
I really need help with the music and the employment in the performing arts?
Basically, I'm starting a course in college and I love: D I have to find some information about these jobs. Can you help please? I need to find information on: Recording / Performing Artist Author / editor of music Sound Engineer / Record Producer Company Disc Collection Manager Artist Societies Thanks a million Wisdom x
enter at the bottom and work your way over the mail room
Levi’s – Dangerous Liaison
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CraftMaster Deluxe Drafting Table $220.00 Alvin CraftMaster drafting table has sturdy 11/2” tubular steel construction with a powdercoated finish. The laminate tabletop has rounded corners.Drafting table features a onehand tiltangle mechanism that adjusts tabletop from 0 to 30 degrees. Two threedrawer storage units each measure 7”Wx 10”D x 7”H. Metal pencil ledge and plastic instrument tray are included.Footrest crossbar has a rubber … |
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Pavillon Art Drawing Table – Cherry (Round) $156.90 AP442-WBR Size: 31 ” x 42 ” Perfect table for the aspiring artist, crafter or hobbyist. Despite its light and attractive appearance, this table is surprisingly strong, stable, and sturdy. Available in two board sizes. Features: – Board angle adjusts 0 to 60 – Height adjusts 31” to 40” and is firmly secured by twin adjustment knobs on each side – Solid wood base construction with smooth, cherry… |
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Alvin CraftMaster Art Hobby Table – White $128.44 The CraftMaster Hobby Station…The ultimate in function utility and convenience for the hobbyist or artist the CraftMaster Hobby Station has been designed from the bottom up to meet your creative needs. Outstanding features include: 24 x 40 inch woodgrain melamine top with rounded corners for safety. One hand tilt-angle mechanism adjusts tabletop from 0 to 30 degrees. Height adjusts from 26 to … |
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Stars of the Russian Ballet / Galina Ulanova, Maya Plisetskaya, Vakhtang Chabukiani, Boris Asafiev $10.96 We will never see dancers quite like this again. Clive BarnesThe first part of this film features Galina Ulanova in excerpts from Tchaikovsky s Swan Lake. Utilizing dazzling special effects, this production takes full advantage of the artistic qualities of the cinema, rather than merely recording the event. This is truly an historical film document, for it is the only extant tape of Ulanova as Od… |
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Broadway Divas $3.99 … |
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Multiplication Rap/Hip Hop CD/Book Set $5.00 Grades 2 & up. Make mastering multiplication cool with hip hop style songs like “Just Think Of Doubles” and “Order Property”. This award winning album includes drills for facts 0-12 both with and without answers and a 24-page Activity Book with lyrics, time tests, and multiplication practice pages. Running time 66:42… |
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Casablanca Mission Ceiling Fan with Inteli-Touch Control … |
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The Art of Shaving The 4 Elements of the Perfect Shave 1 set Prepare | Lather Up! | Shave | MoisturizeSet contains:Pre-Shave Oil, Unscented for Sensitive Skin (2 fl oz/60 ml) Shaving Cream, Unscented for Sensitive Skin (5.3 oz/150 g) Shaving Brush After-Shave Balm, Unscented for Sensitive Skin (4 fl oz/125 ml)The 4 Elements of the Perfect Shave® guarantee optimal shaving results while relieving and preventing ingrown hairs, razor burn, tough beards and sen… |
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Melissa & Doug Wooden Shape Sorting Clock $7.99 It’s time to “block” around the clock! Two toys in one, this colorful clock combines shape sorting and learning to tell time. Place the numbered and shaped pieces in their proper place on the face of the clock, then move the hour and minute hands to make telling time fun! Measures 9″ x 5″…. |
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Melissa & Doug Slice and Bake Cookie Set $11.49 Your little baker will enjoy “whipping” up a batch of homemade cookies with the Slice and Bake Cookie Set from Melissa and Doug! This colorful wooden set includes 12 wooden, sliceable cookies and 12 toppings, wooden knife, spatula, cookie sheet and a kitchen mitt for safe, “low-calorie” play! The cookies store in a durable dough tube…. |
