CD Album Shock | Williams Gareth – JazzPianoDoc

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DVD London November 2004 recital | Debut EDO – European Doctors Orchestra

DVD London November 2004 recital | Debut EDO – European Doctors Orchestra

https://DoctorsTalents.com/en/european-doctors-orchestra-2

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CD Compositions 1979-2014 | Neil Milliken

CD Compositions 1979-2014 | Neil Milliken


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MMOC – Manchester Medical Orchestra & Choir

Manchester Medical Orchestra & Choir – MMOC

Entry facebook: We rehearse weekly towards termly concerts to raise money for medical charities and play/sing a wide range of music, be it classical or contemporary. Both our orchestra and choir are non-auditioned and we welcome musicians of all standards and backgrounds. Our rehearsals are on Monday evenings in Stopford common room. Choir – 6:30pm – 8:00pm Orchestra – 8:00pm – 9:30pm

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Jonathan Palmer

Jonathan Charles Palmer (born 7 November 1956) is a British businessman and former Formula One racing driver. Before opting for a career in motor racing, Palmer trained as a physician at London’s Guy’s Hospital. He also worked as a junior physician at Cuckfield and Brighton hospitals.

He is currently the majority shareholder and Chief Executive of MotorSport Vision (MSV), a company that runs six UK motorsport circuits, the PalmerSport corporate driving event at Bedford Autodrome and several racing championships including British Superbikes and GB3.[3]

Prior to his business life, Palmer was active in Formula One between 1983 and 1989, and drove for TyrrellWilliamsRAM, and Zakspeed. He won 14 Championship points from 83 starts. He also raced a Group C Porsche in sports car events between 1983 and 1990, winning the 1984 1000 km of Brands Hatch with co-driver Jan Lammers and taking second place at the 1985 24 Hours of Le Mans with co-drivers James Weaver and Richard Lloyd.

Palmer helped develop the McLaren F1 road car, and drove one to a new speed record for production cars.

Following his education at Brighton College, Palmer raced an Austin Healey Sprite and a Marcos in club events while he was a medical student at Guy’s Hospital.[4] He went on to work as a doctor at Cuckfield and Brighton hospitals, and opted for a professional driving career after he had participated in Formula Ford from 1978 to 1980. He won the British Formula 3 Championship in 1981,[5] and landed a Williams Formula One test drive in 1982. The following year he won the European Formula Two Championship, and the British Racing Drivers’ Club awarded him their Gold Star.

Palmer joined Williams as a test driver for the 1982 and 1983 seasons whilst racing in F2, and made his Formula One debut at Brands Hatch on 25 September 1983, driving a Williams in the European Grand Prix. This drive was a ‘thank you’ from Frank Williams and Patrick Head. He finished 13th out of 26 starters. Moving to the Skoal Bandit RAM March team in 1984, his six finishes yielded one 8th place, three 9th, one 10th, and one 13th. He joined Zakspeed in 1985, starting in eight races and retiring from all except the 1985 Detroit Grand Prix, where he finished 11th. Sixteen starts with the same team in 1986 resulted in eight retirements and a best finish of 8th in Detroit.

In 1987, Palmer talked with McLaren boss Ron Dennis about becoming the team’s No. 2 driver to double World Champion Alain Prost. Dennis ultimately signed Stefan Johansson, and Palmer joined Tyrrell a week before the season’s opening race in Brazil. Although outpaced by its turbocharged competitors, Tyrrell’s naturally-aspirated Cosworth-powered car proved reliable, and it was nimble on tighter circuits. Palmer won championship points in three races, and it was in the Australian Grand Prix that he achieved his career-best fourth-place finish. He also won the Jim Clark Cup, a championship for drivers of normally aspirated cars. He stayed with Tyrrell for the next two seasons, during which his best results were two 5th-place finishes and three 6th. At the end of 1989 he signed as McLaren’s test driver.

Web Palmer Sport

audio report Palmer

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Basha Mukherjee

Mukherjee was born in India and her family relocated to the UK when she was nine. She went onto complete two bachelor degrees; one in medical sciences and one in medicine and surgery from the University of Nottingham.

Präsentation + Interview

As winner of Miss England, she will be entered into the Miss World contest 2019 and will also bag a holiday to Mauritius.

Ihr Benefizprojekt ist THE GENERATION BRIDGE PROJECT

She practises Martial Arts

Awards and achievements
Preceded by Alisha CowieMiss England
2019
Succeeded by Rehema Muthamia

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Artikel | article STERN

Artikel | article EXPRESS


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Carina Tyrrell

Dr. Carina Tyrrell (born 24 October 1989) is a British-Swiss public healthphysician,[1]investor,[2] and philanthropist who is a former Miss England and Miss United Kingdom. Tyrrell graduated from the University of Cambridge with first-class honours,[3] featured on the front page of The Times for her work to deliver the Oxford–AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine,[4] and is known for making international news for being the first woman from one of the world’s top universities, to participate in Miss World where she was in the top 5, and where another med student Rolene Strauss (presented on this web site) got the title.

