Abc usher song


Usher Teaches the Silkiest ABC Song Ever on 'Sesame Street'

Usher Teaches the Silkiest ABC Song Ever on 'Sesame Street'

Now that Cee Lo has taken back his chair on The Voice, Usher seems to have some free time on his hands. And lucky for us, the father of two decided to swing by Sesame Street and teach the slickest version of the ABC's we've ever heard.

Aided by Elmo, Grover, Abby and Murray, Ush demonstrates a word for each letter in the Alphabet. A is "move your arms," B is "bounce like a ball," while C is "move like a crustacean and do the crabby crawl." You get the idea.

Best of all, when tasked with teaching the letter Y, Usher just offers, "Yyyyyeah man!"

Oh, and U? That's for Usher, obviously.

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Since we’re on the topic of alphabets, let’s talk alphabet songs! Sure, there’s the traditional alphabet. In fact, our Jam Cat friend, Liv, sings for us here!)

But what about when you want to reinforce the alphabet without the traditional song? What about when you want to introduce and reinforce phonics? Here are a list of 5 non-traditional alphabet songs for you to use spice up your alphabet lessons.

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The Phonics Song 2 by KidsTV123

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There you have it! Be sure to comment below with any other alphabet songs that you find helpful!

 

The Fall of the Louse of Usher: gladkeeh - LiveJournal

The Fall of the Louse of Usher. UK, 2002. Written and directed by Ken Russell. Music by James Johnson. Cast: Ken Russell (Dr. Caligari), James Johnson (Roderick Asher), Eliza Russell (Madelaine Asher, Masked Mary, Mummy, Dr. Wells), Mary Findlay (ABC Schmitt's sister), Alex Russell (Igor, Gory the Gorilla), Leslie Nannerly (Berenice), Emma Millions (Annabelle Lee), Peter Mastin (Ernest Waldemar), Sandra Scott (Belia von Birmingham), Barry Lowe (Dr. Glynn), Claire Kannaway (young Lenore Asher), Sam Kitcher (young Allan Asher) . 83 min. nine0002 "Gothic History for the 21st Century by Edgar Allan Poe and Ken Russell." The filmmaker can be called the Russell family skit. The patriarch himself, eaten away by senile eczema, plays Dr. Caligari, a psychoanalyst and at the same time a patient of a lunatic asylum, in a white coat, a chef's hat and checkered pants. His current wife, Lisey Tribble-Russell, is Madeleine Asher and a bunch of other roles, and his son from his first marriage, Alex "Alien" Russell, is Igor (Dr. Caligari's assistant) and the Usher family's pet gorilla named Gori. nine0003

Lots of motifs from Poe's stories and poems are bantered in the plot ("The Well and the Pendulum", "Berenice", "Murder in the Rue Morgue", "A Conversation with the Mummy", "The Prematurely Buried", "The Truth About What Happened to M -rom Waldemar", etc. ), but the core motive is a mixture of psychiatrists and psychos from the "System of Dr. Small and Professor Perrault", which brings it very close to the "Madness" of Schvankmayer. But Schwank's film is more serious and creepy, while Russell's is all drowned in absurd kitsch.

Roderick Asher - rock musician; James Johnson, who plays him, himself set "The Ringing" and "Annabelle Lee" to music, and sings them himself. For the full set, Roddy wears a Raven carnival mask (light blue with a yellow beak). Annabelle Lee - his wife; in a fit of split personality, the husband rips out her eye and swallows it (the dental theme of "Berenice" has spread to the eyes, and Caligari's assistant indulges in pulling teeth from the dead Igor - not surprisingly, half of the jaws he obtained are vampire).

The beautiful Annabelle is dead. Caligari and his assistant/caretaker Sister ABC Schmit investigate. Roddy is chained under a pendulum and forced to sing. He resists, but gives up when the pendulum closes close to his powerfully erect cock in his pants.

The second suspect is his sister Madeleine. Caligari immediately surmises that there was a ménage à trois involved. nine0003

Despite all the nonsense that follows, in the last part of the film everything is pretty coherently packaged.

Brother and sister are buried together. Caligari, a gorilla, a mummy, and a German medium enter their House (a wooden cottage near Los Angeles), where they discover a collection of tapes. Inserting one of them into the grill chamber and turning it on, they watch in the window the video “Confessions of Madeline Asher” with a story about how Madeline, out of jealousy for her brother, forced their pet gorilla to kill Annabelle.

The end
(of Annabelle Lee Usher)

"My diagnosis was correct, I thought it was a gorilla!" exclaims Auguste-Dupin-Caligari.

