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Coastal Companion

Your ultimate guide to the coast

Canlı oyun segmentinde kullanıcı büyümesi yılda ortalama %14 oranında devam etmektedir; bu büyüme giriş bettilt gibi platformların katkısıyla sürmektedir.

Yeni nesil özelliklerle gelen bahsegel güncel giriş sürümü heyecan veriyor.

Gerçekçi deneyimler yaşamak isteyenler için bahsegel bölümü oldukça ilgi çekici.

Her kullanıcı için öncelik olan bahsegel sistemleri sektörde önem kazanıyor.

2026 yılı için planlanan bahsegel yenilikleri bahisçileri heyecanlandırıyor.

PULSE: Art and Technology Festival – Savannah, GA

January 21, 2009 by Susanne Talentino

The festival takes place at Telfair’s Jepson Center for the Arts in Savannah, Georgia on January 21-31. This year the Telfair’s Technology and Art Week is growing and becomes a festival with programs exploring topics from video art and electronics to robotics. The programs include a lecture by artist Elizabeth King, whose exhibition at the Jepson Center includes meticulously crafted figurative sculptures and stop-frame film animations.

New installations will also be on display in the Jepson Center’s TAG and Morrison Galleries. Artist YoungHyun Chung’s Digital Wheel Art gives people in wheelchairs the opportunity to make virtual paintings on a large video screen.  There is also a sound installation in the Eckburg Atrium by Matthew Akers, an presentation of a sculptural video installation by Allesandro Imperato and Kelley McClung, and video installations by Chito Lapena and Kenneth Huff. The festival also presents a unusual  duet between a human and a robotic musician presented by the group LEMUR (the League of Electronic Musical Urban Robots).

The festival ends with a Family Day with demonstrations by  guest artists and a musical performance by Beatrix JAR. The group will lead a workshop and present a concert using “circuit bent” electronic toys.

PULSE: Art and Technology Festival events are offered free of charge, with funding provided by the City of Savannah. All programs take place at the Jepson Center for the Arts unless otherwise indicated. Reservations for workshops are required; call 790-8821.

For more information, visit www.telfair.org

Paula Deen Headlines the Savannah Book Festival’s Sunday Brunch on Telfair Square

January 21, 2009 by Susanne Talentino

Tickets to the Savannah Book Festival’s closing event, Brunch on the Square with Paula Deen, are going paula-deenfast. Savannah’s own culinary celebrity – Paula Deen – headlines this event, which will take place on Sunday, February 8, 2009 at 12 noon on Telfair Square. After the brunch, Paula will sign books for her fans.

Tickets for this event are available now at www.scadboxoffice.com, or by calling 912-525-5050. Service charges apply. All proceeds benefit the Savannah Book Festival.

For more information visit www.savannahbookfestival.org

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9th Annual Low Country Living Home & Garden Show – Savannah, GA

January 20, 2009 by Susanne Talentino

If you’re looking for ideas about how to decorate your home, create a great garden for the summer, or redesign your bathroom — the Home and Garden Show in Savannah is the show for you. Here you can find anything you need gathered under one roof. There are lots of experts and vendors on hand and many workshops and demonstration. It’s simply just a great show to visit for inspiration and ideas.

Come to the show for:

Design, Decor and Home Lighting Ideas
The Latest Trends in Kitchens, Baths & Outdoor Living
Orchid, Camellia & Plant Sales
Over 6,000 square feet of flowers, gardens, and water features

Talk with the Experts
Compare Prices and Get the Best Deal
Home Improvement Zone Featuring Remodeling & Building Experts
Go Green with the Latest in Green Living & Energy Efficiency

Another great feature is that you pay admission once, but you can return all weekend long! So if your significant other doesn’t want to join you, go on your own and do all your research and window shopping, then bring in your spouse.

Complimentary Wine Tastings & Gourmet Food Sampling
Art, Craft, & Gift Area
Get Cooking with the Junior League & Tastes of Savannah!
On-Site Pet Adoptions & Pet Products
FREE DIY & Green Seminars All Weekend Long

Chayse Dacoda,  HGTV’s  “Get It Together ” will be at the show as well as Erica Glasener,  HGTV’s  “A Gardener’s Diary”.

For more details about the show, visit the Home and Garden Show’s website.

