Shopping Cart
Marketing
Financing

Hades is a M(ONSTER)- Ariel/Hades

Hey guys! This is my audition for RisingDarknessStudios. This is a couple that I really like- so I went with it. For the first time, I FINALLY tried to use just one effect to make it all look uniform. So, that was fun. My apologies for the quick audio end. I played around with it and it didn’t really go anywhere. So I had to end it like that. So yeah. Enjoy!! Summary: Hades is the god of the Underworld and, as such, is not at all respected by any of the other gods, especially his brother Zesus. Alone and bored, he summons the Fates, who show him a young mermaid who is pining after a mortal prince. The stars are aligning, the Fates declare, which means that Hades can seal a deal with a mortal and grant one of their greatest wishes. The Fates help Hades concoct a plan that will seal the mermaid’s fate and make her his slave forever. Hades sends his minons to create a storm that catches Eric’s ship and deystroys it, causing Ariel to save him. He awakens to her voice but she leaves before he can see her face. Below, she pines more and more for him. Her aunt, Ursula, who is also Hades’s sister. She tricks Ariel into signing a contract that gives her three days of humanity (on the third day, the stars align). However, she cannot use her voice. She signs, not knowing that if Eric does not fall for her by the third day, she will be Hades servant forever. She appears on land, and Eric takes her to the castle, where she has dinner with him and begins to think that he loves her
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Uma Devi/Tun Tun She gave us music and she gave us mirth. Her career first as precocious crooner and then as Tun Tun, the comedienne is her undeniable legacy, one too short-lived, the other enduring and both immortal. Background Born Uma Devi Khatri in an obscure village in Uttar Pradesh, she lost both her parents at an early age. Raised by her uncle in a conservative Punjabi family, Uma was a tomboy much to the chagrin of her family. But her one enduring passion remained singing. With no formal training, she like many little children, picked up film songs from the radio. In a place and time when educating girls was a luxury and ambition in them was unheard of, Uma Devi showed remarkable spunk teaching herself to read and write Hindi along with a smattering of Urdu and English to help her singing career. At the age of 13, she boarded the train to Bombay to seek her future, challenge the voices she had imitated for years. Her first singing assignment came in Nazir’s Wamag Azra in ’47. But even earning a princely 200 rupees for a single number didn’t cloud her focus. She wanted to sing for Naushad Ali, with his distinctly refined brand of music. Nobody else mattered. For she believed and still does firmly that he was and remains the greatest composer. Break and Success After repeated requests to sing for the maestro, she was finally granted an audience. This intrepid 13 year old charmed the renowned composer with a rendition of Noorjehan’s classic, ‘Andhiyan Gham Ki Yun
Video Rating: 5 / 5