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The Heiden Ratner Level Up Leadership Podcast is a podcast all about leadership, faith, and finding joy in the journey. Every person has the potential to level up in their leadership, and the content in these episodes will help you do just that. We will learn from leaders from a variety of different backgrounds, dive deep into their stories and catch leadership lessons along the way. For more sermon based content from Heiden Ratner you can go to walkchurch.com/sermons
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Das erste deutschsprachige TV-Magazin rund ums Thema Hexen, Heiden, Magie und mehr. Abseits des Esoterik-Booms und der Licht&Liebe Szene moderiert Lady Purple zynisch, weise und oftmals sehr konkret durch die Sendung.
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We Are Send Network

North American Mission Board

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Join church planting leaders and lead pastors Dhati Lewis, Noah Oldham and Heiden Ratner for engaging conversations about all things church planting. We are Send Network — a podcast by church planters on real topics and tough questions — for planters and pastors all across North America.
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A Moment of Bach

Alex & Christian Guebert

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Welcome to A Moment of Bach, where we take our favorite moments from J. S Bach's vast output—just a minute's worth or even a few seconds—and show you why we think they are remarkable. Join hosts Alex Guebert and Christian Guebert for weekly moments! Check wherever podcasts are available and subscribe for upcoming episodes. Our recording samples are provided by the Netherlands Bach Society. Their monumental All of Bach project (to perform and record all of the works of J. S. Bach) serves as s ...
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Join Rugby Translator Doug Picken & Professional Rugby Player Heiden Bedwell-Curtis as we brings you a weekly update on all things Rugby in the Land of the Rising Sun. Each week we will share the news of the week as well as interviewing special guests as they yarn about life in Japan as a professional rugby player. Podcast Instagram Page https://www.instagram.com/japan_rugby_weekly/ Email us your questions and comments at JapanRugbyWeekly@gmail.com This Podcast is supported by Activate and R ...
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Become a Paid Subscriber: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/roy-ben-tzvi/subscribe This podcast is an open platform where I can connect with people that I'm genuinely interested in - to hear their stories, their successes, and even their failures.
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Today we bring you 24 repeated notes on the same pitch. Can you think of any other Bach piece which features this special effect? Certainly this is unique in the orchestrational context here: a high-pitched recorder, beeping out a digital-sounding alarm clock noise. Or is it a bell ringing? We explore what this all means -- because, of course, with…
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In his early twenties Bach produced this compact, delightful cantata, likely for a wedding. The text of the duet is still applicable in a school community: The Lord shall increase you more and more, you and your children. Bach saves a special effect for the last two measures, where a modern technique is used: from highest of highs to the lowest not…
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Bach proves his mastery of the Baroque concerto here, as in the Brandenburgs -- except this time, we don't have the original music! We do have a harpsichord concerto as well as an organ concerto version of the first movement (which is actually from a cantata)... but we do not have the violin concerto version, which scholars assume must exist. The r…
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"I shall sing of the wonders of Jesus." The trumpet reflects the text purely before the singer begins. The oboes and violins join in and play off the trumpet, each finishing each other's musical lines. You probably know this cantata for its most famous movement -- two verses of what we would call in English "Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring." But there …
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A hidden gem, a fully-formed masterpiece from a young Bach, a cantata unburdened by his later fascination with Italian-style recitative and da capo arias: it is the incomparable Gottes Zeit ist die allerbeste Zeit. We look at this cantata for a third time (see season 1 episode 8 for the sonatina, and season 3 episode 15 for the soprano solo ending …
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The famous C minor fugue near the beginning of the Well-Tempered Clavier expresses the emotions of sadness, loneliness, and melancholy, according to harpsichordist Masato Suzuki. Suzuki provides a sensitive performance with attention to articulate detail in the fugue subject. This, naturally, leads Christian and Alex into a comparison with race car…
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Vivid and subtle, this cantata follows the spiritual journey of the soprano soloist who carries the weight of sin on her shoulders. The journey is one from darkness into light, and our moment, sent in by listener Dave, comes at the cathartic middle movement, where hope is found in patience. Soprano Julia Doyle delivers a heartfelt rendition of this…
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On the last note of Mozart's "Kyrie eleison" in his requiem, he chooses a stark and intense open fifth instead of a triad. What happens when a composer finishes...not correctly? Is this allowed? When using old melodies which start and end on scale degree 3 (relative to major), Bach adapts this old Phrygian mode to his idiom, but this does create an…
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Nick and Eric chat about the new cards that they've been having the most fun with since the release of Rebellion Without Rehearsal. It's fun! ▶PATREON◀⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.patreon.com/neonstatic⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ▶DONATE◀⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.buymeacoffee.com/neonstatic⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠▶LINKS◀⁠⁠⁠https://nanpc.games/ ▶YOUTUBE◀⁠⁠⁠⁠youtube.com/@neonstaticpod⁠⁠⁠⁠▶DISCOR…
