Wow... What an amazing view of Atlanta from the eyes of your drone... Thank you for sharing this... BIG liked and subbed for you... have a wonderful weekend... 🤝🏼🤜🏻🤛🏻👍🏼
This is an utterly well usable view on central Atlanta. I did know the city to possess elegance, but I imagined it as larger, with a downtown stretching over an area as big as Manhattan or so. Now I see that Atlanta affords a different upside: a cityscape which altogether is a well-made, harmonious architectural composition in the spirit of a rounder, fairly rural silhouette one could associate with a big village or with a medium-sized town. Something like a bigger Phoenix. Its highrises shimmer most beautifully in the varying light of the day, I'm enraptured by how the video first presents them in pink and later in white, yellowish, and greenish hues. The music fits well apart from the volume of the deeper beats. These in probably unintentional hilarity let me think of the possibility that some of the vehicles shown could collide. It's unpleasant for me to see how the smallness of the cars contrasts with the acoustic scope of those permanent thuds. Nevertheless, in the end undisturbed by such disequilibrium the clip to me also reveals the most interesting trait of a certain similarity of the architecture to the big masterworks of the architecture of Arabia. I mean that simple geometric bodies (here: cuboids) have clear outlines and have surfaces which are ornamented flatly and regularly. Such a style could result from an African influence, perhaps from an influence of African music, especially given Atlanta's location in the south, or it could result from an influence of Jews. Anyhow, it lends Atlanta's downtown a surprisingly massive splendor, makes out of the city an urbanist jewel of worldwide significance. I'm enthusiastic about how the group of these buildings embodies the cosmopolitan trait of the USA of being a melting pot not only of races but of culture, as well. Seamlessly, there here comes along an own, higher level of sculptural design which certainly still is going to overwhelm with wonder the art historians of the millennia of the farther future. It's a clear continuation of the style of the sixties, largely the vision futurist writers have in the sixties depicted as the city to be expected at our time, but it's more. It's a most fruitful, colorful style, anything but sterile - as one could fear given how strongly geometric simplicity contributes. It's lively because it results from a conscious focus on beauty and on swing. Such a degree of open-mindedness perhaps has become possible in Atlanta because the region's dark past as an area of slave-holding has encouraged people to try for an improvement. One quality perhaps unconsciously taken over from such an oppressive historic background is the overall uniformity of the buildings. Even the archaizing towers shown from 5:26 do still share with several other, bigger skyscrapers (traits of) their pyramidal roofs, which enables them to altogether unexpectedly another time enrich the picture. I strongly dislike them, presuming in them late additions from the last years (although they certainly could be genuine sins from the years of the NYC Woolworth Building) and hoping that one will not have to see them too long, any more, but Atlanta without them could appear a little bland - a little too much like Dallas. Observing from a worm's eye the architecture of our culture, especially at stylistically heterogeneous places like Europe, one can fear that we lose the ability to build cities in a uniform style. The part of Atlanta here shown, regardless of how those Disneyland-like towers disrupt it, betrays that our world still has the capacity to produce a reliable stylistic uniformity in the types of its buildings, just like so many bygone epochs (ancient Egypt, ancient Greece, ancient Rome, the European Middle Ages, China with the swung roofs common there from the Tang Dynasty, Korea, Tibet, Indonesia, Russia, the Baroque, the Rococo, the classicist era after 1800, etc.) have had it. What is shown here looks remarkably clean - although the number of cars on their way, of course, tells you that you'll so far not breathe a too good air, in Atlanta: clean in the sense of a neat European creation which intuitively reminds me of the 1940s. This makes me suspicious as regards what goes on in the buildings, presuming quite some brutality within families especially exerted by fathers, but one can see the good sides of such a situation too, which here, after all, dominate and would hide bad sides dependably. It's just revealing how strongly the place embodies the anonymized US-American city, people being stored in cars that ubiquitously that one can assume them to live about as isolated as the inhabitants of a small settlement. Such ghastly a streak should perhaps be compared with how the houses of Pompeii lack windows to the streets.
Those deep beats are the signature sound of ATL my friend! The unique sound of Atlanta hip hop can now be heard in all genres of pop music around the world and it’s a testament to the city’s heritage and cultural influences!
