # BIS-SACD-2187 | 01:00:26

It is well known that Felix Mendelssohn’s sister Fanny was a highly talented musician, but fewer are familiar with the fact that there were two other musical siblings in the Mendelssohn family: Rebecka, a gifted singer, and Paul, a very competent amateur cellist. It is to Paul, a banker by profession, that we owe the existence of much of Felix’s music for the instrument, which in spite of Beethoven’s endeavours hadn’t yet become firmly established as a duo partner of the piano. Fitting comfortably on a single release, Mendelssohn’s works for cello and piano are here presented by Christian Poltera and Ronald Brautigam, who open with the Variations concertantes in D major, composed in 1829. Brautigam has recently released the composer’s Lieder ohne Worte, performing them on a copy of a piano by Pleyel from 1830, and plays the same instrument on the present disc. Meanwhile, Poltera has chosen to equip his 1711 Stradivarius cello with gut strings, and together the two musicians and their instruments create a sound which is both flexible, transparent and vigorous – ideal for Mendelssohn’s scores.