TRACKS:
Dragonborn= 0:00-3:57
Awake= 3:57-5:32
From Past To Present= 5:32-10:39
Unbroken Road= 10:39-17:05
Ancient Stones= 17:05-21:53
The City Gates= 21:53-25:42
Silent Footsteps= 25:42-28:35
Dragonsreach=28:35-30:58
Tooth And Claw= 30:58-32:49
Under An Ancient Sun= 32:49-36:33
Death Or Sovngarde= 36:33-39:36
Masser= 39:36-45:43
Distant Horizons= 45:43-49:38
Dawn= 49:38-53:38
The Jerall Mountains= 53:38-57:00
Steel On Steel= 57:00-58:45
Secunda= 58:45-1:00:50
Imperial Throne= 1:00:50-1:03:13
Frostfall= 1:03:13-1:06:42
Night Without Stars= 1:06:42-1:07:26
Into Darkness= 1:07:26-1:10:21
Kynes Pearce= 1:10:21-1:14:12
Unbound= 1:14:12-1:15:47
Far Horizons= 1:15:47-1:21:21
A Winters Tale= 1:21:21-1:24:43
The Bannered Mare= 1:24:43-1:27:13
The Streets Of Whiterun= 1:27:13-1:31:20
One They Fear= 1:31:20-1:34:37
The White River= 1:34:37-1:38:07
Silence Unbroken= 1:38:07-1:40:32
Standing Stones= 1:40:32-1:47:11
Beneath The Ice= 1:47:11-1:51:28
Tundra= 1:51:28-1:55:19
Journeys End= 1:55:19-1:59:30
Before The Storm= 1:59:30-2:00:39
A Chance Meeting= 2:00:39-2:03:51
Out Of The Cold= 2:03:51-2:06:56
Around The Fire= 2:06:56-2:10:08
Shadows and Echoes= 2:10:08-2:12:29
Caught Off Guard= 2:12:29-2:13:47
Aurora= 2:13:47-2:21:06
Blood And Steel= 2:21:06-2:23:18
Towers And Shadows= 2:23:18-2:25:42
Seven Thousand Steps= 2:25:42-2:26:51
Solitude= 2:26:51-2:29:03
Watch The Skies= 2:29:03-2:31:26
The Gathering Storm= 2:31:26-2:34:22
Sky Above, Voice Within= 2:34:22-2:38:21
Death In The Darkness= 2:38:21-2:40:59
Shattered Shields= 2:40:59-2:43:39
Sovngarde= 2:43:39-2:47:18
Wind Guide You= 2:47:18-2:56:23
Skyrim Atmospheres= 2:56:23-3:39:00
More than 3,5 hours of the most famous and recognizable classical music recordings.The best of classical music for studying, reading, relaxing and (most of all) enjoying!
Tracklist:
0:00 P.I. Tchaikovsky – Swan Lake, Act II: No.10 Scene (Moderato)
02:42 Edvard Grieg – Morning Mood
06:22 Ludwig van Beethoven – Für Elise (Bagatelle No.25 in A minor)
08:51 Frederic Chopin — Nocturne in C-sharp minor
12:56 Georges Bizet — Habanera («Lamour est un oiseau rebelle»)
14:58 W.A. Mozart — Rondo alla Turca («Turkish March»)
18:33 Ludwig van Beethoven — Moonlight Sonata (The Piano Sonata No. 14 in C♯ minor «Quasi una fantasia», Op. 27, No. 2)
23:47 Antonio Vivaldi – The Four Seasons “Summer” (III: Presto)
26:24 P.I. Tchaikovsky – Dance Of The Sugar Plum Fairy
28:10 Federic Chopin – Prelude Op.28, no.4
30:44 Gioachino Rossini – Overture to “The Barber of Seville”
36:29 Jahannes Brahms – Hungarian Dance no.5 in F-sharp minor (fragment)
37:06 W.A Mozart – Eine kleine Nachtmusik (Serenade No. 13 for strings in G major)
42:54 J.S.Bach – Air on the G string (from Orchestral Suite No.3, BWV 1068)
45:47 W.A. Mozart – Symphony No.40 in G minor (1. Molto allegro)
51:44 Erik Satie – Gymnopedie no.1
54:56 Johann Strauss II – “Frühlingsstimmen”, Op. 410 («Voices of Spring»)
