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((Shirley Bassey)) |
((Ricardo Arjona)) |
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I'd do anything for him! |
Name: Mexile
1) I will swap links if you post a Thumbnail of most recent item and Date of last update...at least (the way I'm linking in "Top Ten Hottest Blogs")
Country:: United States - Miami
An easy going average Capricorn with sense of humor. Love jazz, blues and latin folc songs. I'm a down to earth gay guy, but there’s more to me than meets the eye...believe me!
DO YOU WANNA SWAP LINKS? (READ THIS FIRST)
2) Here's my mail = newmx7@gmail.com
"An excellent rendition by Shirley Bassey! I love it when she sings this song and I know that she sung it throughout the 70's. Her treatment of it is the definitive in my book! "
"Part of her mastery and I believe she was by far the greatest pop singer in the 19th century , seems to be that she makes her tongue disappear immediately after the consonant so all you hear is pure vowel with her beautiful tones and vibratos. She is just the greatest most powerful female I've ever heard."
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"Shirley's Bassey's voice is more powerful, her intonation is richer, her treatment of the lyrics more colorful, while she makes full use of declamatory gestures and varying facial expressions to evoke pictorial images in the lyrics. Her grand finale ending of the song is more dramatic than the way Barbra usually ends her version. This performance is typical Shirley Bassey--magnificent and over-the-top!"
"ShirleyBassey has a wide vocal range. She can go low or high without difficulty, maintaining her powerful voice. Truly gifted & we are blessed to hear her wonderful gift of music. Thank God for her."
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READERS COMMENTS:
"It's lmpossible not to love this wonderful woman & her talent. Sing forever Dame Shirley Bassey"
"Genial como toma aire por la boca...le da ese toque de sensualidad a su cálida voz de contralto. Bella muy bella Shirley" |
READERS COMMENTS:
"Such a Beautiful ~ Class ~ Presentation of Showman-ship. Not only a beautifully sung . Expressive arms, and hands ~~ Rather her entire body goes into her act, with rhythmic dance moves "
"There will never, never be a perfomance like this! Absolute emotional perfection...from the one and only Dame Shirley Bassey" |
"I hope that I may always desire more than I can accomplish." MICHAELANGELO BUONAROTTI Michelangelo Buonarroti was born to a family of very minor nobility in Caprese, Tuscany. Before he was ten, Michelangelo knew exactly what constituted a good cut of marble as well as knowing how to dress it in preparation for an artist’s chisel. From that small age, he already had a good ‘hands on’ experience of the very material that would come to make him a renaissance superstar. Michelangelo took his first trip to Rome, the centre of the art world,in 1496. There, he gained a valuable chance to extensively studyclassical sculpture as well as the current work of his contemporaries. The French Ambassador to the Holy Seecommissioned him to produce a dramatic statue for his own funeralmonument. The result was the Pietà, a hunting representation of the Virgin Mary cradling a frighteningly realistic Jesus in her arms. So accomplished was his Pietà that few could believe it was the work of a man in his early twenties. |
"A man paints with his brains and not with his hands." MICHAELANGELO BUONAROTTI However, other passions were also stirring beneath the surface. The concept of being ‘homosexual’ was not one Michelangelo would have understood. Had the term been in common use during his time though, he would almost certainly have privately admitted to being one. From the adoring affections for his tutors, he had grown into a man obsessed by the masculine form, both in his work and in the bedroom! In the city of Florence, he was well known as a ‘Sodomite’ and would often ‘take comfort’ in the arms of his models. His work, filled with idealistic images of male beauty, encapsulated perfectly his personal desires. Romantically, things were taking a dramatic turn as well. In 1532, he met a young nobleman called Tommaso de Cavalieri. Michelangelo was struck by a romantic feeling that simply would not go away. He wrote sonnet after sonnet for the man as well as producing some rather ‘personal’ sketches for his eyes only. For thirty odd years, the two were constant companions |