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Many blessings to you from the Irish & Celtic Music Podcast #647. Seán Heely, Faoileán, Olivia Bradley, Ben Doran, Mànran, Beltaine, Hanneke Cassel, Irishtown Road, Blame Not the Bard, Strings & Things, Brian Quigley, Screaming Orphans, Low Lily GET CELTIC MUSIC NEWS IN YOUR INBOX The Celtic Music Magazine is a quick and easy way to plug yourself into more great Celtic culture. Enjoy seven weekly news items for Celtic music and culture online. Subscribe now and get 34 Celtic MP3s for Free. VOTE IN THE CELTIC TOP 20 FOR 2024 This is our way of finding the best songs and artists each year. You can vote for as many songs and tunes that inspire you in each episode. Your vote helps me create next year's Best Celtic music of 2024 episode. You have just three weeks to vote this year. Vote Now! You can follow our playlist on Spotify to listen to those top voted tracks as they are added every 2 - 3 weeks. It also makes it easier for you to add these artists to your own playlists. You can also check out our Irish & Celtic Music Videos THIS WEEK IN CELTIC MUSIC 0:02 - Intro: Emily Huffman 0:10 - Seán Heely "The Dram Circle / Quarantune / The E - B - E Reel" from Dramagical 6:45 - WELCOME 8:26 - Faoileán "The Coalminer" from Far Hills 11:12 - Olivia Bradley "A Gaelic Blessing" from Misty Morning Shore 13:00 - Ben Doran "Medley: i For Ireland, I'll Not Tell Her Name; ii Marbhna Luimni; iii Cradle Song" from Ceol an Chroi II 23:51 - Mànran "Latha Math" from Mànran 27:16 - FEEDBACK 29:10 - Beltaine "I'm A Rover" from Mercy 32:11 - Hanneke Cassel "Lime Hill / Banks of Spey / Lexy McAskill" from Dot the Dragon's Eyes 36:39 - Irishtown Road "Rattlin' Bog" from On the One Road 42:23 - THANKS 44:41 - Blame Not the Bard "My Son John / Follow Me up to Carlow" from Now and Again 55:24 - Strings & Things "Hurtful Souls" from The Unsolicited Dance 59:34 - Brian Quigley "Lilacs in Springtime" from Tales of Distant Shores 1:02:59 - Screaming Orphans "The Limerick Rake" from Paper Daisies 1:06:19 - CLOSING 1:07:28 - Low Lily "Adventurer" from Low Lily (EP) 1:12:21 - CREDITS The Irish & Celtic Music Podcast was produced by Marc Gunn, The Celtfather and our Patrons on Patreon. The show was edited by Mitchell Petersen with Graphics by Miranda Nelson Designs. Visit our website to follow the show. You'll find links to all of the artists played in this episode. Todd Wiley is the editor of the Celtic Music Magazine. Subscribe to get 34 Celtic MP3s for Free. Plus, you'll get 7 weekly news items about what's happening with Celtic music and culture online. Best of all, you will connect with your Celtic heritage. Please tell one friend about this podcast. Word of mouth is the absolute best way to support any creative endeavor. Finally, remember. Reduce, reuse, recycle, and think about how you can make a positive impact on your environment. Promote Celtic culture through music at http://celticmusicpodcast.com/. WELCOME THE IRISH & CELTIC MUSIC PODCAST * Helping you celebrate Celtic culture through music. I am Marc Gunn. This podcast is here to build a diverse Celtic community and help the incredible artists who so generously share their music with you. If you hear music you love, please email artists to let them know you heard them on the Irish and Celtic Music Podcast. Musicians depend on your generosity to keep making music. So please find a way to support them. Buy a CD, Album Pin, Shirt, Digital Download, or join their communities on Patreon. You can find a link to all of the artists in the shownotes, along with show times, when you visit our website at celticmusicpodcast.com. If you are a Celtic musician or in a Celtic band, then please submit your band to be played on the podcast. You don't have to send in music or an EPK. Email follow@bestcelticmusic You will get a free eBook called Celtic Musicians Guide to Digital Music and learn how to follow the podcast. It's 100% free. Just complete the permission form at 4celts.com. THANK YOU PATRONS OF THE PODCAST! You are amazing. It is because of your generosity that you get to hear so much great Celtic music each and every week. Your kindness pays for our engineer, graphic designer, Celtic Music Magazine editor, promotion of the podcast, and allows me to buy the music I play here. It also pays for my time creating the show each and every week. As a patron, you get music - only episodes