Ceri Shaw


 

Stats

Playlists: 6
Blogs: 1936
events: 233
youtube videos: 537
SoundCloud Tracks: 21
images: 827
Files: 55
Invitations: 9
Groups: 32
audio tracks: 1098
videos: 8
Facebook
 

Blog

.

Follow the whole nine yards here (a 95 part series) :- Half Marathon Blog

Why I am running:- West Coast Eisteddfod Bryn Seion Church

For details of how to sponsor see this post

.

I did not run today because I was not due to. My schedule involves running every other day. But I am still concerned about the rather persistent ( if mild ) pain in my right knee that I have experienced ever since I started training. I am going to investigate a better pair of running shoes and abandon my old daps ( see earlier post ) which are on the point of giving up the ghost anyway. I will also look into buying one of these knee supports with adjustable straps. Does anyone know how effective they are?

On a fund raising note....we were thinking of running the marathon pledges as a Kickstart appeal. Basically the levels of sponsorship would be on a per mile basis BUT there would be rewards built in as well. Supposing that we were aiming for $1500 in total donations the incentives would be roughly as follows:-

Personal Sponsorship

$1/mile e-copies of Gaynor Madoc Leonard stories
$2/mile tickets for Dave Western spoon
$3/mile level both of the above
$4/mile all above plus signed event poster

Website/Commercial or Community Sponsorship

$5/mile spot ad on event pages
$10/mile free admission to event and larger ad on event pages

.

.

This is a rough first draft and we are open to suggestions for other prizes and/or other prize donations. In a few days time we'll run the appeal embed either on this blog or in the right hand column. It will be similar to the one on this page for the St David's Day L.A. appeal. That way people will be able to follow our progress and make their pledges all in one place without having to navigate to old blog posts or send emails. What does anyone think? Any ideas or suggestions?

.

Posted in: default | 5 comments

A message from Peter Luther:-

I'd like to wish all my friends a happy and prosperous 2012.

For those of you who are interested in Honeyman's third outing, I've posted details of my next novel, The Vanity Rooms, on my website www.peterluther.co.uk ,together with the first two chapters of the completed novel.I'm hoping for a launch date in the first half of 2012 but I'll email as soon as I have more news. My apologies that it's taken so long!
I very much look forward to meeting up with you during 2012 at either my launch or at a signing. My thanks as always for your support.
Warm regards,
Peter Luther
Posted in: default | 0 comments

Rick Astley and Kiki Dee will perform alongside Lulu at Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod as part of the Lulu and Friends concert on Monday 4th July.

Three legendary artists performing at the opening concert of the eisteddfod will set a high the standard for the festival week. Lulu, Rick Astley and Kiki Dee will be part of one of the most exciting eisteddfod lineups to date, as they join a festival schedule, which already includes music superstars Russell Watson and McFly.

As well as series of fantastic evening concerts, the festival week will bring performances of music and folk dance from around the world in one place! More than 4,000 competitors, from over 50 countries will take part, including some rare visitors from South Korea, China, Moldova, Slovakia.

Rick Astley Said: Llangollen Eisteddfod is the one of the longest-running annual festivals in Britain and I cannot wait to perform there. Ive been told Llangollen is a beautiful place and that everyone who attends the eisteddfod is really appreciative of music.

Kiki Dee is best known for her 1976 duet with Elton John entitled Dont Go Breaking my Heart, which went to Number 1 both in the UK Singles Chart and the U.S. Billboard Hot 100. In 1993 she performed another duet with Elton John for his Duets album, a cover version of Cole Porters True Love which reached #2 in the UK

Kiki Dee Said: Performing at Llangollen Eisteddfod will be fabulous, especially as I will be in such good company. I cant wait!

The Lulu and Friends concert will be an evening of exciting music, dance and more. The performances on 4th July will no doubt be one of the highlights of this years Llangollen Eisteddfod.

Posted in: default | 1 comments

T racing the history of Llanidloes Cricket Club over a forty-year period, The Daffodils who play in Whites is a book full of cricketing stories about the many and varied characters who graced the scene at this small-town club. The adventures of numerous players, such as Dessie, The Loony and Squareman have been recorded for posterity for future generations.

As the authors explain, This book will attempt to trace the development of a cricket club in a small mid Wales town, from its humble beginnings, playing on little more than a hay field into a thriving club with facilities good enough to play host to County Cricket Clubs and even test match standard players. Unlike typical cricket books, this one is very short on facts and figures instead it is more a tribute to the many and varied characters who lived and contributed to the sporting life of the town.

