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  1. Gaia Symphony IV: Directed by Jin Tatsumura. With Jane Goodall, Gerry Lopez, James Lovelock, Bokunen Naka. The 4th entry in the Gaia Symphony documentary series, which continuously present the philosophy and the way of life of a few extraordinary individuals around the world.

    • Jin Tatsumura
    • 2001
    • Documentary
    • 135
  2. There’s nothing anodyne or clichéd about Pickard’s take on the triumphs and adversities of manned flight; endlessly inventive and pleasingly propulsive Icarus is a good launch pad from which to explore this composer’s oeuvre; it helps, too, that the Norrköping orchestra play with such brio and bite.

  3. The Gaia Symphony was indeed composed for the Cory Band from the Rhondda Valley in South Wales during the period when Pickard was their composer-in-residence. The four movements which comprise the symphony were originally written and performed separately.

  4. All about Movie: directors and actors, reviews and ratings, trailers, stills, backstage. Jane Goodall, Gerry Lopez, James Lovelock, Bokunen Naka...Documentary.

  5. Gaia Symphony is a documentary film series directed by Jin Tatsumura. The series revolves around the Gaia hypothesis. The series has nine episodes. Each episode examines a small number of extraordinary people who somehow relate to the central theme.

    • Japan
    • 1992 –, 2021
    • 9
  6. www.gaiasymphony.com › bu › co_guide4-eGaia Symphony No.4

    Sparked by his theory, the Gaia Symphony film series started in 1989, and this section finally features Lovelock himself. His theory has not only galvanized other scholars of geophysics and bioscience, but also became the theoretical pillar of the environmental movement in the 20th century, contributing greatly to the spiritual awakening of the ...

  7. Gaia Symphony the percussion section is vastly expanded and requires no fewer than six players. Bands of this type flourish in most Anglophone countries, as well as in Hol - land, Belgium, Norway and a number of other countries, including Japan. The origins of the medium, first military, then later associated with the patronage of