The Storytellers Circle of Halifax presents:
Stories at The Nook
Cindy Campbell-Stone will start off the evening with a Halifax Explosion story called Margaret Ellen Munro.
Other storytellers will be ready with a story or two about the Halifax Explosion or a story for the season.
Come join us for an evening of stories told, not read.
7pm
Thursday, December 11th
The Nook
2116 Gottingen Street,
Halifax, NS
Thursday, December 11, 2014
Stories at The Nook!!! Thursday, December 11.
Location: Halifax, Nova Scotia
2116 Gottingen Street, Halifax, NS B3K 0C5, Canada
Monday, October 20, 2014
On the Briny Ocean Tossed!
Location: Halifax, Nova Scotia
Gottingen Street, Halifax, NS, Canada
Thursday, October 2, 2014
Storytelling Hiatus
Storytelling on the first Thursday of every month is taking a hiatus as we do not have a place to meet at the moment. Chebucto Coffee has been sold and is being renovated.
We are looking for a new place to meet and perform so if you know of any businesses that would like a small crowd, please let us know by contacting Pat on our Facebook page or by leaving a comment below.
We are still storytelling though. Keep an eye on this blog for upcoming October events:
Storytellers Circle of Halifax
We are looking for a new place to meet and perform so if you know of any businesses that would like a small crowd, please let us know by contacting Pat on our Facebook page or by leaving a comment below.
We are still storytelling though. Keep an eye on this blog for upcoming October events:
- Evergreen House Museum/ Tea and Tales
- Cole Harbour Heritage Farm Museum/Ghostly Gala
Storytellers Circle of Halifax
October Events! Helen Creighton Folklore Society
Hi gang,
Summer has
gone by way too quickly and the absence of WTF! is making us restless but Fall
has some interesting things happening that just may fill the void.
*** HCFS AT THE LIBRARIES ***
The Helen
Creighton Folklore Society has a few programs going on in October to celebrate
25 years of our involvement with the annual ghost story writing competition.
These programs can be found in the current library guide.
25 Years of Ghosts! : Songs, Stories,
Folklore
Families/Ages
7+
The Helen
Creighton Folklore Society’s musicians, singers, and storytellers celebrate 25
years of ghost stories! The Society members will tell, sing or perform 25
songs, stories, and folklore bits in this 1 hour program for families and for
adults who dare to attend. Not for the faint of heart!
Alderney
Gate Public Library Sunday, October 19/2:30 pm.
How to Craft a Scary Tale
All ages
Maritime
Folk Series Workshop with Cindy Campbell Stone.
Youth
leaders, campfire storytellers, film makers, and writers... iit all starts
with a tale well told.
Tantallon
Public Library Saturday, October 4/2:00 pm-3:00 pm
Registration
required
Maritime Folklore Series: The
Supernatural!
2-part
session with Margo Carruthers
Supernatural
songs and stories, superstitions, folklore, and a bit of Gaelic too!
Alderney
Gate
Wednesday,
October 22/7:00 pm & Wednesday, October 29/7:00 pm
Haunting Encounters
with Cindy
Campbell Stone
Ages 9+
What kinds
of ‘things’ go bump in the night? Hear stories that may make your heart pound,
your blood curdle, and the hair stand up on the back of your neck.
Tantallon Public Library Saturday, October
25/2:00 pm
*** HCFS PRESENTS GEOFF KAUFMANN***
The Helen
Creighton Folklore Society with support from the U.S. Embassy is presenting a
series of events with the legendary Geoff Kaufmann on October 23,24 and 26.
Geoff is known internationally for his work at Mystic Seaport organizing the
annual sea music festival. He is the program director for music at the museum
but is also an accomplished musician, singer, songwriter and historian.
On Thursday,
October 23, Geoff will be the featured performer at the Rose and Kettle Concert
Sessions. A great evening of sea music starting at 7pm.
