IRFT St David's Day Special Click HERE
We have linked all our St David's Day content from this page. We hope there will be something here to interest everyone. Dydd Gwyl Dewi Dedwydd! Happy St David's Day! BlogsAdd Your St. David's Day Greeting Here! 10 Ways to 'Thank the Lord You're Welsh' this St. David's Day! Second Chance to WIN 2 Tickets to Karl Jenkins Concert ' Music Masters of Wales' in New York City on March 6th New shirt designs for Saint David's Day in the AmeriCymru store St David's Day Events Around The USA Lets Send Laura To Wales! - St David's Day Appeal! St David's Day - 'Stories in Welsh Stone' Competition Americymru Welsh Pub Quiz Pack for St. Davids Day St Davids Day Menu Discussions St. David's Day Ideas Forum
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Many thanks to David Parry of the Chicago Tafia for the following list of St David's Day events around the USA. For an event in your area check the list below. Dydd Dewi Sant Hapus/Happy Saint David's Day St. Davids Day Events in Pennsylvania, Ohio, Kentucky, Quebec, California, Alberta, Illinois, Missouri, Georgia, Virginia, Florida, South Carolina, Ontario, British Columbia, Minnesota, Connecticut, Colorado & Washington St. David's Day on Music of the Isles Thursday, February 25th, 7:00pm WMNF 88.5 FM Tampa www.wmnf.org Friday February 26, 6:30pm St. Davids Society of Pittsburgh Pub Crawl Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Saturday February 27, 11:30am The Ottawa Welsh Society St Davids Luncheon Banquet The Royal Ottawa Golf Club 1405 Aylmer Road Gatineau, Quebec Saturday, February 27th, 12:00pm St. Davids Day Dinner Worthington Hills Country Club 920 Clubview Blvd. South, Columbus, Ohio Saturday, February 27 The Cincinnati Welsh Society - St. Davids Day Banquet Holiday Inn Riverfront 600 West Third Street Covington, Kentucky Saturday February 27, 6:00pm The Welsh Society, of Philadelphia 282nd Annual Banquet For Saint David's Day Merion Cricket Club 325 Haverford Avenue Haverford, Pennsylvania Saturday, February 27, 6:00pm The Saint Davids Welsh Society of Edmonton - St Davids Day Banquet Faculty Club at the University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta Saturday February 27, 6:00pm The Vancouver Welsh Society- St. David's Day Dinner The Cambrian Hall 215 East 17th Avenue Vancouver, British Columbia Saturday February 27, 6:30pm Calgary Welsh Society - St. Davids Day Celebration Fort Calgary Historic Park 750 9 Avenue Southeast Calgary, Alberta Saturday February 27, 6:30pm Montreal Welsh Male Choir St. David's Day Ball Delta Hotel 475 Du President Kenedy Montreal, Quebec Saturday February 27, 4:00pm Welsh Choir of Southern California St. Johns Episcopal 514 Adams Blvd. Los Angeles, California www.welshchoir.com Sunday February 28, 12 noon till 2 am March 2nd IRFT Celtic Radio St David's Day Special http://www.irftradio.comlu.com/stdavids.html Sunday February 28, 2:00pm Radio WVIA FM - Pennsylvania St. David's Day Special Sunday February 28, 11:00am Saint David's Day Feast St. David's Episcopal Church 701 N. Randall Road Aurora, Illinois Sunday February 28, 12:30pm St. Davids Society of Greater St. Louis St. Davids Day Meetup Dressels Pub 419 North Euclid Avenue St. Louis, Missouri Sunday February 28, 1:30pm Atlanta Welsh Society St. Davids Day Party Seasons52 90 Perimeter Center West Dunwoody, Georgia Sunday February 28, 2:00pm Saint David's Day Parade Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Sunday February 28, 2:00pm St. David's Day Gymanfa Ganu Lafayette United Methodist Church 955 Moraga Road Lafayette, California Saturday February 28 St. Davids Society of Pittsburgh Daffodil Luncheon Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Sunday February 28 St. David's Day Banquet with the Welsh Society of the Suncoast Sunday, February 28, 6:00pm The Welsh Society of Fredericksburg St. David's Day Potluck Dinner St. Peter's Lutheran Church 