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1 Hour Anime Music Mix | Most Beautiful, Emotion & Sad Anime

vinhnobi123 says...

Mix and Master: Nuvon Studio

1 Hour Anime Music Mix - Beautiful, Emotional & Sad Anime OST Piano Vol 6
[url redacted]

Anime OST is always my favorite theme. I hear it every day as a friend to help me relax, so I hope you 'll like it.

If you liked this collection , Please Like & Subscribe (^_^)

Subscribe: [url redacted]
Follow Me on GG+: [url redacted]
1 Hour Beautiful, Emotional & Sad Anime OST Playlist: [url redacted]

Track list:
0:00:00 Sakurasou no Pet na Kanojo OST – Days of Dash Piano Arr
0:02:33 Rewrite OST – Daisy
0:05:53 Fantasista Doll OST – Yuujou
0:07:37 Fantasista Doll OST – Nostalgia
0:09:11 Gin no Saji Silver Spoon OST – Kyoushitsu
0:11:17 Ef - a tale of melodies - A moon filled sky
0:14:06 Ef - a tale of melodies – Overture
0:18:28 Kara no Shoujo OST - For you...
0:22:38 Kara no Shoujo OST – Higan
0:26:25 chuunibyou OST - Yuugure To Yorisou Kanjou
0:27:47 Ao no Kanata no Four Rhythm OST - Girls of Contrail
0:30:04 Fate Stay Night - Voyage Fallen Shadow
0:35:46 Hyouka - Madoromi no Yakusoku
0:39:08 5 Centimeters Per Second - Oukashou
0:44:12 Zoku Natsume Yuujinchou OST - Haru wo Shiraseru mono
0:48:41 D. Gray Man OST – Musician
0:53:42 Shugo Chara - Futari no Kyori
0:55:52 Kamigami no Asobi OST - Strong Ties
0:58:06 Sword Art Online 2 OST - In time of peace

My other videos:
- Beautiful & Sad Anime OST Piano Collection Playlist: [url redacted]
- Beautiful, Emotion & Sad Japan Music Playlist: [url redacted]

Thanks for watching : )

Caspian Report - Geopolitical Prognosis for 2016 (Part 1)

radx says...

Apologies, I got carried away... wall of text incoming.

@RedSky

I agree, monetary policy at low rates has very little to offer in terms of economic stimulus. Then again, the focus almost solely on monetary policy is part of the problem. Fiscal policy can have a massive impact, both directly (government purchases of goods and services) and indirectly (increase in automatic stabilizers). But for that you either need to be in control of your central bank, so that you can engage in Overt Monetary Financing ("printing" money). Or you need the blessing of the private banks, which is particularly true for a Vollgeld system.

The budget is the core of a parliamentary democracy, and to be at the whim of the folks at Deutsche Bank, HSBC or Credit Suisse -- no, thank you very much. We saw how that played out in Greece.

Anyway, the central bank can do miraculous things: if it provides funds to the democratically elected body in charge of the budget, aka parliament/the government. Trying to "motivate" the private banks to stock up on cheap reserves to stimulate lending is just a sign of ideology.

The great Michal Kalecki, in his essay The Political Aspects of Full Employment, summarized the general issue of government spending quite clearly. The industrial leaders stand in opposition to government spending aimed at full employment for three distinct reasons: a) dislike of government interference in the problem of employment as such; b) dislike of the direction of government spending (public investment and subsidizing consumption); c) dislike of the social and political changes resulting from the maintenance of full employment.

I'd say control over your currency is too great a tool to leave it in the hands of unelected managers. Clement Attlee knew very well why he had to nationalize the Bank of England in '46.

Back to the issue of inflation, I'd like to make two points. First, how big a role should inflation really play when talking policy. Second, what's the influence of a central bank on inflation.

Where does it come from, this focus on inflation. People usually talk about government spending when discussing inflation. Private spending is rarely brought up, even though it can be just as inflationary. So let's ignore private spending for a moment and talk purely government spending: should a deficit/surplus not be judged primarily by how well it helps us achieve our macroeconomic goals? Or more clearly, why should we sacrifice full employment or our general welfare on the altar of inflation? Yes, that's over the top. But so is the angst of inflation.

I'd say let's stick with Abba Lerner's concept of functional finance and judge deficits/surpluses purely by how well they help us achieve our macroeconomic goals. Besides, the US has run massive deficits during the GFC, so much in fact, that a great number of monetarists saw hyperinflation just around the corner. Still waiting for it. Same for Japan. Massive deficits... and deflation.

As long as spending, both private and government, doesn't push the economy beyond its limits (full employment, real resources, production capacity), out-of-control inflation just doesn't materialize. Plus, suppressing inflation is actually one thing central banks can do quite well. Unlike causing inflation, which both Japan and the EU are showcases off. Draghi can dance naked on the table, monetary policy (QE, mainly) won't push inflation upwards.

