Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for May, 2015

Thank you for each original note.

Good Music Speaks's avatarGood Music Speaks

Ray Charles Ray Charles

If I think back, I believe the first music I heard that could be classified as Blues would have been an old cassette tape of Ray Charles.  He was a giant in the world of music, with a musical voice all his own and became a foundational influence in the genres of Blues, R&B, and early Rock and Roll.  That old cassette had to be some sort of greatest hits compilation I’m sure, including such favorites as “Georgia On My Mind” and “What I’d Say”.  The one I remember as a straight up blues was a tune named “A Fool For You”.

Ray Charles, “ A Fool For You”

Robert Cray Robert Cray

I was coming of age in that transition period between vinyl records and the first compact discs.  Most new releases were available on record, cassette and CD all at the same time.  Stores were selling records for…

View original post 368 more words

Read Full Post »

Long Row

A charming telling of how we never forget those, who’ve influenced our lives.

Read Full Post »

MAD MAX: FURY ROAD

This review is unashamedly written by a dedicated fan but nontheless, a very worthy review. I’m looking forward to seeing this movie!

Read Full Post »

Reel-Life Productions in Zimbabwe are making a documentary about the ‘war’ on Rhino poachers:

 

@FrancesMForde  #FrancesMacForde  #ReelLifeProd  #RangerDanger  #ConserveAfrica  #ProtectRhino  #WarOnPoachers

Read Full Post »

150515HarryOwen

Harry Owen  on FaceBook today:  “If I can do this, anyone can! Please join in and help raise awareness for the rhino today. Thank you!”   

 

@FrancesMForde  #FrancesMacForde   @StopKillingRhino  #HarryOwen  #Africa  #Nature  #Rhino  #Elephant

 

Read Full Post »

I can’t believe this – Gillian looks younger than she did in the X-files! She was absolutely amazing in the recent Irish TV Series ‘The Fall’.

Niall McArdle's avatarThe Fluff Is Raging

David-Duchovny-Gillian-Anderson-620x353 Scully and Mulder together again

The Truth is Out There about David Duchovny’s singing voice: he really isn’t very good. I am not sure if it even qualifies as singing. It’s more a sort of mumbled warbling, and he obviously brings the same level of energy to it as he does to his acting. Let’s be polite and call it understated. (No doubt it will be lodged in the same cultural memory box as Bruce Willis’ The Return of Bruno.) Still, though, that didn’t stop people from turning out in droves to hear him launch his debut album, Hell or Highwater at The Cutting Room in New York.

Dressed all in black just like a rock star – or a man in mid-life crisis who thinks that being a rock star would be kind of cool – Duchovny hugged the microphone and brought his signature intensity…

View original post 94 more words

Read Full Post »

Tony Park interview.

An Australian writing about Africa.

Read Full Post »

Perth, Is That You?

Here’s a new view of my gorgeous city. Although, nowadays, I must admit I don’t go into ‘town’ vey often… preferring the suburbs.

Read Full Post »

db_file_img_143659_265xauto

When I met 90 year old Tom, he was a West Australian Living Treasure and an absolute gentleman.

Also the winner of the Patrick White Award in 1992, Tom was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia (AM) in 1988 for services to literature, the author of many novels, including The Ridge and The River, Sowers of the Wind, Swagbelly, Birdsnatcher and The Prince of Siam.

He’d been writing for 60 years and celebrated his 90th birthday with a collection of stories & poems which illustrated his life.

At the official launch, I sat in selfish wonder listening to the magnificent voice of Jack Thompson booming, blasting passion into the masterly poetry and prose of T.A.G. Hungerford’s new book.

Taken from the back cover of  What’s Happened to Joseph?:  “With dazzling ease he moves from prose to poetry, from the ancient past to the present, from the small, absorbing passions of suburbia to the grim demands of jungle warfare. Hungerford makes us wonder just what did happen to Joseph, farther of Jesus Christ- did he continue to work in his carpenters trade, perhaps in Jerusalem – then takes us to the heart of Anzac Day, to the shimmering colours of outback Australia, or to his own front garden, and with every word he illuminates our own experience.”  

I loved every word of his book and want everyone to enjoy his insight, his sensitivity and his ability to place me right there, where he was when writing them.

‘ANZAC Day’ is a poem I believe would work well on screen; the opening lines; dense, establishing and heartfelt:

“This spot at the corner of Pier Street and the Terrace

between two churches – Presbyterian one side,

C. of E. on the other – is just made to order

for us Second Eighth blokes to form up for the March

this mild April morning.  Wild men we were, all of us.”

When Tom allowed me to host ‘An Afternoon With Tom’ during a very special Poet’s Corner event, devoted entirely to him, the place was packed with lovers of words wanting to hear him read and provide further insight to his writing.

TAGHungerford10076

T.A.G. Hungerford graciously allowed me to interview him for BOOKS Australia during Poets Corner. FMF © 2006

TAGHungerford10048

Kevin Gillam playing ‘Fascination’ for “An Afternoon with Tom” at Pages Cafe during Poets Corner. FMF © 2006

The last poem in his book; ‘Fascination Waltz’ is another favorite and made me cry.  That’s why I asked Kevin Gillam, a fellow poet, admirer of Tom and professional cellist to play ‘Fascination’.  I felt the love and saw a tear in Tom’s eye, too.

Although he’s gone now I still think of him and his words, often. I treasure the firstly hand-written, then typed letters we exchanged and an (as far as I know) unpublished poem “Grey Ghost”, which would also make a fantastic film.

I want to pay a larger tribute and help make his writings available to more by getting them up on the big screen. Any producers out there, interested?

