T. W. Trend forest in the eiffel region of western germany. A forest that harbors dark past. With a legacy still visible in isolated places. From the time when it was dumped a greenhouse. In the closing stages of the 2nd world war it was the scene of money fighting between u. S. And German Forces. The path to the western allies advance from belgium into germany. Lets train through the forest around the village the field again. For locals the battle is still a key part of their history. This ticket will come to mark it was while riding around here on my bike as a teenager that i really came into contact with the history of the herd conformists its Mission Environment on virtue i would suddenly come across ruins among the trees in the park Massive Concrete walls. Of office and when i asked my parents they told me they were the remains of bunkers from the 2nd world war. Ends of a month on when once you know what to look for in this wartime landscape you can also see bomb craters trenches
Acclaimed concert pianist gives Zoom concert
NORTHEAST HARBOR ─ On Wednesday, Feb. 24, Donna Coleman will give a piano concert via Zoom titled, The Art of the Fugue: J.S. Bach, Ludwig van Beethoven and Charles Ives.
This program explores the relationships between the Sonata in A-flat major, opus 110 by Ludwig van Beethoven, the Prelude and Fugue BWV 862 by Johann Sebastian Bach and The Alcotts, movement three of the Concord Sonata by Charles Edward Ives.
Coleman’s research into American and 20th century repertories, with focus on the music of Ives, produced two recordings for Et’Cetera Records and earned fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the North Carolina and the Southern Arts Federations, the Rockefeller Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Fulbright Foundation, Radcliffe College and second prize in the first John F. Kennedy Center International American Music Competition, among many other awards.