The Great War 1964

Grand Expectations: The United States, 1945-1974  eBooks & eLearning

Posted by tarantoga at Feb. 2, 2013
Grand Expectations: The United States, 1945-1974

James T. Patterson, "Grand Expectations: The United States, 1945-1974"
ISBN: 0195117972 | 1997 | EPUB/MOBI | 829 pages | 3 MB/3 MB

Learning True Love: Practicing Buddhism in a Time of War  eBooks & eLearning

Posted by IrGens at June 2, 2024
Learning True Love: Practicing Buddhism in a Time of War

Learning True Love: Practicing Buddhism in a Time of War by Sister Chan Khong
English | April 10, 2007 | ISBN: 1888375671 | True EPUB | 320 pages | 1.7 MB

Grand Expectations: The United States, 1945-1974  eBooks & eLearning

Posted by roxul at May 4, 2020
Grand Expectations: The United States, 1945-1974

James T. Patterson, "Grand Expectations: The United States, 1945-1974 "
English | ISBN: 0195117972 | | 880 pages | EPUB, MOBI | 3 MB + 3 MB
10 Women Who Changed Science and the World (Trailblazers, Pioneers, and Revolutionaries)

10 Women Who Changed Science and the World (Trailblazers, Pioneers, and Revolutionaries) by Catherine Whitlock, Rhodri Evans
English | June 11th, 2019 | ISBN: 1635766109, 1472137434 | 304 pages | EPUB | 1.39 MB

Spanning the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, this fascinating history explores the lives and achievements of great women in science across the globe.

Byron Janis - The Mercury Masters [9CDs] (2023)  Music

Posted by ArlegZ at June 13, 2024
Byron Janis - The Mercury Masters [9CDs] (2023)

Byron Janis - The Mercury Masters [9CDs] (2023)
XLD| FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 1.63 Gb | Total time: 06:30:01 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Decca | # 485 3607 | Recorded: 1960-1964

The legendary American pianist Byron Janis, who turns 95 in March 2023, was the first pupil of another iconic pianist - Vladimir Horowitz. Horowitz famously told Janis 'I don't want you to be a 'second Horowitz' I want you to be a 'first Janis'.' Janis certainly established himself on the world stage when he made his Carnegie Hall debut recital in October 1948, garnering a rave review from the New York Times' Olin Downes who praised him as a distinctive artist in his own right destined for a major career. Between 1960 and 1964 Janis made a set of remarkable recordings for the Mercury Living Presence label.
Kurt Masur and New York Philharmonic - Kurt Masur Conducts the New York Philharmonic (2022)

Kurt Masur and New York Philharmonic - Kurt Masur Conducts the New York Philharmonic (2022)
WEB FLAC (tracks) - 1.9 GB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 1.06 GB
7:51:41 | Classical | Label: Warner Classics

"I prefer music that brings people together rather than politics that divides them…" This sentence could have sounded a bit cliché in the mouth of another, but in that of Kurt Masur, it took on a very concrete meaning, he who declined the offer made to him to play a political role in the construction of a reunified Germany… Born on July 18, 1927 in Brieg in Upper Silesia (today Brzeg in Poland but then German territory), Kurt Masur very young in Hitler's army. One of the 27 survivors of his company of 130 men, he enrolled at the Musikhochschule in Leipzig at the end of the war to study music. The direction is in fact not the first choice of the young Masur. Suffering from a genetic disease contracting the tendons of his fingers, he knew very early that a career as a pianist was not within his reach. This did not prevent him, after the war, from playing jazz (his great passion!), in clubs… In 1948, this fan of Furtwängler and Walter became chief rehearsal then conductor at the Théâtre de Hall. He continues as kappelmeister of the operas of Erfurt and Leipzig.