@FrancesMForde  #FrancesMacForde  #TAGHungerford  #What’sHappenedToJoseph? #JackThompson  #Stories&Poems   #Poetry  #KevinGillam  #PoetsCorner  #PagesCafe

Read Full Post »

 

F1010007

Co.Cork.  Frances Macaulay Forde © 2003

 

The Folly    

Gaeltacht – Irish-speaking area.

Teanga – living language, tongue.

 

My Gaeltacht friend explained  ‘Ye should go t’ see the folly…’

So, like tourists, my man and I actually took a clear-day,

no rain so far drive. A determined scenic dalliance

in sunny  sections flashing green and historical grey.

 

Eventually – with no clear direction, journeying

quite far out of our way…  we appreciated the Anglo

interpretation on the road signs, because as foreigners,

we don’t speak the traditional language of Ireland.

 

Not wanting to barstardise or pronounce phonetically

in error, ‘so’.  We enjoyed the lilt and musicality of her

tumbled, seemingly conscientious explanation – story-

telling at a 100 miles an hour.  ‘Ah well  ye know, ta

 

get t’da place dat ‘tis, you just go along dis

road, don’t ye know, ‘tis a sort of a wind-y road, den

up t’ hill, don’t ye know and dere’ll be a turn off t’

da right – de left would it be, no, ‘tis definitely

 

da right…  but don’t you be going dat way, d’ye know

‘cos dat’ll get ye into all sorts a troubles, sure

t’ will and all…’  Pictograms pointing to a past not

forgotten although many have tried to suppress their

 

uniqueness… The soft emphasis or not.  A language

echoed through 400 years… the charming emotional

push of Ireland.  ‘So’, we go on death-defying strips

of beaten earth, slicing through fields, carelessly carving

 

up gently rising hills dotted with dwellings, puffing

grey smoke evidencing crisp cold air, we journeyed

on by-ways bordered by stones. Intrusion bands – neatly

trimmed piles of manual labour carefully selected and placed

 

one on top of the measured other… in spite of  wars and cars,

surviving like the teanga, rebelliously, resolutely, knowingly

employed at home in private, upright and proud though sagging

in some areas, often bent by forces who moved on and forgot.

 

Those walls still exist in places – repaired now, to allow

journey. Showing a path around a sparkling gem waiting…

We chanced intrusion of some one’s private personal space,

a rutted homely driveway – questions of culture, seeking

 

an un-shy, proud demonstration of Celtic heritage. We

wanted a clearer vision of soulful insistence – difference.

A sculptural acknowledgment, including the heroic past,

clear evidence of resistance – of residence.  The Folly!

 

 Frances Macaulay Forde © 2003

 

@FrancesMForde  #FrancesMacForde  #POEM:TheFolly  #SketchingInIreland  #Poems   #Co.Cork  #Ireland

 

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts

authorsinterviews

My interviews with many authors

Short Stories Unlimited

Your creative writing hub!

Lou Treleaven

Children's author and writing coach - official site

Anita Heiss

Author, Poet, Satirist, Social Commentator

Stephen Page

Psithurism - the sound of wind in the trees and rustling of leaves. Stephen Page is the author of 4 books.

Norah Colvin

Live Love Laugh Learn . . . Create the possibilities

Sarika, Pure Reflections

Poems, Pure Reflections

Elizabeth Gauffreau

Fiction Writer in Poet's Clothing

Short Prose

Gabriela Marie Milton - Three Times #1 Amazon Bestselling Poet, Pushcart Nominee, Publisher

FREOVIEW - Fremantle's only daily

A passion for all things Fremantle

The Curious Magpie

Live life more Curiously!

Mug Full of Books

Books, tea and great reads

The Inquiring Mind

“Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom, must, like men, undergo the fatigues of supporting it.” Thomas Paine - "Limitation is essential to authority. A government is legitimate only if it is effectively limited." ~ Lord Acton - Commentary on what interests me, reflecting my personal take on the world

Mike Finn's Fiction

Book Reviews and Short Stories

Whispering Gums

Books, reading and more ... with an Australian focus ... written on Ngunnawal Country

Thoughts Become Words

Miscellaneous Collection by Gretchen Bernet-Ward

earthstonestation

For the beauty of the Earth

Rochford Street Review

A Journal of Australian & International Cultural Reviews, News and Criticism.

words and music and stories

Let's recollect our emotions in tranquillity

Night Owl Poetry - Dorinda Duclos

"The silence of the night awakens my soul"

Jade M. Wong

Writer at Heart | Fangirl by DNA | Struggling Human Until Further Notice

Graham Sherwood's Wise Wine Words

No-Nonsense wine appreciation

I've started so...........

poetry, words, visions on life

Linda's Book Bag

Loving books and reading

Waringwords

Poetry by Paul Waring

Saint Joan

An archive for ... my stuff

Lee Muir-Haman Watercolor Painting

watercolor paintings, instruction and inspiration

Autoimmune Warrior Queen

My journey with Rheumatoid Arthritis and the GAPS Diet

Snake removal and relocation

Based in the southern suburbs of Perth, Western Australia.

MAUREEN EPPEN -- WRITER

WRITING, READING -- AND WRITING ABOUT READING

Screenwriting from Iowa

...and Other Unlikely Places

Linda Smith Inspiration

By Flying With Eagles I Learnt To Soar

knitting with heart

. . . luv 'n stitches for our tired old world

Dambusters Blog

The Dams Raid (Operation Chastise) and after

Gabriel Evans

Picture Book Author and Illustrator

africmcglincheyreviews

Reviews of chapbooks, poetry collections, short stories and fiction

Variety

Entertainment news, film reviews, awards, film festivals, box office, entertainment industry conferences

LOUISE ALLAN

writer & author

Little Pink Dog Books

Publishers of Children's Picture Books and Illustrated Story Books

Poeteer

The Heart Deceives what the Soul Believes, Which Side will You Choose?