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The Greater La Vernia Chamber of Commerce scholarship recipients line up to be recognized May 8, at the chamber's monthly luncheon. Students drafted business plans for a proposed business to fill a niche or meet a community need in La Vernia. Recipients include Payton McBee, joint fifth place, 2.50; Olivia Skaggs, first place, ,280; Claira Fike, third, ,000; Vincent Robbins, second, ,142.50; Elise Davis, 0; Jason Sanborn, 0; Charlotte Collinsworth, 0; Rylee Bocanegra, 0; Ty Hinojosa, fourth, [post_excerpt],142.50. Also receiving a scholarship for 2.50, joint fifth place, was Kendall Mikolajczyk.Article Link
Elise has competed at major UK Crossfit competitions as well as international ones too. As one of the youngest doctors in the UK, Elise is a great example of someone who manages to still find time to train hard whilst managing a busy schedule. As well as being a junior doctor Elise also does coaching at a Crossfit gym and online coaching with athletes in whatever spare time she has available. I'm sure there is something we can all take away from listening to this episode! Enjoy
The cost of buying a home is ridiculous depending on location but check out some of the ones we found on today's episode. Join my guest Elise Davis as we go house hunting!Follow Elise on Facebook!https://www.facebook.com/elise.j.davis?mibextid=ZbWKwL
In today's podcast, host Luke O'Kelley talks to Nashville based guitarist, songwriter, and producer Clint Wells. Clint is a long time AirGigs member and has recorded and toured with artists like Rodney Atkins, Bob Schneider, Mindy Smith, Jessie Baylin, Laura Bell Bundy. Clint is also a songwriter with Rough Trade Publishing where he's written for artists like Jaida Dreyer, Mindy Smith, HudsonMoore, Elise Davis, The Hells, and LeRiche. In this episode we discuss: Clint's musical development, moving to Nashville, his approach to session work, fighting imposter syndrome, pushing yourself to grow without letting people down, his experience as a songwriter in Nashville, and more.To hire Clint to record guitars or produce a song you can contact him here. Check out Clint's original music here.Intro and outro music is by Daniel Hardin.
It's that time again….the guys discuss their favorite songs of 2021 and the ones that got listened to and relistened to. Discussion includes Double Whammys of Bre Kennedy and Lucius (they're on both Ben and Wayne's lists), Blue Water Highway, red scarves, Wayne's crushes of Shania and Orville Peck, Elle King and Miranda, War on Drugs, Noah Gunderson (yeah Noah…you would have a good time hanging with us), Ian Jones, Adeem The Artist, Van Plating, Lindsey Buckingham, Elise Davis, Jillette Johnson, Caroline Spence, Parker Chapin, Danny Golden, Walking Papers, and more. Be sure to check out each of the artists we talk about. All are EXTREMELY worthy of repeated listens. Wayne's Spotify Playlist: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/2RdyVPJplpXEmjcwfERwtV?si=814dadc2f7a74bb0Ben's Spotify Playlist:https://open.spotify.com/playlist/3bcLTWv7zlkDw4vKV6ewIS?si=ed9b2a1a83904472Check out other episodes at RecordsRevisitedPodcast.com, Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, Castbox, iHeartMedia, Google Podcasts and Spotify. Additional content is found at: Facebook.com/recordsrevisitedpodcast or twitter @podcastrecords or IG at instagram.com/recordsrevisitedpodcast/ or join our Patreon at patreon.com/RecordsRevisitedPodcast
The guys welcome Elise Davis to talk about Lucinda Williams’ “World Without Tears.” Plenty of other discussion including recording an album during the pandemic, your 30s, Keith Richards, Lucinda’s grammy nominations, singing about heroin, and Elise's album "Anxious. Happy. Chill." Check out Elise Davis at: http://www.elisedavis.com/ Check out Lucinda Williams at: https://www.lucindawilliams.com/ Check out other episodes at RecordsRevisitedPodcast.com, Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, Castbox, iHeartMedia, Google Podcasts and Spotify. Additional content is found at: Facebook.com/recordsrevisitedpodcast or twitter @podcastrecords or IG at instagram.com/recordsrevisitedpodcast/ or join our Patreon at patreon.com/RecordsRevisitedPodcast
