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Video Internet - Stream 1929

Recherche de vidéos [1929]
Our Modern Maidens, 1929 [6 of 9]
liftoffgirl
10 mn - 5 sept. 2008


Our Modern Maidens, Part 61929 silent film directed by Jack Conway, and starring Joan Crawford, Rod La Rocque, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., and Anita Page.Annette Hanshaw - Am I Blue?
pax41
3 mn - 5 sept. 2008


Velvet Tone 1940-V recorded 5/31/1929 from "On With The Show"COTAGE 1
nakajaiz
3 mn - 5 sept. 2008


Trecho da Trilha Sonora arranjada e tocada ao vivo por Fábio Tagliaferri e Daniel Nakamura. O filme, "A Cottage On Dartmoor", de 1929, foi exibido na II Jornada de Cinema Silencioso, em São Paulo (2008).Ted Weems - Arthur Jarrett - The Man From The South
pax41
3 mn - 5 sept. 2008


Victor 22238-A recorded 12/2/1929 vocal by Arthur JarrettOur Modern Maidens, 1929 [5 of 9]
liftoffgirl
7 mn - 5 sept. 2008


Our Modern Maidens, Part 51929 silent film directed by Jack Conway, and starring Joan Crawford, Rod La Rocque, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., and Anita Page.Our Modern Maidens, 1929 [4 of 9]
liftoffgirl
9 mn - 5 sept. 2008


Our Modern Maidens, Part 41929 silent film directed by Jack Conway, and starring Joan Crawford, Rod La Rocque, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., and Anita Page.Our Modern Maidens, 1929 [3 of 9]
liftoffgirl
10 mn - 4 sept. 2008


Our Modern Maidens, Part 31929 silent film directed by Jack Conway, and starring Joan Crawford, Rod La Rocque, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., and Anita Page.COTAGE
nakajaiz
2 mn - 4 sept. 2008


Trecho da Trilha Sonora arranjada e tocada ao vivo por Fábio Tagliaferri e Daniel Nakamura. O filme, "A Cottage On Dartmoor", de 1929, foi exibido na II Jornada de Cinema Silencioso, em São Paulo (2008).Our Modern Maidens, 1929 [2 of 9]
liftoffgirl
10 mn - 4 sept. 2008


Our Modern Maidens, Part 21929 silent film directed by Jack Conway, and starring Joan Crawford, Rod La Rocque, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., and Anita Page.Script Ohio by National Symphony Orchestra Labor Day '08
mikeholland2000
2 mn - 4 sept. 2008


Script Ohio by National Symphony Orchestra Labor Day Concert 2008 on the West Lawn of our Nation's Capitol. The song now beloved by Ohio State alumni, the student body, faculty, and many others, gains its origins from a French military poem written by Paul Cezano in the late 1870's entitled Le Regiment de Sambre et Meuse. The inspiration for this poem came from the folk tales of France's Revolutionary period when France was invaded by European monarchs. In order to repel these invaders, France held the first large scale military draft, bringing in crude peasants and making them into crude soldiers. The stories continue, accounting for bravery of these disliked peasant soldiers as they fought on after being ordered to retreat. The poem focuses on the bravery of these men and the French hunger for victory. In 1871, French composer Jean Robert Planquette set Cezano's poem to a simple melody which was to become a favorite to the French public. The lyrics were translated into many languages and the song traveled throughout the world. In 1879, Sambre et Meuse was arranged into a military march by Joseph Francois Rauski, and in the 1890's, pianists and orchestral arrangers also produced arrangements of the march, each giving credit lines and references to Planquette and Rauski. The popularity of this march had grown to such an extent, that it gained recognition as one of the most popular marches by a German encyclopedia. In the United States, the first copyrighted arrangements of Le Regiment were by Carl Fischer in 1904 and his band arrangement in 1908. A flurry of copyright activity followed with a flock of arrangements for piano, orchestras, men's glee clubs, and in a community song book published in Chicago. In 1937, release of Fischer's arrangement neglected to have the names of Planquette and Rauski in the credits, thus hiding the true origins of the piece. Professor Eugene Weigel, the Director of the OSUMB from 1929-1939, had played in a Navy band during World War I. Sambre et Meuse had been a popular song during this period, and it is believed that he learned of the march at this time. The year Professor Weigel came to Ohio State, the concert band played Sambre et Meuse and the piece was soon added to the Marching Band repertoire. OSUMB was still using the 1908 arrangement by Carl Fischer even for the first performance of Script Ohio. It was not until the 1940's that the OSUMB made its own arrangement of Le Regiment. In 1964, Richard Heine produced the version currently in use on Football Saturdays. This version as well as the earlier OSUMB version failed to mention any names of the previous composers. The song's history remained unknown until 1978 when OSUMB alumni took the time to recapture the history of this song. Courtesy of Robert M. Goodman is a more detailed history which can be viewed here.
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