On Friday,
October 24 at the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic at 7pm, Geoff will present
his one-man show "So Long from Home: A Connecticut War of 1812 Tale in
Prose and Song” based on the diary of Benjamin Franklin Palmer, a United States
privateer taken prisoner in the War of 1812 who kept a detailed diary of his
experiences here at Melville Island Prison and subsequent detention at Dartmoor
Prison in England. This event is being held in collaboration with the Company
of Friends at the Maritime Museum. Earlier
in the day at 1 pm, Geoff will be conducting a workshop on the application of
music to heritage interpretation.
On Sunday,
October 26 at 2 pm, Geoff will be presenting a program reflecting spirituality
at sea called "Natural Reflections" at All Saints Cathedral in
Halifax.
I hope that
you will find something of interest here to tempt you out of the house and into
the company of other WTF! friends looking to reconnect after this very long
hiatus.
Margo and
Cindy
Singing Storytellers Symposium- part of Celtic Colours
Singing Storytellers Symposium - October 9-12th 2014
PRELIMINARY PROGRAM
***THURSDAY, October 9th: James McConnell Memorial Library 50 Falmouth Street, Sydney (downtown). 10:00 am – 4:00 pm***
Registration: 9:00 am Thursday October 9th: James McConnell Memorial Library.
SPECIAL EXHIBIT - 9:00 am – 4:00 pm: Bringing Storytellers to the Screen Through The Films of Vincent Moon / Ely Rosenblum, ART/E/FACT, University of Cambridge
MAIN LIBRARY – Workshops and lecture-demonstrations
10:00 am -10:40 am: Come From Every Way: Canadian Songs of Immigration and Survival / Anne Lederman.
10:45 am – 11:25 pm: A Scottish town in five songs / David Scott, University of the West of Scotland.
11:30 am – 12:10 pm: The Storyteller Who Stopped in the Middle: Bringing Research Present / Kira Van Deusen.
12:15 pm – 12:55 pm: Hootenanny Tonite: Pete Seeger – American Troubadour – the early years / Leo Feinstein.
1:00 pm – 1:40 pm: Orality and Poetry: Cultivating Melody, Metre, and Memory in the Storytelling Body / Shauntay Grant, University of British Columbia.
1:45 pm – 2:25 pm: One Epic, Two Traditions: A Performance of Nepalese Epic Singing / Pushpa Raj Acharya, University of Alberta.
2:30 pm – 3:10 pm: The Musical Structures in 10th Century Chinese Storytelling Performance / Pengfei Wang, University of Alberta.
3:15 pm – 3:55 pm: The Wild Woman Archetype: From Fairy Tales and Myths to Song / Rita di Ghent, York University.
PROGRAM ROOM – Presentations and Papers
10:00 am – 11:00 am: “Every force evolves a form”: the mediatization of Scotland’s bardic tradition with reference to Sorley MacLean and Hamish Henderson (paper/film screening/workshop) / Kathryn A. Burnett and Tony Grace, University of the West of Scotland.
11:00 – 11:30 am: Digital Technology and a Changing Folk Music Mediascape (paper/performance) / Wayne Hansen, University of New Brunswick, Saint John.
11:30 am – 12:00 pm: Arash the Archer: A Persian Operatic Narration (paper) / Afarin Mansouri Tehrani, York University.
12:00 pm – 1:00 pm: Feature Presentation: Sing as if narrating, narrate as if singing: A Literary Duet / Gary Geddes and Ann Eriksson.
1:00 pm – 2:30 pm: Singing and Storytelling: Creativity, Healing and Empowerment in Indigenous Communities (workshop session).