before regular listeners, vote in the Celtic Top 20, stand - alone stories, and you get a private feed to listen to the show. All that for as little as $1 per episode. A special thanks to our new and continued Patrons of the Podcast: PATRICK T, Kim, Optimum Prime, Marshall Br, M.I. O'Malley HERE IS YOUR THREE STEP PLAN TO SUPPORT THE PODCAST Go to our Patreon page. Decide how much you want to pledge every week, $1, $5, $25. Make sure to cap how much you want to spend per month. Keep listening to the Irish & Celtic Music Podcast to celebrate Celtic culture through music. You can become a generous Patron of the Podcast on Patreon at SongHenge.com. TRAVEL WITH CELTIC INVASION VACATIONS Every year, I take a small group of Celtic music fans on the relaxing adventure of a lifetime. We don't see everything. Instead, we stay in one area. We get to know the region through its culture, history, and legends. You can join us with an auditory and visual adventure through podcasts and videos. Learn more about the invasion at http://celticinvasion.com/ #celticmusic #irishmusic #celticmusicpodcast I WANT YOUR FEEDBACK What are you doing today while listening to the podcast? Please email me. I'd love to see a picture of what you're doing while listening or of a band that you saw recently. Email me at follow@bestcelticmusic. Alfred the Great wrote from Germany: "Hi I'm Bam Bam Hercules of Bamburgh. I've been listening to the Irish and Celtic Music Podcasts since the first few Podcasts. Top Down Left Right Cheers Prost Selkirk Grace. And a quick smile out to Nigel from Bamburgh England as well." Jeff Laszlo emailed from Smyrna, GA: "Marc, Love your podcasts. I always work out while listening. The music puts me in a good state of mind. Sandy's Chanter and Antarctica were great songs for a workout. Love the energy. Reminds me a bit of Cleghhorn." Brandon Davis commented on Facebook: "Love the podcast"
Welkom terug bij een nieuwe aflevering van Kalm met Klassiek, dé podcastserie voor je dagelijkse momentje rust. Het staartje van kerst betekent voor Ab nog één kans om een kerstcarol aan je te laten horen. Met een lullaby blikken we terug op de kerstdagen en zeggen we gedag. Het gaat om 'The shepherd's cradle song' van Karl Leuner, gezongen door het koor van King's College uit Cambridge.
Trinity College hosted its 64th annual Christmas Festival of Lessons and Carols in the Chapel on Sunday, December 10, marking the beginning of the holiday season for the Greater Hartford community. Lessons and Carols is offered to all as a moment of comfort and hope. In its recounting of the Christmas story, the service involves the reading of nine lessons, each followed by the singing of a carol. Contributions to a freewill offering supported students in need, as well as international humanitarian relief efforts. This year's special Bicentennial event featured a newly commissioned work by David Hurd, a setting of a portion of Psalm 96, “Sing to the Lord a New Song,” dedicated to Trinity College Board of Trustees Chair Lisa Bisaccia '78 and Robert Naparstek, whose generosity has supported the Chapel Music Program. The program also featured music by alumni and community composers Paul Lindsley Thomas '50; Dudley Buck, Class of 1859; Robert Edward Smith, Chapel composer-in-residence since 1979; and Douglas Bruce Johnson, professor of music, emeritus. To see this year's full program, visit www.trincoll.edu/LessonsAndCarols
"This source recording came from Little Ontario, Canada, but growing up in Southeastern Louisiana I was very familiar with the chorus of peeper frogs emanating from the night swamp. I used the frog calls to build a subtle, repetitive, rhythmic drone that is the backbone of the piece, while rolling melodic and harmonic phrases imitate the twinkling of stars through the clouds in the night sky. I don't usually listen to music when I'm trying to sleep, but when I do, this is what I'm looking for -- slow, methodical, atmospheric, ever changing." Ontario peeper frogs reimagined by Elizabeth Joan Kelly. Part of the Music for Sleep project - for more information and to hear more sounds from the collection, visit https://citiesandmemory.com/music-for-sleep/