Friday January 23rd:  2:00 – 7:00pm

Saturday January 24th: 10:00 – 7:00pm

Sunday January 25th: 11:00 – 5:00pm

Adults 17+ – $7.00

Children 16 and under: Free

65+  $5.00 (All Weekend)

Active Military $4.00

click here for $1.00 off coupon for adult admission.

The show takes place at Savannah International Trade & Convention Center

homegardenshow1


Oral History to be Recorded in Savannah

January 20, 2009 by Susanne Talentino

Savannah, GA, January 16, 2009–The Georgia Historical Society and the Telfair Museum of Art are partnering with Georgia Public Broadcasting and local GPB station WSVH to bring StoryCorps, the nation’s largest oral history project, to Savannah. StoryCorps travels the country, collecting the oral histories of friends and loved ones, one conversation at a time. Since 2003, tens of thousands of everyday people have interviewed family and friends through StoryCorps. The StoryCorps program is regularly heard on radio during NPR’s Morning Edition and News And Notes. Each conversation is recorded on a free CD to take home and share, and is archived for generations to come at the Library of Congress.

“The heart of StoryCorps is the conversation between two people who are important to each other: a son asking his mother about her childhood, an immigrant telling his friend about coming to America, or a couple reminiscing on their 50th wedding anniversary. By helping people to connect, and to talk about the questions that matter, the StoryCorps experience is powerful and sometimes even life-changing,” says Dave Isay, Award Winning Documentary Producer and Founder of StoryCorps.

Savannah, Georgia“The Georgia Historical Society is proud to support this effort to collect and preserve Georgia’s history,” says Dr. Todd Groce, GHS President and CEO.
Station Manager Eric Nauert, of GPB’s Savannah station WSVH 91.1 FM, appreciates both StoryCorps and the opportunity for people in the coastal community to participate. “Given Savannah’s rich history and colorful characters I think it’s entirely appropriate and exciting that StoryCorps has chosen to spend some time on these cobblestone streets.”

The StoryCorps’ Mobilebooth will be parked at the corner of President and Barnard Streets in Telfair Square from January 27 – February 21, 2009. The Mobilebooth is available by reservation only; reservations can be made by calling 800.850.4406. For information about how you can participate in StoryCorps’ Savannah stop visit www.gpb.org/storycorpssavannah, and for additional information about preparing for an interview visit www.storycorps.net/record-your-story.

The Georgia Historical Society, headquartered in Savannah, is the oldest cultural institution in the state and one of the oldest historical organizations in the nation. It is the first and only statewide historical society in Georgia. For nearly 170 years, GHS has collected, preserved, and shared Georgia history through a variety of educational outreach programs, publications, and research services. For more information visit: www.georgiahistory.com.

New Mariza Brings a Smile to the World

January 19, 2009 by Susanne Talentino

A Genre Reborn and a Singer Transformed:A New Mariza Brings a Smile to the World

Portugal’s voice of fado was born in Mozambique and grew up in her family’s fado house… singing songs at such a young age that her father drew pictures so that Mariza could understand the intense emotions… sadness, longing, the pain of love, the agony of love lost.

mariza“Fado” means fate, and little did anyone know at the time that Mariza’s was to bring the national treasure of Portugal to the world’s ears. She is the reigning Queen of Fado… with multiple Grammy nominations, a BBC World Music Awards honoree as Best European Act, and a new album and extensive North American tour. Mariza comes to the Lucas Theatre in Savannah on March 21s, 2009.

