Showing posts with label eisteddfod. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eisteddfod. Show all posts

Aug 27, 2012

National Eisteddfod - Interview With Organiser of Maes Gwyrdd Nathan Williams

.

AmeriCymru member Nathan Lewis Williams is a freelance musician, sound engineer and music promoter working mostly in Glastonbury, England. He is a fluent Welsh speaker and was raised in Coedpoeth in North East Wales. He sings Welsh traditional music and translates Welsh poetry into English. This year he organised the first ever Green Field ( Maes Gwyrdd ) at the National Eisteddfod held on the Vale of Glamorgan between August 4th and 11th. AmeriCymru spoke to him about the event.

Sep 14, 2011

Llangollen Eisteddfod Appoints New Music Director

eilir owen griffiths











Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod are pleased to announce that they have appointed Eilir Owen Griffiths, the highly successful conductor and composer, as their new Music Director to follow Mervyn Cousins who has left to take a senior post with the Associated Board of Royal Colleges of Music. 

Mr Griffiths, 30, a native of Denbigh and whose parents still live in Colwyn Bay, is a Tutor/Cultural Organiser at The University of Wales Trinity St David in Carmarthen, where, in addition to lecturing he is also a director for Musical Theatre productions and a singing teacher, as well as being Artistic Director of the Trinity Arts Festival.  He is best known throughout Wales as the Musical Director of the very well-known choirs CF1 and Côr Godre’r Garth with whom he has attained considerable success in competitions and concerts.  He conducts the college choir, and is also a highly-regarded composer, his most recent work being a “Requiem” written to celebrate the creation of a new university, which received its premiere in June 2011 with Bryn Terfel and Wynne Evans performing together with Eilir’s 3 choirs and the Chamber Orchestra of Wales.  In addition to his work in Wales, Eilir has considerable international contacts, especially with Poland and North America, and is the founder of the Stuart Burrows International Voice Award

Eilir said “I am very much looking forward to the challenge of maintaining and advancing the very high standards of the International Eisteddfod, and I am particularly anxious to increase the involvement of children in this great festival”   

Eisteddfod Chairman Phil Davies said “We are all very excited at this new appointment of a young man who, while at the heart of the Welsh music scene, has a wide and international outlook which will equip him well for the task of taking the Llangollen Eisteddfod forward to even greater achievements.”
Eilir Owen Griffiths


Jun 28, 2011

Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod – Senior appointment for North Wales’ largest music festival


Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod is seeking to appoint a new music director. The vacancy follows the announcement earlier this year by the current chief executive, Mervyn Cousins that he would be leaving after next month’s festival.

The senior post, will oversee the artistic and musical side of the annual Eisteddfod, currently in its 65thyear.
Phil Davies, Chairman of the International Eisteddfod, says: “We owe a great debt to Mervyn for all he has done for the Eisteddfod during his eight years.  We hope to attract a successor who will carry the Eisteddfod forward while maintaining the high artistic standards that have been established over the last 65 years.”

A number of well-known musical figures have held the post of music director in past years, including Arwel Hughes and Roy Bohana. 

The first music director was WS Gwynn Williams, one of the founders of the Eisteddfod, shortly after the end of World War II.

It aimed then, and continues to bring people together from different nationalities as an antidote to the ravages of war and has been a strong influence for peace and goodwill ever since.

The world famous Eisteddfod stage has held performances by Pavarotti, Shirley Bassey, Katherine Jenkins and Bryn Terfel. This year, Lulu, Russell Watson, Ruthie Henshall and McFly will each perform during the festival.
Applicants interested in the position of music director, which carries an honorarium, are invited to experience the unique international festival taking place in Llangollen from 4 – 10 July.

Further information about the post can be found at www.international-eisteddfod.co.uk.    
 

PRESS CONTACT
Mr Producer – Gareth Rhys Evans
02920 916667

May 2, 2011

Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod celebrates its 65th birthday with a massive giveaway for people from Bangor to Birmingham and Liverpool to Llangethi.



Village of Llangollen in North Wales/UK, view ...Llangollen Image via Wikipedia
July will mark the 65th anniversary of the world famous Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod and to celebrate this milestone the Eisteddfod has a special offer for the ‘local’ community. The first 65 people, who live within 65 miles of Llangollen Pavilion, to call the box office and quote sixty-five between 2nd May and 16th May will benefit from a fantastic 2-4-1 offer on tickets to one of the fabulous evening concerts scheduled for this summer. In addition to tickets to these spectacular evening concerts Llangollen also has a 2-4-1 offer available on a further 65 pairs of Day Passes for access to the festival ground.


A 65 mile radius of Llangollen includes Liverpool, Manchester, Birmingham, Blackpool, Shrewsbury, Chester, Wrexham, Bangor and Aberystwyth.