1. (Intro) Ian A Anderson : Goblets & Elms from the CD Onwards (Ghosts From The Basement)2. Eliza Carthy Trio : Go From My Window / Whitefriars Hornpipe from the DL Conversations We've Had Before (Hem Hem)3. This Is The Kit : More Change from the CD Careful Of Your Keepers (Rough Trade)4. Martin Simpson & Thomm Jutz feat. Angeline Morrison : The Suffolk Miracle from the CD Nothing But Green Willow (Topic)5. Jim Causley : Blackingstone Ravens from the CD Songs Of Dartmoor (Hroc Music)6. Nora Brown & Stephanie Coleman : Gone So Long from the LP/DL Lady Of The Lake (Jalopy)7. Hog-eyed Man : Boone's Wagoner from the CD Kicked Up A Devil Of A Row (Old Time Tiki Parlour)8. Charlotte Greig : Gathering Rushes from the LP/DL Night Visiting Songs (Harmonium Music)9. You Are Wolf : Girl As Wolf from the CD Hare Hunter Moth Ghost (Firecrest)10. Mikey Kenney : The Old Haile Hornpipe from the DL Northwestern English Fiddle (Mikey Kenney)11. Salvatore Pace & Alessandro Gaudio : Passione Meridionale from the CD Passione Meridionale (Visage)12. Érol Josué : Pelerinaj Fla Vodoun from the CD Peleri-naj (Village Hut)13. Jantra : Homoom from the DL/LP Synthesised Sudan (Ostinato)14. Mokoomba : Makisi from the CD Tusona: Tracings In The Sand (Outhere)15. Ninebarrow : Cast To The Waves from the CD The Colour Of Night (Winding Track)16. Harp & A Monkey : Skylarks from the DL single (Harp & A Monkey)17. Ben McElroy : Where We Don't Go from the CD Beacons Of The Wilderness (Ben McElroy)18. Mike Cooper : Lord Franklin from the CD Milan Live Acoustic 2018 (Paradise Of Bachelors)19. Paolo Angeli : Nijar (Sidra) from the CD Nijar (ReR)20. Kevin Breit & The Henrys : Bloom from the CD Bloom (Kevin Breit & The Henrys)21. Angharad Jenkins & Patrick Rimes : Gyrru'r Ychen from the CD Amrwd (Ty Cerdd)22. Rónan Ó Snodaigh & Myles O'Reilly : Calling All Angels from the CD The Beautiful Road (Claddagh)23. Kathryn Tickell & The Darkening : Long For Light from the CD Cloud Horizons (Resilient)24. Alistair Anderson : Pies In The Parish House Set from the CD Hethpool Linn (White Meadow)25. Lizzie Nunnery & Vidar Norheim : I Saw The City from the CD I Saw The City (Red Thread)26. Plúirín Na mBan : Two Brothers from the CD Female Rambling Sailor (Pluirin Na mBan)27. Claire Hastings : Minnie O'Shirva's Cradle Song from the CD Lullabies From Scotland (Luckenbooth)28. No Mad : A l'aube from the CD Des Oiseaux La Nuit (La Curieuse)29. Iona Lane & Ranjana Ghatak : Agar Main Panchi Hota / Lark in the Clear Air from the DL EP Cove (Hudson)30. Mizrob : Laylijon from the CD Lost In Tajikistan (Riverboat)31. Penguin Cafe : In Re Budd from the CD Rain Before Seven... (Erased Tapes)You can find more details at www.podwireless.com
Another Kipling poem -- "Danny Deaver" and the horror of hanging (in partial anticipation of Wilde's "Ballad of Reading Gaol"), and some discussion of Arnold, Pater, and Wilde as context for Lionel Johnson's "Dark Angel." Then two versions of Yeats's "Cradle Song."
The way metaphor works in one of Stevenson's songs of travel, a little attention to George R. Sim's punning in one of his "lunatic laureate" poems, and then close reading of the amazing Alice Meynell, in particular "Renouncement," "A Cradle Song," "The Modern Mother," and "Parentage," with some attention to the experience of Catholic guilt.
Christmas Day PROCESSIONAL: Hodie Christus natus est – Plainsong, Mode I PSALM 98 – Peter R. Hallock (1924-2014) HYMN: What child is this? (Tune: GREENSLEEVES) – English mel.; harm. Christmas Carols New and Old, 1871, alt. NUNC DIMITTIS (Tune: MARILYN) – Peter R. Hallock ANTHEMS: Away in a manger – Normandy mel. with CRADLE SONG […]
Put on this instant sleep lullaby song with a relaxing water flowing sound in the background to help any baby or adult have the best sleep of their lives.
Acercándonos a la Navidad se hace oportuno el espacio para escuchar villancicos. Esta género musical que a lo largo de los siglos terminó enfocándose totalmente en las celebraciones decembrinas abarca un amplio conjunto de composiciones musicales populares de muy diverso origen, época y estilo, siempre y cuando guarden relación con la Navidad. Hoy escucharemos un villancico del compositor, escritor y locutor inglés Michael Berkeley. Este artista que además escribe ópera, ballet y música instrumental, dice acerca de sus composiciones que tienen “un fuerte contenido emocional al que reaccionan los oyentes”. A continuación Cradle Song, pieza que proviene de Balulalow, que se publicó en 1567 como traducción de un villancico de Martín Lutero a cargo de John, Robert y James Wedderburn, en la voz de Andrew Swait junto a Andrew Plant al piano.
