AS.CARTAS.DE.OBLOMOVKA............
by Douglas Fregolente
http://www.filefactory.com/file/6g6pjmky0xwd/agazetademordor_radioetiopia.mp3.mp3
01. Maximilian Hecker - Dying (00:00)
02. Her Name Is Calla - Thief (03:54)
03. Gregory Alan Isakov & The Colorado Symphony - Liars (09:43)
04. Guaiamum - Monument (14:40)
05. Corey Kilgannon - Köln (19:17)
06. Antony and the Johnsons - Rapture (22:22)
07. Tracey Chattaway - Come Away With Me (26:15)
08. The Hope Arsenal - Wake Your Soul (33:07)
09. Cœur de Pirate - Pilgrims On a Long Journey (39:05)
10. Dakota Suite & Quentin Sirjacq - As Long As Forever Is (Part I) (42:25)
11. Break My Fucking Sky - Hello. Farewell (48:05)
12. Two Gallants - Waves Of Grain (51:34)
13. Enigma feat. Aquilo - Amen (1:01:00)
14. Kwoon - I Lived On The Moon (1:05:46)
15. April Rain - On My Way To You (1:09:54)
16. Max Richter - Luminous (1:14:48)
17. Sigur Rós - Hrafntinna (1:19:32)
18. The Avett Brothers - Through My Prayers (1:25:46)
19. Olga Vilenskaia - Casta Diva (Norma), Vincenzo Bellini [Aria] (1:29:51)
"As Cartas de Oblomovka" nunca foram escritas. Iliá Oblómov é o bem educado aristocrata e senhor de Oblómovka, uma propriedade rural herdada em algum lugar da Rússia semifeudal pouco antes do fim da servidão, época onde as notícias chegavam por cartas e mensageiros. Oblómov é o único espectador da própria vida e sonha com a felicidade que viveu na infância e idealiza aquela que ainda viverá em Oblomóvka. Vago e irresoluto, Iliá paralisa a própria existência e a vida ideal ainda é uma memória de um dia típico da infância. Muito longe de casa, Oblómov encerra seus dias "sem dor, sem agonia, como para um relógio no qual se esqueceram de dar corda." As cartas de Oblomovka são as boas notícias que nunca chegaram.
(Oblómov - Ivan Gontcharóv, 1859)
"The Oblomovka Letters" were never really written. Ilia Oblomov is the well-educated aristocrat and lord of Oblomovka, an inherited property somewhere in a semi-feudal Russia just before the end of servitude, days when news came by letters and messengers. Oblomov is the only spectator of his own life. He dreams about the happiness lived in childhood and idealizes the one he will still live in Oblomóvka. Vague and irresolute, Ilia paralyzes his very existence and the ideal life is still a memory from a typical childhood day. Far away from home, Oblomov ends his days "without pain, without agony, as it is for a clock in which they have forgotten to give rope." Oblomovka's letters are the good news that never came.(Oblóvov - Ivan Gontcharóv, 1859)
Douglas Fregolente