Llangollen is famed for securing the biggest names in the music industry to perform at the headline concerts. This year is to be no exception; singing sensation Lulu, performs at the Opening Gala Concert on Monday with her special guests including Ricky Astley and Kiki Dee!  Russell Watson will be headlining the Tuesday Evening Concert at Llangollen and will be supported by teenage Mezzo Soprano, Faryl Smith. Tuesday is also International Children’s Day and will include the annual Llangollen Peace Message, the moving ‘Sound of Silence’, as well as the famous Parade of Nations! 

McFly performed at the Point in 2006. Image via WikipediaFriday Evening’s concert sees West End and Broadway star, Ruthie Henshall, perform ‘The Best of the West End’ featuring soloists from the London stage, accompanied by the Orchestra of the Welsh National Opera. Saturday is International Family Day. The @6 evening concerts feature guest of honour, cello virtuoso Julian Lloyd-Webber, playing some of his favourite music and in the Pavilion the World famous Choir of the World Competition and Concert. Sunday we have an exciting move from tradition with global pop sensation - McFly!    

Chief Executive of Llangollen Eisteddfod, Mervyn Cousins said: “This year’s lineup looks set to be one of the best yet, and we are thrilled to be able to offer people from the region the opportunity to join in our 65th birthday celebrations.”  

Fourteen countries were represented in the first Llangollen Eisteddfod, which was held between June 11th, and 15th, 1947. Since then more than 500,000 overseas competitions have performed in Llangollen alongside some of the music world’s best-loved performers including Pavarotti, Shirley Bassey, Katherine Jenkins, Elaine Page, Michael Ball and Bryn Terfel .  In 2004 the Eisteddfod was nominated for a Nobel Peace prize. 


To secure yourself one of these 65 pairs tickets call the box office on 01978 862001. This offer is not available online. For more information and ticket prices visit www.llangollen2011.co.uk 

    Please find below a list of towns and cities where residents are eligible for the 65th Birthday 2-4-1 offer 


    Aberystwyth
    Machynlleth
    Bala
    Manchester
    Bangor
    Market Drayton
    Barmouth
    Newcastle Under Lyme
    Birmingham
    Newtown
    Blackburn
    Northwich
    Blackppol
    Oldham
    Bolton
    Oswestry
    Buxton
    Porthmadog
    Caernarfon
    Poulton-le-Fylde
    Chester
    Preston
    Colwyn Bay
    Rhyl
    Dudley
    Shrewsbury
    Flint
    Southport
    Glossop
    St Helens
    Halesowen
    Stafford
    Kidderminster
    Stockport
    Leominster
    Stoke-on-Trent
    Leyland
    Stourbridge
    Liverpool
    Telford
    Llandrindod Wells
    Walsall
    Llandudno
    Welshppol
    Llanon
    West Bromwich
    Ludlow
    Wigan
    Macclesfield
    Wrexham

The Offer 
  • 65 Pairs of Tickets to any Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod 2011 Evening Concert available at two for one price.
  • 65 Pairs of Day Passes to the Llangollen International Musical Festival 2011 available at two for one price.
  • Offer available from 2nd May – 16th May.
  • This offer is only available by calling the Eisteddfod box office on 01978 862001 and quoting 65
  • Offer not available online, by email or post.
  • Offer not available on season tickets, family tickets or in conjunction with any other offer. 

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Mar 28, 2011

Paul Child to Lead Welsh National Anthem at Welsh American Event in L.A.


Paul Child is the man who leads the singing of the national anthem at the Millennium Stadium, Cardiff before Six Nations rugby matches. He is known as the "official voice of Welsh rugby" , Paul will be appearing at the West Coast's premier Welsh American event in LA this year. He will be leading the singing of the Welsh national anthem and appearing at the Friday night opening concert. This will be his first appearance in L.A. and by the happiest of coincidences it coincides with his birthday ( Fri Sept 23rd ).....read more HERE
 
 






Mar 22, 2011

An Interview With Paul Child - Official Singer of The Welsh Rugby Union


Paul Child is Wales' biggest independent selling artist. Paul has sang the Welsh National Anthem at many of the Wales international rugby matches at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff. ( When Paul sings, Wales wins!). We are extremely proud to welcome Paul to this year's West Coast eisteddfod in L.A. where he will be headlining and leading the singing of the Welsh anthem at the opening concert on Friday Tickets for the performance can be purchased at the bottom of this page.


AmeriCymru: Hi Paul...many thanks for agreeing to be interviewed by AmeriCymru. We last interviewed you two years ago. Care to fill us in on developments over the last few years?