Salmo 126B (Playback) Melodia: Cradle song Métrica: 11. 11. 11. 11 Compositor: William J. Kirkpatrick, 1895 Letra: Comissão Brasileira de Salmodia, 2013 Quando o Senhor a sorte de Sião restaurou, Ficamos iguais a quem está a sonhar Assim a nossa boca de sorrisos se encheu E com alegria nossa língua cantou Então entre as nações já se ouvia dizer Grandes coisas por eles sim tem feito o Senhor De fato, grandes coisas Deus tem feito por nós Por isso alegre o teu povo está Assim a nossa sorte vem Senhor restaurar Como as fortes torrentes do Neguebe a correr Quem sai em grande pranto pra semente lançar Com grande alegria a colheita fará Quem sai semeando caminhando a chorar Voltará jubilando com seus molhos nas mãos Quem sai semeando caminhando a chorar Com gozo retorna com seus molhos nas mãos --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ipb-alagoinhas/message
Salmo 126B Melodia: Cradle song Métrica: 11. 11. 11. 11 Compositor: William J. Kirkpatrick, 1895 Letra: Comissão Brasileira de Salmodia, 2013 Quando o Senhor a sorte de Sião restaurou, Ficamos iguais a quem está a sonhar Assim a nossa boca de sorrisos se encheu E com alegria nossa língua cantou Então entre as nações já se ouvia dizer Grandes coisas por eles sim tem feito o Senhor De fato, grandes coisas Deus tem feito por nós Por isso alegre o teu povo está Assim a nossa sorte vem Senhor restaurar Como as fortes torrentes do Neguebe a correr Quem sai em grande pranto pra semente lançar Com grande alegria a colheita fará Quem sai semeando caminhando a chorar Voltará jubilando com seus molhos nas mãos Quem sai semeando caminhando a chorar Com gozo retorna com seus molhos nas mãos --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ipb-alagoinhas/message
On this Halloween episode, Natalya and Michelle swap stories of Chicago's historic hauntings and try to separate fact from fiction, debunking a couple of myths along the way. In the second half of the episode, we share Michelle's interview with a Chicago bartender who divulges his paranormal experiences at various Windy City watering holes. Many thanks to Pamela Bannos, whose in-depth research on Chicago's original cemeteries is cited in this episode. Her project can be found here: https://hiddentruths.northwestern.edu/home.html Other cited works and references: Dead in Chicago blog post by Leyla I. Royale. Ray Johnson's blog post on Chicago's Haunt Detective. To Die in Chicago: Confederate Prisoners at Camp Douglas, by George Levy. The "City Cemetery (now southern end of Lincoln Park)" page on The Great Chicago Fire & the Web of Memory site by the Chicago Historical Society and Northwestern University. Thanks also to the Chicago Tribune for its excellent archive. Information on Bucktown and Bucktown Pub: https://www.wickerparkbucktown.com/theneighborhood/neighborhood-history/ https://bucktown.org/about/history/ https://www.bucktownpub.com/about/ Music: WTVT theme by Matt Carrico. "A Cradle Song" by Mary Riddle. "Final Days of Captivity" by Christian Andersen. Sound effects from Epidemic Sound. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Be prepared to be freaked this Friday, for this formation of fearful game reviews will freeze your blood and furrow your brow! It's Halloween, and your hosts Chris Alley, Jason Yanchuleff, and Cameron Lockey are excited to present a spooky take on gaming with three Halloween-themed board game reviews!Chapters:"The House of the Hidden (Gems)" (Sketch) (00:00:00)Banter (00:03:41)Fearsome Floors (00:34:33)Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde (00:55:52)Halloween (01:19:11)Hidden Gems Geek List: https://boardgamegeek.com/geeklist/289922/hidden-gems-podcast-game-ratingsFollow us online:Email: hiddengemsboardgamepodcast@gmail.comWeb: https://hiddengems.gamesInstagram: @hiddengems.gamesFacebook: @hiddengemsboardgamepodcastTwitter: @hiddengemsboardBGG Guild #: 3874Credits:The House of the Hidden (Gems) Score, "Mr. Wilson Visits", Mary Riddle, Royalty Free LicenseThe House of the Hidden (Gems) Score, "A Cradle Song", Mary Riddle, Royalty Free License"The House of the Hidden (Gems)", Sound EffectsSpooky Hidden Gems Theme, "Backyard Boogieman", Travis LockeyFearsome Floors Theme, “Scary Stairsteps", Stationary Sign, Royalty Free LicenseJekyll & Hyde Theme, “Mischievous Operations”, Alfie-Jay Winters, Royalty Free LicenseHalloween Theme, "The Friendly Ghost", Arthur Benson, Royalty Free LicenseTwo Sentence Horror Stories, "Unfettered and Unchained", Golden AnchorLogo Design, Katelyn Nieto, @itskatelynnietoHidden Gems: A Board Game Podcast was produced and edited by Chris Alley, Cameron Lockey, and Jason Yanchuleff in Raleigh, NC. The Hidden Gems: A Board Game Podcast theme is licensed under a royalty free license contract.
How to Read Music by Roger Evans, a Crown Trade Paperback (1978) $10.00. Locate used bookshops. It contains complete note and musical directories and well-known pieces of music to read and play like Ode to Joy by Beethoven, Cradle Song by Brahms, Amazing Grace and Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring by J.S. Bach. Highly recommended. Thank you for listening.
William Blake's mystic lullaby sung with acoustic guitar. For more about this and other combinations of various words with original music, visit frankhudson.org
# A Cradle Song by Alfred Lord Tennyson # Childhood memories #Beauty and Nature of Life
In an open ended conversation Youth Outside's Kim Moore Bailey and Rena Payan reflect on their trailblazing work to ensure every young person feels welcome and safe in the outdoors. The team at Oakland-based Youth Outside “envisions a day when all youth have equitable access to the positive benefits of meaningful outdoor experiences and the opportunity to be champions of our planet.” Original music performed by Thayne Yazzie on guitar. Ben Greené performs original music and Cradle Song by Franz Liszt on piano.