1201 Courthouse Road North Stafford, Virginia www.welshfred.com Sunday February 28 Poultney Area St. David's Society's Luncheon Granville, New York Call (802)-287-5744 or Email: pasds88@yahoo.com for details Sunday February 28, 10:00am St. Davids Day worship service Poultney Welsh Presbyterian Church Grove Street Poultney, Vermont Sunday February 28, 1:00pm St. Davids Day Banquet Banquet Masters, 8100 Park Blvd Pinellas Park, Florida Call (727)-938-7561 or Email: naintaid@verizon.net Sunday February 28, 3:00pm St. Davids Society of Utica, NY Annual St. Davids Day Banquet Harts Hill Inn 135 Clinton Street Whitesboro, New York http://saintdavidssociety.org/ Sunday February 28, 3:00pm St. Davids Day Observance Forest Park United Methodist Church 2100 Kentucky Ave Fort Wayne, Indiana Monday March 1st, 6:00pm The Gulf Coast St David's Welsh Society St David's Day Banquet Heritage Oaks Country Club 4800 Chase Oak Dr Sarasota, Florida Monday March 1, 6:00pm The Charleston Tafia Welsh Society - St. David's Day Pub Night Madra Rua Irish Pub 1034 East Montague Avenue North Charleston, South Carolina Monday March 1, 6:30pm Saint Davids Society of Lackawanna County - Saint David's Day Dinner Trinity Episcopal Church 58 River Street Carbondale, Pennsylvania Monday March 1 7:00pm The Chicago Tafia Welsh Society St. Davids Day Pub Night Cawl & Cocktails @ The Emerald Loop 216 North Wabash Chicago, Illinois Monday March 1, 7:30pm St. David's Day Concert with the Toronto Welsh Male Voice Choir Glenn Gould Studio 250 Front Street West Toronto, Ontario Monday March 1, 7:30 pm The Vancouver Welsh Society - St. David's Day Open House The Cambrian Hall 215 East 17th Avenue Vancouver, British Columbia www.welshsociety.com Monday March 1, 7:00pm St. David's Day Pub Night at NYC's only Welsh-owned pub! The Longbow Pub & Pantry 7316 Third Avenue Brooklyn, New York Monday March 1, 7:00pm St. David's Day Pub Night at Merlins Rest, a Welsh pub in Minneapolis Merlins Rest 3601 E Lake St Minneapolis, Minnesota www.merlinsrest.com Friday March 5, 6:00pm St. David's Day - Potluck, Poems & Pints Cultural Wellness Center 1527 E. Lake St. Minneapolis, Minnesota Saturday, March 6th, 11:30am The Cambrian Benevolent Society of Chicago - St. David's Day Banquet Carleton Hotel Oak Park 1110 Pleasant St Oak Park, Illinois Saturday March 6, 12:30pm The Welsh Society of Western New England St. David's Day Gathering Nutmeg Restaurant 297 South Main Street East Windsor, Connecticut Saturday March 6, 5:00pm Cambrian Society St. David's Day Banquet Addisville Reformed Church Richboro, Pennsylvania Saturday March 6, 7:30pm Burlington Welsh Male Chorus Wellington Square United Church 2121 Caroline Street Burlington, Ontario www.burlingtonwelsh.com Saturday March 6th, 6PM Cardigan Welsh Club & Madog Center for Welsh Studies St. David's Day Banquet Oak Hill Presbyterian Church 205 E. Cross Street Oak Hill, Ohio Sunday March 7, 2:30pm The Puget Sound Welsh Association - St. Davids Day Celebration St. Andrewss Episcopal Church 111 NE 80th Street Seattle, Washington Sunday March 7 St. David's Welsh Society of Greater Kansas City - Gymanfa Ganu Kansas City, Missouri Sunday March 7th, 2:30pm St. David's Day Kirk of the Bonnie Brae Church 1201 S. Steele Street Denver, Colorado www.coloradowelshsociety.org Sunday March 7, 2:30pm 122nd Saint Davids Day Concert Emporia Presbyterian Church 1702 W. 15th Emporia, Kansas Call (620)-256-6687 Saturday March 13 St. David's Day Welsh Banquet Harriton House 500 Harriton Road Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania Saturday March 13, 12:00pm Iowa Welsh Society St. David's Day Celebration Monarchs Restaurant The Royal Amsterdam Hotel 705 East 1st Street Pella, Iowa
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"Hello! My name is Laura Stokes. I am currently studying Harp Performance at the Peabody Conservatory of music in Baltimore MD under Dr. Ruth K. Inglefield.