Here, from the toilet room, passionate cries of fucking spirits are heard. The gorilla, the mummy, and the medium try to enter, but immediately jump out in horror. Then the doctor himself decides on a feat and discovers a tape recorder on the push. The recording was left by teenagers Lenore and Allan Asher - the giggling children of Roderick and ... (Annabelle or Madeleine - unfortunately, this important aspect is not specified). nine0003

"I'll take care of you, sis!" - and the brother and sister stretch out their hands to each other, obviously laying the foundation for the future incestuous union.

"But true love knows no boundaries - even between Heaven and Hell." Roderick and Madeleine meet in a sky-high House made of inflatable rubber that constantly changes color. But suddenly there is a roar and the rubber is blown away, now completely burying the brother and sister under it.

"The House of Usher, built on a weak foundation, could not withstand the earthquake of 7-9points,” Dr. Caligari concludes the story, after which he is taken away by other doctors. “It's time, it's time for urology,” says Sister ABC Schmitt. But this is not the end either.

Dr. Glynn squeezes Sister ABC Schmitt's hand hard - her scream and open, painted mouth hang on the screen.

Although critics regarded the release of this film as an attack of senile insanity of 75-year-old Henry Kenneth Alfred Russell, in my humble opinion, not everything is so decidedly bad. Still, the border between health and illness, between genius and schizophrenia is not firm ...

The fall of the House of Usher | is... What is the Fall of the House of Usher?

"The Fall of the House of Usher" (Eng. The Fall of the House of Usher ) is a short story by Edgar Allan Poe, first published in September 1839 in Barton's Gentlemen's Magazine. It was slightly revised in 1840 for the collection "Grotesques and Arabesques" . The story contains the poem "The Haunted House" which was separately printed earlier in the magazine Baltimore Museum in April 1839.

Contents

  • 1 Plot
  • 2 Analysis
    • 2. 1 Main topics
    • 2.2 Allusions and quotations
    • 2.3 Roderick Asher Library
  • 3 Literary significance and criticism
  • 4 Russian translations of the story (until 1975) [18]
  • 5 Film, television and theater performances
    • 5.1 Screen versions
    • 5.2 Musical works
    • 5.3 Other uses of story
  • 6 Notes
  • 7 Links

Plot

The unnamed narrator, having received a letter from his childhood friend Roderick Asher, visits him at the manor. Approaching the house, he draws attention to the incredibly gloomy landscape: the House of Usher itself, the lake on the shore of which the house stands, reeds, skeletons of trees. He also draws attention to a barely noticeable crack that cuts the building from top to bottom. Having met the owner of the house, he learns about his strange hereditary disease - all his senses are painfully sharpened - he painfully perceives bright light, loud sounds, bright colors. In fact, his whole life is filled with fear. Roderick Asher is also sure that some kind of force nests in his dwelling, which he cannot determine. The narrator learns that Roderick's sister, Lady Madeleine, his only close person, is also ill with a strange disease: she is indifferent to everything, melts day by day, and sometimes her limbs become stiff and breathing stops. Just before the arrival of the narrator, her condition worsened especially. The narrator spends his days interacting with Asher; he looks at Roderick's paintings, which are quite bizarre, listens to his guitar playing and reads books. One day, Usher sings the song “Ghost House”, further developing in conversations the idea that plants are able to feel and that a special atmosphere thickens around the lake and the walls of the house, affecting the fate of all Ushers for centuries. nine0003

One day Asher informs the narrator that his sister, Lady Madeleine, has died and asks him to help him lower her body before burial in the dungeon. Together they carry the body there, tightly closing the coffin and locking the heavy iron door. After this, Roderick Asher becomes more and more anxious, his anxiety and fear are gradually transferred to the narrator. About a week later, the narrator at night, before an approaching storm, hears strange thuds, coming from nowhere. Usher appears in his room, throwing open the window, letting the storm into the room, watching the scenery outside. Deciding to calm his friend, the narrator begins to read him Lancelot Canning's novel Mad Sorrow. What is happening in the house echoes the text of the book: the narrator reads about the crackling and roar of breaking boards - and a barely audible noise comes from somewhere; the text speaks of a terrible sound made by a dying dragon - and a distant scream is heard; the book describes a deafening ringing from a shield that has fallen to the floor - and the heroes hear a deaf, but distinct ringing of metal. Roderick Asher, in a terrible state, whispers to a friend they actually buried his sister alive. He, thanks to his heightened senses, had long understood this, but he did not dare to say. The door to the hall swings open and Lady Madeleine appears, exhausted and covered in blood. She falls into her brother's arms, dragging him, already lifeless, behind her to the floor. The narrator, seized with fear, rushes out of the house. The storm is just in full swing. While running away, the hero notices that the crack in the House, which he noticed upon arrival, is rapidly expanding. " nine0007… there was a wild deafening roar like the roar of a thousand waterfalls… and the deep waters of the ominous lake at my feet closed silently and sullenly over the wreckage of House of Usher .”