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ESSENTIAL ART HOUSE-JANUS FILMS $680.76 50 Years, 50 FilmsAll One Spectacular DVD Box Set! Janus Films opened American viewers’ eyes to the pleasures of Ingmar Bergman, Federico Fellini, and Fran×ois Truffaut at the height of their artistic powers. Celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of this world-renowned distribution company with Essential Art House: 50 Years of Janus Films, an expansive collectors’ box set featuring fifty classic films on DVD and a lavishly illustrated hardcover book that tells the story of Janus Films through an essay by film historian Peter Cowie, a tribute from Martin Scorsese, and notes on each of the fifty films. ò Eight Academy Awards ò Twenty-eight Academy Award nominations ò Two Palme d’or awards Alexander Nevsky (1938) Directed by Sergei Eisenstein Ashes and Diamonds (1958) Directed by Andrzej Wajda L’Avventura (1960) Directed by Michelangelo Antonioni Ballad of a Soldier (1959) Directed by Grigori Chukhrai Beauty and the Beast (1946) Directed by Jean Cocteau Black Orpheus (1959) Directed by Marcel Camus Brief Encounter (1946) Directed by David Lean The Fallen Idol (1948) Directed by Carol Reed Fires on the Plain (1959) Directed by Kon Ichikawa Fists in the Pocket (1965) Directed by Marco Bellocchio Floating Weeds (1959) Directed by Yasujiro Ozu Forbidden Games (1952) Directed by Renš Clement The Four Hundred Blows (1959) Directed by Fran×ois Truffaut Grand Illusion (1937) Directed by Jean Renoir H¯xan: Witchcraft Through the Ages (1922) Directed by Benjamin Christensen Ikiru (1952) Directed by Akira Kurosawa The Importance of Being Earnest (1952) Directed by Anthony Asquith Ivan the Terrible, Part II (1958) Directed by Sergei Eisenstein Le jour se lve (1939) Directed by Marcel Carnš Jules and Jim (1962) Directed by Fran×ois Truffaut Kind Hearts and Coronets (1949) Directed by Robert Hamer Knife in the Water (1962) Directed by Roman Polanski The Lady Vanishes (1938) Directed by Alfred Hitchcock The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp (1943) Directed by Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger Loves of a Blonde (1965) Directed by Milos Forman M (1931) Directed by Fritz Lang M. Hulot’s Holiday (1953) Directed by Jacques Tati Miss Julie (1951) Directed by Alf Sj÷berg Pandora’s Box (1929) Directed by G.W. Pabst Pšpš le Moko (1937) Directed by Jean Duvivier Il Posto (1961) Directed by Ermanno Olmi Pygmalion (1938) Directed by Anthony Asquith Rashomon (1951) Directed by Akira Kurosawa Richard III (1955) Directed by Laurence Olivier The Rules of the Game (1939) Directed by Jean Renoir Seven Samurai (1954) Directed by Akira Kurosawa The Seventh Seal (1957) Directed by Ingmar Bergman The Spirit of the Beehive (1973) Directed by Victor Erice La Strada (1954) Directed by Federico Fellini Summertime (1955) Directed by David Lean The Third Man (1949) Directed by Carol Reed The Thirty-Nine Steps (1935) Directed by Alfred Hitchcock Turell Documentaries x3: The Great Chase (1962), The Love Goddesses (1965), and Paul Robeson: Tribute to an Artist (1979) Directed by Saul Turell Ug |
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Red Shoes, The (Criterion Collection) $35.96 Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger’s influential musical tragedy set the stage for the climactic dance ballets that became a staple of the Arthur Freed-MGM musicals (An American in Paris, Singin’ in the Rain and The Band Wagon) of the early 1950s. Hans Christian Andersen’s tragic fairy tale forms the basis of this film about betrayal, love and art. The story begins as struggling composer Julian Craster (Marius Goring) attends a performance of the Lermontov Ballet Company and recognizes his own score in the production of Hearts of Fire. Julian protests to ballet company director Boris Lermontov (Anton Walbrook) about the unauthorized use of his music. Impressed by Julian’s talent, Boris hires him to compose the score for his next ballet — a dance version of The Red Shoes. Boris also hires an attractive young dancer, Victoria Page (Moira Shearer), to perform in the ballet. When the lead ballerina announces that she plans to get married, Boris, in a pique over being abandoned, casts Victoria in the starring role. As Julian works on the score and Victoria struggles to perfect her dance technique, the two fall in love. When The Red Shoes ballet is premiered — seen in a stunning and glorious fifteen-minute sequence — it is a raging success and it makes Victoria a star. But when Boris learns that Julian and Victoria have fallen in love, Boris, who is secretly in love with Victoria, in a fit of rage forces Julian to leave the ballet company; Victoria leaves with him. Since Boris owns the rights to The Red Shoes ballet, he forbids Victoria to perform the dance and she becomes unemployable. Time passes and Julian and Victoria are now happily married. Julian’s compositions have made him an international success. One day, with Victoria disembarking from a train in Paris, she meets Boris, who implores her to do one performance of The Red Shoes in Monaco. Victoria agrees as Julian cancels an engagement in London to travel to Monte Carlo in order to convince his wife not to perform the ballet. But Victoria goes on with the performance, with tragic results. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide |
