SHOES
Posted: April 23, 2011 Filed under: Fashion | Tags: alisha, alisha hill, hill, it, shoes, strange, wear 1 Comment » Hello my dear readers, today I want to give you a “big” choice of women shoes:P , I like very much Hill’s desighn, at first, I liked Sherry Hill’s promo dresses, now I am fond of Alisha Hill’s shoes.
Alisha Hill
For seeing more, enter her site - http://www.alishahill.com/prom-shoes.php
I hope you will like this designer, in any case she is already well known and fancy business woman. I want to show you other shoes, I don’t know who are the designers but I know for sure that they are incredibly strange, original and some of them are really funny.
If someone has any other strange shoes or wears it, please let me know and explain what for do they wear it?:DDDDD
Армения
Posted: April 22, 2011 Filed under: Poesy, Reading for soul | Tags: ararat, Armenia, ashot erkat, ashtarak, dolina, duduk, eva rivas, gori, music, poezia, stixi, stixi pro armeniu, strana Leave a comment »Про нашу родину Наири,
Перед тобой лежит страна,
Армения – в небесной шири.
Скажите где я нахожусь?
Скажите что это за край?
Быть может мне так повезло,
Быть может здесь попал я в рай?
Бежит река, смеётся так,
Я знаю сердце Армянина,
Не позабудет Аштарак.
Собралась наша вся родня,
Едим, и пьем, и говорим
В тостах хорошие слова.
И горы там вдали встают,
Своею манят красотой,
И обещают нам уют.
Не согласитеся ли вы,
И там, в долине АРАРАТА
Услышать песнь Саят Новы.
Автор стиха – Борис Казарян
Rumba history
Posted: April 17, 2011 Filed under: Dance | Tags: dance, hug, Love, move, passion, rumba, style, touch 10 Comments »Today I want to give you some information about Rumba, The dance with is very beautiful and romantic , and which gives each rumba dancer elegance and sexuality.
The word Rumba is a generic term, covering a variety of names (i.e., Son, Danzon, Guagira, Guaracha, Naningo), for a type of West Indian music or dancing. The exact meaning varies from island to island. The word “rumba” comes from the verb “rumbear” which means going to parties, dancing, and having a good time.
The “rumba influence” came in the 16th century with the black slaves imported from Africa.
The American Rumba is a modified version of the “Son”. The first serious attempt to introduce the rumba to the United States was by Lew Quinn and Joan Sawyer in 1913. Ten years later band leader Emil Coleman imported some rumba musicians and a pair of rumba dancers to New York. In 1925 Benito Collada opened the Club El Chico in Greenwich Village and found that New Yorkers did not know what Rumba was all about.
Real interest in Latin music began about 1929. In the late 1920′s, Xavier Cugat formed an orchestra that specialized in Latin American music. He opened at the Coconut Grove in Los Angeles and appeared in early sound movies such as “In Gay Madrid”. Later in the 1930′s, Cugat played at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York. By the end of the decade he was recognized as having the outstanding Latin orchestra of the day.
In Europe, the introduction of Latin American dancing (Rumba in particular) owed much to the enthusiasm and interpretive ability of Monsieur Pierre ( or simply Pierre, was the professional name of Pierre Jean Phillipe Zurcher-Margolle, (born Toulon, France – London, 1963).[1] Pierre was a professional dancer and dance teacher: he was primarily responsible for introducing the Latin American dances to England, and for codifying them, and laying the groundwork for their use in competitions and in social dance. The system he and his colleagues developed became the basis for all Latin and American competitions held under the World Dance Council (WDC).For more info see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monsieur_Pierre ). In the 1930′s with his partner, Doris Lavelle, he demonstrated and popularized Latin American dancing in London.
Pierre and Lavelle introduced the true “Cuban Rumba” which was finally established after much argument, as the official recognized version in 1955.
Rumba is the spirit and soul of Latin American music and dance. The fascinating rhythms and bodily expressions make the Rumba one of the most popular ballroom dances.
More about Rumba and it’s styles you can find following next links:
http://www.ehow.com/about_5316416_rumba-history.html
Rumba History of Dance http://www.centralhome.com/ballroomcountry/rumba.htm#ixzz1JnD0FSH8
Dance Fitness Sports www.Centralhome.com















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