Yesterday was a fun day. As I told you in my last post, I was feeling energetic, so I accomplished a lot. I got all the weekly shopping done, then got creative in the kitchen. I baked some banana nut muffins, then made some home made tortilla chips which I in turn made into some nachos with jalapenos and home made pico de gallo for lunch. I also marinated some pork chops in a garlic and cracked pepper sauce for grilling last night which turned out delicious. I of course spent a great deal of time on the Internet where one of my discoveries was a new website called aNote To My Kid. "aNoteToMyKid.com gives parents, family and friends the opportunity to express unconditional love for the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender or questioning people in their lives. The site also serves as a resource for people who may not know how to broach the subject of sexuality with the opportunity to learn from example. We also hope aNoteToMyKid.com will remind members of the LGBTQ community that there is a lot of love and support out there; that we are not alone. In addition, our goal for aNoteToMyKid.com is to make it as simple as possible for everyone to have the opportunity to profess their unconditional love for the members of the LGBTQ community who they hold so dear to their hearts." This is a really inspiring website founded by Patrick Wallace and Michael Volpatt. "If you have any questions about aNoteToMyKid.com, or would like to know how you can help make a positive impact by contributing a note, video or photo to the site, please don't hesitate to contact us at patrick@anotetomykid.com or michael@anotetomykid.com."
I have another **Must Hear** video for you today from GoldieG89 as I promised in yesterday's post. Symphony Number 2 in E Major, Opus 40 (1945) by Ernő Dohnányi performed by the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Matthias Bamer. "Ernő Dohnányi was a Hungarian conductor, composer, and pianist. He used the German form of his name Ernst von Dohnányi for most of his published compositions. The Dohnányi family was ennobled by Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor and King of Hungary. Born in 1877 in what is today Bratislava, capital of Slovakia, by the end of the thirties, Hungary had fallen in with the German Nazi regime. Dohnányi did as much as he could to fight the political effects on artistic life during the early years of the Second World War. He managed to keep all the Jewish members of his orchestra in their posts until as late as the spring of 1944, when Germany occupied the country and set up a puppet regime which immediately initiated a campaign of terror against dissidents and Jews. He had to disband the orchestra and, a month after the Soviet invasion in October, left Hungary for Austria -- a controversial move in the eyes of many of his colleagues and compatriots. In the midst of this mayhem, Dohnányi composed his Second Symphony (he wrote only two), a four-movement work in the key of E major scored for a large orchestra including quadruple woodwind, eight horns and four trumpets. After the war had ended, he remained abroad and began to reestablish his pre-war international fame. In 1949 he emigrated permanently to the United States of America, where he became composer-in-residence at Florida State University. There, in the mid-fifties, he revised the Second Symphony in one of his last floods of creative energy before his death in 1960."
Last but not least I have a bevy of beautiful boys who are gloriously Naked or Nearly So to get you in a week ending lascivious and lustful state of mind. Thanks for spending some time with me today, be sure to stop by tomorrow when I review all the photos that are the Best of the Web This Week. Until next time as always, Enjoy!
I have another **Must Hear** video for you today from GoldieG89 as I promised in yesterday's post. Symphony Number 2 in E Major, Opus 40 (1945) by Ernő Dohnányi performed by the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Matthias Bamer. "Ernő Dohnányi was a Hungarian conductor, composer, and pianist. He used the German form of his name Ernst von Dohnányi for most of his published compositions. The Dohnányi family was ennobled by Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor and King of Hungary. Born in 1877 in what is today Bratislava, capital of Slovakia, by the end of the thirties, Hungary had fallen in with the German Nazi regime. Dohnányi did as much as he could to fight the political effects on artistic life during the early years of the Second World War. He managed to keep all the Jewish members of his orchestra in their posts until as late as the spring of 1944, when Germany occupied the country and set up a puppet regime which immediately initiated a campaign of terror against dissidents and Jews. He had to disband the orchestra and, a month after the Soviet invasion in October, left Hungary for Austria -- a controversial move in the eyes of many of his colleagues and compatriots. In the midst of this mayhem, Dohnányi composed his Second Symphony (he wrote only two), a four-movement work in the key of E major scored for a large orchestra including quadruple woodwind, eight horns and four trumpets. After the war had ended, he remained abroad and began to reestablish his pre-war international fame. In 1949 he emigrated permanently to the United States of America, where he became composer-in-residence at Florida State University. There, in the mid-fifties, he revised the Second Symphony in one of his last floods of creative energy before his death in 1960."
Last but not least I have a bevy of beautiful boys who are gloriously Naked or Nearly So to get you in a week ending lascivious and lustful state of mind. Thanks for spending some time with me today, be sure to stop by tomorrow when I review all the photos that are the Best of the Web This Week. Until next time as always, Enjoy!
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