Blogs

Lovespoons on a dark day


By Ceri Shaw, 2012-12-17

Reproduced with kind permission from David western's Portland Eisteddfod Lovespoon Blog

After yet another massacre of beautiful little children in the USA, it's pretty hard to come here and post. That kind of completely senseless and astonishing violence against society's most defenceless members makes it very hard to view the human race in any kind of positive light. In fact, it's pretty tempting to write the whole world off as a seriously deranged gong show and go hide in the quiet calm of my little studio.


I don't know why some people do what they do and I really don't understand the big deal about guns and owning them...but that is because I am a lovespoon carver. In my little world, people are happy, they're in love, they're proud of their families and they want to create something positive that they can share with others. It is the very polar opposite of the darkness which descended on that little elementary school in Connecticut yesterday.


I feel sickened by what I read in the news about this catastrophe and I feel helpless against the mindless violence and evil which seems to infest so many hearts these days...but my way to fight back against the horror of Connecticut is to make beauty.


So here here is my little memorial of 27 lovespoons to all those precious lives lost yesterday.

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A Christmas Present From Seren


By Ceri Shaw, 2012-12-16

Our present to you...

Get a free copy of 'Christmas in Wales' when you order directly from the Seren website

Order from the Seren website before Thursday 20th December 2012 and we'll give you a copy of Christmas in Wales (normally 7.99), absolutely free.The offer applies to all orders (even to Christmas in Wales itself if you want more than one copy!).We'll automatically include your free book when we despatch your order.It's the perfect literary companion to the festive season, a present that will be opened again and again...

Order now, while stocks last!!

Seren Office Opening Hours at Christmas

Although the office will be closed from midday Friday 21st December 2012 to the 2nd January 2013, you can still shop online. Orders received during the Christmas break, will be shipped according to the Royal Mail schedule. If you are buying a Seren book as a gift, please note the Royal Mail recommended Christmas posting service:

Second Class Tuesday 18th December 2012 First Class Thursday 20th December 2012

Follow Seren on Twitter @SerenBooks or 'Like' us on Facebook facebook.com/SerenBooks keep up-to-date with all our new titles out in 2013, author events and online deals.

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New Feature For Bloggers


By Ceri Shaw, 2012-12-15

A major revamp of the blogging function is scheduled from our platform provider early in the new year. In the meantime we have introduced a new tweak on AmeriCymru

If you look at the bottom of this post you will see our new featured blogs feature. The last seven posts featured on the site will be displayed there. There are over 3000 blog posts on AmeriCymru and they are all indexed by the major search engines since this is a public network. If your post is featured it will be displayed on every one of them. A good time to start blogging

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SwanseaJack


By Ceri Shaw, 2012-12-14

It is with regret that we announce the departure of former member SwanseaJack. He has been a regular feature on the site for about 18 months and he will be sorely missed. He left as a result of irreconcilable differences over the future direction this site should take. The decision to leave was entirely his.

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NWR


By Chris Keil, 2012-12-13

"Portugal, romance, film, terrorism, materialism & European capitalism. Highly topical, in the week the European Council got the Nobel Peace Prize! Flirting at the Funeral is reviewed by Katherine Stansfield in NWR spring edition."
Gwen Davies, Editor New Welsh Review

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Cor Meibion Llanell's big Christmas concert


By Robert Lloyd, 2012-12-10

Cr Meibion Llanelli (Llanelli Male Choir) are staging a Christmas concert with a difference this year.
The choir's annual festive concerts at Theatr Elli have been pulling in the crowds for years.
This year, Theatr Elli is unavailable as work is completed on the new Ffwrnes theatre complex in East Gate, Llanelli.
"It's a bit of a blow not to have Theatr Elli available," admitted Cr Meibion Llanelli musical director Eifion Thomas.
"But in order not to disappoint our many fans, we have a Christmas concert with a difference planned for Tabernacle Chapel, Llanelli, on Saturday, 7pm."
The concert is being billed as 'Sing Christmas!', with audience participation encouraged so that everyone gets into the Christmas spirit.
Mr Thomas added: "We are also very fortunate in that we have some very special guests with us for the Tabernacle concert - Cr Curiad, Cr Baroc and the Queen Elizabeth Brass Quintet.
"It promises to be a memorable evening highlighting the very best in Welsh choral traditions, with the spotlight on festive tunes guaranteed to get you into the Christmas spirit."
The accompanist will be Sarah Thomas. The organist will be Allan Fewster MBE.
Admission is 5 by programme. Programmes are available from choir members.

