Top Five Things to Do in Moscow, Russia

Moscow, Russia one of the sleeping giants of travel !

Orginal post: Globetrotting Tips

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  1. Visit Gorky Park. The park itself which used to be a combination of lush gardens and church grounds is a great way to spend the day.
  2. Visit the Red Square. Originally the site of a cluster of wooden huts, the square itself is one of the most beautiful sites in the world and a traveler could spend several hours in the square taking in the sites.
  3. Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts. The Museum is a great spot to spend sometime. The complex itself comprises of 6 complexes and has numerous early to late period collections.
  4. The Kremlin. The Kremlin is vast and packed with interesting historical land marks, museums and cathedrals. A couple must sees include the great bell tower cathedral of consumption and the state armory.
  5. Visit Saint Basil’s Cathedral. Erected in 1555-1561 it is truly the geographic centre of Moscow and one of its most impressive structures.

The 10 Greatest Opera Houses

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Divas and dancers have long been the stuff of legend, but where they practice their art has no less of a history. Here, 10 of the best places to watch your favorite performers.

Paris Opéra

Built in 1875, the Palais Garnier lies in the heart of Paris on—where else?—Avenue de l’Opéra. A vivid example of the architectural excesses of Belle Époque baroque, it is today considered the archetypal opera house. But the Paris Opéra did not always charm. When it was new, the composer Claude Debussy opined that “outside it looks like a railway station; inside, like a Turkish bath.”

Once a year there is a grand défilé of the entire company and school of the Paris Opéra Ballet, whose origins date to the time of Louis XIV. The back wall of the stage is opened to reveal the foyer de la danse, a seemingly infinite cave illuminated by gilded Corinthian columns, where the dancers parade in hierarchic progression. It is a direct glimpse into the balletic world of Edgar Degas, and a view straight into the history of ballet.

Ticket buyers beware: Despite a recent renovation, many of the Palais Garnier’s sightlines are dreadful. Sometimes not even the most expensive seat in the house offers a full view of the stage. It’s possible to pay full price to see nothing but the hairdo of the woman in front of you.

Metropolitan Opera

“I am old, I am fat, and I am ugly,” the redoubtable coloratura goddess Luisa Tetrazzini was fond of saying, “but I am still Tetrazzini.” Sixties-suburban-shopping-mall moderne or not, the Met is still the Met. Its history (which predates Lincoln Center’s) transcends architecture, as do its current orchestra and chorus, superb acoustics, and audience-friendly sight lines. For more than 100 years, from Nellie Melba to Jessye Norman, from Caruso to Domingo, New York’s Met has been the top, the Mona Lisa, the Louvre Museum—the gold standard.

Sydney Opera House

For some travelers, Australia is beer-drinking, surfing, and “Waltzing Matilda.” For operaphiles, it’s the homeland of Nellie Melba and Joan Sutherland, two of the most compelling divas in the history of opera. Fittingly enough, it has one of the most dramatic opera houses in the world. Overlooking Sydney Harbour at Bennelong Point, like an armada under full sail, the Sydney Opera House holds an array of concerts, plays, operas, and ballets in its various halls.

War Memorial Opera House

This San Francisco house honors tradition (Sutherland, Renata Tebaldi), but celebrates the unfamiliar with specially commissioned works, including Dead Man Walking, to be produced during the company’s 2000-01 season.

Baby boomers may also recall that this is where Rudolf Nureyev and Margot Fonteyn danced that fateful night in 1968 when they were busted at a pot party in Haight-Ashbury. (The police reportedly discovered Fonteyn lying facedown on a rooftop in her white ermine coat. She vehemently denied it: “Ridiculous. I wouldn’t be caught dead lying down in my white ermine coat.”) A few days later, the Dynamic Duo—as the papers dubbed them—returned to perform Sleeping Beauty, and thousands of hippies from the Haight wound around the opera house in a snake dance to honor Fonteyn and Nureyev’s initiation into the Age of Aquarius.

Bass Performance Hall

The newest star in the opera-house firmament is Fort Worth’s Nancy Lee and Perry R. Bass Performance Hall, which opened last spring. Two giant, hand-carved trumpet-playing angels on the façade announce its welcome presence in the middle of downtown.

Although not actually called an opera house, it most assuredly is one, designed in the grand old manner: a horseshoe auditorium surmounted by a dome that appears to float over trompe l’oeil clouds. A mixture of Beaux-Arts and Vienna Secessionist styles, it houses the Fort Worth Dallas Ballet, the Fort Worth Opera, and the quadrennial Van Cliburn International Piano Competition.

Teatro alla Scala

Milan’s La Scala is the most famous opera house in the world, the temple of bel canto, the altar of high passions aroused by beautiful singing. Its acoustics are said to be perfect; few, if any, disagree. Statues of Rossini, Bellini, Donizetti, and Verdi preside over the Neoclassical foyer.

The auditorium holds some 2,000 people in four tiers of boxes and two balconies. The Scala Museum, one of the best of its kind, abounds in mementos of the theater’s past: costumes, capes, masks, and photographs belonging to Tebaldi, Callas, Zeffirelli, Toscanini.

The Bolshoi

Bolshoi means “big” in Russian. It is also the name of Moscow’s grand Greek Revival opera house, home to both a ballet and an opera company.

The auditorium, with perhaps half the capacity of the Metropolitan Opera, is at once intimate and awesome. Walls covered in ruby silk damask woven on custom-built looms surround plush velvet armchairs of the same color. The boxes and tiers are painted white, their bas-reliefs of acanthus leaves, lyres, and cherubs burnished with gold leaf.

Upstairs, a chandelier the size of Brazil presides over a gigantic parquet-floored room. A peripheral walkway of Oriental carpets guides visitors as they promenade at intermission, sipping Russian champagne and sampling Russian ice cream.