1:01:31 Frederic Chopin – Nocturne in B-flat minor, Op. 9, no.1
1:07:07 P.I. Tchaikovsky – The Nutcracker: Act I, No.4 Russian Dance
1:08:08 J.S.Bach – Orchestral Suite no.2 in B minor (7.Badinerie)
1:09:07 Gioachino Rossini – William Tell Overture
1:14:55 Antonin Dvorak – Symphony no. 9 in E minor («From the New world»: IV. Allegro con fuoco)
1:26:39 P.I. Tchaikovsky – The Nutcracker: Act I, No. 8 Waltz of the Flowers
1:31:47 Richard Wagner – Ride of the Valkyries
1:37:08 Ludwig van Beethoven — Sonata No. 8 in C Minor Pathetique, Op. 13 (II. Adagio cantabile)
1:42:08 Johann Strauss II – «An der schönen blauen Donau» (The Blue Danube),Op.314
1:49:19 Erik Satie – Gnossienne No.1
1:52:42 Edvard Grieg – In the Hall of the Mountain King
1:54:58 Frederic Chopin – Nocturne in E-flat major, Op. 9, No. 2
1:59:30 Antonio Vivaldi – The Four Seasons “Autumn” (1. Allegro)
2:04:30 Franz Liszt – Liebestraume no. 3 in A flat major
2:09:00 W.A. Mozart – Piano Concerto no.21 in C major (II. Movement)
2:13:19 Ludwig van Beethoven – The Symphony No.5 in C minor (fragment)
2:20:10 Claude Debussy – Clair de lune (from «Suite bergamasque»)
2:25:12 N.Rimsky-Korsakov – Flight of the Bumblebee (from “The Tale of Tsar Saltan)
2:26:28 P.I. Tchaikovsky – The Nutcracker: Act I, No. 2 (March)
2:28:25 Edvard Grieg — Notturno, Op.54, No.4
2:32:45 Felix Mendelssohn – Wedding March (from “A Midsumer Night’s Dream”)
2:37:46 Georges Bizet – Prelude to Act 1 for “Carmen”
2:40:02 Antonio Vivaldi – The Four Seasons “Spring” (1.Allegro)
2:43:36 Erik Satie – Gnossienne No.3
2:46:17 Johann Strauss II – Künstlerleben («Artists Life»), op.316
2:49:08 Frederic Chopin – “Revolutionary Etude” (Etude Op.10, No.12)
2:51:51 Luigi Boccherini – Minuet from String Quintet in E, Op. 11, No.5 (G 275)
2:54:00 Ludwig van Beethoven – Ode to Joy (from Symphony no. 9 in D minor)
2:57:53 Richard Strauss – Also sprach Zarathustra
2:59:14 Frederic Chopin – Waltz in D-flat major, Op 64, No 1 («Minute Waltz»)
3:01:00 Tomaso Albinoni — Adagio in G minor (attributed to Tomaso Albinoni, but actually proabably composed by Remo Giazotto).
3:04:29 Modest Mussorgsky – Night on Bald Mountain
3:11:49 Johann Strauss II – “Wiener Blut”, Op. 354
3:13:24 J.S.Bach – Toccata and Fugue in D minor, BWV 565
3:16:29 Jacques Offenbach – Overture to “Orpheus in the Underworld” (can-can section)
3:18:14 Leo Delibes – Pizzicato (from “Sylvia”)
3:20:09 Frederic Chopin – Funeral March (Piano Sonata No.2 in B flat minor Op 35: III. Marche Funebre)
3:29:33 W.A. Mozart – Requiem in D minor
3:33:01 J.S.Bach – Prelude in C major
Every composition from this video exists as a public domain or creative common content.
The fragment of Debussys «Suite bergamasque» performed by Laurens Goedhart.
Liszts «Liebesträume» performed by Martha Goldstein.
Griegs Notturno performed by Mark Gasser.