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We take a suggestion from listener Bruce, and jump into the "other" Nun komm cantata, BWV 62. Yes, BWV 61 is admittedly the one we prefer, having talked about it several times on this podcast over the last four years. But sometimes it's good to shine some light on the facets of a hidden gem. The opening movement of BWV 62 contains multitudes. Nun k…
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Yes -- the famous one! One of Bach's most universal melodies, the melody in the strings opens a profoundly perfect setting of a verse of the hymn "Wake, Awake, for Night Is Flying" in the central movement (4th of 7) in the beloved masterwork "Wachet auf" cantata. Here is the exceptional performance by the Netherlands Bach Society. Why does this ope…
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In four notes, Bach reframes our idea about what is possible in common practice harmony. This is one of the weirdest moments of Bach, coming from one of the weirdest openings to a hymn tune. But as always, it makes sense in the context of the text. It even makes sense harmonically, as we see when the hymn tune closes on four much more normal-soundi…
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A textbook "moment" of Bach -- in a charming setting of the three verses of the German song "O Lamb of God, Most Holy," suddenly near the end of the third verse Bach finally heeds the text and shows us the strange despair we are praying for mercy to avoid. He employs several musical devices in this sudden moment: a change in meter, a suggestion of …
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One of Bach's most famous works, and one of the greatest melodies of all time -- this comes to us by way of an almost impossibly good performance/recording by the Netherlands Bach Society. By having the first violin part played by a section rather than a solo, they give Bach's wandering melody more purpose than it has in the famous version for solo…
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Welcome back to the Japan Rugby Weekly Podcast! I'm Doug the translator, and this week I review the Japan Rugby League One Semi-finals and the Promotion-Relegation Battles before previewing the Final for the 2024 season! I also breakdown what every team in the promotion relegation battles needs to do to get promoted/stay in their division for anoth…
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This delightful jig closes out our miniseries on Brandenburg 6. Here we speak about the third movement's jumpy beats. and how these rhythmic anticipations give the whole piece a bouncy energy. Bach, the expert violist among so many other things, gives the two viola parts the most intricate material, playing off each other and passing along the musi…
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Welcome back to the Japan Rugby Weekly Podcast! I'm Doug the translator, and this week I preview the Japan Rugby League One Semi-finals and the Promotion-Relegation Battles! I also discuss the recently announced Japan Brave Blossoms training Squad. Thanks so much for all the messages and sorry if I cant get the eps out consistently! We hope to cont…
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Welcome back to our yearly miniseries on the Brandenburg Concertos of J. S. Bach! This is part two of three. Today we look at the languid and luscious slow movement of Brandenburg Concerto No. 6. Music is (often) a setup of expectations, and then the satisfying fulfillment of those expectations OR the clever subversion of those expectations. Bach i…
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Nick and Eric chat about the new cards that they've been having the most fun with since the release of Rebellion Without Rehearsal. It's fun! ▶PATREON◀⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.patreon.com/neonstatic⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ▶DONATE◀⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.buymeacoffee.com/neonstatic⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠▶LINKS◀⁠https://nanpc.games/event/boston/ NANPC Boston ABR Event - mark as going to c…
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Welcome to our yearly miniseries on the Brandenburg Concertos of J. S. Bach! Here we jump into Brandenburg 6, delighting in the weirdness that results when Bach decides to omit violins, preferring a dark, low sound of violas, violas de gamba, cello, and violone. This brings us to some more examples across Bach's oeuvre, as well as some others by Br…
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Today we return to the 7th of the Goldberg Variations, the "Canary Jig." We discuss that peculiar name, and then we get into some smaller moments. Soaring flares up the keyboard, surprising altered tones, and crunchy grace notes are all over. Pushing forward into the ending, a high note leads us to the finish. We discuss why the contour of the hand…
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Recorded in person at Mansionrunner 2024, Eric and Nick are joined by three wonderful guests to talk about the thematic flavorings of the cards we play. Jeff aka YsengrinSC: https://www.youtube.com/@YsengrinSCIzzy: https://podcast.queeringthemessage.net/ https://www.youtube.com/@queeringthemessage and Andrej: https://www.youtube.com/@MetropoleGrid …
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Just after Good Shepherd Sunday, we settle in to this comforting pastorale. Not the famous opening movement -- no, this is another beautiful sicilienne-type dance, a bass aria, in which Bach gives a masterclass on melodic writing in just 5 seconds of music. Melodic shape, sequence, pedal point, and effective parallel motion in triads -- these are a…
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In our second look at the monumental Goldberg Variations, Christian selects the beginning of the sprightly and innocent "gigue" (jig), a particular dance set here for an interplay between two hands. The jaunty rhythm of the dance is rather uneven; this leads us into a discussion about how music is naturally not even in this way (and when it is, it'…
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Just as the three wise men brought their gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh to the young Christ, so also this trio brings their soprano voice, viola da gamba, and theorbo (a lute variant) as musical gifts.... and we, the listeners, are the ones who are lucky enough to receive these gifts. Here we discover the plain serenity of this original hym…
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