Share to: share facebook share twitter share wa share telegram print page

Wind controller

San Francisco musician Onyx Ashanti playing a wind controller

A wind controller, sometimes referred to as a wind synthesizer, is an electronic wind instrument. It is usually a MIDI controller associated with one or more music synthesizers.[1] Wind controllers are most commonly played and fingered like a woodwind instrument, usually the saxophone, with the next most common being brass fingering, particularly the trumpet. Models have been produced that play and finger like other acoustic instruments such as the recorder or the tin whistle. The most common form of wind controller uses electronic sensors to convert fingering, breath pressure, bite pressure, finger pressure, and other gesture or action information into control signals that affect musical sounds. The control signals or MIDI messages generated by the wind controller are used to control internal or external devices such as analog synthesizers or MIDI-compatible synthesizers, synth modules, softsynths, sequencers, or even non-instruments such as lighting systems.

Simpler breath controllers are also available. Unlike wind controllers, they do not trigger notes and are intended for use in conjunction with a keyboard or synthesizer.[2] A breath controller can be used with a keyboard MIDI controller to add articulation and expression to notes sounded on the keyboard. For example, a performer who has pressed a long-held note on the keyboard with a sustained sound, such as a string pad, could blow harder into the breath controller set to control volume to make this note crescendo or gradually blow more and more gently to make the volume die away.

Some wind controllers contain a built-in sound generator and can be connected directly to an amplifier or a set of headphones. Some even include small built-in speakers such as the Roland Aerophone series and the Akai EWI SOLO, however their small speaker systems cannot reproduce bass notes correctly or provide adequate sound levels for serious live performance, so these built in sound systems are strictly for home practice at modest playback levels. Some wind controllers such as EWI USB, Berglund NuEVI, and NuRAD are strictly "controllers" and do not make a sound on their own, and thus must be connected via MIDI or USB to a sound generating device (or a soft synth). For this reason, a wind controller can sound like almost anything (depending on the capabilities of its sound generator). Wind controller models such as the Akai EWI5000, EWI SOLO, and Roland Aerophones have built-in onboard sample sounds, as well as the MIDI and/or USB outputs. The now discontinued EWI 4000s had a DSP subtractive synthesizer built in rather than sampled instruments and so remains popular on the second hand market.

The fingering and shape of the wind controller put no acoustic limitations on how the wind controller actually sounds. For example, a wind controller can be made to sound like a trumpet, saxophone, violin, piano, pipe organ, choir, synthesizers or even a barnyard rooster. Whether designed primarily to appeal to woodwind, brass, or harmonica players, controllers can produce any virtual instrument sound. Some virtual instruments and hardware synthesizers are better suited to adaption for wind controller performance than others. A hardware or software synthesizer's suitability is largely dependent on the control options available. MIDI CC mapping options allow the player to control elements like the filter cut off via breath control for expressive dynamics. Custom patches (or presets) are required for optimal expressivity, to take advantage of the considerable benefits of wind control.

History

Predecessors

Already in the 1930s Benjamin F. Miessner was working on various electroacoustic instruments. Among these was an electroacoustic clarinet, that featured an electromagnetic pickup for the reed vibration and was connected to a variety of electronic filters. Miessner's patent from 1938[3][4] marks the birth of the electronic wind instrument family.[5]

Early experiments with fully electronic instruments started in the 1940s. Leo F. J. Arnold invented an electronic clarinet that featured an on/off-switch controlled by the human breath. This instrument is documented in Arnold's patent from 1942.[6][7][5]

The Frenchman Georges Jenny and the German engineer Ernst Zacharias played an essential role in the development of the first analog wind controllers in the 1950s. Jenny received his patent for an electronic wind instrument in 1954.[8][9] It features a breath transducer for variable volume control, that works with a piezo element. The prototypes of Zacharias, who started to work on electronic wind instruments in 1956, lead to the first commercially produced wind synthesizer – the Hohner Electra-Melodica, released in 1967.[5]

Analog wind controllers

Computone Wind Synthesizer Controller
(essentially, Lyricon II without synthesizer)

