All posts by Steph

Siege of Ennis world record attempt

On Sunday May 17th, Special Olympics Ireland are hoping to smash the world record for the largest ever ceili by calling everyone to Ennis to dance the ‘Siege of Ennis’ at the Fairgreen at 2pm. To raise funds, the ‘Siege DVD’ is up for grabs via local outlets or via the website at www.siegeofennis.com.

Here’s what you can do to help, in any order or combination you like:

The record attempt is part of the opening festivities for the Fleadh Nua 2009 festival, a fantastic festival of Irish traditional music, song and dance in the heartland of traditional & ceili music, Co.Clare. 

Tis me home county after all & I love nothing more than an excuse to get up and shake my tailfeather so I’ll be seeing you down there the weekend after next! Spread the word folks & get involved via the website, the Twitter account, Facebook or Bebo pages. And in case you’re worried about your dancing skills not being up to scratch don’t be – as my dad says, “sure any eejet can dance that”. Here’s what it should look like just in case the only time you’ve ever heard of it was at an Irish wedding reception around 2am:

Cork International Choral Festival: my thoughts

This festival first came to my attention somehow around this time last year right after the 2008 festival had just wrapped up in Cork. That in mind I was determined not to miss out this year so I headed for Cork on Saturday to sample some of the choral action to be had in the country’s fairest city. 

I went along to the Fleischmann Trophy competiton on Saturday, the major prize on offer at the festival. The calibre of performances from the choirs was amazing as was the range of people involved on stage. Personal highlights included ‘Ett liv for mig’ performed by Finnish group Chamber Choir Gallerie and ‘Elijah Rock’ by Irish choir Codetta. Gothenburg Youth Choir gave a fantastic energetic performance to end the evening including a finger-clicking version of ‘Chili Con Carne‘. For something a bit lighter and to satisfy my more jazzy & modern tendencies in all things choral I popped into the National Competition for Light, Jazz and Popular Music on Sunday afternoon where some delightful performances given. Highlights for me were ‘The Impossible Dream‘ by Portadown Male Voice Choir, ‘The Teddy Bears Picnic‘ by Moy Singers from Co.Mayo and ‘Unchained Melody‘ by City of Cork Male Voice Choir. The closing gala concert on Sunday gave many of the choirs who took part in the Fleischmann Trophy competition a chance to let their hair down & have some fun and that they did for a really awesome evening of music. Sadly the camera battery failed to hold out for long enough to capture them all. Probably the most bizarre performance of the festival for me was Warsaw School of Economics Choir with their take on ‘Smells Like Teen Spirit‘. Highlights for me were the Slovenia’s Ptuj Male Chamber Choir take on ‘Happy Together‘, Cois Claddaigh with ‘Loch Lomond‘, Codetta once again with ‘Elijah Rock‘, Cantilena Children’s Choir singing ‘Molly Malone‘, Fleischmann Trophy winners Kammerchor I Vocalisti with the hair-raising ‘Pseudo-Yoik‘ and finally Brigham Young University Singers (U.S.A.) with their jaw-dropping rendition of ‘Leonardo Dreams of His Flying Machine‘. I’m delighted to see they’re on tour in the UK & Ireland over the next 2 weeks. This is deserving of a blog post all by itself so watch this space :)

Overall, it was a fantastic experience in Cork, if too short. I’d love to have taken in more of the festival – there were so many different performances on offer over the 5 days and many of them free of charge too! At the risk of sounding cliched or corny, it really hit me how music can bring people from all walks of life & parts of the world together in a happy, warm, positive & supportive collective. There was such a buzz about City Hall for the performances, all the choirs cheering each other on & getting along famously & enjoying each others’ culture. 

I’ve got a bunch of videos from the Closing Gala Concert and the National Competition for Light, Jazz and Popular Music on YouTube – apologies for the awful quality of the camera work but it’s getting a taste of the sound that matters! I can’t wait for next year :)

Hypertext bento box

Handy icon set
Some icons from 'Handy' icon set

So here we are, 1st of May, first ‘proper’ bank holiday of the year already upon us. Anyone else scared/shocked at how quick the year is passing?

A businessman in the UK by the name of Mr.Hindley has bought the cottage featured in Withnail & I and promised to restore it for fans of the film – awesome!

‘Handy’ icon set free for personal & commercial use at Webdesigner Depot

If I haven’t spammed you already, X Communications are now Facebook-ing here.

Future of Web Design is currently on in London & the very talented Sabrina Dent was up yesterday giving her talk ‘Throwing Client Collaboration Out the Window: The Stalinist Web Design Model’. She’s back blogging again which is awesome & has a post up about her FOWD experience.

Some messing on Culch.ie yesterday has resulted in the launch of a new campaign site.

I’m off to Cork tomorrow to soak up the delights of the 55th Cork International Choral Festival. I’m planning to meet some of the organisers to find out more about the history of the festival & chat about getting the event out into the great wide interweb next year with blogging & all sorts of madness. If you’re about Cork over the next few days & are free for a coffee, drop me a tweet or an email or if you have my number that works too!