This April I will be traveling to Caernarfon Wales (UK) to compete in the Youth Competition of the Second Wales International Harp Festival. This is a wonderful and very exciting opportunity for me. Dr. Inglefield found the competition and urged me to enter because she knew of my love for Wales and harp. I was born to and English father and American mother in Charlottesville VA, USA. Throughout my childhood I spent each summer and many Christmases in Wales, in a cottage that my parents bought 18 years ago in the village of Llanrhaeadr-Ym-Mochnant in Powys. I began playing harp at the age of 8 after many years of begging my family for lessons after falling in love with the instrument while in Wales as a toddler. After 7th grade in Virginia, my family relocated to Wales so that my father, a blacksmith, could assist his brother, also a blacksmith, on a large ironwork project. I attended Welsh high school for a year and totally fell in love with the country and the people of Wales. I was overjoyed to learn that high school owned a harp and had a wonderful teacher who came to the school once a week and gave harp lessons. It was during the time that I really fell in love with harp and decided that I wanted to pursue it a career in music. We loved living in Wales so much that we decided to stay for a second year, during which I passed, with merit, the grade 5 Harp exam given by the Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music.
Upon returning to the United States in my Sophomore year of high school, I finally bought a concert grand pedal harp. With this instrument, a Venus Paragon, I was able to excel in harping playing as I had never been able to before. I am now studying at the Peabody Conservatory of Music working towards a Bachelors of Music in Harp Performance and I am loving every minute of it.
When Dr. Inglefield approached me with the idea of competing in Wales I was simply over the moon with excitement. Sadly neither of us had heard anything of the competition until only a few days before the entry deadline. I still went ahead and applied not wanting to miss out on the great opportunity. The Wales International Harp Competition has many different levels. I will be competing in the Youth Competition a category for harpists under age 19. I am now 18 years old and will be at the time of the competition. This is amazingly timely and couldnt have worked out better time wise. Sadly being a freshman at Peabody I am ineligible to receive any grant money for career development/competition/travel from the school. It is my last possible chance to compete in this level of competition.
I am determined to get to Wales this April but this is not a cheap endeavor, as you know the price of cross Atlantic plane tickets is phenomenal and room and board and cost of attendance of this week long festival is also rather pricey.
I am now on a quest to find someone, be it community group, individual, foundation etc. who would be willing to help sponsor my trip. Every little helps no matter how large or small.
Thank you!!!!!
--Laura Stokes"
Since joining Americymru Alan Evans has contributed many interesting and provocative discussions, video clips and photographs. Today we thought our members would like to learn more about him and his photography. Well have to leave his many other interests for a later discussion.
Americymru: Were you always interested in photography? What other interests do you have? Alan: I was given my first camera as a Christmas present when I was about nine years of age. Photography always interested me and seemed like a glamourous occupation. I was always experimenting but lacked the formal training. At forty I enrolled on a BA honours photography course at art college. I was still using film and the digital revolution was about to take off. The formal learning gave me more confidence and established a clearer identification of what my work was about. I have many other interests including sport, early childhood education and cookery. Americymru: What factors influenced you to become a photographer and chronicler of people and places? Have you always had an interest in photography? How did you prepare yourself to enter the profession?