The first widely played wind controller was the Lyricon from Computone which came about in the 1970s era of analog synthesizers. The Lyricon was based on the fingerings of the saxophone and used a similar mouthpiece. It set the standard for hardware-based wind controllers with a number of features that have been preserved in today's MIDI wind controllers, including the ability to correctly interpret the expressive use of reed articulation, breath-controlled dynamics, and embouchure-controlled pitch variation. The Lyricon also expanded the playing range several octaves beyond the accustomed range for woodwind players. Tone generation on the Lyricon was limited to a dedicated analog synthesizer designed specifically to interpret various wired analog outputs from the instrument. Notable early recording artists on the Lyricon include Roland Kirk and Tom Scott. Third-party adaptations would later bring the Lyricon into the MIDI era.

The next wind controller of note was the brass style Steiner EVI invented by wind controller pioneer Nyle Steiner. Steiner was the inventor of the brass style EVI (electronic valve instrument) wind controller designed for brass players, as well as the EWI (electronic woodwind instrument) designed for woodwind players. Steiner made many very important contributions to the development wind controllers. His research started in the late 1960s and his first wind controller was the Steiner Parker EVI released in 1975. Originally this EVI was only a "controller" which sent control voltages only for pitch and gate and was to be connected to commercial analog synthesizers. The breath sensor on this early original model EVI was very crude consisting of a simple on/off switch activated by the player's breath pressure. Steiner went on to refine and develop new expressive methods of sensing the player's gestures which have since become standard wind controller features such as an expressive proportional type breath sensor (as compared to earlier switch on/off type breath sensing), tonguing velocity sensing, a vibrato lever for the right hand thumb, pitch bend up and down thumb sensors, glide sensing for portamento effects, bite sensing, lip sensing, and others. Steiner's analog wind controller systems eventually included his own analog synthesizer design bundled into a complete self-contained system (Steinerphone). Steiner was also a studio musician and he played his EVI on the soundtrack of the film "Apocalypse Now". Shortly after the release of the Steiner EVI, woodwind musicians asked Steiner to make a woodwind version of the EVI, and Steiner designed the EWI. The EWI was made famous in the mid 1980s by jazz musician Michael Brecker with the group Steps Ahead when he played the Steinerphone EWI with dazzling bravura. Around 1985 Steiner developed a sophisticated MIDI interface for his EVI and EWI by modifying the JL Cooper Wind Driver box. In 1987, Akai licensed Steiner's EVI and EWI designs and released the Akai EVI1000 brass style and woodwind style EWI1000 wind controllers along with a companion EWV2000 sound module. The EWV2000 featured a MIDI output jack which allowed it to connect to additional MIDI synthesizers opening up a universe of possibilities and numerous recordings in both movie and television soundtracks as well as pop music recordings. The EVI1000 or EWI1000 controllers combined with the EWV2000 sound generator were actually a hybrid digital/analog system. Analog signals were derived from the various sensors (e.g., key, bite, bend, glide, etc.) on the EVI1000/EWI1000 controller unit, then converted to digital signals by a front-end microprocessor in the EWV2000. These digital signals were then altered by the microprocessor and D/A converted to internal analog control voltages appropriate for the analog synthesizer ICs within the EWV2000. The D/A used within the EWV2000 used a very high resolution and conversion rate, such that the responsiveness to the player felt immediate, i.e. "analog". The subsequent EWI3000, EWI3020, and EWI3030m systems also used this A/D/A scheme within their dedicated tone modules, though these later models of the EWI would support MIDI in and out.

MIDI controller revolution

With the advent of MIDI and computer-based digital samplers in the early 1980s, the new music technology ushered in a variety of "alternative" MIDI controllers. In the 1960s and 1970s, the main way for a musician to play synthesizers was with a keyboard. With MIDI, it became possible for non-keyboardists to play MIDI synthesizers and samplers for the first time. These new controllers included, most notably: MIDI drums, MIDI guitar synthesizers, and MIDI wind controllers. Leading the way to demonstrate the virtuosic potential of this new arsenal of MIDI technology on the world stage through extensive touring and big-label recordings were guitarist Pat Metheny playing the guitar synthesizer and saxophonist Michael Brecker playing the wind controller, each leading their own bands.