Paul: The last couple of years have been really exciting, with the release of the 'After All These Years' CD in 2009, followed by the 'Best Of...' double CD "My Wales' last Summer. Both CDs have done really well, with the 'My Wales' CD outselling both Cerys Matthews' and Charlotte Church's latest releases. I also performed the Welsh National Anthem for the Welsh football team for the first time last October which was a great honour.


AmeriCymru: You recently performed at Disneyland Paris as part of their annual Festival of Wales, how was that experience and how did it come about?

Paul: Disney in Paris have been holding their Festival of Wales in March for the last couple of years, it's a great 3 day event which sees Minnie Mouse dressed in full Welsh costume for the weekend and lots of Choirs and performers around the park. This year they asked me go go over with my full ten piece band to headline the event. It was a great show with lots of Welsh people who had travelled over for the Welsh weekend as well as a great number of ex-pats living in the area.

AmeriCymru: At Disneyland, you performed "There's a Place," from your "My Wales" album - how was that song chosen and what can you tell us about it's creation?

Paul: Although the 'My Wales' double album is mainly a compilation of the most popular songs from my previous eight albums, we wanted to include a couple brand new songs, just to keep things fresh - Along with "Coming Home To Wales, "There's A Place" is one of my favourites. It was originally written in the Welsh language but we wanted to make it more accessible so it was re-written it in English, it's lovely song. The youtube link below shows a live performance of the track at Cardiff International Arena.


AmeriCymru: You're a father, do your children get to watch you perform? Are they ever able to travel with you? How do they like their dad's performances?

Paul: I'm a very proud father to Michael who is 12 and Kate who is 10. They have been to a few local shows and they like to get involved with the soundcheck and set-up. They are both members of the local youth theatre and Michael particularly loves acting and performing. We have just signed him up to a kids talent agency so we'll see what comes of that!

AmeriCymru: You will be appearing at he West Coast Eisteddfod in September. Is this your first performance in the States? First time in L.A.?

Paul: I am very excited about performing in LA, it will be my first time to do so but I'm lucky enough to have been there a few times in my life - I absolutely love the place! I remember my parents taking me the Disneyland when I was eleven and I made the trip again on my own when I was about 25. In Summer 2009 my wife and I took the kids over, we did Disney, Universal Studios, Seaworld plus of course Hollywood and the beaches. The Strand on Hermosa Beach has to be one of my favourite places in the world - I'd love to retire there one day!

AmeriCymru: Any final message for the readers and members of AmeriCymru?

Paul: Thanks you so much for inviting me to perform at the West Coast Eisteddfod, I am so looking forward to it. I'm sure that it is going to be a fantastic few days that we will all remember for a very long time - see you in September!


2011 West Coast Eisteddfod: Welsh Festival of Arts - Fri 23rd Sept



Opening Ceremonies on Friday, 23rd, 2011 from 6pm to 10pm
in the Barnsdall Gallery Theatre

Featuring Performances by:
"Official voice of the WRU"
Music • Acoustic
Music • Video • Performance Art Installation


Interview by Ceri Shaw Email

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Feb 19, 2011

Jack Bevil - Digon o Grwth To Appear at the West Coast Eisteddfod


We are extremely pleased and proud to announce that Jack Bevil will be appearing and performing at this years West Coast Eisteddfod in September. Watch this space for further details.

In the meantime here is Part I of our three part interview with Jack originally posted in 2009 Master of The Crwth - Digon o Grwth Part (1)

And here is a selection of tracks originally uploaded to the site to coincide with the interview. Enjoy!






Feb 16, 2011

An Interview With Bruce Lader

Bruce Lader’s fourth collection of poetry, Embrace, is about the need for love and intimacy. Winner of the 2010 Left Coast Eisteddfod Poetry Competition, he has received a writer-in-residence fellowship from The Wurlitzer Foundation and an honorarium from the College of Creative Studies at UC-Santa Barbara. A New York City teacher for many years, he is the founding director of Bridges Tutoring, an organization based in Raleigh, North Carolina, educating multicultural students. We spoke to Bruce about his work and the poets craft.

AmeriCymru: Hi Bruce, and many thanks for agreeing to be interviewed by AmeriCymru. You won the Left Coast Eisteddfod poetry competition last year with your poem 'Iberia' . Care to tell us what inspired it?

Bruce: The night I wrote “Iberia,” the famous gypsy flamenco dancer, Carmen Amaya, and I danced a passionate duet at Los Gallos in Sevilla. The image in the fifth stanza of the poem, “gypsy fires dance duende from earth/ like poppies of blood/ flaming Andalusian mountains” refers to our unforgettable performance. Actually, Ceri, what really inspired the poem might not sound as exciting.

