Thursday, January 14, 2010

House Concert: Tania Opland and Mike Freeman

WHEN: Saturday, January 16 8:00 p.m. (Alaska time - midnight Eastern)

WHERE: The Wheat Palace / Listen online



Bio / Info

Quick Description: This international duo from Seattle & Ireland - originally from Anchorage & Manchester (UK) - have been captivating audiences for more than a decade with an engaging, international repertoire: songs and melodies from North America, the British Isles, Eastern & Western Europe... on more instruments than any sane musicians would ever chose to tour with. Opland plays hammered dulcimer, five-string violin, recorders and ocarina. Freeman adds guitar, octave mandolin and djembe (Gambian hand drum).


Tania Opland And Mike Freeman, one from Anchorage (AK) and the other from Manchester (UK), met in Norwich (UK) and now live in Suquamish (WA) and Inistioge (Irl), because anyplace else would be too easy to spell. We spend way too much time in airports and airplanes, but other than that are enjoying our life of nonstop travel and music.


Mike Freeman

Mike Freeman's roots are in Eastern Europe, with grandparents from Russia, Roumania and Hungary. Born and raised in Manchester, England, he spent many years in Norwich working as a designer, cabinet maker and teacher before moving to County Kilkenny, Ireland. He has played guitar and percussion with an assortment of bands, accompanied Middle Eastern and African dance troupes, performed at countless festivals throughout Britain, and featured on recordings in the roles of musician, arranger and producer. Mike's main instrument is the Gambian djembe, from which he draws an amazing variety of sounds, but he plays everything from dholak and darabouka to bones, bodhran and congas, and composes tunes on guitar and mandolin.

Mike has also built a reputation on both sides of the Atlantic as a dance caller and concert M.C., with a charming, irreverent stage presence.


Tania Opland

Originally from Alaska, Tania Opland has travelled extensively in the U.S., Canada, Eastern Europe, Central Asia and Britain. She now lives on an Indian reservation in Washington State, her vast repertoire reflecting the diversity of the communities whose music she has shared. She has appeared on radio and television in the U.S., Canada, Russia, Uzbekistan, Scotland, Ireland and England. Her five solo albums have received excellent reviews in acoustic music magazines on both sides of the Atlantic.

From early classical training on piano, cello and violin, Tania moved on to explore many different fiddle styles and a wide range of wind instruments, and even to experiment with such exotic instruments as chang, gidjak and doira, giving her a style rich in techniques and traditions. She still treasures the unusual blond violin, a handmade instrument by Eskimo craftsman Frank Hobson, which she has played since she was nine years old, but has recently switched to a c.1920 German violin converted to five-string for concert work. Other instruments include an early handmade Larrivee guitar, Flatiron octave mandolin, hammered dulcimer by Dusty Strings, Kiowa Native American flutes by Allan Guffey and Stellar Flutes, and a tiny ocarina by Clayzeness Whistleworks.


Find out more from their Official website


Monday, January 04, 2010

New Years' Fireworks

SUNGRAZING COMET:  Today, a bright comet is approaching the sun for a perilous close encounter, and it probably will not survive.  The comet was discovered by an amateur astronomer monitoring images from NASA's STEREO-A spacecraft.  The Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) has a good view of the comet's approach and images are being posted on http://spaceweather.com.

FIRST METEORS OF 2010: The annual Quadrantid meteor shower peaks on Jan. 3rd around 1900 UT (2 p.m. EST) when Earth passes through a stream of debris from shattered comet 2003 EH1. The timing of this northern shower favors observers in eastern Europe and Asia.  Bright moonlight will interfere with the display, which can reach 100+ meteors per hour under ideal conditions.

Sunspots galore

2009 is ending with a flurry of sunspots.  The month of December has had more "spotted days" than any previous month of the
year by a significant margin, and all of the month's sunspot groups have been members of new Solar Cycle 24. Could this herald an end to the deepest solar minimum in nearly a century? That remains to be seen. Sunspot counts and trends are shown on today's edition of http://spaceweather.com.