Piano versions of Mozarts «Requiem in D minor» and Piano «Concerto no.21 in C major» performed by Markus Staab.
Saties «Gnossiennes» performed by La Pianista.
Richard Wagners «Also Sprach Zarathustra» performed by Kevin MacLeod.
The fragments of Vivaldis «Spring», «Summer» and «Autumn» performed by John Harrison.
More public domain and creative commons music you can find on Musopen website.
To follow me and my playlists on Spotify enter: spotify:user:1190084485 into your searchbar!
In this video I compare two major global languages: Spanish and French! How similar are they? How different are they? ** For lots of great French lessons for students of all levels, visit FrenchPod101: langfocus.com/frenchpod. And for Spanish: langfocus.com/spanishpod.
(Full disclosure: if you sign up for a premium account, Langfocus receives a small referral fee. But the free account is great too!)
Special thanks to Edu Tudela for his Spanish audio samples, and Lùthais MacGriogair for his French audio samples.
Current patrons include these superb people: Andres Resendez Borgia, Anjo Barnes, Auguste Fields, Behnam Esfahbod, Bennett Seacrist, Brandon Gonzalez, Brian Michalowski, Clark Roth, Fiona de Visser, Georgina Toland, Guillermo Jimenez, Jacob Madsen, John Moffat, Marcelo Loureiro, Matthew Etter, Michael Arbagi, Michael Cuomo, Nobbi Lampe-Strang, Patrick W., Paul Boychuk,
Rosalind Resnick, Ruben Sanchez Jr, Sebastian Langshaw, ShadowCrossZero, Victoria Goh, Vincent David, Yuko Sunda, [APG]RoboCop[CL], Adam Fitch, Adam Powell, Adam Vanderpluym, Alberto del Angel, Alex Hanselka, Ali Muhammed Alshehri, Andrew Woods, Angeline Biot, Aous Mansouri, Ashley Dierolf, Atsushi Yoshida, Avital Levant, Bartosz Czarnotta, Brent Warner, Brian Begnoche, Brian Morton, Bron X, Bruce Schultz, Bruce Stark, Bruno Filippi, Carl saloga, Charis TRukh, Chelsea Boudreau, Christian Langreiter, Christopher Lowell, David Anglin, David LeCount, Diane Young, divad, Divadrax, Don Ross, Donald Tilley, Edward Wilson, Eric Loewenthal, Erin Robinson Swink, Fabio Martini, fatimahl, Florian Breitwieser, Gary Walker, Grace Wagner, Gus Polly, Hannes Egli,
Harry Kek, Henri Saussure, Ina Mwanda, Jack Jackson, James and Amanda Soderling, James Lillis, Jay Bernard, Jens Aksel Takle, JESUS FERNANDO MIRANDA BARBOSA, JK Nair, JL Bumgarner, Justin Faist, KEERTHI BANGALORE JAYARAM, Kevin J. Baron, Klaw117, Konrad, Kristian Erickson, Laura Morland, Leo Coyne, Leo Barudi, Lincoln Hutton, Lorraine Inez Lil, Luke Jensen, M.Aqeel Afzal, Maanas Nukala, Mahmoud Hashemi, Margaret Langendorf, Maria Comninou, Mariana Bentancor, Mark, Mark Grigoleit, Mark Kemp, Maurice Chou, Merrick Bobb, Michael Regal, Mike Frysinger, mimichi, Mohammed A. Abahussain, Nicholas Gentry, Nicole Tovar, Oleksandr Ivanov, Oto Kohulák, Panot, Patriot Nurse, Paul Shutler,
Pauline Pavon, Paulla Fetzek, Peter Andersson, Peter Nikitin, Peter Scollar, Pomax, Raymond Thomas, Renato Paroni de Castro,
Rob Hoskins, Robert Sheehan, Robert Williams, Roland Seuhs, Ronald Brady, Ryan Lanham, Saffo Papantonopoulou, Samuel Croes, Scott Irons, Scott Russell, Sergio Pascalin, Shoji AKAO, Sierra Rooney, Simon Blanchet, Spartak Kagramanyan, Steeven Lapointe,
Stefan Reichenberger, Steven Severance, Suzanne Jacobs, Theophagous, Thomas Chapel, Tomáš Pauliček, Tryggurhavn, veleum, William O Beeman, William Shields, yasmine jaafar, Éric Martin.