Digital wind controllers and MIDI

The most widely played[citation needed] purely digital wind controllers include the Yamaha WX series and the Akai EWI series. These instruments are capable of generating a standard MIDI data stream, thereby eliminating the need for dedicated synthesizers and opening up the possibility of controlling any MIDI-compatible synthesizer or other device. These instruments, while usually shaped something like a clarinet with a saxophone-like key layout, offer the option to recognize fingerings for an assortment of woodwinds and brass. The major distinction between the approach taken by the two companies is in the action of their keys. Yamaha WX series instruments have moving keys like a saxophone or flute that actuate small switches when pressed. Akai EWI series instruments have immovable, touch-sensitive keys that signal when the player is merely making contact with the keys. In the hands of skilled players each of these instruments has proved its ability to perform at a high level of artistry.

The now defunct Casio DH series were toy-like wind controllers introduced in the mid-1980s and had a built-in speaker (with limited sound sources) as well as being usable as MIDI controllers.

A recent addition to the wind controller category is the Synthophone, an entirely electronic wind controller embedded in the shell of an alto saxophone. Since the electronic components take up the open space of the saxophone, it is not playable as an acoustic instrument; however, since the exterior matches that of the acoustic instrument, it is significantly more familiar to play.

Additionally, keyboard-based breath controllers are also available. These modulate standard keyboards, computers and other midi devices, meaning they are not played like a woodwind, but like a keyboard, but with a breath controller (similar to a pump organ.) Yamaha's BC series can be used to control DX and EX units. Midi Solutions makes a converter box that allows any midi device to be controlled by the Yamaha BC controllers. TEControl also makes a USB device that is simply a jump drive with a breath tube attached that can be plugged into any standard computer.

Acoustic wind instrument conversion to software MIDI as wind control

Through the 1990s the major hardware-based wind controllers improved through successive models and a number of minor, and less commercially successful, controllers were introduced. These software solutions for a time were the only viable bridge between the woodwind or brass player and the synthesizer. But dating back to the 1980s a lesser known software-based alternative began to emerge. With a software-based conversion program the musician plays an ordinary wind instrument into a microphone at which point a software program (sometimes with dedicated computer hardware) interpreted the pitch, dynamics, and expression of this acoustic sound and generates a standard MIDI data stream just in time to play along with the performer through a synthesizer.

While the first commercial product attempting this approach dates back to the Fairlight Voicetracker VT-5 of 1985, a more successful modern approach using software on personal computers (combined with a digital audio workstation and softsynths) is relatively new. Two more recent examples of this highly unusual archaic approach were Thing-1 from ThingTone Software, and Digital Ear Realtime from Epinoisis Software.

Range of expression

Due in part to their fast and sensitive key switching and breath sensing systems both the hardware and software based wind controllers put precise demands on a player who hopes to play with technical mastery. An accomplished woodwind or brass player may find that a hardware or software based wind controller will produce an unwanted note (called a "glitch") even at the slightest imperfection in fingering or articulation technique. As the better recordings show, these difficulties can be overcome with practice.

In contrast to live performance with a wind controller, and in response to these technical challenges, some "performances" in recordings are achieved through careful post-processing or note-by-note insertion and editing using a notation or sequencer program.[original research?]

Virtually all current synthesizers and their sound libraries are designed to be played primarily with a keyboard controller, whereby the player often reserves one hand to manipulate the many real-time controls to determine how the instrument sounds, perhaps using a foot to manipulate an expression pedal.[original research?]

Wind controller players do not have access to as many of these controls and thus are often limited in exploiting all of the potential voicings and articulation changes of their synthesizers, but the technologies of physical modeling (Yamaha VL70-m), sample modeling and hybrid technologies (SWAM engine) promise more expression control for wind controller players. Furthermore, sound designers are paying more attention to the different playing idioms in which their sounds will be used. For example, certain percussion sounds do not work well with a wind controller simply because playing a struck instrument it is not idiomatic to the woodwind, whereas synthesized instruments that model the acoustic properties of a woodwind will seem fitting and natural to a wind controller player.[original research?]