Alan: I always admired the work of French photographer Robert Doiseneau and saw his work as a benchmark to aim for. People have always interested me and I have found myself chatting to people from all walks of life. I believe that the social interaction is an important part in the process of photographing people. When the subject has relaxed you get a truer representation of the personality. I guess my preparation is based in my upbringing, one of four brothers brought up on a large working class council estate in Llanelli. There really was no place to hide and you had to deal with all sorts of life issues. Americymru: Do you have a favorite subject matter? Why do you like shooting this type of subject? My favourite subject mater is people.
Alan: I find the human face fascinating. Everyone is equal but different. The human face can provide so much information about life itself. I love shooting portraiture because it allows me to look very closely at a fellow human being. I feel like a scientist observing the subject matter. Americymru: What is your favorite medium, digital or film and why? Do you shoot in both? Alan: I love shooting with film because it slows the process down. You have to think a lot more about the fundamentals of photography with a film camera. There is something that challenges your confidence when using film. There is no second chance, delete, re shoot. Everything has to be correct so you go through the technicalities over and over again. I still use film but the demand to provide images within minutes to a client means that it becoming unrealistic to use film. I tend to take digital and film only using film when things have settled down. Americymru: What is your opinion of photo enhancement programs as a photographer? As an artist? Alan: I am very snobby about photo enhancement. My bleief is that if you can't shoot it in camera then you're not up to it. I have not really got into photo enhancement programmes other than Photoshop for adjusting the curves which is similar to giving the negative more or less time at the development stage. Americymru: Your portraits are especially appealing to me, that is not to say that your other subjects are not appealing. How do you get your subjects to reveal their inner selves, to you? How do you choose your subjects? Alan: It takes time and some mutual respect for the subject. I love to chat with people and this is probable a contributing factor to the final image. I will be chatting for a while and then casually raise the camera and start taking photos. I usually keep chatting and the camera seems to become non threatening to the subject. I keep talking whilst taking the photos. Given time the subject drops their guard and you start to see the true personality. I guess it is the same for most people when you meet them for the first time. More often than not the people I photograph are not usually photographed. Americymru: In addition to portraits and commercial photography, you have exhibited a wide variety of landscapes and seascapes in both area and time. Do you travel to a specific area to shoot landscapes and seascapes or do you just keep your eyes open for a good shot when there? How much of your time is spent on looking for the shot? Alan: I tend to base my landscapes and seascapes around days out with the family. We arrive at a destination and if the light is right, I disappear for most of the day and sometimes most of the evening. we are lucky to live in an area of outstanding natural beauty so wherever we travel, there is going to be some form of landscape to photograph. I would like to spend more time looking for the shot but I am lazy. I prefer to lay on the beach all day. The window of opportunity for landscapes is early morning or dusk. Americymru: Based on your experience, what advice would you offer to a person who may be considering photography as a career? What do you feel separates the amateur photographer from the professional? Alan: I would say that you should find an area of photography which really interests you. Improvise with the equipment you have and fine tune your skills in your specialist area. Look at the work of the greats in your specialist area and learn from them. Experiment to a point and accept the limitations of your camera. The amateur takes photographs everywhere the professional sees photographs everywhere but only takes the ones which count. Americymru: The recognition that all artists seek is to share their art with others, and hope that they will buy your art. Do you have any planned or existing exhibitions? How do you sell photographs which have not been commissioned? Do you have a website where our members can view or buy your work? Alan: Like all artists I am tortured and suffer for my art. I have a continual lack of confidence in the quality and value of my work. There is a great fear of rejection when exhibiting work. I tend to stay clear of the exhibition space when my work is on display. If someone buys it then this is a bonus. My website is probably my main exhibition space although I have not really promoted my art based photography which tends to be the nude form. This is because my main website is accessed by people of all ages. Ironically it is these images which sell the most. I am passionate about the people and the area in which I live and work. I have a few websites. The Art Based work can be viewed at www.thebeautifulnude.co.uk My main site is www.alanevansphotography.co.uk My work documenting horse racing in Carmarthenshire is on www.ffoslasphotography.com Americymru: Do you have any final comment for the readers and members of Americymru? Alan: Keep you camera handy and the sun on your back
Interview by: Howard Evans
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Llangollen Eisteddfod President Terry Waite Delivers A Personal Invitation To The People Of Patagonia
By Ceri Shaw, 2010-02-19
There is a word that allows for poverty to become extinct, for war to be eradicated and famine to cease to be. There is a beautiful, brilliant word for this it is PEACE. Alex Pasley (16), Llangollen Peace Message Winner, 2009.
