Forum Replies Created

Page 87 of 105
  • Jürgen

    Member
    16/11/2021 at 08:34 in reply to: Reply to Jurgen in Fairytale & Myth Thread Posting

    Hi Jacki, sometimes certain things in life don’t work out the way they should. But we have found each other this way. Thanks for the idea “Return of The Jedi”. I haven’t seen this part for a long time, but I will definitely watch all three parts of the original trilogy again this winter.

  • Jürgen

    Member
    15/11/2021 at 17:27 in reply to: Music, Myths and Fairy Tales

    Jefferson Airplane -White Rabbit-. And again one less white dot on my music map David.

    Dragons

    Myths and legends without dragons? Unthinkable. In Western mythology, dragons were serpentine, scaled creatures. At first without wings also called lindworm. Later, dragons with wings appeared in the stories, sometimes even with several heads. They were usually ill-tempered creatures that devastated entire landscapes. A symbol of chaos. In the East Asian world, however, the dragon is a creature with predominantly positive qualities. A symbol of fertility and a good luck charm.
    The following song is called “Love Song of a Dragon” and is about one of the last dragons that awakens to new life after ages and feels its longing for love.

    https://youtu.be/UraVwjSIKO0

  • Jürgen

    Member
    15/11/2021 at 07:49 in reply to: Music, Myths and Fairy Tales

    Thanks for the two contributions David. Clearly mysterious and very puzzling. Definitely a good fit to the topic and indeed very funny and entertaining.

    Alice in Wonderland

    In 1865, the British writer Lewis Carroll published his children’s books „Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland“, followed by „Through the Looking-Glass“ and „What Alice Found There“. The talking white rabbit with the pocket watch, that never has time to stop as well as the Cheshire Cat remain unforgotten. There have been countless film adaptations on this theme. Most recently, the book was made into a movie by Tim Burton. The Mad Hatter is portrayed by Johnny Depp.

    (John Lennon is said to have admitted in an interview that his songs “I am the walrus” and “Lucy in the sky with diamonds” were inspired by Alice’s adventure. Whether this is true? Who knows).

    https://youtu.be/vyDRbx8nWFg?t=7

  • Jürgen

    Member
    14/11/2021 at 17:46 in reply to: Music, Myths and Fairy Tales

    Fantasia

    Fantasia is the third full-length animated film by Walt Disney Studios, from 1940. The entire film is accompanied by classical music, played by the Philadelphia Orchestra, conducted by Leopold Stokowski. Based on the principle of the Silly Symphonies (cartoons without a spoken part, accompanied only by classical music), Fantasia created a classic in film history that can also be considered an early form of music video and the first feature film to use a multi-channel sound system.

    Mighty Mouse can’t sing, but he does things he should have left alone.

    https://youtu.be/VErKCq1IGIU

  • Jürgen

    Member
    14/11/2021 at 08:58 in reply to: Music, Myths and Fairy Tales

    The Last Unicorn

    It was 1968 when Peter S. Beagle published his fantasy novel “The last Unicorn”. The book tells the story of the last free-living unicorn, who undertakes a long and dangerous journey to find his fellow unicorns. It is accompanied by the young, clumsy wizard Schmendrick and a thief/robber chief named Molly Groo. The story was filmed as an animated cartoon in 1982. The theme song was written by the group “America”.

    https://youtu.be/K8ClxCGA1SI

  • Jürgen

    Member
    14/11/2021 at 08:57 in reply to: Music, Myths and Fairy Tales

    Labyrinth

    Labyrinth is a musical fantasy film and is about 16 year old Sarah who loses her little brother to the troll king Jareth. Once this happens, Sarah has to make a mighty effort to get her little brother back from the realm of the trolls. Jareth is embodied by David Bowie, who also contributed various songs. His troll subjects are all characters from the workshop of Jim Henson, who also brought the Muppets to life.

    https://youtu.be/Zbp5UuCz2kk

  • Jürgen

    Member
    13/11/2021 at 08:31 in reply to: Music, Myths and Fairy Tales

    Peer Gynt

    Peer Gynt is a Norwegian fairy tale that was written around 1845 based on ideas by the Norwegian writer Peter Christen Asbjørnsen. The main character of the fairy tale is the young farmer’s son Peer Gynt, who tries to escape reality with tall tales. In search of love and adventure, he soon finds himself in a world of trolls and demons. This idea gave rise to a dramaturgical poem written by Henrik Ibsen. The Norwegian pianist and composer Edvard Hagerup Grieg (1843-1907), in turn, created a musical drama from this theme.

