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"East to West" is a contemporary Christian song lasting four minutes and 26 seconds. [3] It was written in common time in the key of F ♯ minor at a tempo of 73 beats per minute. The vocal range in the song ranges from the low note of D 4 to the high note of F ♯ 5. [2]
East/West (French: Est-Ouest; Russian: Восток-Запад, romanized: Vostok-Zapad) is a 1999 drama film directed by Régis Wargnier, starring Sandrine Bonnaire, Oleg Menshikov, Catherine Deneuve and Sergei Bodrov Jr. It received generally positive reviews from critics.
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The cantata is opened by a sinfonia for concertante organ and orchestra, [3] probably the final movement of a lost concerto composed in Köthen, the model for the Concerto II in E major, BWV 1053, for harpsichord. Two weeks before, Bach had used the two other movements of that concerto in his cantata Gott soll allein mein Herze haben, BWV 169. [2]
The opening chorus with the full orchestra is the "centre of gravity" of the cantata. [3] It opens with an introduction marked "adagio", played by the strings doubled by the oboes. Then a fugue begins, two instrumental entries are followed by choral entries, a climax is reached in an entry of the first trumpet.
Bullitt is a soundtrack album to the motion picture Bullitt, by Argentine composer, pianist and conductor Lalo Schifrin, recorded in 1968 and released on the Warner Bros. label. [3] The tracks released on the album are alternate versions of those heard in the film and were re-recorded at the film producers' insistence for a more "pop" oriented ...
The Kreuzstab cantata has been coupled with other works by Bach for solo bass, especially Ich habe genug, BWV 82—a paraphrase of the Song of Simeon—and an impassioned cantata taking longing for death as its theme. [67] Sometimes the fragmentary cantata Der Friede sei mit dir, BWV 158, related to peace (Friede) has been added. [28] [68] [69 ...
[3] The cantata was first published in 1881 in the first complete edition of Bach's work, the Bach-Gesellschaft Ausgabe. The volume in which the cantata appeared was edited by Wilhelm Rust. [2] Winfried Radeke and William H. Scheide provided different but similar attempts to reconstruct the missing part of the second movement in the 1970s. [3]