Place

Place may refer to:

Surname

  • Place (surname), people with the surname Place
  • Geography

  • Place (geography), an area with definite or indefinite boundaries or a portion of space which has a name in an area
  • Place (street name), implies a cul-de-sac
  • Place (United States Census Bureau), defined as any concentration of population
  • Census-designated place, a populated area lacking its own municipal government
  • Incorporated place, a populated area with its own municipal government
  • Populated place, a designation by the United States Geological Survey
  • Place, based on the Cornish word plas meaning Mansion
    • Place House, a 16th-century mansion largely remodelled in the 19th century, in Fowey, Cornwall
    • Prideaux Place, an Elizabethan mansion in Padstow, Cornwall
    • Place House, a 19th-century mansion on the site of a medieval priory, in St Anthony in Roseland, Cornwall
  • Places (Casiopea album)

    PLACES is the thirty-seventh album by the jazz fusion group Casiopea recorded and released in 2003.


    Track listing


    Personnel

    CASIOPEA are

    Supported


    Production

  • Sound Produced CASIOPEA
  • Supervisor Yoshinori Kumazawa, Masatomo Makino
  • Recording & Mixing Engineer Hiroyuki Shimura
  • Mastering Engineer Tohru Kotetsu
  • Assistant Engineer Makoto Okawa
  • Manipulator & Technician Yasushi Horiuchi
  • Drum Technician Mitsutaka Edagawa
  • Art Direction Ken Narikawa
  • Design Ken Narikawa, Kenge Kou
  • Cover & Booklet Photograph Coordination Takayuki Tanaka
  • Art Coordination Takashi Omoto
  • Cover Photograph CORBIS, Kozo Fukuoka, Toshi Sasaki, Hiroshi Suga, Brian Bailey
  • Booklet Photograph & Illustration WORLD PERSPECTIVE (1),
  • Kyuki Sera (2), Takashi Koike (3), Yoshihiro Naruse(1969) (4), Akira Jimbo (5), Paul Cunningham (6), Minoru Mukaiya (7), Yoshihiro Naruse(1965) (8), Minoru Mukaiya (9), Yoshihiro Naruse(1961) (10), Joseph Sohm (11), Takashi Sato (12)

  • CASIOPEA Photo Yoshiyuki Ito

  • Release history

    Places (Jan Garbarek album)

    Places is an album by the Norwegian saxophonist Jan Garbarek released on the ECM label and performed by Garbarek, John Taylor, Bill Connors, and Jack DeJohnette.

    Reception

    The Allmusic review by Scott Yanow awards the album 3 stars and states "A fairly sleepy ECM date... the music has plenty of space, is introspective, and often emphasizes long tones".

    Track listing

  • "Reflections" - 15:08
  • "Entering" - 7:56
  • "Going Places" - 14:16
  • "Passing" - 11:18
  • Recorded December 1977 at Talent Studio, Oslo
  • Personnel

  • Jan Garbarek - tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, alto saxophone
  • John Taylor - piano, organ
  • Bill Connors - guitar
  • Jack DeJohnette - drums
  • References

    Vivo

    Vivo may refer to:

    Computer and technology

  • vivo Electronics, a Chinese electronics manufacturer
  • Video-in video-out (VIVO), a graphics port which enables bidirectional analog video transfer
  • Vivo Software, streaming format, acquired in 1998 by RealNetworks
  • VivoActive, Vivo Software's video format
  • Vivo (telecommunications), a major Brazilian mobile phone company
  • Vivo Miles, an online school merit system where 'Vivos' can be traded for real-life objects, from pens to Xbox 360s
  • HTC Vivo, HTC's internal codename for the HTC Incredible S smartphone
  • Places

  • Vivo, Limpopo is a town in the far north of South Africa
  • VivoCity, the largest shopping mall in Singapore
  • Music and television

  • Al Rojo Vivo (Telemundo), a daily Spanish-language news program
  • En Vivo Marzo 16, a 1992 Franco De Vita album
  • Vivo (photography), a photographic collective
  • Vivo (Luis Miguel album), a 2000 Luis Miguel album
  • Vivo (Clã album), a 2005 album by the Portuguese band Clã
  • Vivo (Coda album), a 2006 album by Mexican band Coda
  • Vivo (Vico C album), 2001
  • Vivo (photography)

    Vivo was a short-lived Japanese photographic cooperative.

    Eikoh Hosoe, Kikuji Kawada, Ikkō Narahara, Akira Satō, Akira Tanno, and Shōmei Tōmatsu six of the participants of the celebrated 1957 exhibition Jūnin no me (10人の眼, Eyes of ten) formed the Vivo cooperative in July 1957, naming it after the Esperanto word for "life." They shared an office and darkroom in Higashi Ginza (Tokyo), marketing and distributing their own work. Kōtarō Iizawa terms their office "the epicenter of the 'image generation's' photographic expression," and the members' activities "a prime example" of the way Japanese photographers of the time "confronted head-on the transformation of modern Japanese society."

    The group disbanded in June 1961.

    Retrospectives have included a major exhibition at the Shadai Gallery.

    Notes

  • Within Japanese, this is normally written not in kana but in roman letters, in full capitals: "VIVO".
  • Kōtarō Iizawa, "The evolution of postwar photography" (chapter of Tucker et al., The History of Japanese Photography), pp. 217, 210.
  • Vivo (Vico C album)

    Vivo is a live album released by Puerto Rican singer Vico C.

    Track listing

  • "Introducción" - 1:21
  • "Cosa Nuestra de Barrio/Base y Fundamento" - 7:41
  • "El Filósofo: La Calle/En Coma/Sin Pena/La Recta Final" - 10:20
  • "Tony Presidio" - 3:49
  • "She Likes My Reggae" - 4:52
  • "Me Acuerdo" (feat. Lissy Estrella) - 8:01
  • "I Like/Baby Quiero Hacerlo" (feat. Lissy Estrella) - 8:46
  • "El Super Héroe" (Bonus Track) - 4:13

  • Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

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