Showing posts with label Norway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Norway. Show all posts

Saturday, October 15, 2011

VG Nett (Norway) reports: Court case against Anders Breivik Behring will start in April, probably after Easter on Monday April 10th

Early Saturday morning Miami time, I first read the news about the Anders Breivik Behring trial date I'd been waiting for weeks to hear, while reading Aftonbladet's always excellent website, http://www.aftonbladet.se/.

Public interest in the trial is so great that a special 150-seat courtroom may need to be built from scratch, modify the existing courthouse in Oslo, or, find a conference center with enough security and the appropriate ancillary facilities for court personnel, victim's families and the huge international press contingent.

There was a story but no video at TV2 Norway otherwise I'd run that at the top of this post.


VG Nett
Terror-rettssaken starter trolig 10. april
Kan bli aktuelt å bygge om tinghuset i Oslo
Published 14.10.11 - 10:25 p.m., changed 14.10.11 - 23:14 (AP)
By Terje Helsingeng , Dennis Ravndal and Jarle Brenna

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

The powerful performance by Karpe Diem doing "Tusen Tegninger" in Oslo last month -with Kork & Traces- that put another big lump in my throat that day


Karpe Diem m/ Kork - "Tusen Tegninger" (Live Minnesceremoni Oslo 2011), Oslo Spektrum, August 21, 2011. http://youtu.be/boQPp2pen60

Karpe Diem performs "Tusen Tegninger" (A Thousand Drawings) with Kork, The Norwegian Radio Orchestra/Kringkastingsorkestret, and the Traces Gospel Choir doing chorus). National Day of Remembrance for Attacks in Oslo and Utøya, Oslo Spektrum, August 21, 2011.
The couple shown in the audience at the end of the video above are Crown Prince Haakon and his wife, Crown Princess Mette-Marit. Her step-brother, Trond Berntsen, an off-duty police officer working security at the AUF youth summer camp on Utøya, which his own son was attending, was the second of the 69 murder victims of Anders Behring Breivik on the island.


Though I try my best to be as organized as possible when I'm writing here or thinking about what I'll be posting here in the near-future, with often a couple of dozen ideas in some degree of completion in cold storage as a Draft, just waiting for a photo or bit of serendipity to strike to make it seem extra delicious, the problem is that being a one-man band here as I am, with no staff or 'significant other' to peer over my shoulder occasionally to remind me of things I need to mention or say from time-to-time, sometimes, unfortunately, ideas slip thru the cracks.
Good ideas that leave me quite exasperated and mad at myself later when they come flooding back to me.

Today, or rather Tuesday night, about the time I saw the Marlins lose to the Mets in extra innings- 12:45-ish, and Matt Dominguez's first Major League at-bat, which was a HBP, hit-by-pitch- I received an email from a wonderfully talented and thoughtful friend overseas.
She wrote that she'd finally been able to spend some time catching-up on the latest adventures here at the blog over the weekend, after getting back from a trip home in Sweden to see her family, and not really doing anything online for a week.
Yes, a real vacation!
Even though it's getting colder there already.

Anyway, she sorta chided me for not having yet posted something here on the blog that I had mentioned in a previous email to her and some mutual friends who also live in England.
Something that I had seen and which had absolutely floored me, as it had her, though perhaps to a lesser degree.
It was a performance that was, in a word, fantastiske, plus, it put a real lump in my throat on a day when I already had several.

In my own view, it was perhaps one of the five MOST AMAZING things I'd seen or heard all year, which makes my neglecting to post it here all the more embarrassing and upsetting for me.

As soon as I saw two simple words she'd written in the subject header, I swallowed hard, because she was right, I had meant to post it two weeks ago and time was, like summer, running out.

The two words? Karpe Diem.
Not the Latin phrase, per se, rather, the Norwegian hip-hop duo of Chirag Patel and Magdi Abdelmaguid, that, prior to watching the Memorial Service LIVE via NRK's website, I'd only had a vague-to-general knowledge of, having read some things about them before and seen a few of their vids on YouTube.
(That's saying somethingm since I hate hip-hop, at least as it's practiced here in the States.)

