The 26th North Texas Irish Festival, the first weekend in March, which next year will actually start on the evening of Friday, February 29th - known as Sadie Hawkins day in some countries! Among the headline guests are the Battlefield Band, Irish button accordion wizard David Munnelly, Matt & Shannon Heaton, Nollaig Casey and Arty McGlynn, the Brock McGuire Band, the Black Brothers, Celtic Spring, Seamus Kennedy, Ed Miller, Town Pants, Brother, and Needfire.
Special Announcement: The Irish supergroup Altan has been added to the lineup of this year's NTIF, performing a single show on Sunday! This is not to be missed.
NTIF is one of the oldest Irish festivals in the country and the largest run by volunteers. It is one of the most fun events to attend in the state, and one of the most fun and fulfilling to volunteer at. My volunteer application is in and accepted. I'll be working the information booth outside by the big stage Saturday night. I'll also be at the tent for the Clan Donald Society of Texas at aome point, so drop by and say howdy!
Those Symbols
Saturday, 05 January 2008
The symbols on the header of this website represent the cultures from which my family came.
The harp represents my father's family. Most of the Scottish
Shannons were originally harpists and storytellers to Donald of the
Isle, and to this day, ancient grave slabs in Kintyre, Skye and Mann
are marked with a harp, indicator that the family was Seachain, forbear
to Shannahan and Shannon. Some claim the Seanchain were in fact
Pictish, chiefs of old knowledge still held to the area in servitude to
their conquerors, the Highland Scots who had moved into their lands
from Ireland centuries ago.
The second symbol is badge to MacDonald, the Scottish clan to which
my family of surname is associated. The clan of Donald of the Isles is
one of the oldest and most honored in both Scotland and Ireland.
The red shield pays repects to my mother's fathers line - Ruslings,
Norman boatmen from Lincolnshire whose Prince William of Normandy
became King of England. Known for administration, and taxation, William
ordered a complete census and inventory of all of England, so that the
King would know exactly what his holdings were. This document became
known as the Domesday book (pronounced dooms-day); because of the
Christian prophecy that all would be written in the book for accounting
in the end-times, the conquered Saxons saw this census as a sign that
the end was near.
The Red Welsh Dragon is homage to the Bristers, my maternal
grandmother's father's family. The Bristers are of the same family as
Bristow, and came to the US early in the 1600s. They were probably
Welsh, coming from the Bristol area of the English-Welsh border. There
were Bristows, Brister has always been an alternate spelling, as Clerk
of the Jewels under Henry VIII, another as High Sheriff of Nottingham.
The boar is a symbol of the Anglo-Saxon-Norse elements of my family
from both sides: the Bells, from everywhere, but mostly from the Scots
borderlands, the Stonestreets, who got their name from the old Roman
road in the Sussex region, and other old family names like Coombs,
Dengate, and Ward.
The Full Moon Barn Dances at Leeann Atherton's are one of the best ways to have fun anywhere. With acts as diverse as Papa Mali, Founders without Eyes, Peter Rowan, and Miss Leeann herself, these homestyle hoedowns - old fashioned hoot'n'anny sorta house concert, with pot luck, open mic, scheduled acts, and an area for the kids - are a great way to hear a lot of good music, get some dancin' done, and share food with a large friendly crowd.
The Barn Dances have a family feel to them, like you are a guest at a big family reunion, or a neighborhood pot-luck crossed with small music fest. The feelings are organic and down to earth. A lot of musicians and musician families. It's obvious a lot of these people know each other. Newcomers are welcome, and it's easy to get to know people.
Music is lively and easy to listen to. The dance floor is usually full. At the Dec. 30th Barn Dance Leeann mentioned a rebuilding of the dying dance floor as a goal in 2008. She has plans on expanding the Barn Dance to include a small indoor venue and a recording studio. These parties having been a resounding success, one can imagine a lot of music and creative projects coming from this South Austin barn.
OK, so I've been dragging around the house since Puppa crossed over, cursing at the silence and feeling plenty sorry for myself.The thing about being in a close-knit group of friends is they can feel it, too.At
every gathering held here at Rowan Central, Pup would gently work the
room with a toy in her mouth, convinced that everyone had come to visit
her!Ah yes, she was quite the gracious hostess!
Abrief Yule tale (and it's all true), written on Saturday, 12/22, the
morning before the Yule Bash here at Rowan Central:
OK, so this morning I'm cruising the aisles at Krogers, oozing with
Yule Happiness, yapping with FL on the cell (he can't make it this
evening on account of work - bummer!), and steering my shopping cart
(yes, we Yankees call it a "cart", not a "buggy") in all manner of
ways, when it occurs to me that the people I'm encountering are driving
their 'buggies' in the same manner they drove their cars in the parking
lot. I.e., insanely. The only person who looked me in the eye was the
person busy stocking cucumbers and whatnot, and the only reason he
stopped fondling vegetables was to ask me this: "Is that a devil's
cross you're wearing?" I looked down, realized he was talking about my
brand-new staurolite/fairy cross (Yay! - mayhaps this one won't go
missing), looked back at him, and said, with a straight face, "Must
have been the embedded garnets that gave it away, huh?" ::blank look::
For the rest of my shopping experience, I had a shadow. I go up one
aisle and he's stocking tea. Three aisles away, he's at the ham
section. I go to check out, waiting in an egregiously long line, get to
the cashier, and realize I've left my ID at home. No problem, Krogers
owns my first born son (folly on their part - Ha!), but as I'm leaving
the lady looks at the staurolite/fairy cross and says:
"Is that a devil's cross you're wearing?"
Sheesh already!!
~Rowan
PS: In retrospect I should have bought a new broom, too. Ahaha!
By: rwshannon (Registered IP 68.206.161.136) on 26-12-2007 09:50
I applaud your restraint. I couldn't let that go; I'd have to have said "It's a naturally occurring mineral, made by God, so why do you overly religious hicks keep calling it Devil's Cross?
Then I'd have added "Besides, Satan is a Christian deity, I don't worship him."
Great Story
By: rwshannon (Registered) on 21-12-2007 21:15