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BC Book Prize Soiree introduces 2005 nominated authors + lots of prizes!

BC Book Prize Soiree introduces 2005 nominated authors + lots of prizes

Lots of authors, publishers, librarians and members of BC's literary
community showed up at Crush Champagne Lounge at Vancouver's Granville
Street on Saturday Night.  Host John Burns, book editor for the
Georgia Straight did a great job introducing the many writers nominated for BC Book Prizes and
giving away the evening's prizes.

The Crush Lounge was a nice informal setting that allowed people to
move easily – always within viewpoint of the stage.  The event was
free and attracted a good sized crowd, many of whom hung around the
silent auction table putting in their bids for the many goodies
available, including magazine subscriptions, hotel stays, writing
programs, books, etc.  I got outbid on the bottle of Glenmoragie
scotch, but managed to take home the dinner gift certificate for
WaaZuBee Cafe.

It was great to talk with friends and writers such as Shamina
Senaratne
, Angela Leung, Charlie Cho, as well as Ray and Mary from
People's Co-op Books.  And always good to attend a well run event
by Liesl Jauk and Brian Pike,
the dynamic duo of Rebus Creative behind
the BC Book Prizes  and Word on the Street.  I had good chats
with John Burns, Douglas Durand (City of Vancouver Cultural Planner), Richmond Librarian Shirley?, Greenpeace author Rex Weyler, and author publisher Tom Snyders.

Here are some pictures from the event:

John Burns hosting the BC Book Prizes Soiree, giving away the final prize.


Rex Weyler
, author of Greenpeace: How a Group of
Journalists, Ecologists and Visionaries Changed the World
nominated
for a BC Book Prize for non-fiction, with his mother Joanne Weyler,
wife Lisa Gibbons and business partner Sindy Taylor – photo by Todd Wong

Liesl Jauk and Brian Pike, the dynamic princiapl duo of Rebus Creative
– the organizers of the BC Book Prizes, with friend Kevin Hutchings. – photo by Todd Wong


A happy gang at the BC Book Prize Soiree, photographer Philip Chin, Charlie Cho (CBC Radio),
John Burns (Georgia Straight), Lynn Henry (Raincoast Books), Kelly
Morrison (Rebus Creative/BC Book Prizes) – photo by Todd Wong

Ballet BC's Rite of Spring: a wonderful rite of passage for human artistic endeavor and technology

Ballet BC's Rite of Spring: a wonderful rite of passage for human artistic endeavor and technology

It had been a very long time since I had attended a ballet
performance. I sat in the QE Theatre, soaking up the
atmosphere, the conversation, the anticipation.  It was all there
– everything for a great date event.

Ballet BC's final performance
for their 2004 to 2005 season had everything one could wish for. 
The dancing evoked both the pathos and atheticism of the human
spirit.  And it was downright sexy to watch. The sound system
was full if a bit loud for the first act.  For the latter
performances, live musicians played off to the side of the stage or
downstage and never detracted from the performances, but somehow made
it more present.  The music was contemporary, classical, or
modern.  Something really for everyone.

And then there was the world premier of John Alleyne's “Rite of
Spring” based on the piano score by Igor Stravinsky, accompanied by the
mult-imedia video presentation of Jamie Griffiths.
A wonderful combination that updated a musical canon with provocative
dance and cutting edge digital video technology.  But more of
that later.

The show opened up with “Like You” by Nicolo Fonte.  The first
thing I was aware of was the almost overwhelming droning of the music,
like a full 5.1 surround system with massive sub woofers.  It was
a very pleasant contrast to the tinny pre-recorded music that
accompanied so many ballet or contemporary dances of the past. 
Today's audience is used to digital home theatre surround sound. 
This set the atmosphere for the magnificient grace and beauty of
Fonte's “Like You.” 

The costumes were simple.  Red singlets for the men, that
really showed off their gluteus maximus muscles (Did I mention it had
been a long time since I last saw the ballet? I think it was the
Joffrey's dances set to the music of Prince in 1993).  The women
wore red dancing shifts that flowed easily and evocatively.  I was
really taken by the beauty of the physical human body, and how
deceptively smooth and light the dancers moved on stage. 
Sometimes in pairs, trios or in large groups, movement flowed up and
around, swirling like swallows in a meadow, playfully, artfully,
deliberately.