I guess it won't come as a surprise to those of you of a more sleuthful persuasion that I'm specifically referring to their masterful performance in Oslo at the Spektrum, as part of the National Day of Remembrance for 22/7, the Minneseremoni, where they were, by far, the youngest of the many talented performers that Sunday afternoon, morning Miami time.
(I've already written several posts about the myriad performances that day.)

And being much younger, of course, they were even more conscious of and the national trauma of so many young people -55- being among the 77 murdered that day in July, which made them an inspired-if-not perfect choice for reasons that you'll see.

After you watch their amazing August 21st performance, watch this video from the original single release, which overtly shows the religious aspects of this song about faith and tolerance, as the two of them, a Muslim and Hindu, are shown in various houses of worship throughout Norway.
It's really quite original and moving!
Maybe even genius!


Karpe Diem - Tusen Tegninger (Official music video, from their album, "Aldri solgt en Løgn") Directed by Kavar Singh.
Er både svart og hvit
Er både glad og trist
Han så på passet mitt og kastet et blikk og traff meg
For jeg var fuglen på bakken, og han var tvunget til å ville kappe vingene av meg før jeg fikk sunget
Sunget ut om profeten og om gud
Alle disse temaene som ellers er tabu
Du, tror du må si du ber i smug
Når du veit at mange av dine ville sett på deg som sjuk
For det er sjukt at du må si at gud setter oss fri
Jeg utsetter og si at du ser på muslim
Til jeg allerede har gjort et inntrykk
Vente til vi blir litt kjent, og Magdi ekke sinnsyk
Du ekke redd fordi det er ukjent
Du har rett fordi du tror du kjenner meg og jeg er ustemt
Falsk, du må stemme meg fint
For at jeg er hyggelig, Selv om, men det ekke fordi jeg er muslim

Er både hvit og svart
Er både rik og blakk
Hun sa hun aldri hadde møtt en kar som ikke drakk
Og spurte meg om gud dømte meg svart hvitt
For til og med muslimene hun kjente drakk litt men
Brorskapet ekke lenger mellom de som tror på det samme
Har en bror som er hindu, og det handler om å godta
At andre har en mor som, og kanskje en far som
Lærte dem noe annet som
Livet som at himmelen er et mål og livet kanskje er casting
Har ikke masse svin på skogene, jeg har masse marsvin
Og et marsvin er hodepine og aspirin og hvis det får oss til å gjøre gode ting, så hva synes du om at
dama tror på gud og sånt
aner du hvor mange som har spurt meg det du spurte om
Lurte på, hvorfor jeg ikke tar de valga de tar
Du kanke gi gud, så bare gi faen

As of today, September 7th, there are exactly 14 days left to watch the entire Memorial program -or individual selections- at the NRK website: http://www.nrk.no/nett-tv/klipp/777779/
It will be removed on September 22nd.
Don't waste the opportunity to see something very special, which I watched LIVE when it aired via the NRK website.

Karpe Diem's official YouTube Channel is

Official website: http://www.karpediem.no/

Official website for Kork, the Norwegian Radio Orchestra - Kringkastingsorkestret

For more information on the Traces Gospel Choir, based in Oslo, please see http://www.tracesgospel.com/

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Haunting performance of "Eg ser' by Bjørn Eidsvåg, then naming the 77 victims who perished 22/7 -powerful emotions that grabbed Norway -and me


Bjørn Eidsvåg - Eg ser (Live Minnesceremoni Oslo 2011), Oslo Spektrum, August 21, 2011.
http://youtu.be/0oMhPDBvSG4


12 minuters eftertanke/12 Minutes of Reflection.
(Live Minnesceremoni Oslo 2011) Oslo Spektrum, August 21, 2011.

Adil Khan, Maria Bonnevie, Ane Dahl Torp, Ingrid Bolsø Berdal and Nicolai Cleve Broch read aloud the names of the 77 victims who perished in the terrorist attacks in Oslo and Utøya on July 22nd.

------

In my post of Monday, Moved to tears... heart sure to follow... Something truly amazing that I saw for myself -the National Day of Remembrance in Oslo
I noted how truly moved and heart-broken I was by the combination of these two performances back-to-back, about 90 minutes into the program.

I also noted at the time that I was writing it late Sunday night that an online video of Sunday's performance of Eg ser (To see) by singer and song writer Bjørn Eidsvåg had not yet been posted online, so I could share it with you and you could see for yourselves how powerful and moving that performance had been.