A few of the many hardware (Yamaha, Roland, Akai, Kurzweill, Aodyo) and software (Native Instruments, Garritan, SampleModeling, Sample Logic, LinPlug, Audio Modeling) synthesizers provide specific support for wind controllers, and they vary widely with respect to how well they emulate acoustic wind, brass, and string instruments. The SWAM technology, devised by Audio Modeling, has specific settings for Yamaha, EWI, Sylphyo and Aerophone wind controllers and has succeeded in producing very rapid natural responsiveness with their woodwinds and bowed strings virtual instruments. Also Samplemodeling has specific settings for wind controllers on their Kontakt-based brass. That said, virtually all current synthesizers respond to MIDI continuous controllers and the data provided by wind controller breath and lip input can usually be routed to them in an expressive way.[original research?]

An example of a hardware synthesizer with wind controller support is the Yamaha VL70-m which uses physical modeling synthesis. Physical modeling allows for a unique level of responsiveness to the control signals sent from a wind controller. The emulation of acoustic instrument sounds varies in quality. The VL70-m is able to connect directly to the Yamaha WX series of controllers and via MIDI to the Akai and other wind controllers. Similarly, an example of a software synthesizer with support for wind controller playing is the Zebra synthesizer from Urs Heckmann, Apple's ES2 softsynth, Korg's Mono/Poly softsynth, Audio Modeling's SWAM instruments, and many others. It is important to note that whatever synth is used, it will need to be set up with specially designed breath responsive patches for optimal response to a wind controller.

Manufacturers

The major manufacturers of wind controllers are Akai, Roland, and Yamaha. As of the beginning of 2022 the available mass production wind controllers include the Akai EWI SOLO, EWI5000, Roland Aerophone models AE-01, AE-05, AE-10, AE-20 and AE-30, Aodyo Sylphyo. Less commonly available model is Synthophone. Also there are ultra low volume handmade instruments that are nonetheless advanced (owing to clever use of off the shelf electronics) such as the Berglund NuRad, NuEVI and WARBL from Mowry Stringed Instruments.

Models out of production and discontinued include the Akai EWI USB (discontinued 2022), 4000s (discontinued 2019). Also 20th century (part analogue) models from Akai such as the 3020, 3000 and 1000. Older discontinued models from Yamaha include WX11, WX7 and WX5. Casio offered more toy-like offerings including the DH-100, DH-200, DH-500 and DH-800.

Wind controllers with saxophone fingerings

Synthophone

The Synthophone is a Wind Controller synthesizer. It is a MIDI sax offering real sax fingerings and a standard sax embouchure. The MIDI hardware allows the key action as well as breath and lip pressure to be read as MIDI data. Since it is a saxophone, the fingerings are the same with some additions - Several combinations allow real-time editing of patches and harmony. The instrument has made several appearances at the NAMM Show, including in 1997.[10]