15 Heterosexual Dances choreographed by James Kudelka contrasted
with the first piece by Fonte, both with it's lightheartedness and its
choice of classical music – Beethoven's Kreutzer sonata #9, Opus 47.
And yet it complimented the previous program by building a
balance… to the seriousness of the opening piece.  

Kudelka is known as an innovative choreographer for this works with both the National Ballet of Canada and Les Grands Ballets to
push the envelope.  He created mechanical repetitive movements
that at times seemed comical but were still deeply moving for the
overall presentation.  Master musicians Jane Coop and Andrew Dawes
performed the Beethoven  Sonata for Violin and Piano
from the left side off the stage.  A spotlight shone on them,
highlighting the virtuosity of their performance but never detracting
from the dancers who moved in the dances of couples. It is a
beautiful piece that fit beautifully with the dancers and reminded
me of how I always and forever will associate J.S. Bach's Concerto in D
Minor for Two Violins to the beautiful choreography of  George Balanchine's “Concerto Barocco.”

Very sexual without being explicit, always heterosexual, evocative,
sometimes angry, provocative, sometimes coy, seductive sometimes
disfunctional – in all the ways that heterosexual relationships are
known to be (and homosexual relationships too for that matter.) 
The classical music was beautiful in its simplicity, as were the
costumes that were simple work clothes, dance shifts, velour gowns, or
pants.

What really stood out for me was that the dancers seemed to be colour-blind casted in their roles.  The Ballet BC Dance dancers roster
is mostly visibly caucasian with two Chinese dancers and two
African-American dancers who were not always paired together to be a
“nice racial couple.”  In fact, the dancers interact simply as
dancers, in inter-racial pairs or trios, as if race doesn't or
shouldn't make a difference.  This seems to be in contrast to the
challenges faced by Asian Canadian actors for theatre, television or
movies as many local groups such as Firehall Arts Centre and Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre challenge the Myths of  Casting
My event companion and both were struck by this, as we are very
aware that classical music is very integrated racially. Since we
are both multi-generational Chinese-Canadian, the recognition of dancers of Chinese
ancestry resonates strongly for us, especially since we are both involved in
inter-racial relationships ourselves.

John Alleyne (who incidently was born in Barbados)  recieved the inaugural 2005 Vancouver Arts Award
for performing arts.  He has greatly advanced his craft while
helming Ballet BC as artistic director.  Bravo to Alleyne for
pushing the envelop on what is to many people, a “warhorse” both for
dance or for music. His version of Igor Stravinky's “Rite of
Spring”
is intimate, opening with four-hand piano duo – banishing any memory recollections to the
moving dinosaurs in Walt Disney's Fantasia set to
Stravinsky's orchestral score or even of the large company of dancers
traditionally used  for this piece originally choreographed by Ninjinsky for its 1913 premier.  It was Ninjinsky's
ritualistic choreography combined with Starvinsky's primal musical
score outraged the Parisan audience causing a riot.

Thankfully, 21st Century audiences are much more appreciative of modern
and post-modern art.  We have witnessed the sexual revolution in
both society and in art.

Alleyne's contribution for his version of “Les Sacre
du Printemps (Rite of Spring en francais) were not only to update a
more sexually provocative work, but also to ask multi-media artist
Jaime Griffiths to create
interactive video imagery including “live capture” as part of an
interactive moving video projection as a component part of the set.

The dance opens with scrim creating a “wall” between the audience
and the stage upon which a gentle image of leaves blowing, leaves
growing and leaves changing… was subtly projected.  The dancing
was strong and provocative, and behind the scrim, it seemed projected
into a dream.  It developed to demonstrate force and beauty,
with primal energy as conflict rose and ebbed between the
dancers..  Okay… sounds like a cliche – but watching
it in the moment, it was very exciting.  I am at a loss of words
to describe it otherwise.