I was traveling alone in Spain in 1977 with a Berlitz handbook and a semester of high school Spanish. Being a fan of flamenco singing and dancing, I attended a flamenco performance in Sevilla. I wrote the poem in Mallorca, then flew to England for the Silver Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth, and visited Laugharne where Dylan wrote most of his poems. The friendly people I met in Wales are also in my memory.

The words and images flowed together in a single draft. It was an attempt to evoke the duende spirit of Spain’s culture. The sprung organic energy of poets like Dylan Thomas and G.M. Hopkins (who considered himself half Welsh) had already influenced me, as had the surreal poetry of Lorca. A Spanish friend in Brooklyn helped me translate the poem when I came back home, but I haven’t tried to get it published in Spanish. Poems often live with me many years before they’re ready to send out. I wasn’t satisfied with the last four lines and revised them in 2003 with the allusion to Don Quixote, then the poem was published by Talking River at Lewis-Clark State College in Idaho. After reading the Eisteddfod Competition poems on the AmeriCymru site, I thought it might be a good one to enter and was honored that Peter Thabit Jones chose it. “Iberia” is included in one of my full-length books that’s almost finished.

AmeriCymru: Your most recent collection, 'Embrace'  marks something of a departure from earlier anthologies like 'Landscapes of Longing' . What prompted you to focus on personal relationships and the universal human need for love in this collection?

Bruce: I’d been publishing poems about love and eroticism in magazines for many years. The decision to include all love poems in one book took place after having many relationship experiences and being in a second marriage. Like many of us, I’m still trying to understand relationships and how to make marriage succeed. Just imagine all the trouble and time it would save if everyone owned talking social robots downloaded with different personalities. We could finally get rid of the problems involved in maintaining relationships. The Vicissitudes of Romance section of Landscapes of Longing, has poems focused on intimate relationships, and Discovering Mortality, my first full-length collection also includes poems about love.

The motive to write positively about love and sex went into Embrace. It’s about various conflicting and amusing moments between lovers. My wife, Renata, who is Polish, likes to believe that every poem in the book is about her, and that’s fine with me since she inspired the book and I want the marriage to survive. There are so many kinds of love that perhaps the need for it is what makes it universal. I don’t believe “romantic” love, as we know it in the western world, is universal, though the need for a kind of intimate loving connection with another is probably what makes us human and prevents total destruction. Contemporary poetry—in the US anyway—is losing the intimate author-reader connection. A thin line separates the personal from the sentimental, and experienced poets try to stay away from the greeting-card zone. That could be one reason there aren’t more poets writing about love affairs. It also requires a lot of strength to explore difficult conflicted feelings.

AmeriCymru: Your poem "How to Bring a Marriage Good Luck" contains a number of 'tips' to help maintain a healthy relationship. Care to tell us a little more about it? I particularly enjoyed the sparseness and finality of number 5:- "Cancel seven business engagements."

Bruce: Ceri, I’m glad you like the fifth step. My brother asked me to read this poem at his wedding in Eugene two year ago and it’s one of my favorites. I want readers to imagine browsing through a bookstore, opening an old book of mysterious encoded spells and turning to a page on how to bring good luck into a relationship. The book of charms has been used so much that part of the last step is missing (maybe stolen) as indicated in the poem.

The poem is about the magic that can happen when we make time for ourselves and the loved ones in our lives. It takes time and effort to crack the secret encryptions of our relationships. Perhaps love relationships have become too much like “business engagements.” Step five seems to work almost as effectively as number six, the sensuous/erotic step, which has been proven effective through many years of personal experience. Five works better in theory than practice since a lot of us would settle for canceling even one business engagement if we could. The entire poem is intended to be a humorous satire on our struggles to balance our hectic lives and make relationships work. I have to voice a disclaimer that any of the tips in the poem help to maintain a healthy relationship, though sharing humor about love’s craziness can bring temporary relief.

AmeriCymru:  How should we approach our reading of poetry in the 21st century? Should it be  a comfortable/entertaining or an unnerving and unsettling experience?

Bruce: Perhaps when we read poetry, we should ask ourselves if the poems have a magical effect on us, if something in a poem invites us to read it again, if the subject and the way it’s written influence the way we think about, feel about, or perceive the world. The question is related to others like what is beauty in poetry, what kinds of challenges should poetry be offering, and how much risk should poets take with their work? That is to say, a lot of uncomfortable poetry challenges us because it deals with unpleasant subject matter, and at the same time its impact brings to awareness a sense of beauty within us. Since the question is perennial in literary history and argued among poets and critics, it’s hard to answer it adequately.