Others

After the Synthophone, several other MIDI saxes have been released that offer real sax fingerings: in 2019 the Travel Sax by Odisei Music,[11] in 2020 the YDS-150 digital saxophone by Yamaha[12] and also in 2020 the Emeo.[13] These MIDI saxes have sensors for breath pressure to adjust the volume, but they do not read lip pressure and thus do not allow the pitch to be controlled by the embouchure or by the manner of breathing. With the YDS-150, pitch bend can be achieved using a separate input on the instrument. The Travel Sax, the YDS-150 and the Emeo provide for settings customisation using a Bluetooth-connected mobile app.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Four Wind Controllers That Are Worth Owning | Vintage Synth Explorer". www.vintagesynth.com. Retrieved 2022-08-25.
  2. ^ "Breath Controller". Sweetwater. Aug 14, 2003. Retrieved 2020-01-14.
  3. ^ Miessner, Benjamin F. (November 29, 1938). "United States Patent: 2138500". www.uspto.gov. USPTO. Retrieved May 3, 2021.
  4. ^ Miessner, Benjamin F. (November 29, 1938). "Apparatus for the production of music". Retrieved May 3, 2021., US002138500, 1938.
  5. ^ a b c Swoboda, Andreas (2017). Die Anfänge der elektronischen Blasinstrumente (1 ed.). Osnabrück: epOs. ISBN 9783940255709. OCLC 978263084.
  6. ^ Arnold, Leo F. J. (November 10, 1942). "United States Patent: 2301184". www.uspto.gov. USPTO. Retrieved May 3, 2021.
  7. ^ Arnold, Leo F. J. (November 10, 1942). "Electrical clarinet". Retrieved May 3, 2021., US002301184, 1942.
  8. ^ Jenny, Georges (1954-02-10). "The Patent Office, Patent Specification: 703733". Espacenet. UK IPO. Retrieved May 3, 2021.
  9. ^ Jenny, Georges (1954-02-10). "Improvements in or relating to electronic musical instruments". Retrieved May 3, 2021., GB703733, 1954.
  10. ^ "Wind Controller Summit At 1997 NAMM". www.patchmanmusic.com.
  11. ^ Julian Horsey (2019-03-14). "Travel Sax super small electronic saxophone". Retrieved 2020-10-10.
  12. ^ Paul Ridden (2020-09-24). "Yamaha blows out authentic-sounding digital saxophone". Retrieved 2020-10-10.
  13. ^ "Israeli start-up develops digital practice saxophone". ajuede.com. 2020-07-03. Retrieved 2023-02-06.

Read other articles:

Bungarus multicinctus (Many-banded krait) Bungarus multicinctus Status konservasiRisiko rendahIUCN191957 TaksonomiKerajaanAnimaliaFilumChordataKelasReptiliaOrdoSquamataFamiliElapidaeGenusBungarusSpesiesBungarus multicinctus Blyth, 1861 DistribusiWilayah persebaran Bungarus multicinctus. lbs Bungarus multicinctus dalam bahasa Inggris disebut many-banded krait, atau Taiwanese krait, atau Chinese krait, adalah spesies ular elapid yang sangat berbisa, dapat ditemukan di sebagian besar wilayah Republ…

Pemintal corong Agelenidae Grass spider (Agelenopsis sp.), femaleLaba-laba gelandangan (E. agrestis)TaksonomiKerajaanAnimaliaFilumArthropodaKelasArachnidaOrdoAraneaeUpaordoOpisthothelaeInfraordoAraneomorphaeSuperfamiliAgelenoideaFamiliAgelenidae Koch, 1837 Tipe taksonomiAgelena Diversitas 92 genera, 1374 spesies Distribusi lbs Agelenidae adalah sebuah famili besar laba-laba yang masuk kedalam subordo Araneomorphae. Contoh yang paling umum dikenal dari anggota famili ini mencakup laba-laba rumput…

David Davis David Michael Davis (lahir 23 Desember 1948) adalah seorang politikus Inggris dari Partai Konservatif yang pernah menjabat sebagai Menteri Brexit dari Juli 2016 hingga Juli 2018, dan ia mengabdi sebagai anggota parlemen dari daerah pilih Haltemprice dan Howden sejak tahun 1997. Ia sebelumnya juga sudah pernah terpilih menjadi anggota parlemen dari daerah pilih Boothferry pada tahun 1987 dan 1992. Pada Juli 2016, setelah hasil referendum menunjukkan bahwa kebanyakan pemilih di Britani…

Season of television series Running Man ChinaSeason 1Let's Run poster for Season 1Country of originChinaNo. of episodes15ReleaseOriginal networkZRTG: Zhejiang TelevisionOriginal releaseOctober 10, 2014 (2014-10-10) –January 16, 2015 (2015-01-16)Season chronologyNext →Season 2List of episodes This is a list of episodes of the Chinese variety show Running Man in season 1. The show airs on ZRTG: Zhejiang Television. Episodes List of episodes (episode 1–15) (Series)Episode …

本條目存在以下問題,請協助改善本條目或在討論頁針對議題發表看法。 此條目需要补充更多来源。 (2018年3月17日)请协助補充多方面可靠来源以改善这篇条目,无法查证的内容可能會因為异议提出而被移除。致使用者:请搜索一下条目的标题(来源搜索:羅生門 (電影) — 网页、新闻、书籍、学术、图像),以检查网络上是否存在该主题的更多可靠来源(判定指引)。 此…

