L'Arpeggiata - Athanasius Kircher (1602-1680) - Tarantella Napoletana, Tono Hypodorico video free download


1,183,779
Duration: 02:41
Uploaded: 2011/08/12

Taken form their official site - http://www.arpeggiata.com/ only for a more convenient listenning in playlist with other musical titles

Comments

8 years ago

Turi Braaksma

most sexy and romantic music still alive :)

9 years ago

Adventurous Voyageur

Tarantella Napoletana by L'Arpeggiata

9 years ago

Yoann Tsai

喜歡響板和揚琴的聲音^////^

9 years ago

Diego Reartes

parece un "Carnavalito"

9 years ago

David Ricardo

¡Christina es una artista maravillosa!

9 years ago

lyusan salman

SUPER !!!

9 years ago

ILOVETHEYANKEES 1957

This is so incredible to listen to. So lively and entertaining. The players are wonderfully talented and you just want to dance. Wish it could run a tad longer than 2:40. Still a joyous tune :-)

9 years ago

Arhi Kuittinen

The Tarantella is a folk dance from southern Italy. The dance is said to originate from the bite of the poisonous tarantula. The wild dance there should be therapy: the musicians came into the house of the patient or to the marketplace and began to play, and the Bitten danced to exhaustion to drive the poison from the body. The first written documentation goes back to Athanasius Kircher. In the 19th Century, the Romantic period, instrumental music took up this form of music.Athanasius Kircher (1602–1680) was a 17th-century German Jesuit scholar and polymath who published around 40 major works, most notably in the fields of Oriental studies, geology, and medicine. Kircher has been compared to fellow Jesuit Roger Boscovich and to Leonardo da Vinci for his enormous range of interests, and has been honored with the title "Master of a Hundred Arts". A resurgence of interest in Kircher has occurred within the scholarly community in recent decades.

9 years ago

matti virtala

The Tarantella is a folk dance from southern Italy. The dance is said to originate from the bite of the poisonous tarantula. The wild dance there should be therapy: the musicians came into the house of the patient or to the marketplace and began to play, and the Bitten danced to exhaustion to drive the poison from the body. The first written documentation goes back to Athanasius Kircher. In the 19th Century, the Romantic period, instrumental music took up this form of music.Athanasius Kircher (1602–1680) was a 17th-century German Jesuit scholar and polymath who published around 40 major works, most notably in the fields of Oriental studies, geology, and medicine. Kircher has been compared to fellow Jesuit Roger Boscovich and to Leonardo da Vinci for his enormous range of interests, and has been honored with the title "Master of a Hundred Arts". A resurgence of interest in Kircher has occurred within the scholarly community in recent decades.

9 years ago

Mirco Niero

Bravissimi! Bellissimo video. Grazie!

9 years ago

Lorenzo Pantanetti

Bravissimi

9 years ago

Nezha Asr

magnifique !!! trop mgnifique

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