What can be inferred from this question is the issue of whether should poets focus on unpleasant subjects like suffering, evil, death, economic inequalities, and politics, or write comfortable feel-good poems, leaving to politicians and journalists the ugly, messy stuff about war and other horrendous problems that threaten our planet. I believe that poets need to address the important issues of their times. The challenges will be to interpret scientific breakthroughs in the fields of physics, biology, environmental studies, and technology. Recent discoveries are already changing the way we think about the origin of the universe and the meaning of life. The changes themselves are unsettling and poets need to address the problems.

I like to read challenging social and political poems that explore difficult age-old themes like the meanings of freedom, justice, and love in new ways that seem magical. My emotional and intellectual responses to themes like these are similar to listening to certain kinds of music like jazz and European classical, but I can’t speak for the ways that other readers approach poetry since, like music, what we look for, and find in poetry, differs depending on our life experiences and knowledge of the arts. Much of what I liked to read when I was a newcomer to poetry isn’t the kind of poetry I enjoy after four decades of reading and publishing, though I return to the classics and continue to get ideas from them. The second section of Landscapes of Longing is my interpretation of the ancient Greek myth of Sisyphus from the viewpoints of 12 different speakers. I wrote them to get at certain truths about human nature that might be disturbing.

Poets provide lenses of experience for reflecting on the world. Poetry written from the perspectives of established religious beliefs will always be around and readers may find comfort in them. However, the dichotomy of comfortable versus disturbing is paradoxical in that poets with the ability to write about difficult emotional material can open a window of empathy for readers and provide them with opportunities to find comfort. Poetry concerned with the unpleasant real world we live in can be entertaining, comforting, and even spiritual to the extent that readers can connect with a poet’s emotions and share the knowledge, experiences, and wisdom in the poems. Poetry will continue to help us become better human beings and lead more fulfilling lives.

The experience of reading and listening to poetry is already being revolutionized. In the next two or three decades, poets will be projecting virtual sensory images as holographic text messages from computers, cameras, and phones. Poets and audiences will be able to participate in slams, open mics, and workshops in our living rooms, classrooms, and on our porches. Poetry books and magazines will be sold at supermarket check outs, as well as bookstores, for those of us who want hard copies in our hands. The proliferation of online magazines and social networking tools is only the beginning of how poetry will be popularized and marketed as entertainment. Many poetry publishers and poets will be marketed like other entertainment enterprises. It’s a good idea for poets and readers to invest more in each other. We haven’t done that enough in the past.

AmeriCymru: Is the ability to write poetry a gift or is it the end result of decades of hard work?

Bruce: Another complex question. The ability to write lyrical verse is probably “a gift” related to the ability to create music. Most of what we consider to be traditional lyric poetry—stanzas with end-rhyme schemes set to classical metric forms that dominated poetry for so many centuries—have become less popular in contemporary poetry. The fact that a poem is rhymed and has classical Greek meter doesn’t necessarily make the poetry lyrical, in my opinion, only formal.

Rhythm is an open-ended resource for creativity. Modern and contemporary free verse that sings from an organic place in the poet’s distinctively voiced instrument is far more interesting, to me, than formal poetry and comes from decades of desire and hard work, though good formal and free verse both require lifetimes of commitment to craft. Commitment is about making poetry the top priority, and the willingness to sacrifice income and material comforts. A sense of being true to one’s poetic gift, a striving to get it (the gift) right, may be a poet’s ultimate responsibility.

I began as a lyric poet and all the poems in my first chapbook, Buoy on the Water, are free verse songs. Then I decided to blend natural cadences with narrative poetry so that I could more effectively relate what I know to readers. I like to let the content and rhythm of each poem determine its eventual form. The turn, or shift, in rhythmic direction that occurs in sonnets is natural for me and I have experimented with the possibilities of sonnet form. The ability to work with metaphorical ideas to convey feelings, especially extended metaphor, may also be inborn, and can certainly be developed.

AmeriCymru: How difficult is it for modern poets to find an audience? Is the internet an aid or a hindrance?

Bruce: Since the advent of the Internet and social networking, poets are finding the audiences they want a lot easier, and it’s a lot easier for audiences to find the poets they like. Poetry is becoming more of a viable product to larger audiences. Millions of viewers visit certain poetry magazine sites every issue, but I don’t think they carefully read more than a few of the poems on each site. I can read steadily at the computer for 20-30 minutes before my eyes get weary, but I can read a book or magazine in my hands for hours. The increased number of open mics, workshops, and literary organizations also makes it easier for poets to find their audience. The real difficulty is how to maintain the audience after finding it, since there are so many interesting poets in the marketplace and most of the audience is comprised of poets. Unfortunately, only a small percentage of audiences read poetry who aren’t also writers. This is a problem that publishers and small press, non-commercial writers continue to face.