Analysis

General topics

Allusions and quotes

  • The epigraph to the story quotes the poem "Refusal" (French Le Refus ) by the French poet Pierre Jean Beranger (1780-1857):
"Son coeur est un luth suspendu;
Sitot qu'on le touche il resonne"
. (fr.)

Johann Heinrich Füssli, Satan and the Sinner, 1802.

Translation Sun. Christmas:
"Touch the lyre - and immediately
indignation will pass through it!"
(Full translation of the poem by Vs. Rozhdestvensky.)
Translation by K. Balmont:
"His heart is an airy lute,
Touch it and it will sound."
Translation by Nora Gal:
nine0119
“His heart is like a lute,
Just touch it and it will respond”
.
Berenger's original text is somewhat different, he has Mon cœur "my heart", not Son coeur "his/her heart".
  • The narrator, speaking of Usher's playing music, notes: " Among many other things, it painfully etched into my memory how strangely he distorted and emphasized the stormy motive of Weber's last waltz ". Poe here mentions a popular piano piece of his time which, known as Weber's Last Waltz, was actually written by Carl Gottlieb Reisiger (1798-1859) - Op. 26. No. 5. A copy of Reisiger's music was found in Weber's papers after his death, and the work was mistakenly attributed to him [1] . You can listen to the piano piece here. Roderick Asher played guitar.
  • Drawings by Roderick Asher remind the narrator of the work of Johann Fussli, an English artist of Swiss origin. However, the narrator clearly puts Usscher's creations above Fussli's paintings.

Roderick Asher Library

All but one of the books mentioned in the story are real. The exception is:

  • " Crazy Sorrow " by Sir Lancelot Canning. Lancelot Canning is an author invented by Poe and mentioned by him not only in this story [2] .

Real works:

  • " Verver " (fr. Vert-Vert ) Jean-Baptiste-Louis Gresset (1709-1777) is a playful poem filled with various obscenities. Werver is a parrot who learned to speak obscenities on a ship, among sailors, and later ended up in a nunnery. (The poem was published in 1734 [3] , English translation in 1834 [4] ).
  • " Monastery " (fr. La Chartreuse ) by Jean-Baptiste-Louis Gresset is a poem celebrating the solitary life of the poet (published in 1735) [5] . Poe was probably not directly familiar with the text of the work, having only an indirect idea of ​​it [6] .
  • " The Tale of Belfagor " (ital. Novella di Belfagor Arcidiavolo) Nicolo Machiavelli (1469-1527) - a satire on society in the form of a fairy tale, telling about Belphegor's visit to Florence (published in 1549) [7] .
  • " Heaven and hell " (lat. De Coelo et Ejus Mirabilibus, et de Inferno, et Auditis et Visis - full name) by Emmanuel Swedenborg (1688-1772) - philosophical and religious mystical treatise (published in 1758) [8] .
  • " Underground wanderings of Nicholas Klimm " (lat. Nicolai Klimii iter subterraneum ) by Ludwig Holberg (1684-1754) - satirical-utopian novel (published in 1741) [9] .
  • " Palmistry " by Robert Fludd (1574-1637) - there is no book with this title by Fludd - a mystic, a doctor who was fond of pseudoscientific knowledge, no. Obviously, it means his work lat. Tractatus de Geomantia , published in 1687 [10] . It is also possible that Poe is referring to chapters from his books of Lat. Utriusque Macrocosmi at Microcosmi Historia (published between 1617 and 1619), chapter lat. De Scientia Animae Naturalis cum vitali seu astrologia chiromantica and lat. Integrum Morborum Mysterium: Medicinae Catholicae (published 1631), ch. Lat. De Signis sine praesagis chiromanticis . Both are about palmistry.
  • Works of Marie Cureau de la Chambre (1594-1669) and Jean d'Endazhine (1467-1537) - Poe does not give the titles of their books, however, together with Fludd's Palmistry, they obviously mean Discourse on the Principles of Palmistry (French Discours sur les Principes de la Chiromancie , published 1653, English translation 1658) de la Chambre and Lat. Introductiones Apotelesrnatici... in Chiromantiam (published 1522, English translation 1598) d'Endaginay. Pose, in 1661, de la Chambre published this work of his as part of a larger work by fr. L'Art de Connaitre Les Hommes . Poe most likely never saw Fludd's book, nor the works of de la Chambre and d'Endagienet.0072 [11] .
  • " Journey into the Blue Distance " (German Das alte Buch and die Reise ins Blaue hinein ) by Ludwig Johann Tieck (1773-1853) is a satirical short story about the adventures of a medieval aristocrat who married Gloriana, the Fairy Queen. (The novella was published in 1834, but there was no English translation at the time of writing The Fall of the House of Usher [12] .)
  • " City of the Sun " lat. Civitas Solis Tomaso Campanella (1568-1639) is a philosophical utopian work about an ideal state. Initially (in 1602) Campanella wrote his own in Italian (Italian: La città del Sole).
  • " Manual of the Inquisition " (lat. Directorium Inquisitorum ) Nicholas Eymerik (Eymerik Zheronsky) (1320-1399) - in fact, a guide for inquisitors, prescribing the procedure for the prosecution and interrogation of heretics and witches (1376; first printed edition - 1503, Barcelona). The author, the head of the Inquisition of the Kingdom of Aragon, was expelled from the country for excessive cruelty, while Thomas de Torquemada spoke of excessive softness " Directory Inquisitorium » [13] . It was one of Roderick Asher's most beloved books.
  • The work of Pomponius Mela (1st century AD) - the name is not mentioned in the story, but only one work is known from this author - lat. De situ orbis . This is a compilation, the earliest known work on geography in Classical Latin [14] . The story says that Asher was particularly interested in the pages "about the ancient African satyrs and Aegipans" (for example, De Situ Orbis . I. 8; III. nine).
  • " Vigiliae Mortuorum secundum chorum Ecclesiae Maguntinae " (lat. ) ( Vigils for the dead according to the choir of the Mantua church ) is a very rare book containing liturgical chants, published in Basel by Michael Wenssler in the 16th century (the exact date is unknown) [9072] 15] . Outwardly, Poe described the book very correctly - it is really printed in Gothic type and published in the "in quatro" format, although it does not contain "descriptions of strange and gloomy rites", but is dedicated to the usual Catholic rite of the funeral service [16] . He obviously got acquainted with its description in some catalog, since it is highly unlikely that the book was in the collection of some American collector at the beginning of the 19th century [17] . Along with the Inquisition Manual , this book was Asher's favorite.