The  piano duo James Anagnoson and Leslie
Kinton

performed a fourhand one piano score as part of Alleyne's more intimate
and minimalist presentation.  The pair is known as one of Canada's
foremost piano duos, and they provided a marvelous minimal soundscape,
emphasizing the beauty and immediacy of live music.  Personally, I
loved hearing Stravinsky's score performed as a fourhand one piano
piece.  This was adapted from the actual piano rehearsal score
that Stravinsky created for Nijinsky to work with.

http://www.joeink.ca/press-kit-releases.htm

Alleyne's
Rite of Spring marries the technology of video and light with the
beauty of
dance and Stravinsky's modern music. While Griffiths is known for her
cutting edge work with Joe Ink. for their collaboration of Grace, her
role with Ballet BC was much more subtle and complimentary. 
Images of the dancers are “captured” and digitally enhanced/distorted
and then projected on the screen.  It emphasizes movement as the
images decay on the screen.  It also opens up possibilities of
what else could be done, as this new media merges more closely with
contemporary arts as we presently know it. 

When Griffiths first showed me a video of her Grace performance, I was
very excited, as it reminded me of the exciting work done by Edouard
Locke and LaLaLa Human Steps
, as they played with the interaction of
physical dance, light and sound.  Griffiths as an artist is also
at that same innovative forefront.  But while Grace was an
“in-your-face” performance theatre work, Griffiths contributions here
are much more subtle and complimentary.  They enhance the dancing
experience as opposed to becoming the star or the object of the show.

“John was very trusting, and gave me lots of room,” says
Griffiths.  “He has a clear vision of what he wanted to achieve
and he did it. Most other people I have worked with, have a general
idea that becomes focussed in the process, but John always knew what he
wanted.  It's not a fully realized collaboration. This was meant to be a stepping stone, for
working with the interactive media. There's only so much you can
accomplish by having only a few days to work together.”

One can only imagine what will happen with John Alleyne and Jamie
Griffiths collaborate fully on a project.  Ballet BC takes Rite of
Spring to Vancouver Island for additional performances.  For
Griffiths, she takes Grace to the Edinburgh Festival, where it will be
introduced to presenters from around the world.

Check out Alex Varty's pre-performance interview with John Alleyne in the Georgia Straight:
Rite Angles

Check out Kaija Pepper's review for the Globe & Mail:

Ballet B.C. offers a more intimate Rite of Spring

BC Book Week: Think I'll be going to the BC Book Prizes Soiree at Crush Champagne Lounge

BC Book Week:  Think I'll be going to the BC Book Prizes Soiree at Crush Champagne Lounge

I love books and magazine!
My office contains five book shelves dedicated to books, one to
magazines, one to cd's and one to vinyl records (what the heck are
they?)

Here's are some of choices to attend for this week to celebrate BC Book & Magazine Week: April 23 to April 30, 2005.

BC Book & Magazine Week: a collective project coordinated by the Association of Book Publishers of BC (ABPBC) and the BC Association of Magazine Publishers
(BCAMP). This weeklong literary celebration was founded in January 1999
as BC Book Week and in 2001, the week expanded to include the magazine

Saturday, April 23

The BC Book Prizes Soiree

7:00 pm

Crush Champagne Lounge

1180 Granville St., Vancouver

Info: 604-684-8266

The kick-off for the BC Book Prizes On Tour authors. A night of
readings, a silent auction, prize giveaways and announcement of the BC
Bookseller’s Contest winner!

Sunday, April 24

The Book and Magazine Promenade

1:00 pm – 5:00 pm

Vancouver Public Library Promenade

350 West Georgia St., Vancouver

Info: 604-684-0228 or 604-688-1175

Book and Magazine publishers will showcase their works in booths set up in the library’s promenade area.

Wednesday, April 27
Raincoast Books Spring Poetry Launch

7:00 pm

The Tahitian Lounge at The Waldorf Hotel

1489 East Hastings (between Clark and Commercial)

Info: 604-323-7100

Don’t miss this night of poetry! Readings by award-winning poets
Evelyn Lau, Aislinn Hunter, Kate Braid, Sandy Shreve and Canada’s
former poet laureate, George Bowering.

