aprilmarie816
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Post by aprilmarie816 on Mar 4, 2014 0:50:37 GMT -5
So this didn't mean just 5 episodes?.......... shoshanna stone @shoshannastone 29 Min. Glee: 5, 4,3...... Judy Lushman @judadam 27 Min. @shoshannastone What? shoshanna stone @shoshannastone 11 Min. @judadam counting down Glee appearances Adamisalamb @adamisalamb 12 Min. @shoshannastone 2, 1???? ;P shoshanna stone @shoshannastone @adamisalamb correct So it looks like New New York is Adams last episode on GLEE. Aprilmarie, I also found this twitter exchange and posted it at the end of yesterday's thread. It was posted on Atop on 2/28, page 8, by Adamrocks. I knew I had seen it somewhere. It does sound to me as if Adam's total number of Glee episodes = 5. Not that it matters. I just didn't want to think I was making stuff up and not even realizing it when I wrote about it in yesterday's thread... LOL peace&love Nope, I was SURE I had remembered seeing her tweet something about how many EP.....I love seeing him on my tv, but, I am ready to see him back on stage With Queen AND by himself
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Post by evergreen on Mar 4, 2014 0:51:49 GMT -5
I was reading the vocal discussion just as Jimmy Fallon came tv with The Roots in one of their classroom instrument songs. This one is that song from frozen with Idena Menzel singing. (Besides being a Broadway star, she has played Lea Michelle's birth mother on Glee.) I found it interesting that the audience broke into cheers for some of her high notes (as audiences are so prone to doing lately) for notes that aren't even particularly high. Is it the highness they are cheering for or do people really get some emotional rush from the feeling conveyed? The thing is, the high notes are not particularly high--yes, a bit higher than the average pop song. Here is the clip. You can hear the audience more at about 2:40 to the end. Although it's just a D, it is belted and sounds like a stretch even though she hits it fine. So, as Cassie mentioned, are people loving it because it sounds more strained? www.nbc.com/the-tonight-show/segments/1996Just a guess - I think someone is prompting the audience to cheer. (It was pretty awful. JMO)
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Post by pi on Mar 4, 2014 0:58:02 GMT -5
I was reading the vocal discussion just as Jimmy Fallon came tv with The Roots in one of their classroom instrument songs. This one is that song from frozen with Idena Menzel singing. (Besides being a Broadway star, she has played Lea Michelle's birth mother on Glee.) I found it interesting that the audience broke into cheers for some of her high notes (as audiences are so prone to doing lately) for notes that aren't even particularly high. Is it the highness they are cheering for or do people really get some emotional rush from the feeling conveyed? The thing is, the high notes are not particularly high--yes, a bit higher than the average pop song. Here is the clip. You can hear the audience more at about 2:40 to the end. Although it's just a D, it is belted and sounds like a stretch even though she hits it fine. So, as Cassie mentioned, are people loving it because it sounds more strained? www.nbc.com/the-tonight-show/segments/1996Just a guess - I think someone is prompting the audience to cheer. (It was pretty awful. JMO) I couldn't listen to the whole thing.. had to go back to Barracuda. Love Adam's bits, especially the beginning.. it would sound much better without Lea's little wolf howly sound. :
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Post by adamrocks on Mar 4, 2014 1:04:32 GMT -5
Aww...cute! From our Kamar!! ✭Kámar ♛ Starchild✭ @kamarmezher96 1h Photo: suitfer: i just wanted to draw kurt and elliott being cute and watching movies together and... tmblr.co/Ztt1cq198224p
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Post by bridgeymah on Mar 4, 2014 1:13:18 GMT -5
I was reading the vocal discussion just as Jimmy Fallon came tv with The Roots in one of their classroom instrument songs. This one is that song from frozen with Idena Menzel singing. (Besides being a Broadway star, she has played Lea Michelle's birth mother on Glee.) I found it interesting that the audience broke into cheers for some of her high notes (as audiences are so prone to doing lately) for notes that aren't even particularly high. Is it the highness they are cheering for or do people really get some emotional rush from the feeling conveyed? The thing is, the high notes are not particularly high--yes, a bit higher than the average pop song. Here is the clip. You can hear the audience more at about 2:40 to the end. Although it's just a D, it is belted and sounds like a stretch even though she hits it fine. So, as Cassie mentioned, are people loving it because it sounds more strained? www.nbc.com/the-tonight-show/segments/1996Just a guess - I think someone is prompting the audience to cheer. (It was pretty awful. JMO) I think of it as reality singing competition conditioning. After over a decade of hearing audiences on those dhows cheering the big / high notes everyone now has a Pavlovian response when they hear them and automatically cheer...
