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06Mar
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05Mar
Home sweet home – Turtle and dogs
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05Mar
Dog love and milk
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04Mar
Dog and squirrels play with fire
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04Mar
Pluto was discovered in 1930, four years before Holst’s death, and was hailed by astronomers as the ninth planet. Holst, however, expressed no interest in writing a movement for the new planet. He had become disillusioned by the popularity of the suite, believing that it took too much attention away from his other works. In 2000, the HallĂ© Orchestra commissioned the English composer Colin Matthews, an authority on Holst, to write a new eighth movement, which he called “Pluto, the Renewer”. Dedicated to the late Imogen Holst, Gustav Holst’s daughter, it was first performed in Manchester on 11 May 2000, with Kent Nagano conducting the HallĂ© Orchestra. Matthews also changed the ending of “Neptune” slightly so that movement would lead directly into “Pluto”. Six years later, in August 2006, the International Astronomical Union promulgated for the very first time a definition of the term “planet”, which resulted in Pluto’s status being demoted from planet to dwarf planet. Consequently, Holst’s original work is once again a complete representation of all of the extraterrestrial planets in the Solar System. When British composer Colin Matthews was commissioned to “complete” Gustav Holst’s famous The Planets Pluto was still deemed a planet. However, the unfortunate Pluto later had it’s planetary status stripped from it, so Pluto is, in essence, the Lance Armstrong of planetary bodies. Colin Matthews gave his piece the title “Pluto, The Renewer”. The Greco-Roman god Pluto was the …
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04Mar
Downtown Disney Florida Wolfgang Puck Express
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03Mar
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03Mar
Poor Pluto. Long considered the ninth and outermost planet of our system, Pluto has faced an astronomical onslaught from critics who claim it is not a planet after all. Others maintain that it is. Using different definitions, both sides are still warring over whether Pluto is our ninth planet, or just another of the dwarf planets in an area called the Kuiper belt. Pluto is named for the Roman god of the underworld, counterpart to the Greek god Hades. The music is said to be from Gustav Holst’s seven-movement orchestral suite, The Planets Op. 32. But Holst died before Pluto was discovered, so this particular movement, called “Pluto, the Lord of the Underworld,” was written later by another composer.
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03Mar
Dog and coyote
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02Mar
The coyote and his cute little son is out looking for food out in the morning when they noticed a farm full of hens that made the coyotes hungry and wanted a snack for breckfast not nowing that pluto is garding it while he was a sleep but when little junior’s stupiidity made his own father…