Anime began at the start of the 20th century, when japanese filmmakers experimented with the animation techniques also pioneered in France, Germany, the United States and russia. The oldest known anime in existence first screened in 1917 it was a two minute clip of a samurai trying a new sword on his target, only to suffer defeat.
the succes of The Walt Disney company´s 1937feature film Snow white and the seven dwarfs influenced japanese animators.
Many commentators refer to anime as an art form. The style can vary from artist to artist or from studio to studio. Some titles make extensive use of common styilization, other titles use different methods: Only Yesterday or Jin-Roh take much more realistic approaches, featuring few stylistic exaggeration; Pokémon use drawings with specifically do not distinguish the nationality of the characters.
Anime has become commercially profitable in western countries, as early commercially succesful western adaptations of anime, such as Astro Boy, have revealed. The phenomenal success of Nintendo´s multi-billion dollar Pokémon franchise was helped greatly by the spin-off anime series that, first broadcast in the late 1990 is still running worldwide to this day. Worldwide, the number of people studying Japanese increase.
Nowadays there´s a lot of popular anime series for example Pokémon, Dragon Ball Z, Bleach, One piece, Fairy tail, Katekyo Hitman Reborn, etc. The anime use other languges as Spanish, French, English, Italian, etc for emphazyse or to make much more impresive the animation. Now i left a video to ilustrate this.
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The word "reggae" was coined around 1960 in Jamaica to identify a "ragged" style of dance music, that still had its roots in New Orleans rhythm'n'blues. However, reggae soon acquired the lament-like style of chanting and emphasized the syncopated beat. It also made explicit the relationship with the underworld of the "Rastafarians" (adepts of a millenary African faith, revived Marcus Garvey who advocated a mass emigration back to Africa), both in the lyrics and in the appropriation of the African nyah-bingi drumming style (a style that mimicks the heartbeat with its pattern of "thump-thump, pause, thump-thump"). Compared with rock music, reggae music basically inverted the role of bass and guitar: the former was the lead, the latter beat the typical hiccupping pattern. The paradox of reggae, of course, is that this music "unique to Jamaica" is actually not Jamaican at all, having its foundations in the USA and Africa.
An independent label, Island, distributed Jamaican records in the UK throughout the 1960s, but reggae became popular in the UK only when Prince Buster's Al Capone (1967) started a brief "dance craze". Jamaican music was very much a ghetto phenomenon, associated with gang-style violence, but Jimmy Cliff's Wonderful World Beautiful People (1969) wed reggae with the "peace and love" philosophy of the hippies, an association that would not die away. In the USA, Neil Diamond's Red Red Wine (1967) was the first reggae hit by a pop musician. Shortly afterwards, Johnny Nash's Hold Me Tight (1968) propelled reggae onto the charts. Do The Reggay (1968) by Toots (Hibbert) And The Maytals was the record that gave the music its name. Fredrick Toots Hibbert's vocal style was actually closer to gospel, as proved by their other hits (54-46, 1967; Monkey Man, 1969; Pressure Drop, 1970).
A little noticed event would have far-reaching consequences: in 1967, the Jamaican disc-jockey Rudolph "Ruddy" Redwood had begun recording instrumental versions of reggae hits. The success of his dance club was entirely due to that idea. Duke Reid, who was now the owner of the Trojan label, was the first one to capitalize on the idea: he began releasing singles with two sides: the original song and, on the back, the instrumental remix. This phenomenon elevated the status of dozens of recording engineers.
Reggae music was mainly popularized by Bob Marley (1), first as the co-leader of the Wailers, the band that promoted the image of the urban guerrilla with Rude Boy (1966) and that cut the first album of reggae music, Best Of The Wailers (1970); and later as the political and religious (rasta) guru of the movement, a stance that would transform him into a star, particularly after his conversion to pop-soul melody with ballads such as Stir It Up (1972), I Shot The Sheriff (1973) and No Woman No Cry (1974).
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