Which brings me to the second point: what's inflation, what's the cause of inflation, how can central banks manipulate it.

CPI is often used as a measure of inflation, but I prefer the GDP deflator. CPI doesn't account for externalities that you cannot influence, whatever you do. Prime case: the price of oil. Monetary policy of the Bank of Sweden has no influence on the price of oil. The GDP inflator, however, accounts for every economic activity within your currency zone -- much more useful.

General theory says, this measure of inflation goes up when demand surpasses supply. And vice versa. The primary factor of demand is domestic purchasing power, therefore wages. If you suppress wages, you suppress inflation. If you push wages, you push inflation. More specifically, you can see a direct correlation between unit labour costs and the GDP deflator in every country at any time. Here's a general graph for multiple countries, and the St. Louis FED provides a beauty for the US.

That's why it's easy for central banks to combat inflation, but almost impossible to fight deflation.

GameSoundCon 2010: "Introduction to Game Audio"

artician says...

Well, I like all the classics like early Megaman, Nobuo Uematsu, Yasunori Mitsuda, Hitoshi Sakimoto, anything from Falcom (Y's, Xanadu, etc).
There are some truly oddball compositions out there that are dear to me, like a lot of the work of Zuntata, which was an in-house band for Taito in the 90's. Similarly, a lot of the weird, sample-based music from the Amiga-era, from people like Chris Huelsbeck, Dave Wittaker and Rob Hubbard.
In recent years, from Japan I've really gotten into anything that Yoko Shimomura has done, and Michiru Yamane upended/revitalized some of the later Castlevania's music in the best way possible.
I will always go to Koichi Sugiyama's Dragon Quest music whenever I want to turn someone on to truly beautiful game compositions (chills), or just relax. Also Matt Uelmen's music for Diablo 2 and Torchlight games also veers toward more contemporary genre's, but is atmospheric, masterful and provides a really well-done alternative sound for what we usually get in interactive media.
Some super strange stuff that just sticks out as not belonging anywhere else: Katamari Damacy's OST, the VibRibbon soundtrack, the Neverhood soundtrack by Terry Taylor, the hidden gem that is the "Moon: Remix RPG Adventure" soundtrack (seriously a great one; check it out).
I have a lot of game music and it's my primary soundtrack while I work.

ant said:

Whar are your favorite game tunes?

X-MEN: DAYS OF FUTURE PAST - Official Trailer (2014)

Some motivation pictures .. everything is possible !

ant (Member Profile)

What Is Your Favourite Video Game Music? (Videogames Talk Post)

A Day in India

kulpims (Member Profile)

The Secret World - Launch Trailer

hpqp says...

Excellent example of how music can really make a trailer (and how the Sift can cause one to discover great things inadvertantly). The song is This Bitter Earth by Dinah Washington, rearranged for the ost of "Shutter Island":


Issykitty (Member Profile)

People Are Awesome - 2011 edition

DerHasisttot (Member Profile)

Movie Openings That Play With The Studio Logo.

gwiz665 says...

But Sunshine was a crappy film, while Kick-Ass was awesome!
Also,, John Murphy redid the music for Kick-Ass, as you can hear that this version is different (in the small details) than the Sunshine one - at least the one you linked.
>> ^hpqp:

Argh, no! Sorry, but one of my pet peeves is giving musical credit to whom it's due in film scoring... Adagio in D Minor was first written by Underworld and John Murphy specifically for the OST of the magnificent and underrated film Sunshine by Danny Boyle.
It has since been "stolen" to score a myriad of other films/trailers/series (e.g. Kick-Ass, The Adjustment Bureau, Fringe, etc etc). It has a history akin to Clint Mansell's RFaD score; created with a specific film in mind, beautifully fitting, then reused for other films with mixed results. I love it when great music gets around, but I do find it a bizarre experience when I'm watching a film and all of a sudden the music of another comes on... kind of breaks the suspension of disbelief quite frankly.
/nerd rant
edit: "Super" > Kick-Ass (even though the latter was a fun watch too)
>> ^gwiz665:
Loved the music from Kick-Ass.


Movie Openings That Play With The Studio Logo.

hpqp says...

Argh, no! Sorry, but one of my pet peeves is giving musical credit to whom it's due in film scoring... Adagio in D Minor was first written by Underworld and John Murphy specifically for the OST of the magnificent and underrated film Sunshine by Danny Boyle.

It has since been "stolen" to score a myriad of other films/trailers/series (e.g. Kick-Ass, The Adjustment Bureau, Fringe, etc etc). It has a history akin to Clint Mansell's RFaD score; created with a specific film in mind, beautifully fitting, then reused for other films with mixed results. I love it when great music gets around, but I do find it a bizarre experience when I'm watching a film and all of a sudden the music of another comes on... kind of breaks the suspension of disbelief quite frankly.
/nerd rant

edit: "Super" > Kick-Ass (even though the latter was a fun watch too)

>> ^gwiz665:

Loved the music from Kick-Ass.



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