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Roger Hunt happy to wear many hats!


By Robert Lloyd, 2012-12-10

There isnt a hat stand in Roger Hunts office; but if there was, it would be full.

Businessman, entrepreneur, Christmas tree grower, sheep farmer, scrap metal dealer and football club supporter . . . the CV is getting longer every year.

Theres a joke doing the rounds that the only person busier than me at Christmas is Sion Corn, old Father Christmas himself, laughs Hunt.

Pay a visit to his Christmas tree plantation overlooking the Tywi Valley and just up the road from Y Polyn restaurant and youll appreciate it isnt so much a joke as a statement of fact.

The joke is told in an accent which reveals his London and East England roots.

The 60-year-old former chairman of Football League side Cambridge United has travelled a long way to put his new roots down near the National Botanic Gardens.

My football links can confuse many people, said Hunt, who spends much of his spare time helping on the executive committee of Welsh Premier League side Carmarthen Town.

I can go to football dinners and it confuses the older generation. Some will mistakenly think Im the same Roger Hunt who played in the England World Cup winning team of 1966. I wish!

Were obviously two very different people, but it does get a laugh on occasions when people get confused.

Born in Folkestone and raised in London, Hunt now considers himself an adopted son of Sir Gar, Carmarthenshire.

I love the place and the people and its a great part of the world to live and work in.

Home for Hunt nowadays is Llwyndu Farm near the Botanic, a property once owned by the very sporting Williams family, showjumper Alun and brother Wyn, father of Paralympic discus medallist Claire Williams.

Im in the process of renovating the farmhouse, who is another of my projects. Its a slow process as there arent enough hours in the day, but we are getting there.

A short drive away lies Hunts Christmas tree plantation at Oaklands, which operates under the name Cymru Christmas Trees.

The plantation has more than 10,000 Norway Spruce trees, all in different stages of development.

I specialise in Norway Spruce as it is a very popular variety, but I also supply other Welsh-grown potted varieties and Nordman trees.

Sustainability is key to the business and many of my customers, including some local councils and community organisations, return year after year. I reckon I plant at least a 1000 trees every year. The spotlight is very much on this being a sustainable crop.

If people want to return trees to me after Christmas, then they can do so for shredding. Over at Cwm Environmental in Nantycaws, they also provide a very good shredding service and throw in a free bag of compost if you recycle your tree with them.

Hunt is keen to preach the environmental message. Buying local is very important to Carmarthenshire and we should all do our bit to keep the carbon footprint down and run good sustainable businesses.

Environmental matters are also at the heart of Hunts other business, Robinson Recycling, a leading South Wales scrap metal merchant, with a depot in Margam near Port Talbot.

We are one of the leading buyers of aluminium cans in South West Wales and we deal in all grades of ferrous of non-ferrous scrap metal.

Hunt declared: I have always been focussed on recycling - even before it started to get the label a green issue. I think we should all be far more sustainable than we are. Recycling must be on the top of everyones agenda.

One of Hunts other hats is that of a sheep farmer. We keep some Herdwick (Cumbrian) sheep on the farm, but the main flock is made up of Shropshire sheep, he said.

The Shropshire sheep are a neat fit with the Christmas tree business as they are the only breed which can graze in and around Christmas trees. They are well fed and they also help to maintain the Christmas tree plantation.

The sheep can be a 24-hour job, especially during the lambing season between January and March. Sadly, that means I do miss out on one of the other passions of my life, football.

Hunt was running a scrap metal businesses in Cambridgeshire when he first joined Cambridge United in April, 1990.

Just six weeks later I was sat in the Royal Box at Wembley, watching Cambridge United bear Chesterfield 1-0 in the first ever play-off final at Wembley. Dion Dublin scored the winning goal. You cant get much better than that and you cant buy that sort of experience.

Hunt is philosophical about the rest of his Cambridge United experience. The club went into decline both on and off the field. Cambridge dropped out of the Football League and then went in administration.

He reflected: At about that time, my wife who was from Swansea, suggested moving to West Wales. It was a 500-mile commute to Cambridge to see football matches and attend board meetings, so not easy by any stretch of the imagination.

