Digital FYI Friends

March 2nd, 2012 No Comments   Posted in ebook Art

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Seán McGuire & Friends.

February 1st, 2012 No Comments   Posted in Art History

Three Reels:(1)The Man Behind The Bar,(2)The Mason’s Apron,(3)The Auld Fiddler. Here Seán plays the definitive version of The Mason’s Apron, of which he became famous for all over the world in the late ’50s and early ’60s. McGuire was only fourteen when his violin playing was broadcast for the first time on BBC radio. In 1949 at the age of only twenty-one, he won the Oireachtas (pronounced “ee-RUK-tus”), the All-Ireland musical championship held annually in Dublin) with the only perfect score ever awarded in the long history of the competition. In the 1950s, he became part of a major touring group called the Malachy Sweeney Ceili Band; later he helped form the Sean McGuire Ceili Band and the Four Star Quartet. [Ed. note: Ceili, sometimes spelled ceilidh ; pronounced "KAY-ley" ; is a Gaelic term for musical gathering]. Through the 1960s he was a leading member of the Gael-Linn Cabaret. In the days before the Chieftains assumed the role, McGuire sometimes served as Irish musics cultural ambassador. He has appeared throughout Europe, and he has been named “Grande Artiste” of the Soviet Union. When he toured the US in 1952, he was asked to appear on such classic American variety programs as the Ed Sullivan Show and the Arthur Godfrey Show. He was also honored by the Wurlitzer Co. of New York City, who not only invited him to play the Stradivarius and Guarnerius violins in their possession, but also to enter his name (alongside those of Fritz Kreisler and Yehudi Menuhin) in

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Seán McGuire & Friends.

January 27th, 2012 No Comments   Posted in Art History

Three Reels:(1)The Man Behind The Bar,(2)The Mason’s Apron,(3)The Auld Fiddler. Here Seán plays the definitive version of The Mason’s Apron, of which he became famous for all over the world in the late ’50s and early ’60s. McGuire was only fourteen when his violin playing was broadcast for the first time on BBC radio. In 1949 at the age of only twenty-one, he won the Oireachtas (pronounced “ee-RUK-tus”), the All-Ireland musical championship held annually in Dublin) with the only perfect score ever awarded in the long history of the competition. In the 1950s, he became part of a major touring group called the Malachy Sweeney Ceili Band; later he helped form the Sean McGuire Ceili Band and the Four Star Quartet. [Ed. note: Ceili, sometimes spelled ceilidh ; pronounced "KAY-ley" ; is a Gaelic term for musical gathering]. Through the 1960s he was a leading member of the Gael-Linn Cabaret. In the days before the Chieftains assumed the role, McGuire sometimes served as Irish musics cultural ambassador. He has appeared throughout Europe, and he has been named “Grande Artiste” of the Soviet Union. When he toured the US in 1952, he was asked to appear on such classic American variety programs as the Ed Sullivan Show and the Arthur Godfrey Show. He was also honored by the Wurlitzer Co. of New York City, who not only invited him to play the Stradivarius and Guarnerius violins in their possession, but also to enter his name (alongside those of Fritz Kreisler and Yehudi Menuhin) in

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