Click here to see more activities throughout the week

Terry Fox book by Douglas Coupland featured for CBC Radio One Book Club

Terry Fox book by  Douglas Coupland featured for CBC Radio One Book Club

The Terry Book Club
will air on North by Northwest on CBC Radio One.

Part One: Sat., April 30, 7 – 8 a.m.
Part Two: Sun., May 1, 8 – 9 a.m.

It was with both excitement and concern that host
Sheryl Mackay said she anticipated the presentation of “Terry” by
Douglas Coupland as the April 21st selection for the CBC Radio One Book
Card.

“You just can't get through it without crying,” said
Mackay.  And true to her prediction, many people spoke emotionally
about the love for Terry Fox, or about their own challenges with
cancer, or about how cancer challenged their loved ones.

Mackay was joined by co-host John Burns from the
Georgia Straight, in welcoming both author Douglas Coupland, and the
younger brother of Terry Fox – Darrell Fox, who is now National
Director of the Terry Fox Run Foundation.

I will write more about the experience of being in
the emotionally and memory-charged room, but first I will post some of
the pictures from the event.

Author Douglas Coupland and family consultant Darrell Fox – who both
signed all the books. Douglas describes the Fox family as Canada's
“First Family.”  Darrell says that Douglas is a member of the
family now.” So does that mean that Coupland is a member of “Canada's
First Family”?

Todd Wong standing with Sheryl Mackay, host of CBC
Radio's North By North West & the CBC Radio One Book
Club.  Sheryl is a warm and congenial host always.  It was a
pleasure to be a guest on her show in January as we talked about my
role with the Reverend Chan Legacy project that was being presented at
the Chinese Canadian History Fair at the Vancouver Museum.

Todd Wong with Douglas Coupland and Darrell Fox, at the CBC Radio
One Book Club for “Terry” – April 21st, 2005.  It was Darrell Fox
who asked me to become a Terry's Team member in 1993.

“What is a Terry's Team member,” asked Sheryl.

“Cancer survivors who speak at Terry Fox Runs and for school visits,
who serve as living examples that cancer reseach has helped to make a
difference.

For my own cancer diagnois in 1989, I was given of a 60% survival
rate.  At the time of Terry's Run in 1980, the survival rate was
about 50%, but by 1989 they were shooting for 100% survival rate. 
My case was extremely advanced and without treatment I would have died
in two weeks.

CBC Radio Host Sheryl Mackay, Douglas Coupland, Darrell Fox and John Burns 

32 Books: Leslie & owner Mary Trentadue.  My favourite
independent book store on the North Shore – where I actually
bought my copy of “Terry” soon after it came out.

Ballet BC's The Rite of Spring meets Jamie Griffiths Multi-Media artist

Ballet BC's The Rite of Spring meets Jamie Griffiths, Multi-Media artist


Click here for Todd Wong's Review of BC Ballet's Rite of Spring

Jaime Griffiths is a) a sensitive photographer  b) passionate for
dance c) a cutting edge multi-media artist  d) a beautiful soul e)
all of the above.

The answer is of course all of the above.  I first met Jaime when
we went outrigger canoe paddling last year.  Next she volunteered
to design the Gung Haggis Fat Choy 2005 poster

Jaime has her own multi-media and graphics company – sure to get real
busy, real soon.  Check out her very exciting and interactive
website www.jamiegriffiths.com

Yesterday Kevin Griffin wrote a story in the Vancouver Sun about
Jaime's upcoming collaboration for Ballet BC's The Rite of Spring – the
world premiere was last night, April 21, and the last two nights are
tonight and tomorrow, April 22, 23 at the Queen Elizabeth
Theatre.  I will be there.  Tickets range from $26.50 to
$70.50 plus service charges. They're available at Ticketmaster.ca and
by calling 604-280-3311.

Here are some excepts from Kevin's article.

 
Kevin Griffin
Vancouver Sun


Griffiths has the
look of someone entirely focused. With only days to go, she's working
at breakneck speed to bring something new to the world of ballet: an
interactive set that changes in response to the dancers' live
performance. The challenge is that it is extremely painstaking and
time-consuming to load information into as many as 100 building blocks
in the software. Time is a luxury Griffiths doesn't have.

