Friday, October 5, 2012

euronews musica: Miloš: Reviving the classical guitar



Published on Oct 5, 2012 by
http://www.euronews.com/ It is one of the greatest accolades for any musician to play in one of the world's most famous venues: the Royal Albert Hall in London. Now it has become a reality for classical guitarist Miloš Karadaglić.

"I dreamed about the Royal Albert Hall even at the time when I was a boy in Montenegro.

"I dreamed that one day I will play there and that coming to London - as hard as it was for my family and for me - all made sense because I thought that one day I will play in the Royal Albert Hall," Karadaglić told euronews.

"You need to have so much energy inside you to be able to radiate this electricity to every single person in the hall.

"If you think of the Royal Albert Hall, 3000 people and more, it is almost like you are this atom in the middle and that you are holding everything into that nucleus of the whole room."
...

Vietnam economy struggling



Published 04 October 2012 15:29 849 Views

Vietnam has had one of the fastest growing economies in the developing world. In 2007, the country got more foreign investment than the Philippines, Thailand and Indonesia combined. But inflation is high and the country's credit rating has just been downgraded. Al Jazeera's Wayne Hay reports from Hanoi.

Harnessing hydropower | Global Ideas



Published on Oct 5, 2012 by
Turkey faces an electricity shortage but one thing it has in abundance is water. The country plans to tap this potential and expand hydropower to ease its energy problems. Find out more:
http://www.ideasforacoolerworld.org?maca=en-podcast_global-ideas_en-5210-xml-...

Markets Relieved, But Not Excited by Jobs Report


Oct. 5 (Bloomberg) -- Bloomberg's Julie Hyman recaps market reaction to the September jobs report and highlights the sectors leading the advances. She speaks on Bloomberg Television's "Money Moves."

Snack Pack: U.S. Dollar, S&P 500, Crude Oil


Oct. 5 (Bloomberg) -- Bloomberg's Alix Steel, Sara Eisen, Julie Hyman and Adam Johnson update the top trading stories of the day. They speak on Bloomberg Television's "Lunch Money."

World's fastest radio telescope starts up in Australia (1:51)



Oct. 5 - In the remote Australian outback, scientists commission world's fastest radio telescope that will vastly increase astronomers' ability to survey the universe. Sunita Rappai reports

Asia Week Ahead: China trade data, Geithner in Asia (3:27)



Oct. 5 - China's latest trade and HSBC services PMI are likely to reflect a continued gloomy outlook for the economy, while U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner visits India and Japan

Europe Week Ahead: Spain bailout eyed (2:32)



Oct. 5 - Investors continue to wait on news of a Spanish bailout as the IMF-World Bank, ECOFIN and Eurogroup meetings get underway.

U.S. Morning Call: Global shares up on hopes of U.S. jobs (3:41)



Oct 5 - Employers in the United States are expected to have added 113,000 jobs to their payrolls last month, according to a Reuters survey of economists.

Songs from space reach ears on Earth (0:37)



Oct. 4 - If you thought it was quiet in space, you were wrong. Instruments aboard NASA's orbiting Radiation Belt Storm Probes have picked up audio from the phenomenon known as ''chorus'' radio waves within Earth's magnetosphere, and they sound more like bird song than aliens from outer space. Turn up the volume to listen.