We had the pleasure of interviewing Elise Davis over Zoom video! Elise Davis's music blurs the lines between genres. It's a sound caught halfway between the confessional storytelling of alt-country and the cinematic punch of pop/rock, molded into a shape by a lifelong musician who began penning tunes at 12 years old. Hundreds of shows and three albums later, she's grown into a road warrior and prolific songwriter whose career highlights — including tours with Ray Lamontagne, co-writes with Maren Morris, and millions of streams for fan favorites like "Last Laugh" — are just as diverse as the records she creates. She stretches her boundaries once again with Anxious. Happy. Chill., an album of lean, guitar-driven rockers and woozy, lushly-layered love songs. Written during the rush of a new relationship and recorded weeks after her wedding, it's the happiest record she's ever made, stocked with 10 songs that serve as foils to the independent, no-boys-allowed anthems that filled her previous album, Cactus. Davis remains every bit as resilient and empowered as Cactus proved her to be, but she has also traded her old muses — heartache, sadness, and a lone-wolf mentality — for something bolder and brighter. That said, Anxious. Happy. Chill. was recorded during dark times. Days after wrapping up her honeymoon in Arizona, where she finished writing the album in the Sonoran Desert outside Tucson, Davis headed to producer Teddy Morgan's studio in Nashville. The Covid-19 pandemic was already in full swing, turning Tennessee's capital into a ghost town. Davis and Morgan worked together for a month while maintaining their physical distance, communicating through the glass windows of the studio's isolation booths and playing the majority of the instruments themselves. Drummer Fred Eltringham (Sheryl Crow, the Wallflowers) joined them for a single day to lend the album its unique, percussive pulse. Morgan juggled bass, keyboard, and lead guitar duties. Meanwhile, Davis — who had mostly played acoustic guitar on her previous records — swapped the unplugged instrument for its electric cousin, adding grungy grit and amped-up attitude to songs like "Ladybug" (the album's larger-than-life opener) and "Thirty" (a booming, anxious salute to growing older…and staying young). Only 300 miles separate Davis' childhood stomping grounds of Little Rock, Arkansas, from her adopted hometown of Nashville. Even so, she's covered an unmeasurable amount of ground since her days as a music-obsessed college student who booked her own tours between classes and spent her weekends on the road. From landing Music Row publishing deals to headlining her own tours across the U.S., she's turned her creativity into fuel, chasing down her own horizon — and her own sound — along the way. Anxious. Happy. Chill. finds her sitting behind the wheel once again, but now there's a companion riding along in the passenger seat, too, bringing a sunnier outlook to the journey. We want to hear from you! Please email Tera@BringinitBackwards.com. www.BringinitBackwards.com #podcast #interview #bringinbackpod #elisedavis #zoom #aspn #americansongwriter #americansongwriterpodcastnetwork Listen & Subscribe to BiB Follow our podcast on Instagram and Twitter! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/bringinbackpod/support
Elise is a singer-songwriter living and writing out of Nashville, TN; an incredibly talented musician, and all around artist. You can connect with Elise through Instagram @_elisesavis_ or through her website at elisedavis.com.
In part 2, Joy Elise Davis shares the rest of her story: After her oldest daughter suffered a brain stem stroke, leaving her quadriplegic and unable to speak, Joy has devoted her life to finding happiness amidst life's hardest challenges.
Joy Elise Davis was taught at a young age to "impute the highest motive." After her oldest daughter suffered a brain stem stroke, leaving her quadriplegic and unable to speak, Joy has devoted her life to finding happiness amidst life's hardest challenges.
We're wrapping up our 2019 with a look back at some fun sessions from this year. Today's show includes live performances and interviews with Divino Niño, Shormey, and Elise Davis. 00:00 - 2019 Review 00:25 - Coca Cola - Divino Niño 04:02 - Interview - Divino Niño 07:56 - Bad Luck - Divino Niño 10:57 - Interview - Divino Niño 15:24 - Quiero - Divino Niño 18:28 - Boogie Island - Shormey 22:29 - Interview - Shormey 25:30 - Cruise! - Shormey 29:40 - Interview - Shormey 31:40 - Lion’s Share - Shormey 35:14 - Interview - Shormey 37:00 - The Burn - Elise Davis 40:45 - Interview - Elise Davis 44:01 - Cactus - Elise Davis 47:47 - Interview - Elise Davis 49:45 - Last Laugh - Elise Davis 53:01 - Interview - Elise Davis 56:59 - Lone Wolf - Elise Davis 60:44 - Outro 61:08 - Finish
In this Special Sunday Night episode, Michelle is joined by a fellow Palmetto State Lady, the one and only Dr. Elise Davis-McFarland, ASHA’s Immediate Past President. Dr. Elise is here to share her wisdom on the importance of Ethics within the Early Intervention. Crucial conversations takes place regarding the differences between Poverty and Neglect, when a DSS referral is warranted, Clinician Safety and the ethics of transferring a patient or when discharging is warranted, as well as ethical considerations for implementing the “Coaching Model” when working with a medically fragile/complex infant/toddler/child. This is mighty powerful hour with a mighty amazing woman, Dr. Elise! Enjoy and Happy Early Fourth of July!!
