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  • Crème of the Crop

    Celtic Woman 4 - Compilation (Valley Entertainment)
     
     Julie Fowlis - Uam (From Me) (Shoeshine Records, 2010)
     
     Altan with R.T. E. Concert Orchestra - 25th Anniversary Celebration (Compass Records, 2010)
     
     When I first discovered Celtic music in College, I made the mistake of thinking that Celtic music only derived from the United Kingdom and Ireland. If Galicia, Brittany, Cape Breton and Quebec were mentioned, it went in one ear and out the other. I remember some viewers of the PBS special River Dance feeling stunned with the inclusion of Spanish flamenco in its Celtic program. Of course, flamenco doesn't possess Celtic roots as far as I know, but Spain boasts Celtic regions in Asturias and Galicia where Celtic music plays a dominant role complete with Spanish bagpipes and other regional instruments.

    The compilation recording, Celtic Woman 4 released on Valley Entertainment provides a collection of songs performed by Irish and Scottish women. The songs for the most part fall into the misty-eyed laments that conjure images of green rolling hills framed by rocky shorelines and occasionally fields of lucky clovers.

     

    The vocalists sing in Scottish Gaelic (Julie Fowlis), Gaelic and English (Back of the Moon and Kate Rusby). You won’t find any fiery jigs, reels or livelier tunes on this compilation, nor will you find liner notes describing the origins of songs or dialects in which the songs are sung. But anyone seeking a collection of relaxing Celtic songs sung by crème of the crop vocalists will enjoy this lovely excursion to the lush emerald British Isles. And Kate Rusby’s heartfelt interpretation of Blooming Heather satisfies any Celtic music craving.

    Scottish Gaelic vocalist Julie Fowlis follows up her second CD, Cuilidh with another compelling work, Uam (From Me) that features work and love songs from the Hebrides Islands. Fowlis spreads her wings further on this recording and includes a traditional Highland tune she learned from Cape Breton musician Angus MacKenzie (the “bad boy” of Canadian Celtic music),and a tune from Brittany, France, I Was Born in the Midst of the Sea. She includes original material too.

    Fowlis frames her gorgeous vocals with whistles, an oboe, bouzouki, fiddle, guitar, Celtic percussion, and a lively array of guest musicians including, Mary Smith (vocals), Allan MacDonald (highland bagpipes and vocals), Phil Cunningham (piano and accordion), Ewen Vernal (double bass), Eddi Reader (vocals), Tom Doorley (flute and whistles), Sharon Shannon (button-accordion), Jerry Douglas (lap steel guitar) and Michelle Fowlis (vocals). The arrangements highlight the chosen repertoire.

    Fowlis provides English translations of the lyrics and detailed notes on each of the songs, noting origins and purpose. Tragic love stories interlace with stories about the seas and soothing milking songs that provide nourishment for the milk maid and the cow as well as, lively songs sung by women engaged in the tweed making process (waulking songs).

    Uam acts as more than a collection of Scottish folks songs. Fowlis took on the mission of preserving an endangered language and equally endangered musical traditions. Though this recording doesn’t possess the earmarks of a field recording and the musicians wield their artistic license by providing their listeners an opportunity to celebrate a rare heritage from the northern British Isles and beyond.

    A Scottish Gaelic tune, Mo Ghaoil, also makes an appearance on the Irish sextet Altan’s 25th Anniversary Celebration CD. This recording strolls down memory lane, bringing out favorites of the band and performing them over Fiachtra Trench’s lush arrangement compliments of R.T.E. Concert Orchestra. Altan, considered one of Ireland’s proponents of traditional music delivers the goods here with hearty reels, ethereal ballads and fiery jigs performed on bouzouki (Ciaran Curran), accordion (Dermon Byrne), guitar (Mark Kelly), fiddle and whistles (Ciaran Tourish) and topped by co-founder Mairéad Ní Mhaonaigh’s vocals and fiddle.

    The orchestration combined with the sextet’s passionate performance breaks new ground and sounds spectacular, fresh and even raw in regard to its pioneering spirit. I imagine that fans of Celtic music will jump on this recording in the same manner as Celtic music audiences jumped on the RiverDance concept many years ago. Whether Altan performs gentle ballads such as Cití na gCumann or I Wish My Love was a Red Red Rose, with gorgeous vocal phrasing framed by the orchestra or breaks out into a spritely set of jigs or reels, (Roseville), you can feel passion dripping off of the musicians.

    This stroll down memory lane, with a tribute to Ní Mhaonaigh’s late husband and flute player, Frankie Kennedy (co-founder of Altan) who died from cancer in the 1990s, reaches across the globe with tunes hailing from as far flung as Canada’s Cape Breton and as nearby as Scotland, though most of the repertoire hails from Ireland.

    In recent decades the Irish government pumped cultural grants into its traditional music which allowed bands like Altan and Lunasa for instance to bring Irish music to the rest of the world in an uncompromising manner. And Irish musicians have been able to make a living recording and touring, but it’s not just about money as Ní Mhaonaigh cites in the press notes, “Now with the recession, I see people being more reflective, and more in touch with who we are in this world, and asking what can we give the world that is different.”