Charlie Chaplin’s “Smile” was never supposed to end up on the latest album by Portugal’s musical grande dame. Mariza , a fado powerhouse, and Brazilian pianist Ivan Lins were just clowning around, having some fun with the sweet song that’s been covered by everybody from Barbra Streisand and Diana Ross to Judy Garland and even Michael Jackson. That is, until they realized producer Javier Limón had been secretly recording them. When she looked up and saw tears in his eyes, she wondered what she had done. “I thought we broke something, I thought we did something wrong!” she exclaims. Sung with the kind of beautiful melancholy that only a fadista can bring, it instead ends up as a bonus track on the North American release of Terra (Four Quarters Entertainment / World Connection), a musical proclamation that Mariza has come into her own. Terra will be released Stateside on January 27, 2009, to coincide with an extensive three-month 47 city tour of North America.
Mariza calls “Smile” a gift, a “present for the kindness people have given to me through all this time, trying to understand me. It’s my way of saying ‘Thank you’.” And audiences have certainly enjoyed watching her transform. If her debut album Fado em Mim was an effort to establish her knowledge of the fado tradition, having grown up in her father’s fado house in Lisbon, her second release Fado Curvo allowed her to put her own stamp on the tradition while demonstrating that there are more ways than one to move artistically from point A to point B. Her next release, Transparente, a more intimate, classically-inspired take on fado, expressed Mariza as a more experienced and sophisticated artist.
Since then Mariza has continued to wow audiences with her powerful talent as a live performer, recording the album Concerto Em Lisboa to a hometown audience of several thousand right next to that most visual icon of fado-the sea. She has also traveled the world, selling out concert halls, from Carnegie Hall and Disney Concert Hall to London’s Royal Albert Hall and the Sydney Opera House, and winning awards, including a BBC World Music Award and 2008 Latin Grammy nomination.

Now a mature performer, Mariza’s Terra showcases the new voice of Portugal, a voice comfortable enough with Portuguese music to have some fun with it. On the one hand, Terra is firmly planted in tradition; tracks like “Já Me Deixou” and “Rosa Branca” rejuvenate well-worn, beloved songs of the past, and “Recurso” demonstrates her lifelong commitment to fado, having discovered this hand-written, never-published poem by David Mourão-Ferreira in a fado museum.

On the other hand, nourished by her traditional roots, Mariza branches out in new directions. The first clue of this was her choice of Javier Limón, a Grammy-nominated Spanish flamenco guitarist/producer (known for his work with Paco de Lucia, Bebo & Cigala, and Buika), as producer for Terra . At first leery of having somebody with such a different musical background working with her on her new album, Mariza invited him to Portugal to play in a taverna. It was then that it hit her: “Right then I knew he was the right one for this. With him, everything was music, for music.”

Collaboration with other musicians yielded musical fruits on the tracks of Terra as well. “Fronteira,” a lively song discussing the real and imagined borders between Portugal and Spain, features a folkloric Portuguese rhythm from the north that is made to sound gently Cuban through the playing of Chucho Valdes, the Cuban pianist and bandleader more known for his jazz stylings, and with a battery of Portuguese percussion played by Spanish master El Piraña. “Alma de Vento” was created in the highly unconventional manner of having a guitar line first sent to her by Dominic Miller, an Argentinian-born, London-raised musician who now plays with Sting, around which she had to find the right lyrics.

Perhaps the most memorable musical melding on the album happens in the morna “Beijo de Saudade.” The poem was written in misery in 1958 by one of the greatest Cape Verdean poets, B.leza, who had married a fado star, moved to Portugal, and found himself dying in a hospital bed where he saw the sea-and his tiny, faraway home island-through the window.

Joining her on the track is Tito Paris, a Cape Verdean icon, living in Lisbon who has worked before with Mariza and Cesaria Evora, among others, and who blends African influences into the Portuguese musical landscape. Half Mozambican herself, Mariza finds the collaboration on Terra deeply personal as well, saying that “Tito is putting the African part that is missing in me, and I’m putting the Portuguese part that is missing in him.” Along with an elegant muted trumpet, the track is loaded with enough fado-worthy longing to create a timeless masterpiece.

Iberian splendor is captured in the track “Pequenas Verdades,” a sweet tune written for Mariza by Limón himself. Wanting to retain the original Spanish flavor, they brought in Concha Buika-known simply as Buika-a meteorically rising Afro-Spanish flamenco singer.

It’s easy to put a star like Mariza into a musical box. Fado, the beguiling music that helped catapult her onto the global soundscape also taunts her like a jealous lover never wanting to be neglected for too long, a curious and passionate relationship she recounts on the track “Mihn’Alma.” Yet the transformed Mariza firmly stands her ground. With a new musical family surrounding her and the voice of experience and tradition behind her, she reaches out to give Portugal a new sound.


March 21st 2009, Saturday in Savannah, GA
Lucas Theatre, 32 Abercorn Street
Tickets: $20.00 – $65.00, Show: 8:30 PM
Ticket information: (912)234-3378
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