Indeed, there are very many amusing stories and anecdotes within the pages of this book, which will strike a chord with weekend-playing club cricketers up and down the land.

Byron Hughes and Lyn Meredith are both former Welsh International footballers and retired schoolmasters. Both have been ever-present playing members of Llanidloes Cricket Club for four decades.

This book is published by Y Lolfa and priced at 6.95. It was launched at Llanidloes Football Club on Friday 3 December 2010.
Posted in: default | 0 comments


 

On my return trip from the West Coast Eisteddfod in L.A. in 2011 I was able to break my journey in Hornbrook, CA   and take some pictures of John Rees's grave and final resting place. Given that we know he was a stonemason in his youth, did he perhaps make it himself? Certainly it is one of the finest and best preserved monuments in the cemetary.

John Rees ( aka Jack the Fifer ) is topical because today ( Nov 4th ) is the anniversary of the ill-fated Chartist march on Newport in which he played a leading role..

The debate as to whether violence can be a legitimate method to secure political ends was one that occupied many physical and moral force Chartists in the 1830's and 40's. John Rees was a 'physical forcist'.

But why is the man who led the vanguard of an armed insurrection in South Wales buried in a small town in Northern California? Read on:-


 



Review of John Humphries 'The Man From The Alamo'

Everybody remembers the 5th of November - 'gunpowder, treason and plot', but what about the 4th? On this day in 1839 the last armed rising in British history took place in Newport , Gwent, South Wales. The following article is a review of a fascinating book, "The Man From The Alamo" by John Humphries. The book is, amongst other things, a partial biography of John Rees a.k.a Jack The Fifer, a hero of both the Texan War of Independence and The Newport Rising of 1839 .


John Humphries' "The Man from the Alamo" does not have much to say about that historic conflict, indeed Davy Crockett is only mentioned once, briefly, on page 91. What it does have to say, however, goes a long way toward answering some of the most intriguing questions about John Rees, a great Welsh-American and man of mystery. Much more can now be said of him than was possible before Mr. Humphries' painstaking research.John Rees ( a.k.a Jack The Fifer ) was born in Merthyr Tydfil in 1815 and died in Hornbrook , Northern California in 1893 . Sometime before he was twenty he immigrated to the United States. He was 20 years old when he volunteered for service with the Second Company of the New Orleans Greys in October 1835. Born of working class parents in South Wales in the early 19 century it is likely that he endured the almost obligatory period of child labour in one of the many local collieries or Ironworks . Given that he was an accomplished fife player it is also possible that he saw some military service with the British army in his teens.

He took part in the siege of San Antonio De Bexar in 1835, and fought at the battle of Coleto Creek in 1836. Following the capture of Colonel James Fannin's command after the battle he was one of only 28 survivors of the infamous Goliad massacre in which more than 300 Texan prisoners were killed. He was later recaptured and spent the rest of the war as a prisoner . After the Mexican defeat at San Jacinto he was released in April or May, 1836. Upon his release he rejoined the army and was honourably discharged later that same year. The traditional account of his subsequent activities has been largely undermined by the books author. It was long thought that John Rees collected his back pay and land-bounty entitlements and returned immediately to Wales where we know that he was employed as a mason at the Tredegar Ironworks in 1839.

The book adduces substantial evidence to suggest that John Rees claimed not one, but several land bounty entitlements and that he spent the better part of two years actively swindling the infant Republic of Texas which he had recently fought so bravely to establish. Lest anyone should think any the less of him for this, it must be pointed out that he was not alone. Submitting bogus land bounty claims was a very prevalent and fashionable vice amongst ex-soldiers of the Republic at this time; rather like cocaine abuse in the 1980's and wife-swapping in the 1970's.

Upon his return to Wales Rees almost immediately became involved in the Chartist movement which at that time was agitating for the acceptance of the famous Six Points listed below (1). He played a key role in the bloody events of the 4th of November 1839. It lies beyond the scope of this review to recount the details of the rising but the following link may help with the background details:- The Newport Rebellion 1839 . There are almost as many theories concerning the intentions of the marchers at Newport as there are books on the subject. Some of the most important works are listed in the footnotes (2). Mr Humphries book seeks to examine the events from the perspective of the role they played in the lives of two of the leading participants. More than fifty percent of the book deals with the life of Zephaniah Williams, a prominent Chartist leader, and the chapters dealing with his subsequent trial and transportation are indeed fascinating but the major premise of the work is that it was John Rees who assumed the mantle of leadership at the key moment on that fateful day.

