Tele

Tele may refer to:

  • Television
  • Tele (band), a German rock/pop band
  • Tele Ikuru, Deputy Governor of Rivers State
  • Télé, Mali, a rural commune of the Cercle of Goundam in the Tombouctou Region of Mali
  • Evening Telegraph (Dundee), a local newspaper in Dundee, Scotland
  • Fender Telecaster, a guitar
  • Lake Tele, Republic of the Congo
  • Telemark skiing, a style of skiing
  • Tiele people, an ancient Turkic tribal confederation
  • Tele (band)

    Tele is a German Rock/Pop-band from Freiburg (now Berlin).

    Band history

    Tele produced their debut album Tausend und ein Verdacht themselves in 2000 before being picked up by Tapete Records a couple years later. Their sound and style consisted of an Indie rock guitar sound, and they arranged their songs in a post rock way.

    The record company Tapete Records from Hamburg distributed their album in 2002 and published an EP with five new songs. Tapete Records published as well their second album Wovon sollen wir leben in 2004. This album contains mainly German pop songs with background stories in the texts. In the majority of cases the texts deal with the individual every day life, often with respect to their love affairs. Tele's music resembles that of the 1980s, but not necessarily in an intentional, retro-fashioned way. This is due to the use of keyboard-arrangements and synthesizer-wind instruments.

    For their third full-length LP, Wir brauchen nichts, Tele began experimenting with different sounds, taking inspiration from the 1940s, lullabies, and choir music. The album was produced by sound engineer Patrik Majer, who also arranged the productions for the band Wir sind Helden. Lead singer Fransceco Wilking featured on Wir sind Helden's third album Soundso, singing an exchange with Judith Holofernes. To date, Wir brauchen nichts is Tele's most commercially successful record due to the success of the single Mario, which Tele used to represent the state Baden-Württemberg at the Bundesvision Song Contest. The song ranked at number 10 after viewer votes.

    Vitali Teleš

    Vitali Teleš (born 17 October 1983 in Tallinn) is an Estonian footballer who plays for Estonian club JK Nõmme Kalju as a goalkeeper.

    Club career

    TVMK Tallinn

    After TVMK was disbanded Teleš was about to retire of professional football and return to TJK as an amateur, but then got a chance to play in Finnish Veikkausliiga for FF Jaro.

    FF Jaro

    He made his league debut for FF Jaro on 31 May 2009 in a 5–1 win against JJK.

    JK Nõmme Kalju

    On 23 January 2012, it was announced that Teleš had signed a one-year contract with JK Nõmme Kalju. He made the league debut for the club on 10 March 2012, in a goalless draw against city rivals FC Levadia Tallinn. In September 2012, he signed a new contract until the end of 2014 season. Teleš was one of three players to play every single minute of the 2012 league season, others being team-mate Ken Kallaste and JK Sillamäe Kalev goalkeeper Mihhail Starodubtsev. He repeated the feat in the next season.

    References

    External links

  • Vitali Teleš at Estonian Football Association (Estonian)
  • Drôme

    Drôme (French pronunciation: [dʁom]; Droma in Occitan, Drôma in Arpitan) is a department in southeastern France named after the Drôme River.

    History

    St Vallier in Drôme, was the birthplace of one of France's most famous courtesans, the noble-born Diane de Poitiers (1499-1566), long-term mistress of King Henri II (1547-1559).

    The French National Constituent Assembly set up Drôme as one of the original 83 departments of France on March 4, 1790, during the French Revolution. The territory formed part of the former French province of Dauphiné.

    Geography

    Drôme lies within the region of Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes and is surrounded by the departments of Ardèche, Isère, Hautes-Alpes, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence and Vaucluse.

    The boundaries of the department have changed several times with the incorporation of the Comtat Venaissin in 1792 and the creation of the department of Vaucluse in 1793. Drôme surrounds an exclave of the department of Vaucluse, the Canton of Valréas (Enclave des Papes).

    Climate

    Economy

    Drôme (disambiguation)

    Drôme can mean:

  • Drôme, a department of south east France
  • Drôme River, a left tributary of the Rhône which gave its name to the department
  • Drôme River, Normandy, a smaller left tributary of the Aure River in northern France
  • Drome (novel)

    Drome is a fantasy novel, written and illustrated by John Martin Leahy. It was first published in book form in 1952 by Fantasy Publishing Company, Inc. in an edition of 1,000 copies. The novel was originally serialized in the magazine Weird Tales in five parts beginning January 1927.

    Plot introduction

    Two explorers travel miles beneath Mount Rainier and discover a cavernous realm, filled with glowing mist, called Drome, which is home to a lost civilization and fantastic animals, including bat-apes, snake-cats, and tree-octopuses.

    Reception

    P. Schuyler Miller described the story as quaint by modern standards, but praised "its classical quotations, bolstering allusions to dubious science, and real warmth and humor."Everett F. Bleiler faulted the novel for doing little to explain its mysteries and for being "greatly padded with 'philosophy of life', quotations from various authorities scientific and philosophical, lists of great men, and exclamations and comments in Siwash."

    References

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Doledrum

    by: Las

    Oh no don't go down to Doledrum
    Oh no don't go down to Doledrum
    If you know what's good for you
    Then you know what you can do
    Just 'get up a fuss and shout'
    Get on the bus get out of Doledrum
    All my life goes by in Doledrum
    I'll see ninety-five in Doledrum
    I can't see much down for me
    I think I'll run away to see
    I'll just get on my coat and shout




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