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Color Honeymooners – Collection 1 $35.96 The Color Honeymooners: Collection 1 is more alluring than it would seem at first glance, even if it lacks anything like the seminal popular-culture impact of the classic ’50s Honeymooners shows. Released by MPI as a triple-DVD set covering the 1966 revival of the series by way of The Jackie Gleason Show, the nine episodes from that season look a little faded, as one might expect from videotape material of 40 years’ vintage; the color is a bit muted as is some of the detail, and the sound is a little soft. But those minor flaws can be overlooked in favor of the energy that Gleason and fellow players Art Carney, Sheila MacRae, and Jane Kean (as well as guest stars Madeleine Sherwood, George O’Hanlon, Rita Gam, and Howard St. John) bring to their roles. Gleason and Carney still had all of the classic timing and the body English that made them a stitch to start with, and they manage to overcome the lack of invention in the scripts, which were a rehash of a lost episode plotline from the previous decade. (One heartily wishes that Madeleine Sherwood had been allowed to sing a bit more, based on the little snippet of vocalizing that she does here.) It’s also interesting to see Kean’s work again — in 1966, not many people could have been aware that she was the woman that, 15 years earlier, Walter Winchell had been seeing on the side, and quietly boosting in her act with her sister Betty as part of the Kean Sisters. And Carney was just coming off his Broadway success as Felix in The Odd Couple. One also wishes that Gleason could have aimed a little higher in his aspirations, which — in the context of the show — never ascended higher than the kind of kitschy between-the-two-wars kind of musical revues that he knew from his youth. The June Taylor Dancers’ work and the choreography seldom changes much from show to show, and when one mixes in the lackluster songs that help extend these scripts (originally written for half-hour time slots), it makes the viewing a chore. In fairness, some of the dance numbers are more interesting than others, with the last episode, Petticoat Jungle, demonstrating some flashes of freshness; the songs are less interesting, even if Gleason, Carney, et al. perform them. In terms of today’s viewing, some of the unexpected moments come from reading the titles of the nine episodes and realizing that the producers kept making reference to old Gleason projects (including the disastrous You’re in the Picture) and Carney’s recent stage triumph (The Mod Couple), among other allusions. Each program gets six chapters corresponding to the commercial breaks in the original broadcasts (one also wishes there were an original sponsor commercial or two). The only bonus feature is a documentary called The Great Gleason Express, which tells of Gleason’s decision to move his entire production company from New York to Miami Beach in 1966 (a move made because he wanted to play golf all year round), by train no less — all on the dime of CBS, |
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Sharpe’s Company $17.96 Sean Bean returns as the stubbornly independent Captain Richard Sharpe in this historical adventure. Sharpe, an officer in the British Army, and his men are in Spain, fighting against Napoleon’s forces, when he learns that Teresa (Assumpta Serna), his mistress, has given birth to his daughter. As Sharpe comes to terms with fatherhood, he loses control of the South Essex company, and learns he must now fight alongside Sgt. Obadiah Hakeswill (Pete Postlethwaite), his nemesis from his days fighting in India. As Sharpe battles Hakeswill with a vehemence that matches his contempt for the French forces, he looks for a way to regain control of the South Essex company. Sharpe’s Company was based on the novel by Bernard Cornwell. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide |
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Company, The (2003) $13.46 Robert Altman directs the musical drama The Company from an original story by actress Neve Campbell, based on her own experiences with The National Ballet of Canada. At the center of the ensemble cast is the young dancer Ry (Campbell), a rising star with the Joffrey Ballet of Chicago. She struggles with the demands of being a dancer while supporting herself as a waitress and starting up a romance with Josh (James Franco). Meanwhile, the ballet company director, Alberto Antonelli (Malcolm McDowell), manages to balance his own administrative and artistic duties. Campbell does her own dancing in the film and the rest of the company is played by the actual members of the Joffrey Ballet. The Company was shown at the 2003 Toronto Film Festival. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide professional.Well known for his conscious debunking of myths and genres, Altman truly lets himself go this time around, delivering a jarringly understated film that is more documentary than drama. Cinematographer Andrew Dunne elegantly captures the many performance scenes on sweeping digital video. Adding even more beauty to the proceedings is the film’s robust soundtrack, which features music from Van Dyke Parks, Julee Cruise, as well as several variations on the classic song Funny Valentine (Elvis Costello, Chet Baker, Marvin Laird, and Kronos Quartet). |