Indian cheesemaker Namrata SundaresanNationalityIndianOccupation(s)cook and entrepreneurKnown forwinning the Nari Shakti Puraskar Namrata Sundaresan is an Indian social entrepreneur, chef and cheesemaker. She won the 2017 Nari Shakti Puraskar with Anuradha Krishnamoorthy. Career Namrata Sundaresan was born an Odia and moved to Chennai in Tamil Nadu after getting married.[1] She built her career through founding an international consulting agency.[1] Sundaresan learnt how to …

Duklja and neighbouring Serbian regions during the 11th and 12th century For other people with the same name, see Mihailo of Duklja. Mihailo III (Serbian Cyrillic: Михаило) was Prince of Duklja, from c. 1180, or before, up to 1186 or 1189. He was descended from the Vojislavljević dynasty, and also cousin to Grand Prince Stefan Nemanja of Serbia. The Principality of Duklja was tributary to the Byzantine Empire until 1180, when Emperor Manuel I died and Empire plunged into turmoil. By 1186…

Синелобый амазон Научная классификация Домен:ЭукариотыЦарство:ЖивотныеПодцарство:ЭуметазоиБез ранга:Двусторонне-симметричныеБез ранга:ВторичноротыеТип:ХордовыеПодтип:ПозвоночныеИнфратип:ЧелюстноротыеНадкласс:ЧетвероногиеКлада:АмниотыКлада:ЗавропсидыКласс:Птиц…

† Человек прямоходящий Научная классификация Домен:ЭукариотыЦарство:ЖивотныеПодцарство:ЭуметазоиБез ранга:Двусторонне-симметричныеБез ранга:ВторичноротыеТип:ХордовыеПодтип:ПозвоночныеИнфратип:ЧелюстноротыеНадкласс:ЧетвероногиеКлада:АмниотыКлада:СинапсидыКл…

Charles AlbertRaja SardiniaBerkuasa27 April 1831 – 23 Maret 1849PendahuluCharles FelixPenerusVictor Emmanuel IIInformasi pribadiKelahiran(1798-10-02)2 Oktober 1798Istana Carignano, Kerajaan Piedmont-SardiniaKematian28 Juli 1849(1849-07-28) (umur 50)Porto, Kerajaan PortugalPemakamanBasilika Superga, TorinoWangsaWangsa SavoyNama lengkapCarlo Alberto Amedeo di SavoiaAyahCharles Emmanuel, Pangeran CarignanoIbuMaria Christina dari SachsenPasanganMaria Theresa dari AustriaAnakVictor Emmanuel II…

Dutch admiral This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Abraham van der Hulst – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (March 2009) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) In this Dutch name, the surname is van der Hulst, not Hulst. Abraham van der HulstAbraham van der Hulst, by Jan de V…

اَلشَّيْخ عُمَر اَلقَاضي (من اليمين إلى اليسار) : الشيخ عمر مع والده الشيخ عبد الوهاب القاضي. معلومات شخصية الاسم الكامل الشِّيخ عُمَر بن عَبد الوهاب بن عبد الرَّحيم بن عبد الله القاضِي الميلاد 1347 هـ / 1929 مدَشتي، هَرمُزَكَان، إيران الوفاة 6 ذو الحجة 1425 هـ / 28 يناير 2004 م (75 عام…

Artikel ini membutuhkan rujukan tambahan agar kualitasnya dapat dipastikan. Mohon bantu kami mengembangkan artikel ini dengan cara menambahkan rujukan ke sumber tepercaya. Pernyataan tak bersumber bisa saja dipertentangkan dan dihapus.Cari sumber: Eastern Suburbs Sydney – berita · surat kabar · buku · cendekiawan · JSTOR (Februari 2009) EasternSuburbs HillsDistrict Parramatta Blacktown GreaterWesternSydney Hawkesbury Inner West NorthernSuburbs Canter…

