Answers
Just a movie. It was an original screenplay by Bill Sherwood.
Scene from Parting Glances I own nothing
Like in class, there's this guy who keeps on stealing glances at me. When I try to look back, he looks away.
I get this from girls too but they're more subtle with it so I cant really catch them.
So what do you think this means on their part?
Thanks! =]
are you a guy? if so, maybe you have an interesting look. maybe they admire you and want to see what you are up to. or maybe you look good and they want to look just like you.
if the girls are looking at you then they probably think you are a cutie :-)
Some of my favorites are:
Les roseaux sauvages (Wild Reeds)
Maurice
Beautiful Thing
The Wedding Banquet
The Lost Language of Cranes
Parting Glances
Torch Song Trilogy
Get Real
The Object of My Affection
Fresa y chocolate (Strawberry and Chocolate)
Farewell My Concubine
Y tu mamá también
The Opposite of Sex
When Night Is Falling is my favorite.
I really like this girl at school but she is quiet and only talks with her friends for the most part. I see her glance at me occasionally but im uncertain if this means anything. Also she will wave goodbye and talk to no other guys.
P.S. i go to a very small high school and basically everything i say and do sticks.
When a quiet girl likes a guy...she gives him a special smile that she only gives to that guy. Go over to her and say hi and if she smiles at you while she's talking, look for that special smile and if it's there, go for it!
If a pianist is any good, I assume that they have to learn many different songs pretty quickly. Should a concert pianist be able to sit down and sightread anything at first glance? (for the most part...)
Sight reading skills are essential to the concert pianist. Not many people can sightread ANYTHING at first glance, though. The better a pianist sight reads, the more he/she can perform. It is that simple. If I take 6 weeks to work up repertoire, and someone else takes 10 weeks, I can perform more repertoire than they can. Sight reading is a skill to work on - the same as any other part of playing. You simply have to do it to get better at it.
At the same time, I have known world class concert pianists (I studied with a couple of them), and there were still pieces that they had to work on. And, to truly perform a piece well - with good voicing, tone, and nuance takes work. Simply playing the right pitches and rhythms is like typing...not necessarily musical. With experience and work, we can sightread musically as well, but there is never a point that we cannot perform a piece better.