Some of the best trance tracks i have.Enjoy them Click here for high quality audio and vieo Click http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HndbHK4RzsQ&fmt=181.Aly &Fila Vs Fkn Ft. Jahala-How Long (Original Mix)2.Atmin Van Buuren-If You Should Go feat Susana (Inpetto And Duderstadt Remix)3.Armin Van Buuren-Serenity (Radio Edit)4.Bissen And The Crossover-Quicksand (Joint Operations Centre Remix)5.Cascada-Everytime We Touch (Remix)6.Dave202-Louvre (Original Mix)7.Atlantix; Avitar-Fiji (Lange Remix)8.Ocean Lab-Satellite (Original Above &Beyond Mix)9.Neo Cortex-Storm Of Light10.Marcella Woods; Matt Darey-Beautiful [ More Detail ]
Jan 15 - German academics think they've solved the mystery behind the identity of the "Mona Lisa" in Leonardo da Vinci's famous portrait.For centuries, art historians and fans of the painting have wondered who the smiling woman really was, with some suggesting she could have been da Vinci's lover, or even his mother.But Armin Schlechter, a manuscript expert from Heidelberg University, has found notes scribbled in a book dating from 1503 which he says have cracked the code and firmly link Lisa Gherardini, the wife of Francesco del Giocondo, to the painting also known as "La Gioconda".Joanna Partridge reports. For centuries - her smile has fascinated and intrigued.And the real identity of the "Mona Lisa" in Leonardo da Vinci's famous painting has also been a mystery - as art historians have wondered whether she could even have been the artist's mother, or his lover.But German academics at the University of Heidelberg say they have cracked the code.Armin Schlechter, a manuscript expert, discovered some notes scribbled in the margin of this book that once belonged to an acquaintance of da Vinci.These notes were made in an edition of letters by Cicero in October 1503 - and say the artist was working on three paintings at the time, including a a portrait of Lisa del Giocondo. SOUNDBITE: Armin Schlechter, Manuscript expert, saying (German):"This is the earliest mention of the fact that Leonardo da Vinci painted a picture which portrays a certain woman called Lisa del Giocondo. People have guessed that he was working on this picture in 1503."The suggestion that Lisa Gherardini, the wife of Francesco del Giocondo, a wealthy merchant from Florence, could be the smiling woman is nothing new. The painting - which hangs in the Louvre in Paris - is also known as "La Gioconda" which refers to her name but also means happy, or smiling, woman in Italian. Art experts, who have already dated the painting to the start of the sixteenth century, have described the Heidelberg discovery as a breakthrough.Schlechter actually found the notes two years ago and although they were printed in Heidelberg library's public catalogue, they hadn't received much attention until recently.But while the Mona Lisa's identity may have been solved, the mystery behind that smile is unlikely to be cracked any time soon. [ More Detail ]