What do Supreme Court Justice Sotomayor, academy award winning actor Leonardo de Caprio, designer Ralph Lauren, and entertainment mogul Jay Z have in common? They all grew up poor. Their success is enviable, but breaking the cycle of poverty is a mammoth task; one that requires educational opportunities that compensate for the disadvantages created by the socio-economic gap, appropriate structural support, and exposure to the larger world. Every young mind has the right to dream big, but not all dreams are destined to become a reality.On this episode, Elise Davis-McFarland, the Immediate Past President of American Speech-Language Hearing Association (ASHA 2019) and an ASHA Fellow, discusses how poverty is a serious condition and a potential cause of deprivation and educating students from low income families warrants more than just tolerance, but strong cultural competence. Robust Executive Function and self-regulation are essential ingredients for raising independent children, but ongoing environmental stressors and economics adversity can prove to be an obstacle in bringing forth future-ready children.About Dr. Elise Davis-McFarlandDr. Elise Davis-McFarland has enjoyed a rewarding career in higher education that includes teaching, development, and leadership of speech-language pathology programs; research; and executive-level college administration. She began her career as a school speech-language pathologist (SLP) in North Carolina where she provided diagnostic and therapeutic services for children in pre- and elementary schools. Following an audiology internship at the VA and Duke Hospitals and graduate study, she joined the faculty of the University of Houston as an assistant professor where she taught graduate courses in language development, childhood language disorders, early literacy development, and assessment and diagnosis of childhood communication disorders.In Charleston, South Carolina—in the absence of an academic program in her discipline—she took advantage of new experiences, first as vice president of Governmental Affairs for the Charleston Chamber of Commerce and later as Director of Institutional Research at The Citadel. Dr. Davis-McFarland was also elected as a commissioner for the state's Medicaid program by the South Carolina Legislature. At the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC), as an associate professor the opportunity to develop and lead the interdisciplinary graduate Communication Sciences and Disorders program in the Department of Rehabilitation Sciences where Occupational and Physical Therapy programs were housed led to a teaching award and to her research at the MUSC hospital. Later, she became Vice President for Student Affairs at Trident College, where she provided executive-level leadership and supported the successful matriculation of students with autism and Asperger's Syndrome into the college. Dr. Davis-McFarland is an ASHA Fellow. Her service to ASHA includes membership on the Committee on Practice Guidelines for SLPs, the Professional Practices Committee, the Ethics Committee, the Executive Board Subcommittee on Examination Performance, and the Multicultural Issues Board. She was one of ASHA's representatives on the committee formed by ASHA and the International Association of Physicians in AIDS Care (IAPAC). She chaired the Committee on Honors and was the coordinator for SIG 14. Until her election as ASHA's president-elect she served on the SLP Advisory Council as a representative from South Carolina, and the SIG 17 Coordinating Committee. She has also been a reviewer for Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools and the African Journal of AIDS Research. Her areas of research and publication include speech and language development in infants and children with HIV-AISupport the show (https://mailchi.mp/7c848462e96f/full-prefrontal-sign-up)
Animals are people, too. Overrated Grammy winning songs. Get your tickets for Matt Woods here! Music in this episode: Charles Wesley Godwin - “Pour It On” (Seneca) Hayes Carll - Times Like These (Times Like These/Be There 7”) Elise Davis -- “33” AND “Married Young” (Cactus) Jared & The Mill - “Broken Bird” AND “Dark Highways” (This Story Is No Longer Available) “It Isn’t Nice” by Malvina Reynolds AND “Zuni Rain Dance” (The Social Power of Music) The Southern Gothic - “16 Bars” AND “Hang My Head” (New Hometown) Songs of Our Native Daughters - “Quasheba, Quasheba” AND “Mama’s Cryin’ Long” (Songs of Our Native Daughters) Tylor & The Train Robbers - “Lost and Lonely Miles” AND “Before It’s Too Late” (Best Of The Worst Kind) Brandon Stansell - “Hometown” (Slow Down) Josh Ritter - “Old Black Magic” (Fever Breaks) Rachel wrote a comic! Check it out here! Send us music via SubmitHub. Send us money via Ko-fi or Patreon. Contact Von via linktr.ee/vonreviews and say hi to Rachel on Twitter @adobeteardrops
Roots-rocker Elise Davis talks about turning her gaze both inward and outward on her latest release, Cactus. Produced and hosted by music journalist Kelly McCartney in Nashville, Tennessee.
Dan Tyminski & Ronnie Bowman, Sara Watkins, Mountain Heart, Eric Johnson and Elise Davis on Mountain Stage. Episode 880 recorded live in Elkins, West Virginia.
Aardvark. Aardvark? Aardvark! Ahem. Now that we got that out of the way, Josh Wodarz and Rebecca Ruiz (Aardvark!) have more aardvarks, um... we mean albums. It's a quite a packed show of good albums from Sneaks, Elise Davis, The Frightnrs, Pumarosa, Sex Stains (ewwww), Morcheeeb... um Skye & Ross, IAN SWEET, and Y La Bamba. Plus a Mango Magnifo, and a Meowgarita. Yes, a Meowgarita. Show notes and links: A Meowgarita Inspired Pale Ale — Pipeworks Brewing Co. (pdubs.net) https://open.spotify.com/user/riskylengths/playlist/4ZmW75DQOzkL8lKc8Tvqiy