Intro music: «Rocka» by Text Me Records/Bobby Renz.
Outro music: «Majikk» by Jingle Punks.
Серия расслабляющей музыки DOZE OFF MEDUZA / STAV IT SKY -это оригинальные, успокаивающие простые и мирные мелодии, сочиненные музыкантом “ STAV IT SKY “ и загруженные на YouTube. Обычно это расслабляющий звук фортепиано, который хорош для снятия стресса. Но также эта музыка отлично подходит для отдыха, медитации, йоги, массажа, учебы, чтения, сна, работы и т. д., а так же что бы помочь Вам уснуть
The DOZE OFF MEDUZA / STAV IT SKY relaxing music series Is Original, calming simple and peaceful tunes composed by STAV IT SKY and uploaded to YouTube. Usually This is Relaxing Piano Sound Which is Good For Stress Relief, But Also These music are great for relaxing, meditation, yoga, massage, studying, reading, working, etc. and to help you to fall asleep.
Amalie Bruun has always paved her own path, challenging underground preconceptions of heavy metal ever since the release of her debut Myrkur EP in 2014. Her first two full-length studio albums, 2015’s M and 2017’s Mareridt, recast black metal in the most personal yet expansive of terms, their blending of Amalie’s Danish folk roots with tempestuous internal struggles breathing new life into a subgenre whose followers can be rigidly possessive.
With the release of her new album, Folkesange, Amalie Bruun has set out to journey into the very heart of the Scandinavian culture that marked her childhood. Folkesange relinquishes black metal for a refined yet far-reaching evocation of traditional folk, combining songs ancient and new to sublimely resonant effect.
After the nightmare-induced visions that wrought themselves throughout Mareridt, Folkesange offers an emotional sanctuary, a means to reconnect to something permanent and nature-aligned. It’s an awareness that’s become deeply bound to the album’s organic, regenerative spirit, from the opening track Ella’s heartbeat, frame-drum percussion and crystalline vocals that become the grounding for a rapt, richly textured awakening, to the gentle carousel of the closing Vinter, with its nostalgia-steeped connotations of seasonal, snowfall-bewitched awe.
Storytelling, rites of passage, and the invocation of a continuity that passes through time and generation are all part of folk music’s tapestry, and Folkesange taps into all these currents in their most essential form. In part a purist’s approach to the genre, free from over-interpretation and fusion, the use of traditional instruments throughout, such as nyckelharpa, lyre, and mandola offer a deeper, more tactile connection to their source, an unbroken line of communication back to the past.
But the album is no museum piece; it resonates in the here and now, aided by the spacious production of Heilung member and musical collaborator Christopher Juul. Cinematic yet intimate, Folkesange exists in a state of boundless reverie, bourne by string-led drones, cyclical, elegiac rhythms and Amalie’s frictionless voice, all carrier signals for deep-rooted, ancestral memories, and associations felt on an elemental level.
It’s a binding of the otherworldly and the earthy that echoes the the subject matter of many of the tales themselves. Written by Amalie, Leaves Of Yggdrasil’s medieval cadences bind tragic love story and mythology, full of both fairytale wonder and deeply human foible. Tor i Helheim, its dreamily persistent rhythm redolent of both innocence and encroachment, is based on a poem from the Icelandic Eddas, relating a journey into the underworld of Hel where the sparse nature of the accompaniment becomes the medium that carries you along in its thrall.
An immersive experience in its own right, but also belonging to a wider, pagan folk-based renaissance that has attracted a devoted following worldwide, Folkesange answers a need that has become ever more pressing in turbulent times. A zeroing in on a resonance that is both intrinsic and enduring, it’s a rediscovery of personal grounding, and an experience that reaches beyond culture to remind us of a shared, deeply rooted inheritance. A tuning fork that binds the personal and the universal, Folkesange is a reminder that the most transcendent experiences are those closest to home.