Terry Waite is a well-travelled man but few journeys have meant as much to him in recent years as his recent visit to Gaiman, Patagonia. This small village (population 6000) in the Argentinian heartland was founded in 1865 when 150 Welsh immigrants arrived here on their ship the Mimosa and now, in the twenty first century, the community has retained much of its inherent Welshness.
Its incredible when you walk the streets and hear this wondrous mixture of Spanish and Welsh, says Terry. Im convinced that Gaiman is a unique place in terms of its linguistic and cultural make-up and, I must admit that I was completely entranced and enchanted by it.
Being a predominantly Welsh village of course, music was very much in the air and Terry Waite soon encountered the sweeping tones of a local choir.
What a sound! Those voices were absolutely amazing! And the peculiar thing is- if you closed your eyes, and tried your best to ignore the heat, you would have sworn that youd just been transported back into the Dee valley!
There was an important reason for Terry Waites pilgrimage to Gaiman because Terry is the President of theLlangollen International Musical Eisteddfod and he took with him a message from the Festival- a message of goodwill, peace and (appropriately enough) harmony.
I think people sometimes forget that Llangollen was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize back in 2004, says Terry. The Llangollen peace message has become an integral part of the festival and I thought it would be marvellous to deliver a message of my own, from Llangollen- in the heart of the homeland- to other side of the world. My words would hopefully echo the noble sentiments of the famous Llangollen peace message.
The Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod takes place between July 5 th and 11th and, this year, the festival expects to attract competitors from Patagonia. In addition to the competitive events and the pageantry and colour a series of Gala Concerts this year will feature such luminaries as Nigel Kennedy, Only Men Aloud, Karl Jenkins and Bond.
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Toronto Welsh Male Voice Choir -Celebrating Wales, the ‘Land of Song’ - St David's Day 2010
By Ceri Shaw, 2010-02-18
The Toronto Welsh Male Voice Choir invites you to celebrate St. Davids Day on Monday, March 1st, 2010, beginning with the annual raising of the Red Dragon at Toronto City Hall, Nathan Phillips Square, 100 Queen Street West, Toronto, at 4 pm. The oldest National flag still in use will fly proudly celebrating the Patron Saint of Wales. Being a land rich in tradition, music will ring out as members of the TWMVC join the community to sing Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau. The Toronto Welsh Male Voice Choir creates the unique sound of four part Welsh voice harmony, performing a variety of songs from the coal mines of Wales to North American spirituals and much loved opera choruses with the passion and reverence for music that has made Welsh choirs famous for over a hundred years. The St. Davids Day Concert ~ Cyngerdd Dydd Gwyl Dewi ~ featuring the Toronto Welsh Male Voice Choir and Guest Soloist, Shannon Mercer, takes place on Monday, March 1st, 7:30 pm at 3050 Yonge Street, Suite 206T, Toronto, Ontario M4N 2K4. Enjoy the rich culture and heritage of Wales with a bounty of music under the baton of William Woloschuk, Artistic Director, and Julie Loveless, Accompanist. Wrapping it all together is Christopher Thomas as the Master of Ceremonies, who is proud of his Welsh heritage and contributes to the evenings festivities celebrating the Land of Song. The Toronto Welsh Male Voice Choir was founded in 1995 to preserve in Canada the rich culture and heritage of a small country with only approximately 2.5 million people, roughly the population of Toronto spread over a geographic area the size of Lake Ontario, The Choir sings with a purpose believing that The world just wouldn't be the same without music. For more information or Tickets to the Concert, please contact www.roythomson.com or 416-872-4255 or 416-410-2254, www.twmvc.com .
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