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lunes, 8 de noviembre de 2010

The sound of music

Plot Summary for: The Sound of Music
In 1930's Austria, a young woman named Maria is failing miserably in her attempts to become a nun. When the Navy captain Georg Von Trapp writes to the convent asking for a governess that can handle his seven mischievous children, Maria is given the job. The Captain's wife is dead, and he is often away, and runs the household as strictly as he does the ships he sails on. The children are unhappy and resentful of the governesses that their father keeps hiring, and have managed to run each of them off one by one. When Maria arrives, she is initially met with the same hostility, but her kindness, understanding, and sense of fun soon draws them to her and brings some much-needed joy into all their lives -- including the Captain's. Eventually he and Maria find themselves falling in love, even though Georg is already engaged to a Baroness and Maria is still a postulant. The romance makes them both start questioning the decisions they have made. Their personal conflicts soon become overshadowed, however, by world events. Austria is about to come under the control of Germany, and the Captain may soon find himself drafted into the German navy and forced to fight against his own country. Written by LOTUS73
Let's start at the very beginning
A very good place to start
When you read you begin with A-B-C
When you sing you begin with do-re-mi

Do-re-mi, do-re-mi
The first three notes just happen to be
Do-re-mi, do-re-mi

[Maria:]
Do-re-mi-fa-so-la-ti
[spoken]
Let's see if I can make it easy
Doe, a deer, a female deer
Ray, a drop of golden sun
Me, a name I call myself
Far, a long, long way to run
Sew, a needle pulling thread
La, a note to follow Sew
Tea, a drink with jam and bread
That will bring us back to Do (oh-oh-oh)

[Maria and Children:]
[Repeat above verse twice]

[Maria:]
Do-re-mi-fa-so-la-ti-do
So-do!

[Maria: (spoken)]
Now children, do-re-mi-fa-so and so on
are only the tools we use to build a song.
Once you have these notes in your heads,
you can sing a million different tunes by mixing them up.
Like this.
So Do La Fa Mi Do Re
[spoken]
Can you do that?
[Children:]
So Do La Fa Mi Do Re
[Maria:]
So Do La Ti Do Re Do
[Children:]
So Do La Ti Do Re Do
[Maria:]
[spoken]
Now, put it all together.

[Maria and Children:]
So Do La Fa Mi Do Re, So Do La Ti Do Re Do
But it doesn't mean anything.
So we put in words. One word for every note. Like this.
When you know the notes to sing
You can sing most anything
Together!


Rodgers and Hammerstein Biography
 In the early 1920's, Richard Rodgers, born in 1902, was a relatively well-known composer, working with such men as lyricist Lorenz Hart on witty musicals intended to make light of serious issues. During the same period, Oscar Hammerstein II, born in 1895, was completing somewhat popular works using the operetta form. His most famous collaborations (pre-Rodgers) include Rudolf Friml, Vincent Youmans, and Sigmund Romberg. These collaborations resulted in The Desert Song, Rose-Marie, and The New Moon, all operettas. Hammerstein also wrote Show Boat in 1927 with Jerome Kern, which proceeded to change musical theater for good. His last musical collaboration, before beginning an exclusive collaborative relationship with Richard Rodgers, was the 1943 version of Bizet's tragic opera, Carmen - he entitled it Carmen Jones. After long and highly distinguished careers with other collaborators, Richard Rodgers (composer) and Oscar Hammerstein II (librettist/lyricist) joined forces to create the most consistently fruitful and successful partnership in the American musical theatre.
Richard Rodgers
Rodgers and Hammerstein first got together to create the first musical in a currently deeply-explored genre, the musical play. The called it Oklahoma, and in it, fused Rodgers' musical comedy with Hammerstein's operatic background. Who knew that this collaboration would signify the first in a long stream of musicals, resulting in over forty shows and film scores, including On Your Toes, Babes In Arms, The Boys From Syracuse, I Married An Angel, and Pal Joey.
Oklahoma was soon followed by Carousel, and then Allegro, South Pacific, The King and I, Me and Juliet, Flower Drum Song, The Sound of Music, and Pipe Dream. In addition to these Broadway musicals, Rodgers and Hammerstein wrote a musical specifically for film, entitled State Fair, and another specifically for television, entitled Cinderella. Although many of their Broadway musicals ended up on either the film screen or the television screen (winning them a total of fourteen Academy Awards), they only wrote those two specifically for either of those mediums. Their most successful film was The Sound of Music, in 1965, which won Best Picture and is considered to be one of the most popular musical films ever made. After Hammerstein died in 1960, Rodgers continued to write for the stage, his first solo piece called No Strings. However, although a few of his solo works were well-regarded, after his death in 1979, he has not been known as much for these as he has for his collaborations with Hammerstein. This collaboration signified the most long-standing, influential collaboration in Broadway history, and has not been paralleled since.

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