Post by Fred McCormick on Apr 26, 2010 10:43:19 GMT
Just to let everyone know that Worlds of Trad’s Internet radio upload for May 2010 is spanning the globe and dispensing musical goodies, even as I key this in.
The full playlist can be seen at
www.mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=129015&messages=2
However, we’ve got some great gospel singing from Dorothy Love Coates, Archie Brownlee and the Original Five Blind Boys of Mississippi, and Fred and Annie Mae McDowell; Dan Dowd, Tom Hughes, Hobart Smith, The Dixon Brothers, Joe Heaney, Tommy Peoples and three inebriated Austrians regale us with the pleasures of drink; Sarah Grey hits the trail with a whole loada cowpokes, including Jess Morris, Pegleg Sam, Woody Guthrie, Cisco Houston, Ken Maynard, The Texian Boys and a whole lot more. Folks round the Worlds of Trad office are kinda worried that if she takes a liking to them fellas, we might not be able to get her back.
Elsewhere in this hedonistic halcyon we hear some French Canadian fiddle players, a hurdy gurdy player from the French Auvergne, a pair of Swedish nyckelharpists, a Gambian kora player, a Madagascan guitar player, a harpist from Peru, a guitar band from Kenya, and The Grand Curacaye String Orchestra
Closer to home we sample the delightful singing of Peta Webb and Alison McMorland, Norfolk’s own Billy Cooper, Aberdeenshire’s own Jock Duncan and The Kingdom of Fife’s very own Jimmy Shand.
As if that wasn’t enough, Joseph Walsh tells us of the Hell Bound Train; we get to wear not one grey bonnet, but two; Yank Rachell can’t get his key in where it used to fit; and Ladysmith Black Mambazo try not to get too upset over the demise of Eugene Terreblanche.
All these and much, much more can be found by going straight to the station player at www.live365.com/cgi-bin/mini.cgi?station_name=oneworldmusic&tm=7011 .
On the other hand, you can bring up the station page first. Click on
www.live365.com/stations/oneworldmusic . Then click the yellow PLAY button. Then, if you press the green button to the right, you can save Worlds of Trad as a preset. That will save you having to search the next time you listen in.
Happy Listenings,
Fred McCormick.
The full playlist can be seen at
www.mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=129015&messages=2
However, we’ve got some great gospel singing from Dorothy Love Coates, Archie Brownlee and the Original Five Blind Boys of Mississippi, and Fred and Annie Mae McDowell; Dan Dowd, Tom Hughes, Hobart Smith, The Dixon Brothers, Joe Heaney, Tommy Peoples and three inebriated Austrians regale us with the pleasures of drink; Sarah Grey hits the trail with a whole loada cowpokes, including Jess Morris, Pegleg Sam, Woody Guthrie, Cisco Houston, Ken Maynard, The Texian Boys and a whole lot more. Folks round the Worlds of Trad office are kinda worried that if she takes a liking to them fellas, we might not be able to get her back.
Elsewhere in this hedonistic halcyon we hear some French Canadian fiddle players, a hurdy gurdy player from the French Auvergne, a pair of Swedish nyckelharpists, a Gambian kora player, a Madagascan guitar player, a harpist from Peru, a guitar band from Kenya, and The Grand Curacaye String Orchestra
Closer to home we sample the delightful singing of Peta Webb and Alison McMorland, Norfolk’s own Billy Cooper, Aberdeenshire’s own Jock Duncan and The Kingdom of Fife’s very own Jimmy Shand.
As if that wasn’t enough, Joseph Walsh tells us of the Hell Bound Train; we get to wear not one grey bonnet, but two; Yank Rachell can’t get his key in where it used to fit; and Ladysmith Black Mambazo try not to get too upset over the demise of Eugene Terreblanche.
All these and much, much more can be found by going straight to the station player at www.live365.com/cgi-bin/mini.cgi?station_name=oneworldmusic&tm=7011 .
On the other hand, you can bring up the station page first. Click on
www.live365.com/stations/oneworldmusic . Then click the yellow PLAY button. Then, if you press the green button to the right, you can save Worlds of Trad as a preset. That will save you having to search the next time you listen in.
Happy Listenings,
Fred McCormick.