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Company, The (2007) $17.96 Chris O’Donnell, Michael Keaton, and Alfred Molina star in this television mini-series event adapted from the book by Robert Littell and brought to the screen by cinematographer-turned-director Mikael Salomon (Salem’s Lot and Benedict Arnold: A Question of Honor). An epic thriller that traces the timeline of the CIA from the Berlin Base of the 1950s through to the Gorbachev putsch, The Company details the struggles of agents caught between double lives, that war waged against an enemy as immoral as it is elusive, and the internal battles that threatened to destroy The Company from the inside out. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi |
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Electric Company – Best Of The Electric Company $13.46 Hilarious, educational, and groovy, the 1970s educational television show and cultural phenomenon THE ELECTRIC COMPANY ran zany comedy and music acts designed to teach kid reading and arithmetic. The show featured an impressive cast that included stints by Bill Cosby, Morgan Freeman, Rita Moreno, and Gene Wilder. |
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THE COMPANY OF WOLVES $22.46 Company of Wolves is Little Red Riding Hood for the Alien generation. Sheltered 13-year-old Sarah Patterson, living on the edge of a foreboding woods, is visited by her grandmother Angela Lansbury. The old lady delights in telling Sarah the most horrific stories, usually involving what happens to little girls if they trust wolves–the actual, rather than symbolic kind. Later on, Sarah sets out through the woods to visit her grandmother. She makes the acquaintance of a seductive young huntsman (Micha Bergese), who turns out to be…..well, what big teeth he’s got. The ads for Company of Wolves, showing a wolf springing from the open mouth of poor little Sarah Patterson, were warning enough for the faint of heart. Actually, the horror is secondary to the remarkable Grimms-Fairy-Tale ambience which the film successfully sustains from beginning to end. And, in keeping with the original unexpurgated versions of most fairy tales, the sexual subtext is never far from the surface. Director Neil Jordan would further develop some of the subliminal themes in Company of Wolves in his 1994 production Interview with the Vampire. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide |
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In the Company of Men $22.46 Two frustrated young executives vent their pent-up rage via a childish prank and end up paying a price in this psychological black comedy, the feature-film debut of writer-director Neil LaBute. Former college buddies Chad (Aaron Eckhart) and Howard (Matt Malloy) are in their early 30s and work in the same company. One day the two encounter each other in the men’s executive washroom and begin expressing their mutual frustration regarding their lack of rapid advancement at work and their most recent bad luck with women. In hopes of gaining revenge against the fairer sex and bolstering their battered egos, the two hatch a nasty scheme to be enacted over an upcoming six-week-long business trip: Find a vulnerable young woman to court, slather with affection, and then callously dump. They choose a lovely, hearing-impaired typist named Christine (Stacey Edwards), a woman who hasn’t dated in many years. Not realizing that she is about to be the metaphorical mouse between a pair of hungry cats, she laps up the sudden attention, but in no time it becomes apparent that Chad is the man she prefers. When Howard discovers this, it creates escalating tension between the two men who begin playing more psychological games, not only with hapless Christine, but also with each other. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide |
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Early Bergman (Criterion Collection Eclipse Series 1) $62.96 Ingmar Bergman was arguably the most acclaimed and accomplished filmmaker of his generation; his best work (such as Persona, Scenes from a Marriage, Cries and Whispers and Wild Strawberries) changed the rules in how human emotion was portrayed on screen, and his elegant but powerful visual style, his poet’s sense of rhythm and his gift for drawing remarkable performances from his actors influenced dozens of notable filmmakers. However, while Bergman’s work came to the attention of American audiences in the mid-Fifties when films such as The Seventh Seal and Smiles of a Summer Night began playing art houses in the U.S., he’d been making movies since 1946, and many titles from his first decade as a director have been all but impossible for North American film enthusiasts to see. The Criterion Collection, America’s most prestigious home video company, have launched their new Eclipse line (a collection of multi-disc sets featuring lesser-known works from important filmmakers) with Early Bergman, a set of five titles from the master which have been little-seen in the United States — 1944′s Hets (aka Torment), directed