But now, thanks to the efforts of jockemustafa in Sweden, you can finally see it for yourself, as Eidsvåg is backed up by Kringkastingsorkestret, a.k.a. Kork, the Norwegian Radio Orchestra.

The performance after the victims names were read, continuing this sad and haunting theme, was the Kork performing Beethoven's 7th Symphony, 2nd Movement.


The complete program broadcast can be seen until September 20th at the Norwegian TV/NRK website at

NRK's information homepage for the attacks, with timeline, graphs and photos, is at:

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Amazing Sissel leaves them proud! Sissel Kyrkjebø - Til ungdommen, National Day of Remembrance for Oslo & Utøya; Minnesceremoni


Sissel Kyrkjebø - Til ungdommen (Live Minnesceremoni Oslo 2011), Oslo Spektrum, August 21, 2011.

Sissel's amazing and powerful performance was the last of the afternoon and was the exclamation point on a wonderful program that helped Norway come together one last time and remember the 77 they lost on July 22nd.

Monday, August 22, 2011

Moved to tears... heart sure to follow... Something truly amazing that I saw for myself -the National Day of Remembrance in Oslo


A-ha - Stay on These Roads, Oslo Spektrum, August 21, 2011.
The band had just held their farewell concert there last year before Christmas.
The couple you see at the end of the performance is Princess Märtha Louise and her husband, author Ari Behn.
Related article, Minneseremoni hylles på Twitter at

Moved to tears... heart sure to follow... Something truly amazing that I saw for myself -the National Day of Remembrance telecast from Oslo.

What follows is an excerpt of an email that I sent to someone Far From the Madding Crowd of South Florida, whom I really respect and admire and who has been places and seen things herself, first-hand, that few people have seen.

I sent it to her about 1 p.m. or so Miami time on Sunday afternoon after getting my head and thoughts together after watching the very thing I wrote about yesterday, and encouraged you readers of the blog to see for yourself -the National Day of Remembrance in Oslo, for the attacks in Oslo and Utøya on July 22nd, which claimed 77 innocent lives.

-----
S,

Just wanted to drop you a line to let you know about something truly amazing that I watched this morning -the National Day of Remembrance telecast from Oslo, which was streamed via NRK's website with absolutely amazing audio and video.
I literally felt like I was inside the Spektrum in Oslo.

Because of what you've done in the past and the places you've been, you've seen things that most people can never imagine seeing in-person, met all sorts of interesting and not-so interesting talented and well-known people along the way, and I'm sure that for either reporting or personal reasons, you've also been at your share of impressive memorials for notable people.
I've been to a few myself, but clearly not as many as you.

That said, this morning's ceremony was one of the most amazing things I've ever seen, by turns inspiring, poignant and sweet, but most of all, clear-eyed and resolved.
You never heard the word democracy used as much at a memorial ceremony as it was heard today in Oslo.

The combination of the top-level Norwegian music, whether names you know, like A-ha to Sissel, to others I was unfamiliar with but who still left me equally dumbstruck, plus the Norwegian Radio Orchestra, and the amazing heartfelt sets, lighting and stage backgrounds, candles everywhere... well, it really got to me from the start.

For long periods of time there was a golden heart formed by candles seemingly looming over the heads of the orchestra, and it was a very powerful symbol in ways that my mere words here can't convey.

And when, after about 90 minutes, they finally got to the point where five well-known Norwegian performers came on stage and read out-loud the names of the 77 people who perished, as large photos of them were shown on TV and inside the hall, WOW!

And all I could think of was those families sitting at a table in their own homes and knowing that they had to choose one photo to represent the qualities and life of their loved one to the country, one photo, well, it was so quiet that you could hear the sobbing after some kids names were read.

For the families involved, this was the day they dreaded most.
After the funerals and the family get-together in towns big and small, they always knew there would be this national day of remembrance to point to, a day where the whole country would be watching and listening.
A day that the country mourned together and put those memories in their heads forever.

But after today, there are no more ceremonies for the affected families, just the rest of their lives...and lots of haunting, never-ending questions about what might've been.

Here's the link to the complete program which will be available on the NRK website until Sept. 20th.
At some point in the near future, when you have the time and opportunity, perhaps you can see that it was as advertised: truly amazing.