@@Odysseyvisualmedia Okay, that may justify the usage of those beats in this video - but it could also be especially embarrassing to use them clumsily in a video on the city they come from. Would it be so terrible to have a video on Atlanta with other music? Or couldn't you find a sound file which has those beats in a somewhat lighter version? Perhaps it could also help to simply turn down the volume a little, or only to accompany passages of the video with those beats in which there aren't visible (so many) driving cars. Anyhow, I find it interesting that Atlanta, just like I presumed (without knowing anything about Atlanta hip hop), really is well known for a musical style which, in the end, has a similar character like the one conjured up through the somewhat cozy arrangement of geometric shapes in the dominant buildings of the city's downtown.
@@HansDunkelberg1My favorite thing about Atlanta's skyline is the Disneyland, pyramid shaped rooftops as you so ridiculously put it . Good luck with your boring box skyscrapers.
@@soulerflare7 Perhaps you have been surrounded by cuboid buildings more than I. I live in Europe, where box-shaped buildings often appear as a welcome variation. I do know the feeling of a lack of European variety and originality North America suffers from anyway, since I once have been taken to the USA and Canada.
Am I the only one that sees the beauty of traffic flowing through a city because it's like seeing the blood flowing through a body. I think Atlanta is in talks of covering up the interstate going through downtown which sounds boring.
The traffic is beautiful so long as you’re not stuck in it lol but you’re absolutely right I thinks it’s gorgeous !! Thanks for watching be sure to check out our channel for more incredible cityscape drone videos !!:)
Atlanta has "amazing" so much massive skyscrapers & amazingly new NHL expansion team: Atlanta Gladiators, not Flames and not Thrashers, too!🍑🍑🍑🍑🍑🍑🏙🏙🏙🏙🏙🏙🏒🏒🏒🏒🏒🏒
Wow... What an amazing view of Atlanta from the eyes of your drone... Thank you for sharing this... BIG liked and subbed for you... have a wonderful weekend... 🤝🏼🤜🏻🤛🏻👍🏼
Thanks for watching! More cool drone clips on our channel be sure to check them out!:)
Awesome
Thank you for watching!! More cool drone videos on our channel be sure to check them out!!!
This is an utterly well usable view on central Atlanta. I did know the city to possess elegance, but I imagined it as larger, with a downtown stretching over an area as big as Manhattan or so. Now I see that Atlanta affords a different upside: a cityscape which altogether is a well-made, harmonious architectural composition in the spirit of a rounder, fairly rural silhouette one could associate with a big village or with a medium-sized town. Something like a bigger Phoenix. Its highrises shimmer most beautifully in the varying light of the day, I'm enraptured by how the video first presents them in pink and later in white, yellowish, and greenish hues.
The music fits well apart from the volume of the deeper beats. These in probably unintentional hilarity let me think of the possibility that some of the vehicles shown could collide. It's unpleasant for me to see how the smallness of the cars contrasts with the acoustic scope of those permanent thuds.
Nevertheless, in the end undisturbed by such disequilibrium the clip to me also reveals the most interesting trait of a certain similarity of the architecture to the big masterworks of the architecture of Arabia. I mean that simple geometric bodies (here: cuboids) have clear outlines and have surfaces which are ornamented flatly and regularly. Such a style could result from an African influence, perhaps from an influence of African music, especially given Atlanta's location in the south, or it could result from an influence of Jews. Anyhow, it lends Atlanta's downtown a surprisingly massive splendor, makes out of the city an urbanist jewel of worldwide significance. I'm enthusiastic about how the group of these buildings embodies the cosmopolitan trait of the USA of being a melting pot not only of races but of culture, as well. Seamlessly, there here comes along an own, higher level of sculptural design which certainly still is going to overwhelm with wonder the art historians of the millennia of the farther future. It's a clear continuation of the style of the sixties, largely the vision futurist writers have in the sixties depicted as the city to be expected at our time, but it's more. It's a most fruitful, colorful style, anything but sterile - as one could fear given how strongly geometric simplicity contributes. It's lively because it results from a conscious focus on beauty and on swing.