The holidays are looking a lot different this year, but there's a light at the end of the tunnel. Join us for a wave of holiday tunes and Bo's recitation of "'Twas the Night Before Christmas"! Keep the energy. Hold on to love and light, y'all! Playlist: Plus tôt by Alexandra Stréliski The Christmas Song (Alternate Take) by Nat “King” Cole Alabaster by Andrew Bird Can’t Help Falling in Love by Haley Reinhart Oh Holy Night by Andrew Bird Skating by Andrew Bird Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas by Judy Garland A Bo Story: ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas (instrumental music) Cradle Song by Katie Melua Plane Song by Katie Melua If You Are so Beautiful by Katie Melua O Holy Night by Katie Melua River by Katie Melua Overgrown by James Blake No Place Like Home by John Legend Christmas Is Coming by Andrew Bird The Quiet Voice by Alexandra Stréliski It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year by Andy Williams
Daniella Theresia (mezzo-soprano) and Suzanne Yeo (pianist) discuss the British-born Canadian composer Amice Calverley (1896-1959) with her niece, Sybil Rampen, as part of The Eternal Feminine Podcast Series. Our featured piece is "Cradle Song." To learn more, visit: www.ArtSong-Podcast.com/ef-calverley.
We're halfway through the ASAS, so we're taking a break to watch and discuss the 2019 masterpiece, Ma! Also, Kyel is in the room for the first time since March (we missed him so much), AND we all try a Mexican Parma... did we survive? Episode edited by Matt Smith (ig: @notthatmattsmith / tw: @GungaDin) Theme music: "A Cradle Song" by Marry Riddle Twitter: @wpfpod email: worthplayingforpodcast[at]gmail[dot]com Recap/discussion of the 2019 film, Ma.
Have you ever woken up to a suddenly cold room, certain you were being watched? Had your phone call for help without your knowledge? Seen the shadows take the form of someone you love? Our listeners have, and from civilians in Edmonton, Alberta to an aircraft mechanic in the US Air Force, they've decided to share those stories with us, to try and make sense of those cold feelings in the night. Also on this episode: the iron fist in the velvet glove and the triumphant return of Pervy Mickey Mouse Music on This Episode: Main Theme: "Radio (Into the Darkness We Go)" by Podzontommusic Stories Theme: "The Future Belongs to Them Now" by Hexxagram Bumpers: "A Cradle Song" by Mary Riddle "Radio" & "The Future Belongs to Them Now" are used with permission, all other music and sound FX are licensed via Epidemic Sound. You can now support us on Patreon! We have tiers at the $1, $5, and $10 levels, with rewards like an Patreon-only Ghost Story Guys sticker, early access to episodes, exclusive bonus content, access to our monthly live show, and more! Click on over to Patreon.com/GhostStoryGuys to check it out! Grab yourself some Ghost Story Guys merch at our Red Bubble and Threadless stores! Don't forget to let us know you bought something and we'll send you some stickers as a thank you. Comment? Suggestion? Story you want to tell? E-mail us at ghoststoryguys@gmail.com! The Ghost Story Guys are: Brennan Storr - Host, Writer, Producer Ian Gibbs - Host Luke Greensmith - Researcher Sarah Kent - Communications Anthony Germaine - Researcher Rachel GW - Facebook admin Pins and signed copies of the guy's books are available at Big Cartel or via e-mail.
More great books at LoyalBooks.com
More great books at LoyalBooks.com
This is a very simple poem about a mother who sits by her infant's cradle while he sleeps and sings him a song. The deeper question to ask is, why is she crying?
This is a very simple poem about a mother who sits by her infant's cradle while he sleeps and sings him a song. The deeper question to ask is, why is she crying?
A Cradle Song By Thomas Dekker
Celeste Chaney is a writer, filmmaker, and marketing consultant. Her first script, The Feed, is in development with Passage Pictures and was a finalist in the Tribeca Film Institute’s 2019 AT&T Untold Stories Competition, as well as the Alfred P. Sloan filmmaker fund. Her novel, In Absence of Fear, received Honorable Mention at Foreward’s 2015 Book of the Year Awards. She wrote, produced, and directed Cradle Song, her first short film in May 2019. https://www.celestechaney.com/
And Caswell Richardson became kind of weird like him too. Hopefully, not as much.
Much on "The Lamb" (and a little on "The Tyger"), "A Cradle Song," "Infant Joy" and the Innocence version of "The Chimney Sweeper." Innocence as privative (like "infant" and "innocuous")-- a contrast to the world as we know it.
Tracklist 01. "The Road Is a Grey Tape" 02. "H in New England" 03. "This Picture of Us. P." 04. "Lullaby from the Westcoast Sleepers" 05. "When the Northern Lights/Jasper and Louise" 06. "Circles from the Rue Simon – Crubellier" 07. "Cascade NW by W" 08. "A Sudden Manhattan of the Mind" 09. "In Louisville at 7" 10. "Cathodes" 11. "I Was Just Thinking" 12. "A Song for H/Far Away" 13. "Return to Prague" 14. "Broken Symmetries for Y" 15. "Berlin by Overnight" 16. "Cradle Song for a (Interstate B3)" 17. "Kierling/Doubt" 18. "From 553 W Elm Street, Logan Illinois (Snow)" 19. "Tokyo Riddle Song" 20. "The Tartu Piano" 21. "Cold Fusion for G" 22. "32 via San Nicolo" 23. "Found Song for P." 24. "H Thinks a Journey"
Happy summer, everyone! Today's episode is a live performance given by a wonderful duo (Mark Evans, cello and Charlie Nilles, bass) from the National Symphony Orchestra. This is their own arrangement of a piece originally written for violin and cello. The lower voice captures the rocking rhythm of the cradle, while the melody reminds me of a lullaby. Performed by: Mark Evans, cello Charlie Nilles, bass Special thanks to Mark and Charlie for generously donating this recording to the podcast!