Collegiate sports club in the United States Louisiana Tech Bulldogs and Lady TechstersUniversityLouisiana Tech UniversityConferenceC-USANCAADivision I (FBS)Athletic directorDr. Eric WoodLocationRuston, LouisianaVarsity teams16Football stadiumJoe Aillet StadiumBasketball arenaThomas Assembly CenterBaseball stadiumJ. C. Love Field at Pat Patterson ParkSoftball stadiumDr. Billy Bundrick FieldSoccer stadiumRobert Mack Caruthers FieldOther venuesJim Mize Track and Field ComplexLambright Bowling …

この項目には、一部のコンピュータや閲覧ソフトで表示できない文字が含まれています(詳細)。 数字の大字(だいじ)は、漢数字の一種。通常用いる単純な字形の漢数字(小字)の代わりに同じ音の別の漢字を用いるものである。 概要 壱万円日本銀行券(「壱」が大字) 弐千円日本銀行券(「弐」が大字) 漢数字には「一」「二」「三」と続く小字と、「壱」「弐」…

Austrian Open 2003 Sport Tennis Data 21 luglio – 27 luglio Edizione 58a Superficie Terra rossa Campioni Singolare Guillermo Coria Doppio Martin Damm / Cyril Suk 2002 2004 L'Austrian Open 2003 è stato un torneo di tennis giocato sulla terra rossa. È stata la 58ª edizione dell'Austrian Open, che fa parte della categoria International Series Gold nell'ambito dell'ATP Tour 2003. Si è giocato al Kitzbühel Sportpark Tennis Stadium di Kitzbühel in Austria, dal 21 al 27 luglio 2003. Indice 1 Cam…

Artikel ini sebatang kara, artinya tidak ada artikel lain yang memiliki pranala balik ke halaman ini.Bantulah menambah pranala ke artikel ini dari artikel yang berhubungan atau coba peralatan pencari pranala.Tag ini diberikan pada Maret 2016. SMK Negeri 1 BalonganSekolah Menengah Kejuruan Negeri 1 BalonganInformasiDidirikan30 November 2004JenisNegeriAkreditasiAKepala SekolahDrs. H. Komar, M.PdJurusan atau peminatanMulti Media Teknik Gambar dan Bangunan Teknik Komputer dan Jaringan Teknik Ke…

The IdiotPoster Jepang asli menampilkan Toshirō Mifune (kiri), Masayuki Mori (tengah) dan Setsuko Hara (kanan)SutradaraAkira KurosawaProduserTakashi KoideDitulis olehAkira KurosawaEijirō HisaitaBerdasarkanThe Idiotoleh Fyodor DostoevskyPemeranSetsuko HaraYoshiko KugaToshiro MifuneMasayuki MoriTakashi Shimura Noriko SengokuPenata musikFumio HayasakaSinematograferToshio UbukataPenyuntingAkira KurosawaPerusahaanproduksiShochikuDistributorShochikuTanggal rilis 23 Mei 1951 (1951-05-23) D…

Japanese warlord (1458–1541) In this Japanese name, the surname is Amago.Amago Tsunehisa尼子経久Head of Amago clanIn office1477–1538Preceded byAmago KiyosadaSucceeded byAmago Haruhisa Personal detailsBornDecember 25, 1458Izumo ProvinceDiedNovember 30, 1541(aged 82)ParentsAmago Kiyosada(尼子清定) (father)Maki Tomochika's daughter(真木朝親娘) (mother)Nickname(s)Matashirō (又四郎)Burial name:(興国院月叟省心大居士)Military serviceAllegiance Amago clanRankDaimyō (Lord)…

Nationalist private militia in Japan (1968–70) Tatenokai楯の會LeaderYukio MishimaDates of operation1968–1970Country JapanAllegiance Emperor of JapanIdeologyJapanese nationalismUltranationalism[1]TraditionalismAnti-communismMonarchismPolitical positionFar-rightSizeapprox. 90 The Tatenokai (楯の会, 楯の會) or Shield Society was a private militia in Japan dedicated to traditional Japanese values and veneration of the Emperor. It was founded and led by author Yukio Mis…

Kembali kehalaman sebelumnya