Renaissance Festival Podcast #71, Feb 24-25 and Mar 3-4
Brought to you by...
SONG HENGE, the online archive of free
and legal Celtic music downloads.
Find out more at http://www.SongHenge.com
Notes:
- Oops! Broadside Buddies was the winner in the awards, not Biguns with Brigands
- The Circle, Renaissance Festival Compilation CD
- Time to vote for us at Podcast Alley, YahooPodcasts, and at iTunes where you can make comments on the show.
- Irish & Celtic Music Podcast
- Marc Gunn - Irish, Scottish, Folk Songs and Cat Music
- Brobdingnagian Bards' Tour of Ireland,
- Renaissance Festival dot com Message Board,
- Record a promo for us. Call 512-879-NEWT.
Download this week's podcast.
This week:
25-26 February
* Arizona Renaissance Festival, Apache Junction, Arizona, USA
Tartanic, "The Brewery Tap" from Unmistakeable
Cast in Bronze, "Pavanne" from Spirit of the Bells
Fugli, "Crazy Leo's Indulgences"
Owain Phyfe, "Cossack Folk Song" from Tales from the Vineyard
* Florida Renaissance Festival, Deerfield Beach, Florida, USA
Cantiga, "Childgrove" from The Otter's Pool
The Limeybirds, "The Ballad of Lily and Sam" from The Naked Album
Craig of Farrington, "Jack in the GREEN Medley" from Easy Being Green
(Free download parody on his website)
Minstrels of Mayhem, "Jack and the Mermaid" from Rocky Road
Wylde Fyre, "Barque in the Harbour" from All's Faire
4-5 March
* Four Winds Renaissance Faire, Troup, Texas, USA
Arabesque, "The Gneeveguilla Set" from Glen Road to Cordoba
Also on Victims of Irish Music, a new Celtic music compilation CD
Jed Marum, "Rising of the Moon" from Lonestar Stout
* Renaissanc Festival Flashback
Celtic Stone, "Rocky Road to Brenham" from Digital Flashbacks
Also on Victims of Irish Music, a new Celtic music compilation CD
- We want to hear from you. Email us at music@renaissancefestivalmusic.com with REN FEST PODCAST in the subject line.
- We want to thank everyone who listens to this podcast and tells their friends. Thanks to those you email us and to those who post in our message board at RenaissanceFestival dot com. And a special thanks to those who financially support the podcast by making donations or through your purchases in theRenaissance Festival Podcast Music Store at CDBaby.
- If you like what you heard today, visit our shownotes at www.renaissancefestivalmusic.com and find out more about the artists who make the music happen. Show your support by telling your friends of the great music you found.
Brobdingnagian Bards, "Seven Drunken Nights" from The Holy Grail of Irish Drinking Songs
Marc Gunn with Lorella Loftus reading "The Faire is Over"
- The Renaissance Festival Podcast is a proud member of the
Celtic Podcast Network. Find other great podcasts
http://www.celticpodcastnetwork.com/
--posted by Marc Gunn
3:46 PM
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Tuesday, February 06, 2007
Renaissance Festival Podcast #70 - Renaissance Festival Awards
Music from Joni Minstrel, Heather Alexander, Darcy Nair, Owain Phyfe, Craig of Farrington, Marooned, Bounding Main, The Rogues, Bocca Musica, Bedlam Bards, The Bilge Pumps, Tartan Terrors, Three Quarter Ale, Hall of Fame of 2006, Brobdingnagian Bards.
Brought to you by...
SONG HENGE, the online archive of free
and legal Celtic music downloads.
Find out more at http://www.SongHenge.com
Notes:
- Announcing the 2nd Annual Renaissance Festival Awards.
- Quick note about the last show. According to Douglas in Scotland, there is no Burns Day. It's more of an arbitrary day. See http://www.rabbie-burns.com/burnssupper/ for details.
- Become an Official Sponsor
- The Circle, Renaissance Festival Compilation CD
- Bard Crier Music Marketing and Promotion Ezine.
- Time to vote for us at Podcast Alley.
- Renaissance Festival dot com, The Directorie of Renaissance Faires, Ren Radio, Modern Bard, RenSites Faire Photo Galleries.
- We want to thank everyone who listens to this podcast and tells their friends. Thanks to those you email us and to those who post in our message board at RenaissanceFestival dot com. And a special thanks to those who financially support the podcast by making donations or through your purchases in the Renaissance Festival Podcast Music Store at CDBaby.
Download this week's podcast.
This week:
Best Music Soloists of 2006
5. Joni Minstrel, "My Own Hero" from Joni Minstrel Kicks the King
4. Heather Alexander, "Brannigan's Special Ale" from Midsummer
3. Darcy Nair, "The Bonnie Lass/Gravel Walk" from High Strung
2. Owain Phyfe, "We Be Soldiers Three" from Where Beauty Moves and Wit Delights
1. Craig of Farrington, "Parody, Old Time Religion" from Easy Being Green
Best Music Groups of 2006
5. Marooned, "The Fair(e) Lass" from Marooned
4. Bounding Main, "High Barbaree" from Lost at Sea - Sea Shanties and Nautical Ballads
3. The Rogues, "Pressed for Time" from RogueTrip
2. Bocca Musica, "We Are Entertainers" from We Are Entertainers
1. Bedlam Bards, "Ballad of Joss" from On the Drift (Music Inspired by Firefly and Serenity)
Best New CD of 2006
1. On the Drift by Bedlam Bards
2. We Are Entertainers by Bocca Musica
3. The Bilge Pumps, "Pirating the Seas" from Brigands with Big'uns
4. Tartan Terrors, "Broken Tail" from Who's Your Paddy
5. Three Quarter Ale, "The Old Orange Flute" from Intertwined
Hall of Fame of 2006
* Seymoure aka C. Wayne Owens
- We want to hear from you. Email us at
music@renaissancefestivalmusic.com with REN FEST PODCAST
in the subject line.