There has been much debate concerning the intentions of the marchers. It has been suggested that the original plan for an armed insurrection had been amended and that nothing more than a peaceful demonstration was intended. If so, did John Rees acquiesce in the change of plan? Did John Rees fire the first shot at the Westgate and if he did was he acting unilaterally or with the full premeditation of the other Chartist leaders? What is certain is that he was at the head of the column as it approached the hotel and that he was accompanied by a hundred or more men armed with muskets, shotguns and assorted firearms ( most of the marchers were armed with pikes). It was John Rees who , pistol in hand, demanded the release of the Chartist prisoners held within , a demand which precipitated the bloody melee in the hotel foyer. This in turn prompted the soldiers secreted in the hotel lobby to throw open the shutters and fire into the tightly packed crowd in the street outside.

Whatever his intentions, his actions led to a charge of high treason being brought against him and a reward of one hundred pounds being offered for his capture. John Rees escaped to Newfoundland and subsequently to an unknown location in Virginia thus avoiding the awful fate of John Frost, Zephaniah Williams and William Jones who were captured, tried, found guilty of high treason and ultimately transported to the British penal colonies in Tasmania. The details of his escape are recounted by none other than John Rees himself! In 1841 he wrote two letters to the editor of the Cambrian newspaper in west Wales. They were not published until 1844 . Humphries quotes extensively from these letters and it is from them that we know that Rees settled in Virginia for a period of five years where he stayed with unidentified friends.

In 1846 we find him back in Texas serving with the military; this time with the Texas Rangers. It is highly likely that he was captured and subsequently released at a very early stage in the U.S-Mexican War of 1846-48. He emerges in late 1846 in Matamoros, Mexico doing one last "shady" deal which involved the sale of his last remaining land donation certificate. This transaction was fraudulent because the certificate in question could not legally be sold during the recipient's lifetime.

For the rest of his life Rees almost certainly lived in Northern California to which he was drawn by the initial fervour of the California gold rush . At some point he became an American citizen and he appears on both the 1870 and 1880 census. He died of natural causes in Hornbrook in 1893.

In conclusion it must be said that John Humphries has written a very powerful book about two extraordinary men. John Rees was a great Welsh-American who was a hero, of sorts, on both sides of the Atlantic. His remarkable penchant for placing himself in difficult and dangerous situations was only matched by his genius for self-preservation. It is to be hoped that much more remains to be discovered about the life of this colorful and admirable character
.
The book may be purchased here The Man from the Alamo



FOOTNOTES

(1) This version of the Six Points is taken from a contemporary leaflet featured in British Working Class Movements: Select Documents 1789-1875 edited by GDH Cole and AW Filson (Macmillan, 1951).

1. A VOTE for every man twenty one years of age, of sound mind, and not undergoing punishment for crime.
2. THE BALLOT .--To protect the elector in the exercise of his vote.
3. NO PROPERTY QUALIFICATION for members of Parliamentthus enabling the constituencies to return the man of their choice, be he rich or poor.
4. PAYMENT OF MEMBERS , thus enabling an honest tradesman, working man, or other person, to serve a constituency, when taken from his business to attend to the interests of the country.
5. EQUAL CONSTITUENCIES , securing the same amount of representation for the same number of electors,--instead of allowing small constituencies to swamp the votes of larger ones.
6. ANNUAL PARLIAMENTS , thus presenting the most effectual check to bribery and intimidation, since though a constituency might be bought once in seven years (even with the ballot), no purse could buy a constituency (under a system of universal suffrage) in each ensuing twelvemonth; and since members, when elected for a year only, would not be able to defy and betray their constituents as now.

(2) Two of the most important and recent works on the Chartist Rising.

"South Wales and the Rising of 1839" Ivor Wilks University of Illinois Press 1984 ISBN 0-252-01146-5

"The Last Rising: The Newport Chartist Insurrection of 1839" David J. V. Jones University Of Wales Press; New edition (March 28, 1999) ISBN 070831452X




Posted in: Featured | 7 comments

FOLK MUSIC OFFER / CYNNIG ARBENNIG AR CERDDORIAETH GWERIN

GEORGIA RUTH - Week of Pines
AVAILABLE TO PRE-ORDER NOW, RELEASE DATE MONDAY 20 TH OFMAY
MODD RHAG-ARCHEBUR CD, DYDDIAD RHYDDHAU DYDD LLUN 20 FED O FAI

