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VALE CHARLIE DANIELS

  • Post author By Paul Jenkins
  • Post date 7 July 2020
  • Categories In General posts
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VALE CHARLIE DANIELS

RIP Charlie Daniels
RIP Charlie Daniels

Charlie Daniels, a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame who sang “The Devil Went Down to Georgia,” recorded with Bob Dylan and was a vocal supporter of U.S. veterans, died Monday morning after suffering a hemorrhagic stroke. He was 83.

By the time the Charlie Daniels Band topped the charts with “Devil” in 1979, the instrumentalist, singer and songwriter had long established a remarkable, multifaceted career in Nashville. As a session musician, he played on three of Bob Dylan’s albums — including the revolutionary “Nashville Skyline” — as well as recordings for Ringo Starr and Leonard Cohen.  

Charllie Daniels with the GFA's own
Pixie Jenkins in Tamworth 1997
Charllie Daniels with the GFA’s own
Pixie Jenkins in Tamworth 1997

He was a fixture of the touring circuit for the next 40 years, became a tireless advocate for servicemen and women, and entered the information age as one of country music’s most outspoken conservative voices.

Read more here…..

  • Post author By Paul Jenkins
  • Post date 7 July 2020
  • Categories In General posts
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Nanaimo fiddle instructors recognized for contributing to city’s culture

  • Post author By Paul Jenkins
  • Post date 30 June 2020
  • Categories In Fiddle Players, General posts, Teachers or teaching
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Nanaimo fiddle instructors recognised for contributing to city’s culture

Fiddle instructors Trish and Geoff Horrocks are recipients of this year’s Honour in Culture Award. (Josef Jacobson/The News Bulletin)
Fiddle instructors Trish and Geoff Horrocks are recipients of this year’s Honour in Culture Award. (Josef Jacobson/The News Bulletin)

For more than 10 years this duo has been writing and publishing fiddle and piano music books under the Cross Canada Fiddle banner, which soon added a teaching side and their flagship ensemble, Fiddlelium. Now Trish and Geoff Horrocks have been presented with Nanaimo’s 2020 Honour in Culture Award.

Last year fiddle instructors Trish and Geoff Horrocks attended the City of Nanaimo’s Culture and Heritage Award ceremony and this year they’re winners themselves. They were there with their Fiddelium ensemble, which performed during the event.

For video and more on the story…

  • Post author By Paul Jenkins
  • Post date 30 June 2020
  • Categories In Fiddle Players, General posts, Teachers or teaching
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Unleash the ’Gong boy

  • Post author By Paul Jenkins
  • Post date 26 June 2020
  • Categories In General posts
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2020 marks 30 years of Richard Tognetti as Artistic Director of the Australian Chamber Orchestra.

 Image: 
(ACO: Andrew Quilty)
Director of the Australian Chamber Orchestra, Richard Tognetti at home, in Manly, Sydney.

Unleash the ’Gong boy

Richard Tognetti has been staying up until 3am — not with jet lag, not rehearsing, not in post-performance celebrations. Tognetti is up reinventing his orchestra.

June should have seen the Australian Chamber Orchestra playing Mahler’s Song of the Earth and preparing for the debut of one of Tognetti’s own compositions.  Then, plot twist: COVID-19. The tide went out.

In this interview specially commissioned by the Australian Chamber Orchestra, Kate Holden speaks to Richard Tognetti about his 30 years leading the Australian Chamber Orchestra, and the crisis that has forced him to reinvent again.

Read more here….

  • Post author By Paul Jenkins
  • Post date 26 June 2020
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Mass shooting victim’s favourite instrument donated in her memory

  • Post author By Paul Jenkins
  • Post date 24 June 2020
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Mass shooting victim’s favourite instrument donated in her memory…

Music teacher Shawn MacDonald, who taught Nova Scotia shooting victim Emily Tuck, plays a fiddle donated in her memory.
Music teacher Shawn MacDonald, who taught Nova Scotia shooting victim Emily Tuck, plays a fiddle donated in her memory.

Emily Tuck was the youngest victim of the mass shooting, which claimed the lives of 22 people, including her mother Jolene Oliver and father Aaron Tuck, in April.

Touched the by teen’s talent, Nadine Sarty of Bridgewater, N.S., raised funds to purchase a fiddle, along with a year of free lessons, which she has donated to MacDonald to be gifted to a student in Tuck’s memory.

Read more on this uplifting story …

  • Post author By Paul Jenkins
  • Post date 24 June 2020
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A Brief History of the Violin

  • Post author By Paul Jenkins
  • Post date 18 June 2020
  • Categories In General posts
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A vielle, an ancestor of the modern violin, appears in a 1330 fresco. Museum of Navarra, Pamplona.

PHOTOGRAPH BY BRIDGEMAN/ACI
A vielle, an ancestor of the modern violin, appears in a 1330 fresco. Museum of Navarra, Pamplona.