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Post by kittykay on Mar 4, 2014 1:13:31 GMT -5
I was reading the vocal discussion just as Jimmy Fallon came tv with The Roots in one of their classroom instrument songs. This one is that song from frozen with Idena Menzel singing. (Besides being a Broadway star, she has played Lea Michelle's birth mother on Glee.) I found it interesting that the audience broke into cheers for some of her high notes (as audiences are so prone to doing lately) for notes that aren't even particularly high. Is it the highness they are cheering for or do people really get some emotional rush from the feeling conveyed? The thing is, the high notes are not particularly high--yes, a bit higher than the average pop song. Here is the clip. You can hear the audience more at about 2:40 to the end. Although it's just a D, it is belted and sounds like a stretch even though she hits it fine. So, as Cassie mentioned, are people loving it because it sounds more strained? www.nbc.com/the-tonight-show/segments/1996This sounds very nasally to me. Jimmy and the roots were fun but idena did not sound good with so few instruments As to the cheering. I think audience are hungry for stars that can sing without auto-tune.
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Post by DancyGeorgia on Mar 4, 2014 1:14:08 GMT -5
LAMBERTLUST @lambertlust 5m #glee spoiler 5x10 Kurt & Elliot via glee__glee__glee instagram instagram.com/p/lG7npxNdn3/ pic.twitter.co P.S. Is there a way to insert an image into a spoiler?
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Post by Q3 on Mar 4, 2014 1:16:35 GMT -5
Aprilmarie, I also found this twitter exchange and posted it at the end of yesterday's thread. It was posted on Atop on 2/28, page 8, by Adamrocks. I knew I had seen it somewhere. It does sound to me as if Adam's total number of Glee episodes = 5. Not that it matters. I just didn't want to think I was making stuff up and not even realizing it when I wrote about it in yesterday's thread... LOL peace&love Nope, I was SURE I had remembered seeing her tweet something about how many EP.....I love seeing him on my tv, but, I am ready to see him back on stage With Queen AND by himself Oh, I am the one causing mischief because Shoshanna is not clear in her tweets. Yes, she counted down Glee episodes but she did not say why or what it means. Seems like it means 5 episodes but Glee guest star often return. I still am betting on 6 with a break before the 6th and last appearance. Why can't anything that involves Adam just be said? Demi Lovato agreed to do Glee and the announcement said she would be in 6 episodes. Even now we get this countdown instead of a statement that Adam will be in 5 episodes.
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Post by Q3 on Mar 4, 2014 1:35:03 GMT -5
Spoilers only work for text.
***
New thread is up.
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Post by cassie on Mar 4, 2014 1:36:58 GMT -5
I was reading the vocal discussion just as Jimmy Fallon came tv with The Roots in one of their classroom instrument songs. This one is that song from frozen with Idena Menzel singing. (Besides being a Broadway star, she has played Lea Michelle's birth mother on Glee.) I found it interesting that the audience broke into cheers for some of her high notes (as audiences are so prone to doing lately) for notes that aren't even particularly high. Is it the highness they are cheering for or do people really get some emotional rush from the feeling conveyed? The thing is, the high notes are not particularly high--yes, a bit higher than the average pop song. Here is the clip. You can hear the audience more at about 2:40 to the end. Although it's just a D, it is belted and sounds like a stretch even though she hits it fine. So, as Cassie mentioned, are people loving it because it sounds more strained? www.nbc.com/the-tonight-show/segments/1996Just a guess - I think someone is prompting the audience to cheer. (It was pretty awful. JMO) Lawd, that was awful! Don't get the appeal in any way. But it seems American audiences love their belting divas. And anything above a C5 is considered AMAZING. Maybe because most untrained voices cannot hit those notes? (Which are nothing for trained female voices.) I do think that audiences have been conditioned to think that the sound of straining to hit notes means the singer is great, is working very hard, and doing something very difficult. The truth is more likely that they are NOT great, they are having difficulty singing the melody because they don't know how to use their voice. It reminds me of a TV show where a circus strongman is being coached. He is lifting heavy weights with ease, and the audience is unimpressed. He is told he has to grunt, moan, strain, shake, make it look like he is about to collapse under the weight. He does that, and is a huge hit. With singers, I keep thinking about James Brown. I always thought his histrionics were absurd.
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