A British-Swiss public health physician, she´s a healthcare and technology investor – formerly working at Goldman Sachs, and as an Investor and Chief of Staff to the former President of Samsung. She is committed to reducing health inequalities, enhancing access to care, and improving the quality of healthcare for patients and the population. She´s engaged in supporting populations to overcome the effects of COVID-19 as a research scientist at Cambridge University, where her research has focused on COVID-19 antibody detection and identifying COVID-19 vaccine and therapeutic trials.

  • Miss Cambridgeshire
  • Miss England
  • Miss United Kingdom
  • Top 5 Miss World 2014

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Nadey Hakim

Nadey Hakim is a multi-talent: He is clarinet player and sculpturist, his specialty are sculptures of prominent people which made him very well-known.

Skulpturen | sculptures

google-search many sculptures

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MAS – Medical Art Society

The Medical Art Society, founded in 1935, exists for doctors, dentists, veterinary surgeons, and recently all fully accredited healthcare professionals, whether working, retired or students, who enjoy drawing, painting and sculpture.

It is based in the UK, but welcomes medical artists living abroad as members and has links with similar medical art societies in other countries.

The Society’s programme includes lectures by well known artists, visits to studios and galleries, life drawing sessions, painting days and weekends, short breaks in UK and abroad, occasional conferences and always an Annual Exhibition .

The MAS is administered by its Officers and Committee. There is no joining fee and the annual MAS subscription is low.

Opening of the yearly exhibition 2023

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Boyd Neel

Category : conductorDocs

Louis Boyd NeelO.C. (19 July 1905 – 30 September 1981) was an English, and later Canadian conductor and academic. He was Dean of the Royal Conservatory of Music at the University of Toronto. Neel founded and conducted chamber orchestras, and contributed to the revival of interest in baroque music and in the 19th and 20th Century string orchestra repertoire.

Neel was born in Blackheath, London, and wanted to be a pianist as a child.[2] His mother, Ruby Le Couteur, was a professional accompanist, and his father was an engineer.[3]

Neel attended Osborne Naval College and then Dartmouth, and was commissioned in the Royal Navy. Soon after he was commissioned, the armed forces underwent a drastic reduction (the so-called ‘Geddes Axe‘), and Neel left the navy to study medicine at Caius CollegeCambridge. He qualified in 1930, and became House Surgeon and Physician at Saint George’s Hospital, London, and Resident Doctor at King Edward VII’s Hospital, London.[4][5]

In 1930, while practising medicine, Neel studied music theory and orchestration at the Guildhall School of Music.[6]

For Neel, at this stage, music was still a hobby. He conducted amateur groups and formed an orchestra of young professionals, whom he recruited in 1932 from the Royal Academy of Music and the Royal College of Music.[7] The Boyd Neel London String Orchestra (later the Boyd Neel Orchestra) made its debut at the Aeolian Hall, London, on 22 June 1933. The programme included the first performance in England of Respighi’s Suite of Ancient Airs and Dances and the premiere of a new suite by occasional composer Julian Herbage. After the concert, Neel returned to his surgery and delivered a baby.[8] The second concert, at the same venue, took place on 24 November 1933, and included the first performance in England of the Serenade for Strings by Wolf-Ferrari. On 18 December 1933 the orchestra was invited to broadcast by the BBC for the first time.[9] When Decca offered Neel and the orchestra a contract, he left medicine to devote himself full-time to music.[4]

On 16 February 1934 the orchestra performed a concert of chamber works by Ernest Bloch at the Aeolian Hall, conducted by the composer.[10] Neel conducted the first music heard in the new Glyndebourne opera house in 1934, in private performances, at John Christie‘s invitation.[4] Among the Boyd Neel Orchestra’s early releases in 1936 were the first recordings of Vaughan Williams’s Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis and Britten’s Simple Symphony.[11] The following year, Neel and his orchestra were invited to the Salzburg Festival, for which Neel commissioned Britten’s Variations on a Theme of Frank Bridge.[4] In 1939 Boyd Neel commissioned John Ireland‘s three movement Concertino Pastorale for string orchestra, first played at the Canterbury Festival on 14 June 1939. It was subsequently recorded in February 1940.[12] The orchestra toured Great Britain and Europe until the outbreak of war.[13][14]

Boyd Neel Orchestra

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