The performers are listed on the left of the video when you pull this webpage up.
You can even click and hear just the performances you want.

Unfortunately, while I could watch this Full Screen when it was LIVE, the version they have here doesn't allow you to see it quite the same way I did and appreciate the intimate details.
If I come across a better version this week, I'll send the link.
It's just under two hours long and really gets moving after the first 20 minutes.

FYI: when Bjørn Eidsvåg sings the haunting song, "Eg Ser" (I see), with the full orchestra behind him, wow, the whole program goes up another level in intensity.
And then they read the 77 names...
-----
It all began with this...

Susanne Sundfør - Mitt Lille Land (My Small Country)

As I write this post, there is not yet a video available online of Bjørn Eidsvåg singing from Sunday afternoon that I can post separately here, though you can hear him sing at the link above.

There is, however, an excellent video of him singing this on July 30th, a week after the attacks, at Oslo Domkirke, the Cathedral in Oslo, with an orchestra, and the powerful feeling is just as beautiful and haunting and sad.

It's the very same cathedral where the July 23rd ceremony was held from whence came the screen shots I posted on the blog yesterday, including King Harald and Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg, both of whom gave very heartfelt and dignified speeches Sunday.


Bjørn Eidsvåg - Eg Ser (I see)

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Sunday's LIVE telecast of the National Memorial in Oslo can be seen at NRK at 9 a.m. Eastern U.S./Canada - Minnesceremoni från Norge


SVT Rapport video: Överlevande åter på Utöya. August 19, 2011.
SVT's Thursday night news segment on the survivors returning to Utøya for the first time since the armed attack one month ago, along with dozens of family members of the survivors and deceased and an army of psychologists.



SVT Rapport video: Sorgen fortfarande starkt närvarande i Oslo. August 19, 2011.
SVT news segment from Thursday night on the strong grief still being felt a month later in the Norwegian capital.
http://svtplay.se/v/2507901/rapport/sorgen_fortfarande_starkt_narvarande_i_oslo

Both videos available at SVT Play website until August 19, 2012.
--------------------------

Sunday's LIVE telecast of the National Memorial in Oslo regarding
the attacks in Oslo and Utøya on July 22 can be seen via computer at NRK at 9 a.m. Eastern U.S./Canada.




According to the latest information on SVT's website, the following individuals are scheduled to participate:
Music: Kringkastingorkestern, Susanne Sundfør, Leif Ove Andsnes, Karpe Diem, Dumdum Boys, Sivert Høyem, Jarle Bernhoft, Bjørn Eidsvåg, Ingrid Olave, Sissel Kyrkjebø and A-ha.
Readings will be led by actors Aksel Hennie, Anders Baasmo Christiansen, Ane Dahl Torp, Adil Khan, Ingrid Bolso Berdal, Sofie Gråbøl and Maria Bonnevie.
The ceremony will be hosted by (reporter/singer) Haddy N'jie.

I've refrained up 'till now from writing about what transpired a month ago in Oslo and Utøya on July 22nd for reasons that are not entirely worth getting into right now. Perhaps in the not-so-distant future.
There were some things, though, that I wanted to share now that I think reflect my frame of mind and what I will eventually post here, and will give you some small guidance if you watch Sunday's national memorial service.

First and foremost, as it always does, timing and opportunity rules everything.

I was reading/watching the LIVE reports of the armed attacks in Norway by Anders Behring Breivik -via Stockholm and Oslo- within mere minutes of it happening, even BEFORE it was being reported in the U.S. media, because of the fact that that particular morning -my time- I was already looking at Swedish news websites like Aftenposten, SVT, TV4, Svenska Dagbladet, Expressen, et al.
I'd also written some recent posts about Norway, so still had the NRK website handy as well on my Bookmark list.



SVT video: NRK:s Peter Svaar direktrapporterar från Oslo. July 22, 2011.
Above, one of the first on-scene reports of the explosion downtown by NRK's Peter Svaar.

Norska TV2 berättar från Utöya. July 22, 2011.
Above, one of the first reports from Norway's TV2 on what happened in Utøya, with lots of helicopter shots outlining the island.

I watched the foreign and domestic coverage for a few hours almost continually for days, constantly amazed at the VERY poor and incorrect reporting being done in the U.S. media on this rapidly-evolving story.