Frank Sinatra - The Girl Next Door (2014)  Music

Posted by DjangoTiger at Aug. 23, 2015
Frank Sinatra - The Girl Next Door (2014)

Frank Sinatra - The Girl Next Door (2014)
MP3 CBR 320 kbps | 27 Tracks | 1:23:45 | 206 MB
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz | Label: Platinum Selection

Frank Sinatra was arguably the most important popular music figure of the 20th century, his only real rivals for the title being Bing Crosby, Elvis Presley, and the Beatles. In a professional career that lasted 60 years, he demonstrated a remarkable ability to maintain his appeal and pursue his musical goals despite often countervailing trends. He came to the fore during the swing era of the 1930s and '40s, helped to define the "sing era" of the '40s and '50s, and continued to attract listeners during the rock era that began in the mid-'50s. He scored his first number one hit in 1940 and was still making million-selling recordings in 1994. This popularity was a mark of his success at singing and promoting the American popular song as it was written, particularly in the 1920s, '30s, and '40s…

Winds of Change: Britain in the Early Sixties  eBooks & eLearning

Posted by First1 at Dec. 15, 2019
Winds of Change: Britain in the Early Sixties

Winds of Change: Britain in the Early Sixties by Peter Hennessy
English | September 5th, 2019 | ISBN: 1846141109 | 768 pages | EPUB | 36.66 MB

From the celebrated author of Never Again and Having It So Good, a wonderfully vivid new history of Britain in the early 1960s

Byron Janis - The Mercury Masters [9CDs] (2023)  Music

Posted by ArlegZ at June 13, 2024
Byron Janis - The Mercury Masters [9CDs] (2023)

Byron Janis - The Mercury Masters [9CDs] (2023)
XLD| FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 1.63 Gb | Total time: 06:30:01 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Decca | # 485 3607 | Recorded: 1960-1964

The legendary American pianist Byron Janis, who turns 95 in March 2023, was the first pupil of another iconic pianist - Vladimir Horowitz. Horowitz famously told Janis 'I don't want you to be a 'second Horowitz' I want you to be a 'first Janis'.' Janis certainly established himself on the world stage when he made his Carnegie Hall debut recital in October 1948, garnering a rave review from the New York Times' Olin Downes who praised him as a distinctive artist in his own right destined for a major career. Between 1960 and 1964 Janis made a set of remarkable recordings for the Mercury Living Presence label.

The Thin Red Line (1998) [DVD9] [2002]  Movies

Posted by evaristegalois at Dec. 7, 2009
The Thin Red Line (1998) [DVD9] [2002]

The Thin Red Line (1998) [DVD9] [2002]
1 Original Dual-Layer DVD Image (.ISO) = 7.5 Gb | 100 Mb RARs | RS
Classic/War/Drama | 2.35:1 | Color | English DD 5.1/Spanish DD 2.0/Portuguese DD 2.0 | Spanish/English/Portuguese Subtitles | 170 min.

One of the cinema's great disappearing acts came to a close with the release of The Thin Red Line in late 1998. Terrence Malick, the cryptic recluse who withdrew from Hollywood visibility after the release of his visually enthralling masterpiece Days of Heaven (1978), returned to the director's chair after a 20-year coffee break. Malick's comeback vehicle is a fascinating choice: a wide-ranging adaptation of a World War II novel (filmed once before, in 1964) by James Jones. The battle for Guadalcanal Island gives Malick an opportunity to explore nothing less than the nature of life, death, God, and courage. Let that be a warning to anyone expecting a conventional war flick; Malick proves himself quite capable of mounting an exciting action sequence, but he's just as likely to meander into pure philosophical noodling–or simply let the camera contemplate the first steps of a newly birthed tropical bird, the sinister skulk of a crocodile. This is not especially an actors' movie–some faces go by so quickly they barely register–but the standouts are bold: Nick Nolte as a career-minded colonel, Elias Koteas as a deeply spiritual captain who tries to protect his men, Ben Chaplin as a G.I. haunted by lyrical memories of his wife. The backbone of the film is the ongoing discussion between a wry sergeant (Sean Penn) and an ethereal, almost holy private (newcomer Jim Caviezel). The picture's sprawl may be a result of Malick's method of "finding" a film during shooting and editing, and in some ways The Thin Red Line seems vaguely, intriguingly incomplete. Yet it casts a spell like almost nothing else of its time, and Malick's visionary images are a challenge and a signpost to the rest of his filmmaking generation. –Robert Horton