- If you like what you heard today, visit our shownotes at
www.renaissancefestivalmusic.com and find out more about the
artists who make the music happen. Show your support by
telling your friends of the great music you found.
Best Ineligible Band
Brobdingnagian Bards, "If I Had A Million Ducats (live)" from Brobdingnagian Fairy Tales
Marc Gunn with Lorella Loftus reading "The Faire is Over"
- The Renaissance Festival Podcast is a proud member of the Celtic Podcast Network.
Labels: ren_fest_awards
--posted by Marc Gunn
9:10 PM
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Thursday, February 01, 2007
C. Wayne Owens: A True Renaissance Man
When it comes to accomplishments, C. Wayne Owens, 56, known to many as Seymoure, has a lifetime of them.
"This man is, at his core, an entertainer," said Jesse Slicer, Owens' son-in-law. "Never have I known someone personally who was so immersed in the entertainment arts. He's always one of those types of guys who works hard and never asks for anything in return. Just a satisfied audience. That's something every entertainer should strive for."
Born in Oklahoma in 1950, but raised in Los Angeles, Owens was already working as an extra on popular television shows like "My Three Sons," and "Circus Boy" by the age of five.
In 1963, he left home to work and to attend college at Southwest Missouri State College and the University of Missouri-Kansas City, where he studied theater and performed in numerous landmark shows.
The show "King Henry's Feast," which Owens co-wrote and also performed, is the longest running live show in Kansas City, lasting for three years. It was from this show that the character Seymoure emerged and Owens toured the Renaissance circuit as that character.
"That's the truly amazing thing about C. Wayne Owens," Marc Gunn, a close friend and Renaissance performer, said. "He isn't just a comedian. He's a philosopher, a poet, a man who inspires."
Brian Wendling, who worked with Owens at the Kansas City Renaissance Festival and the old Westport Standford & Sons Comedy Club, agrees.
"Beyond his performing and writing abilities, he is a gentle and generous man, and to me, that says more than any of his performing."
Owens is someone people respect. Not only does he perform, but he inspires others, not just performers, but those who take in his shows and see the very essence of this man.
"He has taught me that we all, as performers and as people, have something special to contribute, both to the performance environment and to the fabric of our lives as a community," said Denise Goodson, a performer at the Kansas City Renaissance Festival. "His work at faires has spanned a number of venues, over an extended tenure and his contribution over the years has been not only to contribute to the performance at hand, but also to teach other performers what to bring to the table."
Goodson noted another important characteristic of Owens: that he is a consummate professional.
In fact, Owens is the first inductee into the Renaissance Festival Hall of Fame.
"I think he is the perfect recipient because of his contribution to the Renaissance festival circuit," Gunn said. "He made people laugh, taught people improv, and best of all, he opened people's minds in a way that transcended history lessons, and in a way that ultimately leads to a better life for all in our current day. I've known no one else at faire who has inspired me so much."
Wendling echoes those thoughts. "My sense of being a performer is twofold: to be a person of many interests and passions. Seymoure is certainly that, and to be a solo stage performer at a Renaissance festival, one should have the ability to hold the audience with your voice and your story, whatever that story is, and Seymoure has many stories, on many levels."
To Goodson, it is the example that Owens sets that makes him the perfect recipient of this award.
Indeed, those who know Owens do try to live up to the example he has set in the Renaissance faire circuit. It seems every performer or anyone who takes in one of his shows walks away changed in some way by not only his presence, but the way he projects himself to those around him.
"Back in 2000, we struggled with anonymity and were trying to find a place in the Renaissance festival world," Gunn says of his duo, the Brobdingnagian Bards. "C. Wayne Owens, through Seymoure, and also through our professional relationship that developed outside of faire, showed me that there is more to this business of music than self-service. There is a higher cause, to help inspire fans, and helps bands selflessly so that others may share the love and dignity that we were shown."
It seems to be a common tale told by other performers who know him.
"He was always kind to me, and since I was a shy transplant to the Kansas City area, that meant a lot," Wendling said. "And as I get older, he is one of those touchstones that knows part of my history from almost 30 years ago. Those early days of the Kansas City Renaissance Festival were full of newness and energy and fun. Seymoure was one of those special people then...and he still is."
For Slicer, Owens' influence goes beyond the realm of performances and faires to a more personal level.
"What can I say about my kids' grandpappy, my wife's papa and a fellow who has not only treated me like a son, but taught me so much about the entertainment world? Well, I guess I can, at a minimum, say ‘thanks' to him. He's been a major influence in many parts of my life, obviously, but I think I learn the most about him, and myself, watching his interactions with others."
For a man like Owens, who grew up with entertainment in his blood, from credits for writing and performing in a variety of shows and films, an appearance on "Jeopardy," touring Europe and the Middle East, headlining the first USO All Stand-up Comedy Show, creating comic strip characters, and recording five music and comedy albums, it might seem as though he'd find other venues in which to display his talent. On the contrary, it seems his performances at the Renaissance faires have touched not only other performers, but those who simply came to observe and instead found themselves inspired.
Gunn sums it up the best.
"When I talk to Seymoure, I find new meaning in my life. I find direction about what is important. Seymoure inspires me to think, about life, the universe and everything. And if I had one wish for my dying days, it would be that I was able to inspire people as Seymoure has inspired me."
Labels: hall_of_fame
--posted by Marc Gunn
1:13 PM
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