The Mariinsky Theater

With its pale, pale blue (some call it aquamarine; others, turquoise), silver, and gold interior, the theater, formerly known as the Kirov, is one of the jewels of St. Petersburg, a city of architectural jewels. Here danced Anna Pavlova, Vaslav Nijinsky, George Balanchine, Rudolf Nureyev, Mikhail Baryshnikov. A house museum celebrates their careers and a hundred others, including that of Tchaikovsky, whose Nutcracker and Sleeping Beauty were first presented here.

Vienna State Opera

The wine-red and gold Vienna State Opera house is one of the most lavishly appointed, decorated with sculptures, paintings, tapestries, and frescoes. The institution dates to the 17th century, but this particular auditorium, on Vienna’s Opernring, opened in 1869 with a performance of Mozart’sDon Giovanni—still the opera to see here.

This year the company began its celebration of the 150th anniversary of Johann Strauss’s death with a New Year’s Eve performance of Die Fledermaus (one of the hardest opera tickets to come by anywhere). Every February, a parquet dance floor is installed in the auditorium for the annual Opera Ball—and the orchestral accompaniment is by the Vienna Philharmonic.

Teatro Massimo

The Teatro Massimo of Palermo will be familiar to Francis Ford Coppola fans and opera lovers alike. It was on its very steps that the director staged the shooting of Sofia Coppola, who played the last Corleone don’s daughter in The Godfather, Part III.

A splendid specimen of Beaux-Arts style, the theater opened in 1897, 23 years after its construction had begun. Closed since the seventies for renovations, the theater was fully refurbished in time for the 1997 season.

The Teatro Massimo also has a summer locale, the Teatro di Verdura, an outdoor theater that seats 2,000. The setting is the garden of the 18th-century Villa Castelnuovo, filled with fountains and perfumed with jasmine vines. At sunset, a huge espalier of moonflowers intensely scents the air.

Original post found on Travel + Leisure

Bar BQ Café is blasting into the i-future

Some restaurants/bars are really embracing the i-future.  Next is a small story on a ber/restaurant in Moscow using iPad on every table.
Do you know other bar/Restaurants embracing the future, let us know and we post it here!

Restaurnt: Bar BQ Cafe, Moscow 
Original Post: The Moscow News

Bar BQ Café is blasting into the i-future with the introduction of its new high-tech ordering system. There is no need to fuss about with real, live waiters anymore – Bar BQ now has iPad menus at every table. Guests simply grab the technological marvel and choose from a list of dishes complete with photographs. The order is then transmitted through cyberspace directly to the kitchen. The pad will also inform of any specials on off er and allow guests to provide feedback on the food and service. What’s more, diners can also use the device to check their e-mail and surf the world wide web.

25 Pyatnitskaya Ul., 953 0012, m. Novokuznetskaya

7 Underground Wonders of the World: Labyrinths, Crypts, Catacombs and More

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What motivates humankind to burrow deep into the Earth? From London to Paris, Budapest to Moscow, the USA to Australia, here are seven of the most amazing examples in the world. Some were built for military defense or shelter, many are abandoned while others thrive. These amazing images feature tunnels, caverns, labyrinths from seven underground location around the world.

1. Paris, France

There are extensive networks of catacombs, quarries and other tunnels running under the capital of France. Some of these amazing photographs were taken by urban explorers who lit the scenes with candles, producing remarkable image effects. The other images show the work of Paris General of Police from the late 18th Century, when disease led the city to bury bones underground in unused quarries rather than risk further infection of the population.

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2. Moscow, Russia

This particular photographer is uniquely privileged, as an official government photographer, to take rare looks and snapshots of the myriad tunnels of all kinds running underneath Moscow. Clearly he does a great deal of post-production work, giving these images an air of surreality. Still, they are incredibly impressive and show a compelling range of locations.

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3. London, England, UK

The West Norwood Cemetery has a remarkable collection of historic monuments. Even more fascinating, however, are the catacombs below the chapel on site. As these images show, there is a remarkable collection of coffins in spaces of various sizes. The mahogany coffins have largely survived the test of time, while the pine ones have not fared quite as well. All in all, a beautiful collection, and largely left to wear naturally with time.

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4. Ozarks, Midwest

The Ozark mountain range is filled with caverns and mines that date back generations. They are perhaps most famous for being the site where Radium was discovered shortly after radioactive elements were beginning to be understood in Europe. These more recent explorers featured here have certainly shown dedication, bringing along a raft to use flooded areas.

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5. Budapest, Hungary

A labyrinth of caves and tunnels span for miles under Castle Hill. These are believed to date back many centuries and to have been created for military purposes, and were more recently used as an air-raid shelter during World War II. Visitors are now allowed on two kinds of tours: a flashlight tour and fully lit tour. The aged walls and arches are something to behold. (Images via Dheera dot Net)

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6. Orlando, Florida, Disneyworld

For a long time, mysteries circulated about tunnels underneath the so-called Magic Kingdom. As it turns out, the rumors were true: Disney World has an extensive system of underground passages used my employees to travel quickly and discreetly from place to place. These highly private tunnels are large enough to accommodate vehicles as well as pedestrians, and connect a series of offices, kitchens, cafeterias, storage and break rooms, which all lurk below the glittering facade of the world’s most famous theme park.

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7. Coober Pedy, Australia

This small town in the middle of nowhere, Australia, is home to some of the strangest houses on Earth. A combination of climactic conditions and the existence of opal mining in the region have literally driven the residents underground. Everything from residences to churches are carved out of the ground as the above images show. The place is something of a tourist attraction, with underground hotels as well as a golf course above ground – though golf is played at night due to the regional heat!

Post via http://weburbanist.com/

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