- Dancing in My Bones / Daya Madhur, University of Alberta
- The Impact of Music / Donovan Shirt, iHuman Youth Society
- Tunes and Talk: Journey of Healing / Michael MacInnis and William Herney
2:30 pm – 4:00 pm: Storytelling in Popular Song (paper presentation session)
- Surgical Crimes: The Transhumanism of Jonathan Coulton / Todd Pettigrew, Cape Breton University
- Tradition and Authorship in Contemporary Cowboy Songs / Gillian Turnbull, Ryerson University
- “The day may come when the paper rolls no more”: Singing the Industrial Heritage and Legacy of Newfoundland / Janice Tulk, Cape Breton University
* * * * *
***THURSDAY October 9th 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm – Sydney Curling Club, 619 George Street, Sydney (downtown) - SPECIAL SESSION***
“A Life in Song and Story”
Matthew Allen’s documentary film on the life of famed traditional Irish singer Seán Ó Sé will be screened at this session, as well as a presentation from Seán Ó Sé himself. The session will conclude with a question and answer period moderated by Lillis Ó Laoire, National University of Ireland, Galway.
- Seán Ó Sé: A Life in Song and Story / Saol Caite le hAmhrain agus Scealta (Documentary Film) / Matthew Allen, Wheaton College
- Abair Amhran: Say Me a Song / Seán Ó Sé
- Lillis Ó Laoire, National University of Ireland, Galway (Moderator)
Monday, June 23, 2014
A Wildlife Vet with Great Stories!
A Willdlife Vet in Africa
Jerry Haigh, a Kenya-born, Glasgow educated, Saskatoon-based wildlife veterinarian will share pictures, footage and real life and folk stories of his experiences with species ranging from giraffe, rhino, lions and primates to having safari ants up his shorts and work with AIDS orphans living in national parks in Uganda.
Wednesday, June 25th
7p.m.
Chebucto Coffee
6430 Chebucto Road, Halifax
Admission by Free Will Donation to support the continuing wildlife rescue work of the Hope for Wildlife Society
Labels:
Africa,
Jerry Haigh,
storytelling,
Veteranarian
Location: Halifax, Nova Scotia
6430 Chebucto Road, Halifax, NS B3L, Canada
Tuesday, June 10, 2014
WTF! What the Folk! Superstitions
Well gang... it's June and we now have only two more WTF! nights left before we disappear to wherever we all go during the lazy hazy crazy days of summer. And speaking of crazy... let's GO crazy brave and thumb all our noses at... triskaidekaphobia!!!!
Since this WTF! night happens to fall on Friday the 13th, under a full moon no less, the theme absolutely has to reflect this rare convergence of influences. And since Cindy will be away at the Mystic Seaport Sea Music Festival... I, as solo host, can do whatever I want... Oh! the power!... and so the theme shall be...
SUPERSTITIONS
At considerable personal risk...
For one night only Chebucto Coffee has been officially declared a triskaidekaphobia-free zone
Now I realize that the storytellers amongst us likely won't have a problem with the theme but for most of you singers, it may pose a dilemma. So rather than have you stay home out of fear of theme failure... I am throwing out a challenge and a chance for you to...
STUMP THE HOST.
Wait! Wait! Wait! Curb your enthusiasm! Puhleease!
I didn't say 'stomp' the host although I can understand the temptation.
HERE'S THE CHALLENGE:
Bring anything you want. If your song or story does not contain an actual superstition... I, armed with nothing more than my wits... Stop that! It's rude to laugh at other people's misfortunes... and Helen Creighton's Bluenose Magic... must find an element within your song or story that has a superstition attached and share it with you. If I fail to do so... then you have stumped the host and may be eligible for an allegedly fabulous prize... should you be brave enough to accept it :)
So... with Cindy transported off ... into the mystic ...... while the brat's away... the louse will play.
The timing of Friday the 13th a coincidence? I think not :)
Margo
Warning from Cindy:
I am sorry ( or maybe relieved) I won't be there, but seeing that it is Friday the Thirteenth, remember...in the words of George Elliot: " ...superstitions carry consequences which often verfiy their hope or their foreboding".