Poets with Internet know-how and the time to social network are having good results. The Internet has been helping my work get published. Whether the Internet will influence the quality of poetry to achieve a higher or lower level over several decades is debatable; everyone has an opinion and it’s still too soon to conclude one way or the other. One of the dangers is that poets—beginners in particular—may believe that networking is a shortcut to learning the craft of writing and use it mainly to become popular. By focusing mainly on their audience, and not taking the time to read poets of proven excellence, many are neglecting better-quality poets who have spent lifetimes developing their craft.

AmeriCymru: What advice would you offer to anyone considering poetry as a vocation?

Bruce: Go for your dream—whether the dream is organizing poetry events in your community, writing poems to change the world, or winning prestigious award competitions. Reflect on why you write and the deeper meanings of your poems. Remember to write about the things and people you love; even experienced poets often forget this. Locate your inner comfort zone and take risks, research new subject matter of interest to you and try to write about ideas in ways you didn’t think you could, challenge yourself to write about a subject that is emotionally difficult—even if that poem doesn’t work, another one in the future could surprise you. If nothing in a new poem is surprising you, it probably won’t grab other readers. Write several versions of the poem, experiment with various rhythms, let the content determine the rhythm and free verse shapes of lines and stanzas, and use traditional forms to see what works better for you. Stretch outside your zone and keep learning. Ask for feedback about your writing from various poets whose writing you admire and from editors of magazines you value for the work they publish.

My practical advice is to spend a lot of time writing. Learn the poetry press market and network as soon as you can, but not at the expense of sacrificing needed writing time. If you’re spending more time networking and promoting than writing poems, schedule more writing time. Use search engines like Duotrope’s Digest to find publishers looking for your kind of work. Also develop the craft of prose, if you can, to complement poetry and help build a career. Join writers’ groups and societies, writing meetup groups, book clubs, men’s and women’s centers, attend poetry readings and workshops, and get into college writing programs. Develop a routine of writing and/or submitting every day. Don’t worry if your work doesn’t get published the first five or more years you submit; unsigned rejection slips and email responses with no comments are disappointing, but they don’t mean anything about the quality of your writing. Search for other magazines and book publishers and believe in your talent. Support other poets and they will eventually support you if you stay committed.

Read a variety of international poets living and dead. If you don’t enjoy the process of reading and writing poetry, read other genres. Maybe fiction or nonfiction is better suited to your talent. Poets need a lot of time to write, independent publishers expect them to spend a lot of time to promote their books, and the books bring little if any profit to the poets. A very small percentage of poets are fortunate enough to find commercial publishers. Anyone who believes they can earn a significant income from publishing only poetry should choose another occupation. Some money from poetry can be made from teaching workshops and courses, but the work is harder, travel expenses are involved, and the hours are much longer than in other vocations.

My rewards from poetry have come from the dream of being a poet who writes inventive poems that others understand and enjoy. I also get a sense of fulfillment from being friends with other poets in writers’ groups, and reading my work in print alongside poets whose work I admire. There have been exciting surprises—the $150 and publication in The Seventh Quarry that came with winning the Eisteddfod Competition were unexpected bonuses. There are poetry contests that offer thousands to the winner. However, the chance of winning any contest is like a lottery. In other words, I’m not going to leave my job as director of Bridges Tutoring. Besides, I enjoy helping students develop writing and reading skills and they have inspired many of my poems.

AmeriCymru: Where can people read/purchase your work online?

Bruce: My thanks to anyone who reads this interview. People can find excerpts of my books and purchase them from my author site at www.brucelader.com. The books are also available from the publishers, but you save shipping and handling costs by emailing me directly at bridgesbl@aol.com. Plus, you will receive a FREE jewelry gift of your choice: one pair of beaded earrings or one FREE beaded bookmark for any copy of Embrace, Landscapes of Longing, or Discovering Mortality that you order. My wife, Renata, is Polish and an award-winning artist who crafts gorgeous gifts. She made the complimentary jewelry to help launch the books.

There are YouTube videos of my readings and interviews, and magazines like Poetry, New York Quarterly, Harpur Palate, CircleShow, Centrifugal Eye, Earthshine, and Contemporary Verse 2 have archived my work online.

Here are links to my readings and interviews:






AmeriCymru: What's next for Bruce Lader?

Bruce: Diolch/Thank you, Ceri, for this chance to introduce myself to AmeriCymru members and visitors.

Radio interviews and public readings in NC to promote Embrace and Landscapes of Longing will continue. A chapbook of my antiwar poems is due to be published soon. The title is Voyage of the Virtual Citizen and the publisher is Lummox Press. The book is about a Special Forces soldier and his experiences from enlistment through his adjustment to civilian life and coping with PTSS (which reminds me that I’ve been reading Alun Lewis’s Collected Poems, thanks to my friend Mary Perkins-Gray, an excellent Welsh poet). Toward the end of 2011, Červená Barva Press will publish Fugitive Hope, a full-length book of poems about ways that hope is lost and regained.

