뉴욕 필하모니 역사적인 평양 공연
NBC News Headline
On the broadcast here tonight. Tough talk. New numbers showing Hillary Clinton losing ground nationally while turning up the heat on ~에의 압력을 강화하다 Obama here in Ohio. And our series, where they stand. Tonight, all the major candidates on the American economy. Leap of faith. A fascinating new report out tonight about religion in this country and some surprising choices Americans are making.
Hormone replacement. Health news of importance to women who are weighing the risk. And for sale. It’s been called the most famous sign in the world, but there are new fears about what might happen to the view. Nightly News begins now. This is NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams.
뉴욕 필하모니 역사적인 평양 공연
There is another extraordinarily 이례적으로 rare mission underway tonight. For the first time ever, an American orchestra has been given permission to play its music in one of the most secretive, isolated 고립된 nations on the face of the earth, North Korea. NBC’s Ian Williams is along for the journey with the New York Philharmonic.
The philharmonic arrived on a gray freezing afternoon. A cultural icon of one of the world’s most vibrant 활기 넘치는 cities stepping foot in one of the most isolated places on earth. The concert here arranged last year comes as nuclear talks are stalled <말로 얼버무려> ~을 연기하다. “We make music. What they do afterwards behind closed doors 비밀리에, 비공개로 is up to the politicians and the diplomats.”
At a banquet 연회 tonight, one of the orchestra’s Korean American violinists whose grandparents hail from ~태생인 the north summed up ~의 요점을 간략하게 말하다 this surreal 초현실적인 day. “It was a little bit apprehensive 염려하는 and a little nervous, getting on the plane and getting over here. But once I arrived, I think it’s awesome.” Tuesday will be their turn to perform in an electricity-starved city where they’ve even lit up the buildings for the visit. Ian Williams, NBC News,