6. German Cradle Song Traditional Lullaby, hush my babe and do not cry, in your cradle now you swing, until you sleep I’ll softly sing,Lullaby. Lulla, lullaby, birds above you gliding high, wishing you a peaceful sleep,close your eyes and do not peek, Lullaby. Lulla, lullalee, a nightingale will sing for thee, a song so soft upon your ear, tis only for a babe to hear, Lullalee. Lulla, Lullaby, robin redbreast in the sky, lands upon the nest she built, andbabe you snuggle in your quilt, Lullaby. Lulla, Lullaby, blessed is the babe so shy, baby birdies in the tree, snuggleup so merrily, Lullaby, Lullaby. 更多内容,关注Anna老师亲子英语微课 个人微信:15942686862; 微信公共账号:magicforest2016
更多内容,关注Anna老师亲子英语微课 个人微信:15942686862; 微信公共账号:magicforest2016
Möt Schubert-älskaren Sverker Åström, pianisten Conny Antonov, visdiktaren Jan Hammarlund och körledaren Grete Pedersen. Grete berättar hur viktigt det är att vara öppen med sin sexuella preferens. I det sjätte och sista avsnittet i serien Det osynligas piano möter vi Grete Pedersen, körledare för Det Norske Solistkor, som nomineras till Nordiska Rådets Musikpris 2007. Hon berättar hur viktigt det är att vara öppen med sin sexuella preferens, för att öka mångfalden och få ett bättre, rikare och roligare samhälle. Inte minst inom den klassiska musikvärlden. Pianisten Conny Antonov spelar Franz Schuberts sånger och förklarar vad det är som är så speciellt med den österrikiske tonsättaren. Kompositören och sångaren Jan Hammarlund har ett levande förhållande till Franz Schuberts sånger. Han berättar om ett besök i Franz Schuberts rum i Wien. Numera avlidne diplomaten Sverker Åström var Schubert-älskare. Han ville att Schubert skall spelas på hans begravning. Låtlista:Impromptu Nr. 3 Gess-dur op.90-3 (D.899-3) Schubert, Franz Conny Antonov, piano Liveinspelning String Quartet nr 13, D 804 Der Tod und das Mädchen II Andante con moto Franz Schubert Quartetto Italiano String Quartets nr. 14, D 810 Rosamunde and nr 13, D 804 Der Tod und das Mädchen Quartetto Italiano PHILIPS 426 383-2 Frasses Ständiga Otur Jan Hammarlund Jan Hammarlund Röda Linjen Skördemåne Records SCD 07 10 Symfoni nr 8, h-moll. Ofullbordade. Sats 2 andante con moto Schubert, Franz HARNONCOURT, NIKOLAUS (DIR) CONCERTGEBOUW ORKEST (AMSTERDAM) Inspelad: NEDERLÄNDERNA 1992 Teldec Sonata for Piano in A major, D 959, II Andantio Schubert, Franz Alfred Brendel, piano Schubert: Piano Sonatas D 784, 840, 894, 959 & 960 PHILIPS 456573 An den mond - (D 296) SCHUBERT, FRANZ (C) GOETHE, JOHANN WOLFGANG VON (A) GOERNE, MATTHIAS (BAR) HAEFLIGER, ANDREAS (PI) DECCA An den mond - (D 296) Conny Antonov, piano Liveinspelning Visa I Vinden Elisabet Hermodsson Grete Pedersen/Oslo Kammerkor/Gunnar Eriksson Kyst FOOTPRINT RECORDS FRCD 012 I Folketone (In the Folk Style) Grieg, Edvard (1843 - 1907) Det Norske Solistkor, choir. Grete Pedersen, conductor Grieg - Choir Music BIS-SACD-1661 Margrethes vuggesang (Margaret_s Cradle Song), Op.15 No.1 Grieg, Edvard (1843 - 1907) Det Norske Solistkor, choir Grete Pedersen, conductor Grieg - Choir Music BIS-SACD-1661
#brickbooks #Karyotype #KimTrainor
This week’s program showcases Cedille's two new releases for October. Playlist for October 23, 2013 Two New Releases LEOŠ JANÁCEK (1854–1928) Sonata for Violin and Piano JW VII/7 I. Con moto (4:48) II. Ballada: Con moto (5:13) From signs, games + messages Cedille Records CDR 90000 143 (Tracks 1–2) Jennifer Koh, violin Shai Wosner, piano GYÖRGY KURTÁG (b. 1926) In Nomine — all’ongherese (from Signs, Games and Messages) (4:51) From signs, games + messages Cedille Records CDR 90000 143 (Track 17) Jennifer Koh, violin Shai Wosner, piano BÉLA BARTÓK (1881–1945) First Sonata for Violin and Piano, Sz. 75 III. Allegro (10:17) From signs, games + messages Cedille Records CDR 90000 143 (Track 20) Jennifer Koh, violin Shai Wosner, piano ATANAS OURKOUZOUNOV (b. 1970) Folk Song Variations (6:54) From Out of Africa ... and Around the World Cedille Records CDR 7005 (Track 1) Denis Azabagic, guitar VOJISLAV IVANOVIC (b. 1959) Café Pieces Funny Valse (3:37) Nostalgia (4:23) From Out of Africa ... and Around the World Cedille Records CDR 7005 (Tracks 3 & 5) Denis Azabagic, guitar ALAN THOMAS (b. 1968) Out of Africa Morning Dance (3:05) Cradle Song (3:03) From Out of Africa ... and Around the World Cedille Records CDR 7005 (Tracks 11 &14) Denis Azabagic, guitar
A Way with Words — language, linguistics, and callers from all over