I’m always busy working on new poems and publishing in magazines and anthologies. I have been working on three chapbooks and a new full-length manuscript and querying to find interested publishers. Anyone is welcome to email me and talk about life, poetry, and the interview. I have edited poetry manuscripts for authors to submit to book publishers and magazines, and have edited papers to help students meet course and degree requirements. We could also talk about those possibilities if you like.

Pob hwyl/All the best to your organization.


Interview by Ceri Shaw Email



West Coast Eisteddfod Lovespoon Contest On!


Reproduced with permission from David Western's Portland Lovespoon Blog

Well, no sooner had we announced the contest to help design this year's Eisteddfod spoon, the ideas came flooding in! We're very excited to get such a positive response and we look forward to seeing lots more excellent ideas!

In case you missed it last week, here is the design for the spoon:



We'll be looking for 3 designs to fit the blank circular sections and are open to any and all ideas at this point. As mentioned earlier, you don't need to be an AmeriCymru member or have the artistic capabilities of a Rembrandt...you just need a desire to have some fun. Scribble down your best ideas and post them as comments at one of three locations:
You may enter as many ideas as you like but only one design idea per person will make it to the final poll.

The contest is open now and will close for entries on March 31 so you have chance to ammend, improve or re-do your entries you may have already sent or if you think of something better in the six weeks! The final poll to choose three designs will be up on all three sites for one month from April 1st and will close April 30. There are no restrictions to what you can enter -- pictures, photos, poems, whatever floats your boat! Just remember that it has to fit in a 2" inch diameter circle and I have to have a fighting chance of rendering it in wood. So photos of the Sistine Chapel Ceiling or the unedited text of Beowulf likely won't make the cut!! If you are Welsh or have Welsh ancestry, let your pride have free reign, if you aren't Welsh, pretend you are! Everybody is welcome to enter, we don't care if you are kids, grandparents, miserable cranks, wickedly irreverent humourists, capitalists, socialists, fat, thin, incredibly witty, ploddingly dull, even if you are English!! So go on, give it a go and don't use the old 'I can't draw' and 'I don't have the imagination for this kind of thing' routines, because we've already taken those....THAT'S why we're getting YOU to do the work for us!!!

Winners will be selected by public vote during the month of April. Visitors to the AmeriCymru website will be free to vote for their three favourites from 10 possibilities picked by a selection committee comprised of Ceri, Gaabi, Dave and Lorin. The selection possibilities will be chosen after a rigorous protocol of alcohol consumption, intense brawling, arguing and name-calling, in the Welsh tradition, has taken place within the committee.

We even have prizes!!! Fox Chapel Publishing have generously donated three copies of "The Fine Art of Lovespoon Carving" to be awarded for the three winning designs. As a bonus, you will also enjoy the unstinting praise and admiration of all who behold your champion design when they are announced on May 1!



Have fun and be part of the 2011 West Coast Eisteddfod!!! But please remember that the spoon's purpose is to help raise donations to support our event. Please see your way to helping with a donation and you could be the one who wins it!!


Feb 15, 2011

Llangollen Announces it's Evening Concert line up: to include McFly, Russell Watson and Lulu!


Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod Week Schedule 2011



Monday 4th


Evening Concert: Lulu and Friends: Opening Gala Concert, 7.45pm £50/£40/£30


Tuesday 5th


Daytime: International Children’s Day

Strains of Hope: On the field, 5000 children will be transported to Africa, the Caribbean and the Americas, in a day of joyful, uplifting performances and workshops showcasing music and dance from around the world. The Peace Message from the Children of Wales is presented this year by school children from the Chirk and Glyn Ceiriog area. Alex Pascall from Grenada will delight us with some Caribbean harmony and Steven Sogo and his band Hope Street will perform.

The Parade. Parade of Nations. 4.30pm

The colour and excitement of the Festival spreads into the streets of Llangollen town with the Parade of Nations. Each year over 60 years, a vibrant tradition has continued.

Evening Concert: Russell Watson – La Voce:

Special Guest: Faryl Smith. 7.45pm.
Tickets £45, £35, £25


Wednesday 6th


Daytime: A Feast of Costume, Music and Dance.