    https://youtu.be/M7NLZDig9_U

  • Jürgen

    Member
    13/11/2021 at 08:28 in reply to: Music, Myths and Fairy Tales

    The Highlander

    The Fountain of Youth or the Spring of Life are mythical or folk ideas of a spring whose water brings eternal life. Whoever drinks or bathes from it will receive healing, rejuvenation or even eternal youth. But how does it feel to be immortal when the people we love cannot accompany us? This question is posed by Christopher Lambert in the movie “Highlander”, in which Lambert plays the role of Connor MacLeod, born in Scotland in 1518. After a battle with an enemy clan, he discovers that he is immortal. At this point begins his long, suffering journey through time and he must learn that there are other immortal people, but they are not well-disposed towards him. An uncertain future lies ahead of him and his great love cannot follow him through time. The band Queen wrote the appropriate song for this certainly tragic topic.

    https://youtu.be/_Jtpf8N5IDE?t=5

  • Jürgen

    Member
    12/11/2021 at 17:40 in reply to: Music, Myths and Fairy Tales

    Shangri-La

    Shangri-La is a fictional place in Tibet. It is described in the utopian novel „Lost Horizon“ by the British writer James Hilton and was published in the 1930s. The book is about a paradisiacal Garden of Eden called „Shangri La”. This place is hidden in the vastness of the Himmalaya Mountains, unrecognized by the Western world. Its inhabitants keep the spiritual treasures of mankind, protected from wars and catastrophes. Since then, the name „Shangri La” has been synonymous with security, happiness and peace.

    https://youtu.be/4omopxSKH3E

  • Jürgen

    Member
    14/11/2021 at 16:36 in reply to: Music, Myths and Fairy Tales

    “Goldilocks For Awhile” brings us to the topic of dancing beauties:

    https://youtu.be/LKcZL8q1eBw

  • Jürgen

    Member
    14/11/2021 at 15:57 in reply to: Music, Myths and Fairy Tales

    I am thrilled David. Where do you get all the extraordinary songs? I’ve never heard this one before either. Here is one more unicorn:

    https://youtu.be/iinXhhe7OBs

  • Jürgen

    Member
    13/11/2021 at 17:07 in reply to: Music, Myths and Fairy Tales

    David, as a child I also had a thick fairy tale book by the Brothers Grimm together with my sister. It was already quite worn and slightly tattered. I don’t know exactly what the book itself had already experienced. Popular with us are also the stories of the Dane Hans Christian Andersen: For example, „The Snow Queen“ (Die Schneekönigin), „The Little Mermaid” (Die kleine Seejungfrau), “The Ugly Young Duckling” (Das häßliche junge Entlein). I don’t know if I translated the titles correctly. I always found Andersen’s collection of fairy tales very serious and I didn’t like them that much, probably because the stories, like so many other fairy tales, were not originally intended for children at all. And then we have a lot of legends: Every region has its own fantasy figures. You have already introduced the “Pied Piper of Hamelin”. Very well known is “Rübezahl” a giant mountain ghost, perhaps similar to “Paul Bunyan” but he is not good-natured like Paul. Perhaps the most famous legend is the “Nibelungensage”. It comes from the Germanic and Nordic area and goes back to the time of the migration of peoples in Europe and includes “Siegfried the dragon slayer”, who gained great fame through the opera cycle “The Ring of the Nibelungs” by Richard Wagner. But you probably know most of the things for sure. And one saga is especially popular with tourists who take a tour on the Rhine River:

    „Die Lorelei vom Rhein“ (The Lorely from the Rhine). Once, in times long past, the virgin Loreley lived in a cave on the Rhine. She sang with a sweet voice, so that all listened enchanted. When the rock walls reflected the warm glow of the evening sun or the surface of the water reflected the light of the moon, one could often spot the fairy-like figure of the Loreley high up on the rock. Many of the passing skippers were so taken by the song that they no longer paid attention to their course and crashed on the treacherous rocks. Yet few had ever seen the beautiful maiden up close. To the fishermen, whom the Loreley was fond off, she showed the places in the river where a rich catch could be expected.

    https://youtu.be/V-AoaZpWs-A

  • Jürgen

    Member
    13/11/2021 at 08:14 in reply to: Music, Myths and Fairy Tales

    Hi Jacki, nice selection. Do you mean that scene from the space fairy tale where the good guys get the really big party going?

    https://youtu.be/GlCFPo6YYbU

  • Jürgen

    Member
    12/11/2021 at 22:28 in reply to: Music, Myths and Fairy Tales

    Xanadu, Shangdu, Kubla Khan? Never heard of it. Do you mean the movie with Olivia Newton John? 🙂

    To put it positively: I like the song very much, the rest could have been left out.

    PS: “The Legend of Xanadu” is a funny song. Especially the part with the whip is hot (it reminds me of Indiana Jones). I didn’t know it was by Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich (is there actually a short form of the band name?!).

    https://youtu.be/dKSB2O2Shts?t=202

  • Jürgen

    Member
    12/11/2021 at 22:23 in reply to: Music, Myths and Fairy Tales

    It’s nice of you to try to build me up David, but you watched Sesame Street until you were seven. I watched it from the age of seven. I knew that something was going wrong in my personal development… . But it was entertaining, you’re right. And what should I watch as a child? We had only three television programs at that time.

Page 87 of 105