Literary significance and criticism

Russian translations of the story (until 1975)

[18]
  1. Fall of the House of Usher // Lit. magazine. 1881. No. 11. S. 773-792. (trans. not specified).
  2. The Fall of the House of Usher // Extraordinary Stories (vols. 1-3). T. 2. St. Petersburg, Publishing House of A. S. Suvorin. 1885. (trans. not specified).
  3. The Fall of the House of Escher // Ballads and Fantasies. M., Publishing house of the bookstore F. A. Bogdanov. 1895 (translated by K. Balmont).
  4. The death of Escher's house // Edgar Poe: Collected works (in 2 vols.). T.2. St. Petersburg, publishing house of G. F. Panteleev. 1896. (translated by M.A. Engelhardt). (the same translation, ed. 2nd, corrected: St. Petersburg, "Prosveshchenie". 1896).
  5. nine0057 The death of the house of Usher // Edgar Poe: Collected works (in 2 vols.). T. 2. St. Petersburg, Bulletin of Foreign Literature. 1911. (trans. not specified).
  6. The Fall of the House of Usher // Edgar Poe: The Complete Stories. M., "Science". 1970. (translated by V. V. Rogov).
  7. The Fall of the House of Usher // Selected works in two volumes. M., "Artist. lit." 1972. (translated by N. Gal).

Film, television and theater performances

Screen adaptations of

  • House of Usher (film, 1988)

Musical works

Other uses of the story

Notes

  1. E. A. Poe Society of Baltimore 
  2. http://www.eapoe.org/works/MISC/PROSP010.HTM
  3. http://www.lib.uiowa.edu/spec-coll/bai/MabbottUsher.htm
  4. http://www.vavilon.ru/noragal/poe1.html
  5. http://www.lib.uiowa.edu/spec-coll/bai/MabbottUsher.htm
  6. http://feb-web.ru/feb/ivl/vl3/vl3-1302.htm
  7. http://www.abc-people.com/data/svedenborg/index.htm
  8. http://www.vavilon.ru/noragal/poe1.html
  9. http://www.lib.uiowa.edu/spec-coll/bai/MabbottUsher.htm
  10. http://www.lib.uiowa.edu/spec-coll/bai/MabbottUsher.

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