Get out your skinny jeans and pass the PBR! Martha and Grant discuss the definition of the word hipster. Also, what happens when you pull a brodie? And why do we describe something cheap or poorly made as cheesy? Also, sawbucks, pulling a brodie, shoestring budgets, the origins of bootlegging, and cabbie lingo, including the slang word bingo.FULL DETAILSA former cabbie shares his favorite jargon, like green pea and making your nut. Someone waving down an occupied cab is known as a bingo, and the cabbie will usually tell the dispatcher to send another car. A San Diego cabdriver has gathered much more taxi slang here. Is there any etymological connection between the dairy product and the adjective cheesy, meaning inferior, cheap, or otherwise sub-par? This descriptive term for something lowbrow or poorly made at one point had positive connotations in the 1800s, when something great could be said to be cheesy as a rare Stilton. Over time, though, cheesy took on the connotation of something unappealing, an apparent reference to a low quality, stinky cheese. A shoestring budget is a spending plan that's as thin and spindly as a shoestring. Not surprisingly, the term gained popularity during the Great Depression.A line from The Moor of Venice, that I would liefer bide, features an old word for rather that shares a root with the words love and leave, as in by your leave.Cabbies are sometimes known to stretch their hood, which means to fib to the dispatcher about their location. Sometimes they have to drive out of bounds to pick up a fare.Quiz Guy Greg Pliska has a word puzzle based on so-called container clues, where the answer is divided into two words, one which is found inside the other. For this game, the answers are all Greek gods.A Word-Book of Virginia Folk Speak from 1912 includes this gem: Bachelors' wives and old maid's children are the best people in the world.What is a hipster? Is it an insult to call someone a hipster, even if they're, well, a hipster? Do hipsters identify themselves as hipsters? Grant traces the label from 1960s counterculture to today's skinny-jeaned Brooklyn paradox. The handy term omnishambles means all in shambles, and has found its way from the British TV comedy The Thick of It to the floor of the House of Commons.What is a cuculoris? This lighting grate, which also goes by such names as cookie, gobo, and dapple sheet, is used in photography to cast a dramatic shadow. There are lots of spellings of this word, including cucoloris, kookaloris, cookaloris, and cucalorus. The name may have to do with George Cukor, an early pioneer of the tool in old Hollywood. Add this to your list of paraprosdokians: Two guys walked into a bar. The third one ducked. Where does the term bootleg come from? Originally, smugglers tucked bottles of alcohol into their pants to sneak them onto Indian reservations to sell illegally. The term knockoff also refers to pants, and buttleg is a variant that can refer to contraband cigarettes.Why do we call a ten-dollar bill a sawbuck? The support for woodworking known as a sawbuck folds out into the shape of an X, the same shape as the Roman numeral for ten. Hence, the slang term for the currency worth ten bucks.Can you get away with calling a misspelled word a typo if you didn't know how to spell it in the first place? One variety of mistake is called a performance error, where the goof is somehow related to the machine or keyboard. A competence error occurs when someone doesn't know the difference between your and you're in the first place.To spin a brodie or pull a brodie is to spin a doughnut in a car. The term derives from the name of Steve Brodie, who allegedly jumped off the Brooklyn Bridge in 1886. To do a brodie, originally meaning to jump or fall, came to mean any kind of stunt.On the website A Poem From Us, people upload videos of themselves reading poetry from other writers. Here, David Jones reads "A Cradle Song" by William Butler Yeats.This episode was hosted by Martha Barnette and Grant Barrett.....Support for A Way with Words also comes from National University, which invites you to change your future today. More at http://www.nu.edu/.And from The Ken Blanchard Companies, whose purpose is to make a leadership difference among executives, managers, and individuals in organizations everywhere. More about Ken Blanchard's leadership training programs at kenblanchard.com/leadership.--A Way with Words is funded by its listeners: http://waywordradio.org/donateGet your language question answered on the air! Call or write with your questions at any time:Email: words@waywordradio.orgPhone: United States and Canada toll-free (877) WAY-WORD/(877) 929-9673London +44 20 7193 2113Mexico City +52 55 8421 9771Donate: http://waywordradio.org/donateSite: http://waywordradio.org/Podcast: http://waywordradio.org/podcast/Forums: http://waywordradio.org/discussion/Newsletter: http://waywordradio.org/newsletter/Twitter: http://twitter.com/wayword/Skype: skype://waywordradio Copyright 2012, Wayword LLC.
