The Luxembourg Pavilion is one of the very few pavilions at EXPO 2020 Dubai with a Michelin-starred chef. Inspired and influenced by Luxembourg’s international community and diversity, he created a uniquely refined menu that allows you to enjoy modern Luxembourg on a plate. The idea of open borders is also reflected in the gastronomical creations by Michelin-starred Kim Kevin de Dood.
For those citizens who would need a travel permit, one single visa application (called the “Schengen_Visa”) is enough to travel within 26 countries.
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Signed on June 14th, 1985, the “Schengen Agreement” became the soil for the free and unrestricted movement of people within the Schengen Area. Idyllically located at the border triangle of Germany, France, and Luxembourg, the wine-making village of Schengen is a synonym to a zone where 26 European countries decided to abolish their internal frontiers. This broad gastronomy section of the Luxembourg Pavilion managed by the Michelin-starred chef Kim Kevin de Dood will showcase Luxembourg’s excellence in this field while reflecting its diversity. Visitors will be able to enjoy fusion cuisine from the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, influenced by flavors from all around the world as well as Luxembourg’s international community. He’s in love with both animals almost as much as he is with Juanita, and both get a song of their own the Buck Owens bounce of ‘Shamrock – Hot On The Trail’ and the heartfelt a capella of ‘Sam (Rest On High)’.Luxembourg Pavilion will be the home of a restaurant called Schengen Lounge during the EXPO 2020 DUBAI that takes place from 1st October 2021 – 31st March 2022 in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. He vows to track her down and bring her back home, taking his horse Shamrock and his dog Sam along for the ride.
But tragedy is never far away – only a few moments after we meet her, Dood’s true love Juanita is kidnapped. In his role of gravelly voiced narrator, Simpson relays the tale of the sharp-shooting Dood, the “son of a mountain miner and a Shawnee maid” – as we hear on ‘Ol’ Dood (Part I)’ – who fast falls in love with Juanita on the fiddle-assisted ‘One In The Saddle, One On The Ground’. Even the artwork, a roughly but warmly sketched scribble of a staunch-looking man, horse and hound, looks like the cover of a long lost John Steinbeck novel, neatly slotting Simpson into the tradition of great American storytellers. A concept album that tells the tale of a separated couple during the American Civil War, ‘The Ballad of Dood & Juanita’ even features a guest spot from one of the finest to ever do it, the 88-year-old Willie Nelson, on the elegiac track ‘Juanita’.įittingly, Simpson’s seventh album feels like something of the past, its meldings of traditional mountain music, gospel and Appalachian cowboy crooning stacked with echoes of Nelson’s iconic 1975 album ‘Red Headed Stranger’ – which told the story of a man on the run after shooting his wife and her lover – as well as moody anthems of Marty Robbins’ fabulously filmic 1959 release ‘Gunfighter Ballads and Trail Songs’. The prolific yet publicity-shy star’s latest release is less a chart-friendly collection of twanging country tunes and more a deft slice of sonic storytelling. Not many albums open with a minute-long gun-shot-riddled ‘Prologue’ accompanied by the sound of a whistling army on the march masquerading as a chorus line, but not many artists are Sturgill Simpson.