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Amor fati is a Latin phrase that may be translated as "love of fate" or "love of one's fate". It is used to describe an attitude in which one sees everything that happens in one's life, including suffering and loss , as good or, at the very least, necessary.
Amor Fati (2007), Hellenic Music Center, 2010, ISMN: 979-0-9016000-2-7; Typewriter Tune for amplified chamber ensemble (2006, 2009), Hellenic Music Center, 2010; Point of no return, Hellenic Music Center, 2010; The Pedal Tone for a Middle-aged Man (2009), concerto for pf (No. 4), sax quartet and str orch, Hellenic Music Center, 2011
amor fati: love of fate: Nietzscheian alternative worldview to that represented through memento mori ("remember you must die"): Nietzsche believed amor fati was more affirmative of life. amor omnibus idem: love is the same for all: From Virgil, Georgics III amor patriae: love of the fatherland: i.e., "love of the nation;" patriotism: amor ...
Especially considering the strong emphasis on Nietzsche, it is silly to define amor fati as anything having anything to do with a belief in destiny or in an ultimate purpose . . . to love one's fate, even if it is full of purposeless suffering, because this is the honorable thing to do (make the world beautiful, not ugly), would seem to be the ...
García Abril composed many orchestral works and chamber and vocal pieces, as well as music for films and television series such as El hombre y la Tierra, Fortunata y Jacinta, Anillos de oro, Segunda enseñanza, Brigada Central, Ramón y Cajal, La ciudad no es para mí and Compuesta y sin novio.
A sample from "Malambo No.1" was used in Robin Thicke's "Everything I Can't Have". Sumac is also mentioned in the lyrics of the 1980s song "Joe le taxi" by Vanessa Paradis, and her album Mambo! is the record that Belinda Carlisle pulls out of its jacket in the video for "Mad About You". [41] "
Raye, 27, is no stranger to recognition. She swept last year’s Brit Awards (the U.K.’s Grammy equivalent) with six trophies including best album, breaking Adele’s record for the most wins in ...
Aurora Matilde Gómez Camus was born in Santander, Cantabria on 26 September 1919, the daughter of Francisco Gómez Landeras and Matilde Camus del Villar. In the 1920s, Matilde Camus attended the Colegio de San José, and later on the Instituto de Santa Clara for seven years. She married Justo Guisández García in 1943.