In CNN's case, that is, the U.S. version of CNN, that included reporting low casualty figures hours and hours after it common knowledge among the media on the scene that the grim numbers were FAR HIGHER, an upsetting point that I made in some quick emails to some U.S. media friends around the country, some well-known, that I wanted to know the true scope of the attacks, not the old info being foolishly repeated over-and-over on CNN.

One of the emails I sent was this news about an important Tweet warning being sent around the area as people were warned to turn off their cell phone rings.
My subject header was: FYI: Ominous Twitter warnings went out re Utøya: ”Ring inte ön"
"RING INTE FOLK PÅ UTØYA. De gömmer sig för gärningsmannen. Kopiera statusen! (Ambulansen kommer inte fram ertersom det fortfarande är skottlossning)."
which roughly means:
Do not call the island on your mobile as fake cop re-loading gun in search of people to shoot, is listening for rings from phones. Ambulances won't arrive if shooting is happening.
from Ungdomarnas larm från ön på twitter: Hjälp oss, Nyheter, Aftonbladet

I also watched the LIVE telecast on SVT Play via NRK the following day of the Memorial service at the Oslo Cathedral that drew so many notable figures, as well as the families whose loved ones had perished.


Above, right-to-left: King Harald, Queen Sonja, Princess Märtha Louise and her husband, author Ari Behn.

That started at 5 a.m. Miami and was very tough to watch as you'd see people just start crying, tearing-up or sobbing out-of-the-blue.
Especially after the poignant lighting of the candles!


The emotion of the occasion gets to the King and Queen, too.


Above and below are just some of the screen shots of the dozens I took of that church service which I have been holding onto, knowing that it would be impractical to simply post them all, knowing that 99% of you would not have enough context to appreciate what was taking place just from the photos.

While it might not always seem that way to some of you, especially those of you who are in South Florida, I try my best not to be too preachy here on the blog, and I knew that it would be hard to drop ALL those photos on you all, out-of-the-blue, then as now, without seeming either patronizing or...???
Because if you have to explain everything...

So I've held onto them.
But I thought I'd share a few now...


The Royal Family represents.

Above and below, Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg addresses those assembled in the cathedral and across the nation.









Above, Prime Minister Stoltenberg singing along.


All screen shots on this page by South Beach Hoosier.

Saturday, July 16, 2011

A talented & worthy American takes Scandinavia by storm: up-close with Chris Medina - One Day In Stockholm (What Are Words)



UniversalMusicSweden video: Chris Medina - One Day In Stockholm (What Are Words). Chris appears on Rix FM in Stockholm. Yes, they DO have 'Morning Zoo' radio formats in Sweden. http://youtu.be/eNjSIKIBE1U

Link

---------

Chris Medina VEVO video: What Are Words

http://youtu.be/nQY4dIxY1H4Link

I received the behind-the-scenes Chris Medina video at the top of this post within about ten minutes of it being posted to YouTube by Universal Music Sweden last month, and thus was one of the first persons to see it.
That's the kind of video I want to see more of!

As most of you know by now, I'm NOT an American Idol viewer.

The only time I've actually watched it for even a minute without immediately changing the channel from Fox-TV, was when it intentionally bled over past nine o'clock into the time slot for HOUSE. That's it.

I want to see genuine musical talent, not contrived histrionics or teen divas and attitudes and ponderous programs larded with no-talents.
Which is why so many foreign TV music programs are MUCH more to my liking, however friendly they try to be to the "talent."
They're much more cut-throat and don't indulge contestants as much because of their back-story or haircut or on-air melodrama like American version does or did.


You don't need to be Quincy Jones to see that Chris Medina CLEARLY has a unique voice and talent, just like Carrie Underwood or Kelly Clarkson, so why does the American version of Idol persist with all the crummy shows for weeks, while shows like ET and Access Hollywood relentlessly hype the no-talents as interesting curiosities, when they're not? Advertising dollars.
Sometimes, less is more.

Just saying.

Link


ABC News Good Morning America
: Robin Roberts with Chris Medina.