Week of Pines is a record about joyfulness, and coming home. And reclaiming things presumed gone. And grace, after making mistakes, that element of forgiveness and calm has been integral to this record. Georgia regularly plays in ex- Gorkys Zygotic Monkey member Richard James band and appears alongside him in his new project Pen Pastwn. She will also be appearing on the Guillemots forthcoming album, having recorded parts for it in the summer of 2012. BBC Radio Wales Adam Walton described her as one of the most prodigious talents ever to grace my airwaves. / Mae Week of Pines yn albwm am hapusrwydd. A dod adre. Ac ail ennill pethau y credwyd eu bod wedi mynd ar goll. A gras ar l gwneud camsyniadau: maer elfen o faddeuant a thawelwch wedi bod yn rhan annatod or record yma. Mae Georgia yn aelod o grp Richard James (Gorkys Zygotic Mynci) yn ogystal i brosiect newydd, Pen Pastwn. Mae hi hefyd yn perfformio ar albwm newydd y Guillemots a gafodd ei recordio yn Haf 2012. Disgrifiodd Adam Walton (BBC Radio Wales) hi fel "un or talentau mwyaf ysgubol a glywais erioed. Steve Lamacq and Tom Robinson both gave it a play on BBC 6Music, and daily airplays on BBC 6Music, having won the REBEL PLAYLIST last week, Janice Long on BBC Radio 2, Huw Stephens on Radio 1; Bella Unions Simon Raymonde chose it for Amazing Radio, whilst Adam Walton and Bethan Elfyn have been playing it on BBC Radio Wales./ Yn y pythefnos dwetha mae Steve Lamacq a Tom Robinson wedi chwaraer trac ar BBC 6 Music a darllediad dyddiol ar l ennill REBEL PLAYLIST yr wythnos diwethaf ar y rhaglen; Janice Long ar BBC Radio 2, Huw Stephens ar BBC Radio 1; Adam Walton a Bethan Elfyn ar BBC Radio Wales; a Lisa Gwilym ar BBC Radio Cymru.

Tour dates available the Week of Pines album. Confirmed dates so far / Cyfres o gigiau i gydfynd a rhyddhaur albym Week of Pines. Dymar ddyddiadau sydd wediu cadarnhau 14/5: Crackling Vinyl @ Telfords, Chester / Crackling Vinyl, Telfords, Caer 20/5: In-store at Spillers Records, Cardiff / Siop Recordiau Spillers, Caerdydd 26/5: Nyth Festival (acoustic set) / Gyl Nyth (set acwstic fer) 29/5: Communion, Oporto, Leeds / Communion, Oporto, Leeds 31/5: The Parrot, Carmarthen (with Siddi) / Y Parot, Caerfyrddin (efo Siddi) 01/6: *Official album launch*, Chapter, Cardiff (with Sam Airey and Siddi) / *Noson lawnsior albym* yn Chapter, Caerdydd (efo Sam Airey a Siddi) 06/6: 4a6, Caernarfon / 4tan6, Clwb Canol Dre, Caernarfon 21/6: The Grain Barge, Bristol / T he Grain Brage, Bryste 27/6: The Castle Hotel, Manchester / Gwestyr Castell, Manceinion

SPECIAL OFFER - You might also like these albums !!
CYNNIG ARBENNIG - Efallai bydd gennych diddordeb yn yr isod!!

Copyright 2013 Sain Recordiau, All rights reserved. www.sainwales.com
Our mailing address is:

Sain Recordiau
Sain
Llandwrog
Caernarfon,GwyneddLL54 5TG
United Kingdom
Posted in: default | 0 comments

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.

Posted in: default | 0 comments

.

Follow the whole nine yards here (a 95 part series) :- Half Marathon Blog

Why I am running:- West Coast Eisteddfod Bryn Seion Church

For details of how to sponsor see this post

.

I looked at the Intelligent Running site after seeing it mentioned in a comment on yesterdays blog. It looks like it might be useful but for two things:-

1. I like to set my own goals and schedules, and

2. It seems like it's geared to preparing you to put in a competitive performance in a full marathon.

This would be overkill for me. My sole objective is to finish the 13 miles in a fairly average time for a novice runner. Fortunately I haven't committed myself to anything more than that. If I had I might be sending away for the c.d's.

The idea that you needn't run every day is a sound one though not necessarily new. I will certainly NOT be running the day before July 4th and I am only running every other day now. Two short and one long runs a week is the well balanced way. The short runs are simply to maintain your general level of fitness and preparedness. The 'long' runs are when you push for extra distance and endurance. It seems to me that this was what I was doing back in the 80's. Worked then....lets hope it works again at age 55.

Here is the Intelligent Running video from YouTube in case anyone wants to give it a try:-

.


.
.
Posted in: default | 0 comments
   / 242