Music

Exploring the Music of Ireland

by Kerry Dexter /
Kerry Dexter's picture
Feb 16, 2016 / 0 comments

The music of Ireland: it is a source of connection, a way of celebration, a path for reaching across borders and boundaries. It can be a way of sharing and creating stories, of connecting families and welcoming strangers, remembering absent loved ones, and gaining perspective on present troubles.

Exploring the Music of Ireland

Savannah Music Festival: Education in the Spotlight

by Kerry Dexter /
Kerry Dexter's picture
Jan 18, 2016 / 0 comments

The city of Savannah, Georgia, has been a place where cultures meet and mix and mingle ever since its early days centuries ago. Blues, bluegrass, country music, jazz, gospel, and Celtic music are local traditions in music that continue to flourish in Savannah. Over the years, it has also become a crossroads for classical musicians, those who work in opera, and musicians who bring their native traditions from many parts of the globe. The Savannah Music Festival celebrates and encourages all these aspects of music.

Scotland's Music: A Saint Andrew's Day Tapestry

by Kerry Dexter /
Kerry Dexter's picture
Nov 16, 2015 / 0 comments

As autumn turns to winter in Scotland -- a transition which certainly happens during November -- days become shorter, temperatures fall, it may begin to snow, and that snow, already in place or oncoming, may begin to stay around longer. There are changes in the quality of light as the sun hangs low in the sky, and at night stars shine brightly.

Maestro Magic -- Eric Jacobsen in Glorious Debut with Orlando Philharmonic By Josh Garrick

In the past 11 months, Orlando has twice announced to the world that the city the world will always know as the vacation land home of DisneyWorld is ready to stand up and say, “We are MORE than a place to stay while you visit a theme park.” The first miracle event happened last November when, led by Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer, philanthropist Jim Pugh, and Executive Director Kathy Ramsberger, we opened the magnificently world-class Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts.  

Listening to the West

by Kerry Dexter /
Kerry Dexter's picture
Oct 19, 2015 / 0 comments

The Texas hill country, the high country of Alberta, the dusty backroads of rural California, the mountains of Colorado, the quiet landscapes of Montana, the forested slopes of Oregon ranges: each of these has had its part in shaping and changing and keeping alive the idea of the west in North America. So, too, the musicians who have been shaped and drawn to these places have had their part in creating, defining, and sharing ideas of these landscapes. Take a listen...

Collaborations: Stories Told in Word and Melody

by Kerry Dexter /
Kerry Dexter's picture
Aug 17, 2015 / 0 comments

Music is a collaborative art and a solitary one -- solitary at times in creation and at practice and study, collaborative with listeners, other players and singers, and at times, with musicians who are also partners in life. From the landscapes and traditions of Cape Breton, Ontario, Texas, Ireland, and Boston, among other places, Natalie MacMaster and Donnell Leahy, Bruce Robison and Kelly Willis, and Matt and Shannon Heaton draw their stories told in word and melody...

Explore the sounds of a Celtic Cafe with Putumayo World Music

by Kerry Dexter /
Kerry Dexter's picture
Jul 20, 2015 / 0 comments

The mission of Putumayo World Music is defined in its tagline: music guaranteed to make you feel good. Putumayo founder Dan Storper and ethnomusicologist Jacob Edgar search the world for music from varied cultures to meet this idea.

Putumayo: Introducing the World Through Music

by Kerry Dexter /
Kerry Dexter's picture
Jun 15, 2015 / 0 comments

Music speaks in many ways: melody, tone, timbre resonance, rhythm, instrumentation, and word -- but what if you do not understand the words being sung? Dan Storper noticed that people were responding to, and asking about, the music from Latin America and other parts of the world which he played to enhance the atmosphere in his clothing and handcraft stores.

Walking the World of Music with Rani Arbo & daisy mayhem

by Kerry Dexter /
Kerry Dexter's picture
Apr 21, 2015 / 1 comments

A young girl who learned music from from medieval to Poulenc to Paul Winter in the choir at a great cathedral, a boy who loved jumping on his parents' bed, not so much for the love of jumping as for the love of the sounds the springs made, another boy who was drawn to the sound of the bagpipes and knew he had to learn to play them, and a boy who found a dusty old guitar and knew he had to figure it out: Rani Arbo, Scott Kessel, Andrew Kinsey, and Anand Nayak began early on their musical paths.

World Musician Guy Mendilow, Part 2

by Kerry Dexter /
Kerry Dexter's picture
Nov 20, 2009 / 0 comments

Guy Mendilow is a musician who is passionate about exploring sounds across cultures. He is world citizen himself, growing up following his professor father’s assignments from Israel, where he was born, to South Africa and the United States, and also living for a time in Brazil. On his latest album, Skyland, Mendilow includes music that mixes ideas from those cultures, Yiddish songs from a guest vocalist, Cajun accordion and bamboo flute from regular band members, and his own overtone singing along with a range of other instruments and styles.

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