NRK-TV video: Chris Medina LIVE on VG Lista Topp 20, Rådhusplassen, (City Hall) Oslo, Norway. June 2011
http://youtu.be/ap6oY2cN11E
The complete version of this performance as aired by NRK is here:
http://www.vgtv.no/#!id=41778
See interview at http://www.vgtv.no/#!id=41779

His daytime performance in Bergen is here:
http://www.vgtv.no/#!id=42240

As of today,
Chris Medina is #1 on the official Swedish singles chart, http://allcharts.org/music/sweden/singles.htm and #3 on the Norwegian chart: http://lista.vg.no/

Not bad for a 27-year old guy that you never heard of eight months ago!

--------------

http://www.rixfm.com/

Listen LIVE here: http://webradio.rixfm.com/webbradio/webbradio-rixfm.php
Just remember, Stockholm is six hours ahead of us in the U.S. Eastern time-slot!

http://www.youtube.com/OfficialChrisMedina

http://www.facebook.com/OfficialChrisMedina

http://www.youtube.com/user/UniversalMusicSweden

Friday, July 15, 2011

Sunrise, sunset... Well, actually, a ten-hour Arctic sunset courtesy of Terje Sørgjerd, and beautiful ones via Andrea Hegard and Tess Montgomery


Wall Street Journal: Norwegian landscape photographer Terje Sørgjerd has released unique footage of the extended sunrises and sunsets that occur just prior to the arctic summer. He explains how he captured the images. Originally published June 8, 2011.
http://youtu.be/5xEssyTHVMs

I originally planned to post this video on June 23rd, but because of some interesting posts with photos that I received late yesterday afternoon, it's probably for the best that the video stayed in Blogger Draft for the past three weeks.

By the way, for the record, Terje Sogjern is also Terje Sørgjerd, it's just that different publications and media outlets spell his last name differently because they don't all use use the Norwegian letter "ø" in their keyboards or stories. And that my friends explains why so many people with that same first name have similar videos!
Meanwhile, in another part of Norway that's far from the Arctic Circle, blogger Andrea Hegard who lives in Stockholm but who's now elsewhere on vacation like the rest of Sweden, takes a moment out of her rest and relaxation to snap some great photos of the orange sunset she just saw, and trust me, it's well worth
checking-out. http://stureplan.se/bloggar/andrea/2011/07/14/sunset
Link

Andrea blogs on the hugely popular Stureplan.se blogging platform that I've spoken of here before that gets so many reader eyeballs every day, keeping multi-national consumer product advertisers happy as a clam, and which also includes bloggers like London-based Tess Montgomery and Anna Hibbs among others I keep tabs on.
Tess is actually back in Sweden for a bit of some Swedish sommar fun now, and has a great sunset shot today, too!
She calls it beautiful heaven on earth, if that gives you an idea of the photo:
"Vackraste himmelen på jorden!"
http://stureplan.se/bloggar/tess/2011/07/14/vackra-vackra-sverige
In my experience from reading her for a while, Tess has a real knack for taking photos with her family and friends that are consistently inspired, amusing and sweet, as last year's photos around Christmas almost looked like something straight out of a 1940's Warner Brothers film set, but it was all real.
It was really something!

It really, really, really made me envious, too, especially when I accidentally got stuck in traffic gridlock on U.S.-1, a half-mile north of Aventura Mall, when I got distracted by something I was listening to -the great Point of Grace Christmas CD from 1999, A Christmas Story, back when the original four-member band performed.

Everyone who hears it absolutely LOVES that wonderful album.

Having seen POG perform LIVE in Washington, D.C. in 1999, with Amy Grant and the Nashville Symphony Orchestra as part of her holiday tour, when I hear their songs, esp, When Love Came Down, I think back to the concert and... well, the next thing I know, I've missed my turn and am stuck in the line of cars being attracted to the Mall like a magnet.
It took me 20 minutes to navigate my way off the road and make my escape!
(To North Miami Beach, no less, not Shangri La!)
That gridlock was NOT a happy holiday memory!

Almost as envious as I've felt the last few weeks hearing about various friends summer plans on the water, esp. near the archipelago, and going-on and on about the great weather.
Far from the humid and non-breezy 94 degrees your faithful blogger is experiencing hereabouts!

(And not just brutally hot, but brutally boring and repetitive, too, as one day seems like the one before.)

Meanwhile, over there, everyone is relaxing, absorbing sunshine, having fun, jumping in the water once in a while and eating outside, esp. -of course!- strawberries.