Such a degree of open-mindedness perhaps has become possible in Atlanta because the region's dark past as an area of slave-holding has encouraged people to try for an improvement. One quality perhaps unconsciously taken over from such an oppressive historic background is the overall uniformity of the buildings. Even the archaizing towers shown from 5:26 do still share with several other, bigger skyscrapers (traits of) their pyramidal roofs, which enables them to altogether unexpectedly another time enrich the picture. I strongly dislike them, presuming in them late additions from the last years (although they certainly could be genuine sins from the years of the NYC Woolworth Building) and hoping that one will not have to see them too long, any more, but Atlanta without them could appear a little bland - a little too much like Dallas.
Observing from a worm's eye the architecture of our culture, especially at stylistically heterogeneous places like Europe, one can fear that we lose the ability to build cities in a uniform style. The part of Atlanta here shown, regardless of how those Disneyland-like towers disrupt it, betrays that our world still has the capacity to produce a reliable stylistic uniformity in the types of its buildings, just like so many bygone epochs (ancient Egypt, ancient Greece, ancient Rome, the European Middle Ages, China with the swung roofs common there from the Tang Dynasty, Korea, Tibet, Indonesia, Russia, the Baroque, the Rococo, the classicist era after 1800, etc.) have had it.
What is shown here looks remarkably clean - although the number of cars on their way, of course, tells you that you'll so far not breathe a too good air, in Atlanta: clean in the sense of a neat European creation which intuitively reminds me of the 1940s. This makes me suspicious as regards what goes on in the buildings, presuming quite some brutality within families especially exerted by fathers, but one can see the good sides of such a situation too, which here, after all, dominate and would hide bad sides dependably. It's just revealing how strongly the place embodies the anonymized US-American city, people being stored in cars that ubiquitously that one can assume them to live about as isolated as the inhabitants of a small settlement. Such ghastly a streak should perhaps be compared with how the houses of Pompeii lack windows to the streets.
Those deep beats are the signature sound of ATL my friend! The unique sound of Atlanta hip hop can now be heard in all genres of pop music around the world and it’s a testament to the city’s heritage and cultural influences!
@@Odysseyvisualmedia Okay, that may justify the usage of those beats in this video - but it could also be especially embarrassing to use them clumsily in a video on the city they come from. Would it be so terrible to have a video on Atlanta with other music? Or couldn't you find a sound file which has those beats in a somewhat lighter version? Perhaps it could also help to simply turn down the volume a little, or only to accompany passages of the video with those beats in which there aren't visible (so many) driving cars.
Anyhow, I find it interesting that Atlanta, just like I presumed (without knowing anything about Atlanta hip hop), really is well known for a musical style which, in the end, has a similar character like the one conjured up through the somewhat cozy arrangement of geometric shapes in the dominant buildings of the city's downtown.
@@HansDunkelberg1My favorite thing about Atlanta's skyline is the Disneyland, pyramid shaped rooftops as you so ridiculously put it . Good luck with your boring box skyscrapers.
@@soulerflare7 Perhaps you have been surrounded by cuboid buildings more than I. I live in Europe, where box-shaped buildings often appear as a welcome variation. I do know the feeling of a lack of European variety and originality North America suffers from anyway, since I once have been taken to the USA and Canada.
@@HansDunkelberg1 London has beautiful highrises, I will give you that .
Why do people like Atlanta
Amazing food amazing music amazing people ;) thanks for watching!
@@Odysseyvisualmedia What is the amazing food one can obtain in Atlanta? I'm curious, after having been disappointed by the food of the USA in 1995.
Am I the only one that sees the beauty of traffic flowing through a city because it's like seeing the blood flowing through a body. I think Atlanta is in talks of covering up the interstate going through downtown which sounds boring.
The traffic is beautiful so long as you’re not stuck in it lol but you’re absolutely right I thinks it’s gorgeous !! Thanks for watching be sure to check out our channel for more incredible cityscape drone videos !!:)
Atlanta has "amazing" so much massive skyscrapers & amazingly new NHL expansion team: Atlanta Gladiators, not Flames and not Thrashers, too!🍑🍑🍑🍑🍑🍑🏙🏙🏙🏙🏙🏙🏒🏒🏒🏒🏒🏒
You're awesome!! I can't wait to go back and we'll try to catch a game! Thank you for watching!!