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Folk camp vo.1

フォークキャンプ vo.1
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The three-man plan at LOFT HEAVEN and Daiki Ueno is decided! The self-planning of Ueno Daiki is semi-annual! Above all, it is an important plan, I think to try on a good day, I wait for a lot of people after a long time of self-planning! (Taiki Ueno) Taiki Ueno
s o t t o
New Year's Day

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OPEN 12:30 / START 13:00
¥ 2,500 ADV / DOOR ¥ 3,000

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Advance tickets are released from 2/9 (Sat) 10:00 in e +
chair seat (all seats free) / beverage ... another 600 ¥

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New Year's Day, also simply called New Year or New Year's, is observed on January 1, the first day of the year on the modern Gregorian calendar as well as the Julian calendar.
In pre-Christian Rome under the Julian calendar, the day was dedicated to Janus, god of gateways and beginnings, for whom January is also named. As a date in the Gregorian calendar of Christendom, New Year's Day liturgically marked the Feast of the Naming and Circumcision of Jesus, which is still observed as such in the Anglican Church and Lutheran Church.
In present day, with most countries now using the Gregorian calendar as their de facto calendar, New Year's Day is probably the most celebrated public holiday, often observed with fireworks at the stroke of midnight as the new year starts in each time zone. Other global New Year's Day traditions include making New Year's resolutions and calling one's friends and family.

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Mesopotamia (Iraq) instituted the concept of celebrating the new year in 2000  BC and celebrated new year around the time of the vernal equinox, in mid-March. The early Roman calendar designated March 1 as the first day of the year. The calendar had just ten months, beginning with March. That the new year once began with the month of March is still reflected in some of the names of the months. September through December, our ninth through twelfth months, were originally positioned as the seventh through tenth months. (Septem is Latin for "seven"; octo, "eight"; novem, "nine"; and decem, "ten".) Roman legend usually credited their second king Numa with the establishment of the months of Ianuarius and Februarius. These were first placed at the end of the year, but at some point came to be considered the first two months instead.

The January Kalends (Latin: Kalendae Ianuariae) came to be celebrated as the new year at some point after it became the day for the inaugurating new consuls in 153  BC. Romans had long dated their years by these consulships, rather than sequentially, and making the kalends of January start the new year aligned this dating. Still, private and religious celebrations around the March new year continued for some time and there is no consensus on the question of the timing for January 1's new status. Once it became the new year, however, it became a time for family gatherings and celebrations. A series of disasters, notably including the failed rebellion of M. Aemilius Lepidus in 78  BC, established a superstition against allowing Rome's market days to fall on the kalends of January and the pontiffs employed intercalation to avoid its occurrence.

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Hiroki Ueno (Hiroki Ueno, October 13, 1986) is a former professional baseball player (pitcher) from Adachi-ku, Tokyo. Right throw right hit. Former professional baseball player Takahisa Ueno is a brother.
Graduated from Teikyo High School to Toyo University. He had won only one game until the fall of 3rd, but was selected as a MVP at the 57th All Japan University Baseball Championship in 2008. Toto university league total 8 wins 3 losses.

Chiba Lotte Marines was named third at the 2008 draft conference and signed an agreement on December 19.

In 2009, he debuted as a middle pitcher to the July 3 game against Oryx Buffaloes (Chiba Marine Stadium). He scored his first victory in the Saitama Seibu Lions match against Seibu Dome on August 21 and scored one victory, one defeat and a defense ratio of 3.94 in 16 games per official game.

In 2010, he pitched seven games in one official match, but no one win was won.

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In 2011, the first military victory of the season in relief on July 9. When he stood on the first mound for the first time in the match against Fukuoka Softbank Hawks on the 17th of the same month, he scored a closed victory with six hits and four balls. After that, he pitched in 13 games while carrying one corner of the starting rotation. The season ended with 4 wins and 7 losses and a defense ratio of 3.55.

In 2013, it was reinstated as a middleman under the policy of Tsutomu Ito, who became director of a single army from this year. After the season's first player registration was held on April 6 right after the opening, the team recorded a defense ratio of 3.06 at the 42nd game of one official match (the first match).

In 2014, he won the match against Yokohama DeNA Bay Stars (Yokohama Stadium) 8 times on the 17th of June (2nd inning), and won a mid-season, following on from the previous year. In an official match, he won 2 games in 31 games, but after entering a pro, he got a record of 12 home runs.

In 2015, he boarded in two games of one official game. He won 1 win in a total of 2 innings, but received an outside force notification from the team on October 3. On November 10, he will join the 12 team joint try-out (Kusato Stadium) in a sheet batting style, but will take a third base from Naoki Takane, allowing all three batters in the match to hit and retiring on the same month 29 Expressed.

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Sotto voce ( , Italian: [ˈsotto ˈvoːtʃe] ; literally "under the voice") means intentionally lowering the volume of one's voice for emphasis. The speaker gives the impression of uttering involuntarily a truth which may surprise, shock, or offend. Galileo Galilei's (probably apocryphal) utterance "Eppur si muove" ("And yet [the Earth] moves"), spoken after recanting his heliocentric theory, is an example of sotto voce utterance.
In law, "sotto voce" on a transcript indicates a conversation heard below the hearing of the court reporter.

In drama, literature, and rhetoric, sotto voce is used to denote emphasis attained by lowering one's voice rather than raising it, similar to the effect provided by an aside. For example, in Chapter 4 of Jane Eyre, Charlotte Brontë uses the term sotto voce to describe Mrs. Reed's manner of speaking after arguing with Jane:

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In music, sotto voce is a dramatic lowering of the vocal or instrumental volume.

The Chœur d'Enfants Sotto Voce is a children's choir that resides at the Châtelet Theatre in Paris. They're known for their interpretations of all types of songs, ranging from Broadway to French classics to Jazz.

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This article uses material from the Wikipedia article "Tokyo", "Ueno Taiki", "s o t t o", "New Year's Day", which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0.
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