Below, in a relaxed moment from July 7th, awesome Cecilia Kallin, lead singer of Timoteij, anticipates the taste of some delicious strawberries while in Lysekil, Västra Götalands län, on the country's west coast, before their recent tour, which they've been blogging about here,
http://www.timoteij.se/


Photo from the official Timoteij blog



Friday, March 25, 2011

In a word: Wow! Terje Sorgjerd and Ole Christian Salomonsen's spectacular videos of the aurora borealis from Norway will amaze you. Häpnadsväckande!

The Aurora from Terje Sorgjerd on Vimeo.



The Aurora
-Terje Sorgjerd spent a week in northern Norway near Kirkenes, close to the Russian border, and somewhat to his own amazement, captures some astounding video of the aurora borealis in clarity and action that has rarely been seen before.
http://vimeo.com/21294655

To get a sense of how very far North he was when he shot this video near Kirkenes, that's almost exactly the same as the northern-most point in Alaska.
I just checked on Kirkenes and right now, the temp there feels like 6 °F.

I remember 6 degrees -and lower- in Bloomington in January of 1982, one of the brightest sunniest days I ever experienced, where the snow was literally blindingly bright. We eventually had wind chills of -40 to -50 below zero, and I remember it so well because it was the same week the Chargers played at the Bengals for the AFC Championship, the week after beating the Dolphins here in Miami, where I'd watched the game on TV near my mother's home near The Falls. The weather there in Cincinnati was the same as it was at IU, a couple of hours east.



Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy



MSNBC photoblog: Northern lights, like never seen before
Article at: http://photoblog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/03/23/6329101-northern-lights-like-never-seen-before?chromedomain=cosmiclog

Other examples of Terje Sorgjerd's talent at: http://vimeo.com/terjes

And also shot from cold northern Norway,
Ole Christian Salomonsen, and In The Land Of The Northern Lights

In The Land Of The Northern Lights from Ole Christian Salomonsen on Vimeo.


http://vimeo.com/21419634

http://vimeo.com/arcticlightphoto

Just imagine what the Vikings must've thought about on their sea journeys at night with no land or torch lights visible for miles, and then suddenly seeing these images flash across the sky?
Their own insignificance?


But to get near there from here....

Scandinavian Airlines Pictures, Images and Photos




Scandinavian Airlines (SAS)
TV commercial
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=if486a186YE&feature=player_profilepage

FYI: Starting on Monday the 28th, there's a NEW daily SAS non-stop from Newark to Oslo for only $413 each way.
Promo code: KKUSSC5


SAS homepage for USA -in English: http://www.flysas.com/en/us/

http://www.norway.com/

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Fairytale for Norge: Alexander Rybak wins 2009 Eurovision Song Contest in Moscow

Above, Norway's Alexander Rybak and his team,
the Frikar dance company, arrive on stage before they
get ready to steal the show with judges and TV viewers
alike across Europe.
Photographer: Indrek Galetin (EBU)

Still working on my blog post regarding this weekend's
activities at the always hard to figure Eurovision Song
Contest in Moscow, and the crazier-than-usual circus
atmosphere there, which, depending upon which European
newspaper you read or which country's TV news you watched,
often alternated casting it as a battle pitting nationalism vs. kitsch,
and we all know how kitsch hates to lose.

Kitsch, like rust, never sleeps, and always gives 110%
This year, kitsch lives in Norway.

See full size image



MALENA ERNMAN.jpg
Malena Ernman

Tack så mycket, Malena, som tack får du en puss!

Rock på!



Won't be posting that blog entry for a few days yet,
but thus far, this is by far the best combination quality
audio and video I've yet found of 22-year old Alexander
Rybak's performance for Fairytale, which earned
Norway the title and the right to host the next Eurovision
competition.

Be forewarned, though, that this version is the one that the
EBU team producing the show throughout Europe ran to
conclude the show, so unfortunately, despite having great
crowd shots, it also has production credits rolling thru
portions of as it concludes.

Click twice to get to full page view and sense of the crowd.



Another video of this song, without the rolling credits, is this
one from March's national competeition, which earned Rybak
the right to perform in Moscow.



Below, Sunday morning, Rybak and company returned to a hero's
welcome in Oslo as his arrival at the airport created a scene of
pandemonium.