The outstanding Llangollen competitions begin and continue throughout the day, with choirs and folk dancers from over 20 countries. Also featuring the best young soloists in the world.
  • Senior Children’s Choirs
  • Traditional Folk Dance Groups
  • Vocal Solo under 15 years of age
  • Vocal Solo aged 15-20
  • Instrumental Solo under 18 years of age
Dancing in the Street

On the field: Dance workshops and World Music performances, introducing performers from all five continents on the outside stages. Come to Llangollen and experience the whole World in One Place!

All the World, More Smiles, the festival’s award winning inclusive project, brings together music, dance, drama and art to the S4/C stage.

@6 Concert: Djabe: one of Europe’s most exciting jazz/folk fusion groups.

Evening Concert: One World, One Stage, One Llangollen Welcome (including the Welcome Ceremony and Procession). 7.45pm. £15 (children £5)


Thursday 7th


Daytime: Join the musical party; a day full of competitions for young performers with dazzling talent. A thousand children perform.

    • Junior Children’s Choirs
    • Children’s Folk Dance
    • Youth Choirs
    • Songs from the Show’s Final
    • Vocal Solo, 21 yrs of age and over Final
    • Instrumental Solo over 18 yrs of age Final
    • Dancing in the Street
    • Folk Dance Duos Final
    • Individual Folk Dance Final


12 noon: The moving ‘Sound of Silence’, the whole Pavilion and field fall silent, everyone links arms, and the Llangollen Message of Peace is broadcast to the world.

On the field: Enjoy upbeat music and colourful dancing, with a flavour of the exotic.

Special packages for Secondary Schools.
£5 per pupil. Teachers FREE
(Pre-booked parties only; pupil-teacher ratio 12:1)
@6 Concert: ‘Community Choir Fest’; hear both the winners of television’s ‘Codi Canu’, Côr Rhos a’r Cylch and Llangollen’s own community Choir.

Evening Concert: Noye’s Fludde, with performances from around the world £15 (children £5) 7.45pm


Friday 8th


Daytime: Folk Friday

Fabulous Folk and Choral performances, including Celtic groups, and uniquely inspiring inclusive singing, dance and theatre: the essence of Llangollen.
  • Mixed Choirs
  • Folk Song Choirs
  • Chamber Choirs
  • Folk Showcase


Bands from Wales also lead an eclectic mix of sights and sounds.
Reserved seat in the Pavilion: £15, £12
Ground admission (unreserved seat in Pavilion)
Adult £10, Concession £8, Child £5, Family £23
Special packages for Secondary Schools.
£5 per pupil. Teachers FREE
(Pre-booked parties only; pupil-teacher ratio 12:1)
Evening Concert: starring Ruthie Henshall: The Best of the West End: 8pm. £40, £30, £20


Saturday 9th


International Family Day.
Daytime: One Day, A Thousand Voices
Traditional male and female choirs, simply the best in the world, including Barbershop and Show choirs: the daytime competitions reach a climax.
On the field: A Festival within a Festival – all day fun for everyone. Music, dance, arts, crafts, story-telling, demonstrations and competitions for all.
@6 Concert: The day’s Guest of Honour, Julian Lloyd-Webber (‘Cello)
Evening Concert: Choir of The World, with Guest Appearance by Julian Lloyd Webber (Cello)


Sunday 10th


Daytime: “Sunday on the Field” - Bands and solo artists play on the field from 2pm.
Evening Concert: McFly, 7.45pm.Tickets: £35 (seated and standing; standing aged 14 and over), £25 (seated)
Full booking info:
Reserve your ticket NOW!
Online booking at www.llangollen2011.co.uk
(including ‘Choose your own seat’ option)
Box Office 01978 862001 9.30am to 4.30pm weekdays.
Email tickets@international-eisteddfod.co.uk
By post: Llangollen Eisteddfod Box Office, Royal International Pavilion, Abbey Road, Llangollen, LL20 8SW.
Season Tickets: amazing offers!
Become a Season Ticket Holder or a Friend of the Festival to have access to priority seating arrangements and great offers;
  • Platinum ticket is only: £200 Sit in the same seat all week (Day and night, Monday to Saturday!)
  • Gold - £135 Wednesday to Saturday Evening (£5 discount on top-price seats for Russell Watson concert)
  • Silver Season - All daytime sessions, Wednesday to Saturday, same top-price seat guarantee, £70.


FESTIVAL GROUND ADMISSION
(Pavilion Reserved seat ticket includes Ground Admission)
Adult £10
Concessions £8
Child Under 16 £5 (£2 Saturday)
EVENING GROUND ADMISSION
Only £1 – ‘Ground for a Pound’ after 4.30pm, Tuesday – Thursday
FAMILY GROUND ADMISSION
Wednesday -Friday £23 ; Saturday £20 (International Family Day)
(2 Adults & up to 3 children)
Press: Mr Producer Ltd
02920916667


Russell Watson Lulu McFly


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