    I couldn’t have expressed it better myself. Altan’s music, with its gentle melodies, uplifting instrumentation and lush orchestration brings its gift to the world. And for that, I’m truly grateful and I feel honored to review this anniversary CD. Bonne Anniversaire!

     

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    Compliments of The Whole Music Experience blog.
     

Part Time Work PDF Print E-mail

Online Work Study (OWS) - Part time work for online degree program students

1. Introduction
2. Requirements to join OWS

3. Nature of OWS
4. Salary and Work Time

Introduction

The purpose of the program is for students to obtain U.S. corporation or U.S. institute work experience. OWS provides income that can assist students financially. OWS does not interfere with the regular study or work schedules of online degree students. Students in OWS earn up to $7,115 each year. Low income students who receive New Era grant can usually cover all tuition costs through OWS with in a year or so.

Requirements to join Online Work Study (OWS):

1. All OWS positions are assigned to registered students within 3 months after enrollment.

2. All low income online students (Annual income below USD 60,000).

3. All online degree programs provide OWS, including the following majors.

Major Type of Degree
Bachelor of Business Information Technology (BBIT) Online Degree
Master of Business Information Technology (MBIT) Online Degree
Bachelor of Business Administration (BBA) Online Degree
Master of Business Administration (MBA) Online Degree
Executive Master of Business Administration (EMBA) Online Degree
Bachelor of Business English (BBE) Online Degree
Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN-RN) Online Degree
Master of Health Administration (MHA) Online Degree

 

Nature of OWS:

All the positions are assigned by U.S. corporations or U.S. institutes.

All work can be completed in the vicinity of the student's residence, as most work required can be completed directly online or with student's own computer.

If you are interested in building a career in corporations as listed below, you should start to establish work experience with OWS.

Accenture
Agfa
Alcoa Mill Products
Alliance Energy
Allied Signal Aerospace
American Home Security
AMTS Data Systems
Applied Systems Inc
AT&T
Automotive Systems Laboratory
Bailey Controls
Baker Hughes Inteq
Bell Canada
Bell South
BellSouth Telecommunications
Benton County Information Systems
Bethlehem Steel
Boeing
Bryan Memorial Hospital
Caterpillar Inc
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Cell Star LTD
Chevron
Chrysler
Cisco
City Of Hope Cancer Ctr
Coastal Engineering
Comdial Telecommunications
Communications International
Computer Science Corporation
Con Agra Foods
Corning Cable Systems
CSX Transportation
Daimler Chrysler
Dell
Deloitte Consulting
EDS
Exxon
General Dynamics
General Electric
General Motors
GM- Metal Fabrication
Green Mountain Power
Groton Utilities
GTech Corporation
HAI Finance Corp
Halliburton
Harley Davidson
HB Media Group
Hiawatha Community Hospital
Hibernia National Bank
Hitachi High-Tech Electronics Engineering
HP
Hutchinson Technologies
IBM
Ingersoll-Rand
Intel
Kaiser Foundation Hospital
Kelly Services
Kimberly-Clark Corporation
Lear Corporation
Liquid Container
Lockheed Martin
Los Angeles Metropolitan Medical Center
Lowes Home Improvement
ManTech
Martin Luther King Jr.-Harbor Hospital
May Department Stores Co.
McCann University
Mercy General Hospital
Meridian Imaging Solutions
Meridian One Corporation
Metropolitan State Hospital
Miller Brewing Co
MN Star Technologies
Mobil
Morgan Gin Company
Motorola
Novartis Pharmaceuticals
Nunkin & Bush
Pacific Sunwear
Picker International
Praxis Inc.
Qwest
Raytheon
RCG Information Technology
ROCKWELL COLLINS
Sandia National Laboratories
Skyworks Solutions Inc
South Carolina Electric and Power
Sprint
St Microelectronics
St. Joseph Hospital
Stanley Technologies Inc
Teal Electronics
Technion Communications Corp
Tessenderlo-Kerley
Texaco
The Boeing Company
The Raymond Corporation
Thomson Consumer Electronics
Thomson Multimedia Inc
Union Pacific Railroad
United Technology
US Steel Gary Works
US West Pathways
Verizon Communications
Visteon Systems
Washington Hospital
West Los Angeles Memorial Hospital
Western States Venture Capital
Xerox
Xylan Corp
York International Corporation

 

Types of OWS:
1. Market researcher: analyze product and market trends
2.Translator: translate certain documents and material into local languages
3. Graphic editor: design graphics or animations using software
4. Information processor : Processing and organizing data
5. Independent consultant: provide consulting services for local markets or products
6. Luxury sales: sales and marketing of top brands and concepts into local markets, such as auto, yachts, tourism and fashion, etc.
ows

Salary and Work Time:

The work time is completely flexible and can take between one hour to twenty hours each week. Students with busy schedules have the option not to participate at any time.

Paid amount: not lower than the minimum wage in U.S.A. ($8.00 per hour) or commission based. Payment is made monthly in U.S. dollars.

All positions are provided until graduation.