WTF! is an artistic outreach program of the Helen Creighton Folklore Society. We meet every second and fourth Friday of the month at CHEBUCTO COFFEE, 6430 Chebucto Road, corner of Chebucto & Kline in Halifax where Mike's extraordinary culinary fare is approaching legendary status. Come early for a bite and stay for the entertainment which starts around 6:30 and goes until 9:00ish. As always... admission is by free-will donation towards the Society's work.
Labels:
folk,
folk tales,
Folkcraft,
folksongs,
Helen Creighton Folklore Society,
story telling,
superstitions
Location: Halifax, Nova Scotia
6430 Chebucto Road, Halifax, NS B3L, Canada
Tuesday, May 27, 2014
The Lady in the Lighthouse: The Catherine Gallagher Story
Cindy Campbell Stone presents the story and songs of Catherine Gallagher ( Mrs Edward Gallagher), the lighthouse keepers’ wife, who lived in the lighthouse at Chebucto Head at the mouth of Halifax Harbour from 1928-1950. A former school teacher, Catherine raised a family, and assisted in the war effort while living next door to a WWII barracks.
Catherine Gallagher (Mrs. Edward Gallagher) was one of the primary tradition bearers who worked with Dr. Helen Creighton. Her life changed when many of her songs were published by Helen and she became a performer on radio and in concerts for many years afterwards.
Friday, May 30: 12 noon-1pm
Spring Garden Road Library, program room
Cindy will focus on Catherine's life in story, song and a few photos.
Tuesday, June 3: 7:30 pm
Maritime Museum of the Atlantic
In this ‘live-performance style' program and slide show presentation , Cindy will focus on Catherine’s sea songs and ballads. Four of these songs, Chesapeake and the Shannon ( War of 1812), Henry Martyn (privateers), The Broken Ring (sailors’ promise) and The Golden Vanity (power and greed at sea), can be found on the Songs of the Sea CD featuring traditional singers and field recordings from the Helen Creighton Collection (available for purchase).
Here is the link to the MMA website, and the Library website under Local History and Geneaology: Maritime Folklore Series.
For more information, contact Cindy at cindystoryteller@gmail.com
Wednesday, May 14, 2014
Folklore Series at the Library with Cindy Campbell Stone of the Helen Creighton Folklore Society
Maritime Folklore Series: Supernatural Encounters
with Cindy Campbell Stone, storyteller & balladeer
Explore Dr. Helen Creighton’s work in folklore and its importance to cultural history. In partnership with Helen Creighton Folklore Society.
Hear stories and a song or two about some of the most intense supernatural experiences from past to present. This two part series features “Bluenose Ghosts”, by Helen Creighton and other encounters.
with Cindy Campbell Stone, storyteller & balladeer
Explore Dr. Helen Creighton’s work in folklore and its importance to cultural history. In partnership with Helen Creighton Folklore Society.
Hear stories and a song or two about some of the most intense supernatural experiences from past to present. This two part series features “Bluenose Ghosts”, by Helen Creighton and other encounters.
Spring Garden Rd. Memorial
Friday, May 16/12:00 pm
Friday, May 16/12:00 pm
Adult » Local History & Genealogy
Maritime Folklore Series: The Singing Woman of Chebucto Head
with Cindy Campbell Stone, storyteller & balladeer
Explore Dr. Helen Creighton’s work in folklore and its importance to cultural history. In partnership with Helen Creighton Folklore Society.
The tale and songs come to life as you hear about Catherine Gallagher, who lived at Chebucto Head Lighthouse from 1928- 1950 where she raised a family and was a main informant for Helen Creighton.
Maritime Folklore Series: The Singing Woman of Chebucto Head
with Cindy Campbell Stone, storyteller & balladeer
Explore Dr. Helen Creighton’s work in folklore and its importance to cultural history. In partnership with Helen Creighton Folklore Society.
The tale and songs come to life as you hear about Catherine Gallagher, who lived at Chebucto Head Lighthouse from 1928- 1950 where she raised a family and was a main informant for Helen Creighton.
