["estéreo>"[-]
gritins ebrigüan
MaryPoppins escribió:
="MaryPoppins"]
Gontchita, Te refieres supongo a "Los renglones torcidos de Dios" ¿noo???
si
ese mismo, con doña Alicia la loca como prota prinsipal, muchas gracias por recomendarlo...
physicalsonora escribió:
aunque me alegro por sus seguidores y le deseo suerte
gracias majo
la vamos a necesitar
gracias asimismo por el link q tan generosamente nos ha proporcionao
uy por cierto, como no, la billorada del dia... la letra d Oceania:
one breath away from mother Oceanía
your nimble feet make prints
in my sands
you have done good for yourselves
since you left my wet embrace
and crawled ashore
every boy, is a snake is a lily
every pearl is a lynx
is a girl
sweet like harmony made into flesh
you dance by my side
children sublime
you show me continents
- i see islands
you count the centuries
- i blink my eyes
hawks and sparrows race in my waters
stingrays are floating
across the sky
little ones - my sons and my daughters
your sweat is salty
i am why
[ Imagen no disponible ]
d sobre Oceanía en inglé:
This song was premiered at the 2004 Olympics in Athens, Greece.
"Basically, the Olympics people asked me to do a kind of 'Ebony and Ivory' or 'We Are the World' type song. Those are smashing tunes and all that, but I thought, 'Maybe there's another angle to this.' When I tried to write an Olympic lyric, though, it was full of sports socks and ribbons. I ended up pissing myself laughing."
Björk decided to call on Sjón Sigurdsson, Icelandic poet and previous lyrics-collaborator. Needing something epic, Sjón took a course in Greek mythology, and then wrote these lyrics for 'Oceania', a kind of aquatic sojourn and the last song recorded for Medúlla.
"The Olympic version will be a little different. But it will fit the occasion, I think, because the song is all about how the ocean doesn't see boundaries between countries and thinks everyone is the same. Sjón came up with this beautiful last line that touches on how we were all little jellyfish or whatever before we made it on to land. He has The Sea saying, 'Your sweat is salty / And I am why / Your sweat is salty / And I am why.'" (Björk 13 Aug 2004)