The First Bradfield Traditional Music Weekend 13th,14th & 15th August 2004
#1
Posted 21 April 2004 - 06:58 AM
Mark Davies
Edgemount Farm
Lumb Lane
High Bradfield
Sheffield S6 6LJ
Tel:0114 2851479
Mobile:07850475067
Email:edeophone@aol.com
#2
Posted 21 April 2004 - 04:35 PM
I would recommend the weekend,which I will attend on the Saturday and also the CD when it is released.Some memorable performances.
Hope to see some old friends and many new.
Al
#3
Posted 23 April 2004 - 12:42 AM
I'm currently exiled to southern California, where there seems to be total absence of anything concertina-related.
--
Paul Hardy.
Paul at paulhardy dot net
A Brit, returned from Redlands, California to Cambridge, UK
#4
Posted 23 April 2004 - 01:49 AM
Paul_Hardy, on Apr 23 2004, 06:42 AM, said:
Shouldn't be so.
I believe Stephen Mills' map shows 6 players in the region... 2 anglo, 2 English, 1 duet, and 1 who plays all 3 types.
Where in southern California are you located?
#5
Posted 23 April 2004 - 09:20 AM
Jim, when you gather at the SSI, raise a glass to the luck of being in the thick of so many fine players in so many styles. You lot in the NE U.S., also, next NESI. My colleague, Ruth, the fiddling Neurobiologist, who’s played at the amateur level with many noted international players and is in the thick of the Irish scene here, has heard only a rumor of another concertina player, besides me, in the Houston area. My daughter's harp teacher, who the Chieftains tap to play their concerts when they're in Texas, hasn't heard of any.
Kurt, you're hosting the next (first) Gulf Coast Squeeze-In at the Baton Rouge Dairy Queen nearest your house, right?
Paul, I’d only suggest you check out the local festivals and slowly grow some contacts. A quick look at southern California netted me Lark in the Morning’s festival, which is, however, in Northern California (Mendocino) at the end of July. I did notice Jack Gilder, a noted concertina player is heavily involved, although no concertina workshops appeared on their schedule.
This link Henk van Aalten once provided lists concertina players. Some, like Chris Cooper, are based in LA.
[Note in edit: Sorry, Paul. You are of course the GREEN dot east of LA.
This post has been edited by Stephen Mills: 30 April 2004 - 10:39 AM
#6
Posted 28 April 2004 - 01:42 PM
Paul_Hardy, on Apr 23 2004, 12:42 AM, said:
I'm currently exiled to southern California, where there seems to be total absence of anything concertina-related.
--
Paul Hardy.
13th, 14th and 15th August.
Samantha
#7
Posted 28 April 2004 - 04:03 PM
Stephen Mills, on Apr 23 2004, 09:20 AM, said:
Whoosh! The scale of the US catches me out again. I was going to say that you had not just a player but a maker on your doorstep, when I thought I'd better check my US road atlas. It's over 300 miles from Houston to Mesquite! You have my sympathy. Come and live somewhere cosy, like England...
Chris
and for company try The International Concertina Association
A revolution without dancing is a revolution not worth having.
#8
Posted 28 April 2004 - 04:24 PM
Quote
For a visit, sometime pretty soon, I hope, thanks to international scientific conferences. If I'd taken up concertina sooner, I probably would have made it to one in London last year.
For this year, a detour from a meeting in Vermont to the Button Box will have to do, and then, in Australia, maybe I can find a good musical pub in Sydney or Brisbane. Any pub recommendations, you Australian squeezers? Another not exactly cozy country.
#9
Posted 29 April 2004 - 06:10 AM
Robin Madge
#10
Posted 29 April 2004 - 06:30 AM
Robin Madge, on Apr 29 2004, 06:10 AM, said:
Just out of curiosity, has anybody actually tried balancing Britain on a point, to determine where the centre actually is?
Chris
and for company try The International Concertina Association
A revolution without dancing is a revolution not worth having.
#12
Posted 29 April 2004 - 09:03 AM
Peter Brook, on Apr 29 2004, 02:18 PM, said:
Probably depends on whether you're taking the center of England, the island of Great Britain (including Scotland and Wales, but not the Hebrides or other islands), or the UK (including Northern Ireland).
#13
Posted 29 April 2004 - 10:05 AM
My wife tells me that they were shown at school how to take the centre of gravity of an irregular object as a physics lesson and that they used a cut out of Britain. It came out as near to Dunsop Bridge.
Robin Madge
#14
Posted 29 April 2004 - 11:07 AM
Robin Madge, on Apr 29 2004, 04:05 PM, said:
I suppose finding a centre of levity in Britain would be rather more difficult.
#15
Posted 30 April 2004 - 06:13 AM
Presumably a helium factory is a "centre of levity".
As a point of historical interest, I wonder how much it has moved in the last 30 odd years with coastal erosion and land reclamation schemes?
Robin Madge

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