Song for the day is Did Ye Get Healed by Van Morrison, have a listen & get yer fingers clickin’: http://blip.fm/~5c2cu

Happy long weekend tout le monde :)

Suicide. Yes that’s right, suicide. Let’s talk about it.

This is a post that’s been brewing within me for a long time. A series of recent events has brought it to the fore once again & this time I need to get it out of my system.

Suicide. No greater taboo exists in Ireland in my opinion. Every year hundreds of people die by suicide in Ireland. In 2007 (latest available figures from the National Office for Suicide Prevention) 460 people took their own lives in Ireland & Ireland had the 5th highest suicide rate for people between 15 & 24 in Europe.

Statistics are easy to list, to hear & forget about. The reality is most of us sadly know of at least one person, either in our families, communities or circle of friends who has taken their own life. In the past 10 days alone I’ve encountered 2 cases – while they weren’t personal friends or even acquaintances, it was still in my life & I was aware of it. While at home in Clare for Easter, a person in their late 50s took their own life. On Friday, my flatmate went to the funeral of a 13 year old girl who had also taken her own life. These incidents coupled with a conversation that happened to dredge up my own personal experience of suicide has led me to finally discussing this more publicly, which is something I strongly believe needs to happen desperately in Ireland.

Almost 2 years ago I lost a first cousin to suicide. He was a talented furniture designer with a thriving business, a wife and a wonderfully close family of 4 sisters, a mother & a father. I remember exactly where I was when I got the news. I was waiting on an Indian takeaway I was treating myself to having just had an interview with X Communications and been offered a job I had dreamed of. A major high to a major low in 10 seconds flat. The shock was unbelievable. As the cliche goes, he was the last person on earth I’d have expected to go down that road. The journey home to Clare for the funeral felt like an eternity so great was my dread of what I was to face. I’ll never forget it for the rest of my life & it haunts me from time to time since – the faces, the shock, the tears, the sobbing. It was the first and only time I’ve seen my dad cry. And he wasn’t the only tough-skinned grown man who had to leave the house to gasp for air amidst the overwhelming emotion.

Regardless of reasoning given by victims of suicide, one thing is absolutely clear in my mind – it’s almost impossible for someone who is contemplating suicide to reach out for help in Ireland when such a huge stigma is still attached to it. I remember at the time of my cousins’ untimely death it was referred to as ‘the tragedy’ by various people and they never once dared to mention the word suicide, least of all get into any sort of discussion about it.

Spending on healthcare in Ireland in general is being hit by the budget cuts, day-to-day mental health services falling foul under the wider umbrella. Charities such as Aware, 3 Ts and SpunOut.ie are all feeling the pinch as our own purse strings have had to tighten also on account of our awful economic situation. While all of these organisations (and many more besides) do wonderful work supporting people who often simply need to talk to someone about our problems, I think the real solution will emerge from removing the stigma surrounding suicide. We need to start talking about it or at the very least stop being afraid to talk about it. Even if it’s not something affecting you directly or something that’s on your mind, if it crops up (like id did for me this past week) well then don’t rush to change the subject or brush it under the carpet. Talk about it. Get a discussion going & let’s get rid of this fear, this awful taboo & see what a difference we might make. When it came up in conversation with a friend last week I almost shut down completely as I was embarassed to talk about it, partly because I’m rubbish at talking about anything emotional anyway but partly due to it being so taboo and such a touchy subject. But I eventually openened up and felt far better for it afterwards. Looking back now I feel like an idiot for being embarassed about it.

If I’ve upset or confused or touched a nerve with anyone by writing this well feel free to leave a comment, email me or come find me and we’ll have a coffee or a pint, I’m more than happy to talk :)

Good times for a change…

Delights of my postbox
Delights of my postbox

Today thus far for me has been threatened by negativity – from the dude on the bus who had Colm & Jim Jim on loudspeaker to the rotten weather to the horrible stats on the news about the projected rate of unemployment. All nasty. So I’m going to try counteracting all this with positive stuff, starting with what I found in my postbox last night, including some fantastic gifts from my 60-something year-old landlord who just got back from NYC who knows I’m pro-Obama and have a funny sense of humour like their own.

1. Obama ‘Change’ Chocolate – I can’t wait to see if his face is embossed on it

2. National Achievemints – “For Powerfully Fresh Breath”, date stamped with the date of Obama’s inauguration

3. Tickets for U2 at Croke Park in July

4. A cheque from a friend for one of said tickets 

So what other positives are out there today? My Twitterstream has been pretty fruitful thus far with jobs been advertised for Daft.ie, Amazon & Zerogrey at the Digital Hub and Cawley-Nea. Peter got 4 eggs from 4 hens yesterday too which is great news :)  So what’s your good news?