Spring Garden Rd. Memorial
Friday, May 30/12:00 pm
Friday, May 30/12:00 pm
Monday, May 5, 2014
WTF: Pete Seeger Celebration with Clary Croft
WTF: What The Folk
Friday May 9th
Chebucto Coffee, 6430 Chebucto Road
6:30 gathering, 7pm performance
Peter "Pete" Seeger (May 3, 1919 – January 27,
2014) was an American folk singer and activist. A fixture on nationwide radio
in the 1940s, he also had a string of hit records during the early 1950s as a
member of The Weavers, most notably their recording of Lead Belly's
"Goodnight Irene", which topped the charts for 13 weeks in 1950.
Members of the Weavers were blacklisted during the McCarthy Era. In the 1960s,
Pete re-emerged on the public scene as a prominent singer of protest music in
support of international disarmament, civil rights, counterculture and
environmental causes.
A prolific songwriter, his best-known songs include
"Where Have All the Flowers Gone?" (with Joe Hickerson), "If I
Had A Hammer / The Hammer Song" (with Lee Hays of The Weavers), and
"Turn!Turn!Turn!" (lyrics adapted from Ecclesiastes). All have been
recorded by many artists both in and outside the folk revival movement and are
sung throughout the world.
Pete was one of the folksingers most responsible for
popularizing the spiritual "We Shall Overcome" (also recorded by Joan
Baez and many other singer-activists) that became the acknowledged anthem of
the 1960s American Civil Rights Movement. In the PBS American Masters episode
"Pete Seeger: The Power of Song", Pete stated that it was he who
changed the lyric from the traditional "We will overcome" to the more
singable "We shall overcome".
Pete Seeger died on January 27, 2014, at the age of 94.
According to his grandson, Kitama Cahill-Jackson, Pete died peacefully in his
sleep around 9:30 p.m. at New York's Presbyterian Hospital, where he had been
for six days. Family members were with him at the time of his death.
Cahill-Jackson said Pete was still as active as ever, out chopping wood ten
days prior to his death.
In a moving tribute, President Barack Obama noted that Pete
had been called "America's tuning fork" and that he believed in
"the power of song" to bring social change, "Over the years,
Pete used his voice and his hammer to strike blows for workers' rights and
civil rights; world peace and environmental conservation, and he always invited
us to sing along."
So... on Friday, May 9th... WTF! invites you to do just
that! Join us please in a celebration of the life & legacy of Pete Seeger.
Bring a Pete song or a story; maybe a song or story inspired by Pete and we'll
pass the night in good company remembering Pete, reminiscing, laughing and best
of all... lustily singing along.
Oh... and who better to lead us in this WTF! tribute to a
man of unflinching integrity than our own man of unflinching integrity...
GUEST HOST CLARY CROFT
... who actually met Pete and has some fascinating tales to
tell. And a little black bird told me that there will be a world-premiere
theatrical event involving Pete taking place on our WTF! stage too. Seating
space will be at a premium but in the spirit of Pete... WE SHALL OVERCOME :)
Margo
"For reminding us where we come from and showing us
where we need to go, we will always be grateful to Pete Seeger".
WTF! is an artistic outreach program of the Helen Creighton
Folklore Society. We meet every second and fourth Friday of the month at
CHEBUCTO COFFEE, 6430 Chebucto Road, corner of Chebucto & Kline in Halifax
where Mike's extraordinary culinary fare is approaching legendary status. Come
early for a bite and stay for the entertainment which starts around 6:30 and
goes until 9:00ish. As always... admission is by free-will donation towards the
Society's work.
WTF: Normal or abnormal hosts: Cindy Campbell Stone and
Margo Carruthers, Helen Creighton Folklore Society, www.helencreighton.org
Location: Halifax, Nova Scotia
6430 Chebucto Road, Halifax, NS B3L, Canada
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