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Thomson Spirit marsiglia 31/10/2009

Thomson Spirit is your home away from home. Every little detail, from the sumptuous cuisine to the sizzling entertainment, has been tailor-made with you in mind. Spacious, stylish and sociable, the ship is your gateway to a dazzling world of choice. Standard cabin or designer suite? Foot-tapping razzmatazz or classical recital? The Captain’s Cocktail Party or a cosmpolitan or two in the cocktail bar? Whatever you decide, it’s all there waiting for you. Tonnage 33930 GRT Length 214.66 m Beam (width) 27.26 m Speed 18 knots Decks 9 Lifts 7 Cabins 627 Cruise passengers 1254 Crew and staff 520 Electrical current 110/120v AC Registry Cyprus

Spirit of Jamaica

The Jamaican Spirit comes through loud and clear in this song.

Joachim Raff – Piano Suite No. 4 in D Minor Op. 91 (1859)

Piano Suite No. 4 by Joachim Raff. Performed by Andrea Carnevali. I. Fantasia – 00:00 II. Giga con Variazioni – 13:33 III. Cavatina – 26:13 IV. Marcia – 34:58 Although generally regarded for most of his career as a progressive musician, Raff was also a pioneer in the rediscovery of the old baroque musical forms such as the fugue, gigue and the canon. He used them frequently in his own compositions, often grouping them into suites of which he wrote no less than 17 for various instrumental forces. Indeed, along with Franz Lachner, Raff can be credited with the reintroduction of the suite as a musical form. Raff’s suites, in whatever medium, are generally unlike the random collections of lightweight pieces which later gave the genre a bad name. A typical Raff suite not only comprises, in the spirit of its baroque heritage, five or six gigues, gavottes, fugues and marches but they are usually substantial movements and the baroque form is no archaic throwback but rather Raff’s modern interpretation of the old form, suffused with romantic melody and harmonies. Raff wrote seven suites for solo piano but never numbered them. The D minor op.91 is chronologically the fourth, being written in Wiesbaden in 1859 during a very happy and productive time for Raff (he married in the same year).The work was published in 1862 and is dedicated to Liszt’s daughter Cosima, then married to Raff’s great friend Hans von Bülow whom she later left for Wagner. With the G minor Suite which follows it