by Alf Sjoberg from Bergman’s screenplay (his first to be brought to the screen) and 1946′s Kris (aka Crisis), 1948′s Hamnstad (aka Port Of Call), 1949′s Torst (aka Thirst) and 1949′s Till Gladje (aka To Joy), four of Bergman’s earliest directorial assignments. As cinema, these five films are fascinating and rewarding stuff; Alf Sjoberg’s bolder visual style sets Torment apart from the others four features, but it shows Bergman’s dominant themes of fractured emotional interaction and inner turmoil were already firmly in place, while the other four pictures reveal how quickly Bergman’s very distinctive approach began to manifest itself, and Thirst and To Joy are compelling thumbnail sketches of notions Bergman would explore with greater depth in later films. As a DVD presentation, while this set lacks the bells and whistles that are so much a part of Criterion’s best known releases, the debut Eclipse set is quietly impressive. All five films have been transferred to disc in their original full-frame aspect ratio of 1.33:1, and while the source materials show occasional flaws on Torment and Crisis, the transfers themselves are splendid, capturing a rich spectrum of gray tones and accurately reflecting the original look of these movies. The audio for all five films has been mastered in Dolby Digital Mono, and sounds as good as the vintage of the masters permits. Each film is presented in its original Swedish, with optional English subtitles. No bonus materials are included on these discs (though each case features a short essay on the film in question), which Eclipse cites as an effort to keep these sets affordable, but despite the relative austerity of this package, the presentation has been assembled with obvious care and these films are essential viewing for anyone interested in Bergman’s career or classic International filmmaking of th |
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Ship’s Company, the Entire Collection $13.65 Ship’s Company, the Entire Collection |
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Two’s Company: The Complete Collection $78.95 Two’s Company: The Complete Collection |
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Cooks and Company Collection of Recipes $2 Cooks and Company Collection of Recipes |
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In Good Company: The Ultimate Collection $17.22 In Good Company: The Ultimate Collection |
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Two’s Company – Complete Series $53.96 In the classic British sitcom TWO’S COMPANY, Elaine Stritch (SEPTEMBER, MONSTER-IN-LAW) plays Dorothy McNab, a brash American novelist living in London with her butler Robert (Donald Sinden), an uptight and reserved Englishman. The ensuing culture clash and constant bickering between the mismatched housemates makes for a biting satire containing impeccable comic timing and witty dialogue. TWO’S COMPANY – THE COMPLETE COLLECTION features all four seasons of the show and includes classic episodes such as The Bait, The Honeymoon, The Take-Over Bid, and The Friendly Aristocrats. |
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Three’s Company – Jack’s Episodes $9.99 Renowned for his talent at physical comedy, John Ritter passed away in 2003 to the surprise and sadness of his colleagues and fans. This collection celebrates the actor’s best moments from the classic comedy THREE’S COMPANY. As Jack Tripper, he performed pratfalls that would make any vaudevillian proud. However, the actor was equally adept at delivering the show’s many double entendres. This title features the hilarious episodes Downhill Chaser, Urban Plowboy, Baby, It’s Cold Inside, Up in the Air, and Cupid Works Overtime. |
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Oliver and Company $26.96 Disney brings Charles Dickens’ tale of orphaned pickpockets in the streets of London to the screen with a colorful cast of canine characters. Oliver (voiced by Joey Lawrence) is an orphaned kitten lost in Manhattan until he meets up with the Dodger, a crafty dog with a gang that leads Oliver on a series of colorful adventures. Featuring songs by Billy Joel and Bette Midler. |
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Company Business $13.46 The demise of the Cold War rendered this flat and obsolete spy thriller, written and directed by Nicholas Meyer, mute upon its release in 1991. Gene Hackman plays Sam Boyd, a retired CIA agent, now making ends meet by engaging in industrial espionage. But Sam is recalled to duty and ordered to deliver a captured Russian spy, Pyiotr Grushenko (Mikhail Baryshnikov), to East Berlin for a prisoner exchange. Along with Pyiotr, Sam is also transporting $2 million in Columbian drug money to East Berlin. But due to a series of set-ups, Sam and Pyiotr finds themselves working together to keep from getting killed. Sam tries to get help from the CIA, but it turns out that the CIA (along with the KGB) wants them both dead. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide |
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