PHOTOGRAPH BY BRIDGEMAN/ACI

A Brief History of the Violin

Italian musical masters took the violin from fiddle to first chair

Strummed, plucked, or bowed, violins had been making music for centuries before Andrea Amati and Antonio Stradivari brought them to new heights in the 16th and 17th centuries.

The violin is arguably the world’s most popular instrument. Its expressive tones suit a variety of musical styles, from fast and furious to slow and sanguine. Becoming popular in the 16th century with both commoners and nobles, the violin has remained a democratic instrument, universal and versatile. (See also: 1,700-year-old musical instrument found, and it still works.)

Read more on this amazing story…

  • Post author By Paul Jenkins
  • Post date 18 June 2020
  • Categories In General posts
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At 87 Years Old, Al Schahn Began Restoring Violins. At 88, He Became a Violin Maker.

  • Post author By Paul Jenkins
  • Post date 17 June 2020
  • Categories In General posts
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It's never too late. At 87, Al Schahn took on a new career.Karen Gavis
It’s never too late. At 87, Al Schahn took on a new career.
Karen Gavis

At 87 Years Old, Al Schahn Began Restoring Violins. At 88, He Became a Violin Maker.

As a boy, Al Schahn knew that the handmade violins his “papa” created made a distinct sound. Now 88 years old, Schahn began patiently restoring musical instruments last year and has since refurbished more than 20 violins, he says, including 13 that his father made.

Read more about Al Schahn here …..

  • Post author By Paul Jenkins
  • Post date 17 June 2020
  • Categories In General posts
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Million-dollar Strads fall to modern violins in blind ‘sound check’

  • Post author By Paul Jenkins
  • Post date 16 June 2020
  • Categories In General posts
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Million-dollar Strads fall to modern violins in blind ‘sound check’

brown wooden violin and violin bow
Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

For more than a century, violins crafted by Stradivari and members of his family have been thought to possess acoustic qualities that new violins simply can’t match. (Violins fashioned contemporaneously by members of the Guarneri family are similarly revered.)

Is this still the case….read more!

  • Post author By Paul Jenkins
  • Post date 16 June 2020
  • Categories In General posts
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Annual Donegal Fiddle Festival goes online to beat crisis

  • Post author By Paul Jenkins
  • Post date 12 June 2020
  • Categories In General posts
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Annual Donegal Fiddle Festival goes online to beat crisis

Fiddle players from all over the world attended last year's Donegal Fiddle Week.
Fiddle players from all over the world attended last year’s Donegal Fiddle Week.

With the Covid-19 lockdown many of the events organised by Cairdeas na bhFidiléirí have been forced to go online.

Organisers of the annual Donegal Fiddle Week say they are determined that the pandemic won’t force them to abandon this year’s festival.

The week-long carnival dedicated to the fiddle music of Co Donegal attracts ‘trad’ enthusiasts from across the world. Organised by Cairdeas na bhFidiléiri (Friendship of Fiddlers), it has become a firm fixture in the Irish music calendar since the first festival in Glencolmcille 35 years ago.

Read more here…….

  • Post author By Paul Jenkins
  • Post date 12 June 2020
  • Categories In General posts
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Why is Arthur Edward Smith considered Australia’s best violin-maker?

  • Post author By Paul Jenkins
  • Post date 11 June 2020
  • Categories In General posts
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Why is Arthur Edward Smith considered Australia’s best violin-maker?

Arthur Edward Smith and Isaac Stern in Sydney, 1947.
Photo courtesy of the National Library of Australia
Arthur Edward Smith and Isaac Stern in Sydney, 1947.
Photo courtesy of the National Library of Australia

Today in both Australia & the wider global community, Arthur Edward Smith is considered the most important violin-maker to have been active in Australia. After migrating from London to Australia in 1909, Smith’s reputation began to grow. As his reputation grew, so did the prices for his violins, with one such example selling for USD $84,000 at a 2017 Tarisio auction.

After passing away in 1978, certainly no other domestic maker has been so well regarded as A. E. Smith, despite there being a number of local violin-makers over the years. What is it then that sets Smith apart? Why are his instruments so well regarded & sought after, both locally & internationally?

Read more here……

  • Post author By Paul Jenkins
  • Post date 11 June 2020
  • Categories In General posts
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At 87 Years Old, Al Schahn Began Restoring Violins. At 88, He Became a Violin Maker.

  • Post author By Paul Jenkins
  • Post date 10 June 2020
  • Categories In General posts
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At 87 Years Old, Al Schahn Began Restoring Violins. At 88, He Became a Violin Maker.

It's never too late. At 87, Al Schahn took on a new career.
It’s never too late. At 87, Al Schahn took on a new career.

As a boy, Al Schahn knew that the handmade violins his “papa” created made a distinct sound. Now 88 years old, Schahn began patiently restoring musical instruments last year and has since refurbished more than 20 violins, he says, including 13 that his father made.

When pondering why he had waited until the age of 88 to build his own violin, Schahn says, “I was busy.”

To read more about this amazing man…….

  • Post author By Paul Jenkins
  • Post date 10 June 2020
  • Categories In General posts
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