After Hunt finished his association with Cambridge, he was approached by Carmarthen Town President Jeff Thomas to help the Welsh Premier League side.

I have plenty of experience of the rough and tumble world of running a Football League club, so I try to bring some of that experience to bear in helping Carmarthen Town.

The club is well run by an enthusiastic team of people. Budgets are tight, but Carmarthen Town is a progressive club working very hard to nurture young talent in the community.

Football is one of my passions and I think its very important in life to care passionately about what you do. I try to carry that through in the different areas of my business life. Carmarthenshire is a great place and I am very fortunate to be running several businesses which bring me great delight.

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New opportunity in USA


By andrew price, 2012-12-10

Hey Ffrindiau,

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I wanted you to see why everyone is taking notice of this breakthrough product and rare opportunity:

"When selecting companies [to feature in our magazine], we look at their reputation and longevity, so it isn't often that we feature startups in Success from Home. In fact, we've never featured a company that is as young as the one that graces the cover this month. But the unique blend of experience and research backing this company makes it seem far more established. A solid, experienced leadership team and credibility are a few elements anyone seeking a new home-based venture should look for in a company."

Deborah Heisz, Editor in Chief, Success from Home Magazine

Watch this short video to see a sneak peek of what Nerium International is all about!

View our Opportunity Video

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Visit My Website

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We believe that this new community will be a great resource for our members and readers. We devote the vast majority of our time, effort and money to developing our existing community on Ning ( http://americymru.net ) but this group too, will grow.
The group is linked to our official AmeriCymru G+ page which in turn is linked to this blog .It should be remembered that anything posted here ( and we encourage Welsh businesses, writers and artists to join and post ) has the potential to go viral on the G+ network AND will be visible in search engines ( google, bing etc )Material posted to Facebook is severely limited in terms of propagation by the new Edgerank algorithm. Indeed you are 'encouraged' to pay to make your posts visible on your friends walls with no guarantee that accompanying links will ever be followed. It must also be born in mind that posts on FB are invariably invisible to search. SO...we have low impact short shelf life content. Only a handful of your most active contacts get to see your content in the short run and in the long run it simply disappears because it is not indexed by the major search engines.
We will continue to maintain our presence on FB but we sincerely hope that the new Communities feature on G+ will be a game changer or at the very least help to keep the competition on its toes :)


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4 Vinyl Films - Now on Culture Colony


By Jacob Whittaker, 2012-12-08

This series of films was made between 2006 & 2009 and document processes and activity in the studio.
Screened as a series in Aberystwyth in 'The Box', they provide a nostalgic look at found and faulty hifi equipment, questioning sentimentality and reverence towards both music and past technology.

Tying Tone Arms (02:42) wach here

(This film was made in response to a call for short films on the theme of restriction and was first shown as part of the Real Institutes 'Really Restrictive Shorts' event, Llangollen, 13/01/07. Subsequently it has also screened at various events and locations nationally including Shunt Vaults, Mission Gallery, and Aberystwyth Arts Centre.)

Restrictions are fundamental to my work. This film focuses on the most obvious physical restriction. My work generally uses found objects, and my aim is to use them, as much as is possible, in the state in which they are found. Basic repairs are made merely to achieve some sound, with any problems leading to their being discarded playing an important part of the composing process. With turntables I often then intervene further by tying the tone arm back in order to interrupt normal play. The work is then produced live without headphones or post-production, using randomly selected loops from often randomly selected records. By making work in this way I hope to reassess the nature of the objects and their useful life, explore memory and notions of musical consistency and examine the ontology of recorded sound.

This study of a fundamental part of my composing process is accompanied by a mix of randomly selected loops from randomly selected records.

Shaky (03:22) watch here

Looks at a particular fault of an old Alba hifi found by a friend some years ago. The audio is from the camera mic.

Panaround (05:14) watch here

A single long pan around the studio, cutting to details on the beat of the loop. The a
udio is the stuck record shown playing, Bauhaus 79-83 Side 1 (a 'natural' loop, ie not tied) recorded on camera mic.

15 Fragments (02:36) watch here

15 fragments of webcasts in one short.
The duration is dictated by the lower middle screen, a Sony PS-212A playing a Calibre record. Calibre records are unique recordings made in public recording booths. The audio is a digital remix of all the individual webcast soundtracks.

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