A Way with Words — language, linguistics, and callers from all over
Get out your skinny jeans and pass the PBR! Martha and Grant discuss the definition of the word hipster. Also, what happens when you pull a brodie? And why do we describe something cheap or poorly made as cheesy? Also, sawbucks, pulling a brodie, shoestring budgets, the origins of bootlegging, and cabbie lingo, including the slang word bingo. FULL DETAILS A former cabbie shares his favorite jargon, like green pea and making your nut. Someone waving down an occupied cab is known as a bingo, and the cabbie will usually tell the dispatcher to send another car. A San Diego cabdriver has gathered much more taxi slang here. Is there any etymological connection between the dairy product and the adjective cheesy, meaning inferior, cheap, or otherwise sub-par? This descriptive term for something lowbrow or poorly made at one point had positive connotations in the 1800s, when something great could be said to be cheesy as a rare Stilton. Over time, though, cheesy took on the connotation of something unappealing, an apparent reference to a low quality, stinky cheese. A shoestring budget is a spending plan that's as thin and spindly as a shoestring. Not surprisingly, the term gained popularity during the Great Depression. A line from The Moor of Venice, that I would liefer bide, features an old word for rather that shares a root with the words love and leave, as in by your leave. Cabbies are sometimes known to stretch their hood, which means to fib to the dispatcher about their location. Sometimes they have to drive out of bounds to pick up a fare. Quiz Guy Greg Pliska has a word puzzle based on so-called container clues, where the answer is divided into two words, one which is found inside the other. For this game, the answers are all Greek gods. A Word-Book of Virginia Folk Speak from 1912 includes this gem: Bachelors' wives and old maid's children are the best people in the world. What is a hipster? Is it an insult to call someone a hipster, even if they're, well, a hipster? Do hipsters identify themselves as hipsters? Grant traces the label from 1960s counterculture to today's skinny-jeaned Brooklyn paradox. The handy term omnishambles means all in shambles, and has found its way from the British TV comedy The Thick of It to the floor of the House of Commons. What is a cuculoris? This lighting grate, which also goes by such names as cookie, gobo, and dapple sheet, is used in photography to cast a dramatic shadow. There are lots of spellings of this word, including cucoloris, kookaloris, cookaloris, and cucalorus. The name may have to do with George Cukor, an early pioneer of the tool in old Hollywood. Add this to your list of paraprosdokians: Two guys walked into a bar. The third one ducked. Where does the term bootleg come from? Originally, smugglers tucked bottles of alcohol into their pants to sneak them onto Indian reservations to sell illegally. The term knockoff also refers to pants, and buttleg is a variant that can refer to contraband cigarettes. Why do we call a ten-dollar bill a sawbuck? The support for woodworking known as a sawbuck folds out into the shape of an X, the same shape as the Roman numeral for ten. Hence, the slang term for the currency worth ten bucks. Can you get away with calling a misspelled word a typo if you didn't know how to spell it in the first place? One variety of mistake is called a performance error, where the goof is somehow related to the machine or keyboard. A competence error occurs when someone doesn't know the difference between your and you're in the first place. To spin a brodie or pull a brodie is to spin a doughnut in a car. The term derives from the name of Steve Brodie, who allegedly jumped off the Brooklyn Bridge in 1886. To do a brodie, originally meaning to jump or fall, came to mean any kind of stunt. On the website A Poem From Us, people upload videos of themselves reading poetry from other writers. Here, David Jones reads "A Cradle Song" by William Butler Yeats.
Some more about the adjectives in Auden's "Lullaby." The transposition of the word "human" from her to him. A consideration of Yeats's "Cradle Song" as a sort of precursor.
Union side, 1864. Composed by Theodore T. Barker.
W Blake read by Classic Poetry Aloud: http://www.classicpoetryaloud.com/ Giving voice to the poetry of the past. --------------------------------------------------- A Cradle Song by William Blake(1757 – 1827) Sleep, sleep, beauty bright, Dreaming in the joys of night; Sleep, sleep; in thy sleep Little sorrows sit and weep. Sweet babe, in thy face Soft desires I can trace, Secret joys and secret smiles, Little pretty infant wiles. As thy softest limbs I feel, Smiles as of the morning steal O'er thy cheek, and o'er thy breast Where thy little heart doth rest. O the cunning wiles that creep In thy little heart asleep! When thy little heart doth wake, Then the dreadful light shall break. First aired: 26 September 2008 For hundreds more poetry readings, visit the Classic Poetry Aloud index. Reading © Classic Poetry Aloud 2008