Vandaag brengen @Anuna_Choir "Skye Boat Song" uit, de 2de single van Systir's aanstaande debuutalbum.
Je vindt links naar alle streamingdiensten op de 2de pagina hieronder. Ze namen dit korte filmpje afgelopen weekend op in Yorkshire.
Amelia Jones solo.
Today we release "Skye Boat Song", the second single from Systir's forthcoming début. You'll find links to all streaming services below. They recorded this short video last weekend in Yorkshire - Amelia Jones solo. Stream at https://t.co/Lvc7FFDf5w
Smashing it once with "Ceann Dubh Dílis" this is Spokanki lashing my old banger "Dúlamán" to the mast and flogging it. Surprising how many people think these are traditional Irish songs. But music education isn't a big thing here.
https://t.co/tPmIP4yKuX
Found in a sock drawer. 2011 - we had a bash in Dublin for the 25th Anniversary of ANÚNA . I can remember thinking "this is pretty much the end of it all". 15 years later, new recordings, new tours and a plan for our 40th next year in 2027. Now we are three with M'ANAM & Systir
@Clearpreso I swim there and it is, without doubt, the worst thought out amenity I've used in Ireland relative to cost. I have to say that Dun Laoghaire have excelled themselves again, and I look forward to further shitty developments. It gives us years of incredulous bitching.
@zighazighazigha Looks like a deliberate, and weirdly justified right...piece of propaganda. Is that what it is supposed to be because it looks exactly that?
The stunning artistry of @lampeniuslinda playing Michael McGlynn's "Kells". Linda is a sublime artist, modest, professional, genuine and gifted. @Eurovision will be better for her inclusion. Sending you our sincerest love and best wishes ❤️ ❤️ https://t.co/KtyMr8LAw7
Back in 2009, in London, England, a bald, overweight community worker named Paul Yarrow decided he was tired of news cameras only ever filming attractive people for street interviews.
So he started showing up in the background of live broadcasts, always in the same beige sweater, just walking past or pretending to be on his phone, never saying a word.
By the middle of 2010 he had appeared in over 100 live news shots across the BBC, ITV, Channel 4, Sky News and Al Jazeera. He told reporters it was a protest. “It is a statement about the image-conscious media.”
A British comedian on the BBC dismissed him as “one fat guy who just wants to get on telly,” which Yarrow said proved his point exactly.