Alice Lion

Alice Lion Poems

here i sit
at my desk
what do i write?
in my suicide note
...

All I got to my name,
Is my music
It's all i ever am
and all i will be
...

O how I wept
O how I cried
when you left
I died, inside
...

why is it me?
Always Me!
that misery visits
...

It's all a big circle
around around around
spinning in circles
...

So light, Soft and red
lay silently unmoving on the ground
so beautiful and delicate
...

BEFORE I write this, I take absolutly NO CREDIT fo this poem! ! My Friend wrote it and I want to share with the world What she can do. People think that all she is is a pretty face, a good dancer and a straight A student, but she's not. she's more than that! ! ! ALSO i would like to say that she told me that she had NO idea that this is like a New Moon thing! LOVE U BRI-BEE! ! !
-------------------------
I'm running, Falling, Running, Crying, Falling.
I'm searching for-
...

Sweet words whispered
take away all the fear
This is my lullaby
...

I sit all alone
in my room I shall cry
writng and weeping all the day
...

can you hear it now?
can you feel it's cool caress on your skin?
it's silently blowing throw the trees,
it's blowing my hair around in the air,
...

11.

can you feel the drops?
the soft wet drops?
look there's more!
and more!
...

here she rests all the day
in her room in the attic
tonight she walks
...

Alice Lion Biography

Paul (Zion) Brodie. Born: April 10th 1934, Montreal Quebec. Died: November 19th 2007 (73) , Toronto Ontario. Paul Brodie started off learning clarinet in high school, and played in the Regina Lions Junior Band. He went on to Study saxophone in 1953-1959, in Paris, and made his New York Debut at Town hall in 1960. He taught woodwinds from 1959-1960 at the Royal Conservatory of Music. In 1961, he founded the Brodie School of Music and Modern dance, and was the director until the school closed in 1979. From 1968-1973, he taught at the University of Toronto, and started teaching at York University in 1982. In 1994, Brodie was made an Officer of the order of Canada, Canada’s highest civilian honour. For having shown “True mastery of his art through his ability to reach all ages with his music.” Since 1960, he has performed over 2500 concerts in Canada, Us, Mexico, France England, India, Singapore, Hong Kong, Philippines, Australia, China, Italy, Scotland, Russia, and Argentina. He is considered to be one of the most recorded saxophonists in the history of the instrument, with over 50 recorded albums. Adrianne Honnold. “My teaching philosophy is that if you can dream it, you can do it. Kind of cliché, I know, but I was able to achieve several of my music goals by first setting them, and then working really hard to realize those goals. I try to instil the same kind of dedication, passion and work ethic in all my students.” Adrianne Honnold received her Bachelor of Music Education in 1998 from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and a Master of Saxophone from the same institute in 2005. She is a former member of the United States Air Force Heritage of America Band and Rhythm in Blue Jazz Ensemble, located at Langley Air Force base in Virginia, where she was the principal saxophonist in the concert band, and was a featured concerto soloist 3 times. Honnold has been performing regularly with the Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra (SLSO) Since 2004. Additionally, she has performed twice with the Opera Theatre of Saint Louis. She has been a member of the North America Saxophone Alliance (NASA) since 1994, and has been a featured performer at various biennial and regional NASA conferences. Embouchure for Saxophone. I found many things describing embouchure, and explaining where the word came from (Boucher being French for mouth) But the simplest explanation I could find, was: “Bite down on half of your lower lip. That’s about how much of your lip should be covering your bottom teeth. Now, Put the mouthpiece (with the reed) In your mouth, keeping your lip the way it was before. There’s a half moon shape on the reed, and your bottom lip shouldn’t go past that. Now bite the mouthpiece (not hard) That’s generally the proper embouchure. Your teeth should never come in contact with the reed while playing. Saxophone embouchure is very similar to that of clarinet embouchure, just not quite as tight.” Stacey Hoggarth Tenor Saxophone- 2011. Stacey Hoggarth. Track 1: Rolling In The Deep (Adele) Tenor sax, Track 2: Allegro Appassionato, St. Saens. Track 3: Ambassador, Paul Brodie. Track 4: Andante & Bouree, Lawrence Wang. (Pretty bad quality, I apologize. I thought it was better when it was recorded.) Track 5: La Cinquantain, Paul Brodie. Track 6: Billie Jean (Michael Jackson) Tenor sax. Track 7: Serenade (Franz Schubert) Track 8: Single Solo de Concert.)

The Best Poem Of Alice Lion

Suicide Note

here i sit
at my desk
what do i write?
in my suicide note

now that you're dead,
I have no reason to live
what do I write
in my suicide note

the days are so much longer
the night so short
it would bring me to you
in my suicide note

no why bother?
nowone would care
you would want me to live
but I can't
In my suicide note

in my suicide note...
____________________________________________________
hey evry1 its Alice! I do, sadly think about suicide now and again.But don't worry! Im to chicken to actually kill myself! I am emo though so.........BEWARE! (//_^) Emo kid waz here...

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