Without
a fuss, Griffiths opts for the practical. She tells everyone to imagine
that the images on the scrim will be eight times larger in the Queen
Elizabeth Theatre.

They
do one run-through and then a second. And that's when you realize
what's being created. With a delay of less than a fraction of a second,
you see the two dancers running through the forest image and then
superimposed on top of the dividing egg. It's not a recorded image:
it's live. The effect is magical.

What's happening, Griffiths
said, is that new software — a program called Isadora that's been
created for real-time manipulation of digital video — and faster,
smaller computers allows artists such as Griffiths to literally bring
the set alive.

“The stage has eyes and the artists and the
dancers make decisions about the physicality of the space that affect
the set — and it's live. You're not watching a DVD,” she said.

“You're metaphorically giving life to something that has not had life before.”

For
Ballet B.C., using this kind of technology is a testing of the waters
for a bigger, full-length ballet next year. This evening, when The Rite
of Spring opens for a three-day run in Vancouver, it will mark the
first time live interactive technology and pre-recorded video has moved
from the world of experimental modern dance to the ballet. It's the
kind of innovation that's become a Ballet B.C. trademark under artistic
director John Alleyne.

It's no accident that this kind of technology
is being brought to a wider audience in Vancouver. Although there are
several locations around the world where artists and programmers are
working to create what's been called an intelligent stage, Vancouver
turns out to be one of the hot spots in the field.

Griffiths, for
example, carved out a niche as an interactive media artist by accident.
Coming from a background of more than two decades as a visual artist
and photographer, Griffiths embarked on a new artistic direction in
2000 for the Vancouver New Music Society when she decided to create an
interactive video with music in honour of the 20th century composer
Edgard Varese.

Since then, working on one project after another,
she's managed to turn herself into something of a computer geek as
she's taught herself how to use the software on live music and dance.

One
of her most groundbreaking collaborations was with Joe Laughlin for Joe
Ink's Grace, which premiered last October at the Scotiabank Dance
Centre. Using digital and analog cameras that fed live images through a
MacIntosh G5 and then on to various screens, Grace blurred the line
between dance and performance. One New York agent was so impressed that
she booked it into the Edinburgh Fringe Festival later this year to
show to some of the major dance presenters around the world.

Grace,
however, is much different from The Rite of Spring. Grace had only one
dancer and both Laughlin and Griffiths had 18 months to create the
performance and build the software. With The Rite of Spring, Griffiths
really started working only at the beginning of March. As a result,
Griffiths had been putting in intense 14 to 16 hours of work a day to
create the recorded and interactive video segments for the ballet.

See the entire artible at Spring comes alive: Ballet BC performs Stravinsky's pagan opus on an interactive set

Colour TV: New shows for April 23, 24 & May 1 with host Prem Gill

Colour TV: New shows for April 23, 24 & May 1 with host Prem Gill

Here's an announcement from my friend Prem Gill, the host of Colour TV on CityTV.  enjoy – Todd

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Hello,

We have a few new ColourTV shows coming up:

April 23, 3:30pm

In case you missed last Sunday's
show, we talk about Spirituality and Modern life with the editor of
Shared Vision magazine, Beverly Sinclair.

April 24, 6:30pm

Is Vancouver no fun city? Not
according to socialites Free Lee and Catherine Barr. Join us for a
lively discussion on “Vanhatten's” party scene. Fred Lee covers the
event circuit for the Vancouver Courier and you'll find Catherine's
photos in the Westender and the North Shore Outlook.

May 1, 6:30pm

I chat with Nelofer Pazira, author of A Bed of Roses, her autobiography about growing up in Afghanistan. She also starred in Kandahar and was featured in Return to Kandahar.

We are also launch a new show on May 7 at 9:30am, REALTY TELEVISION,
a weekly round-up of the local real estate scene, we talk trends,
buying and why this market is so nuts. The show will be hosted by Dawn
Chubai. Check it out Saturday mornings at 9:30am and Sundays at 3:30pm.

There is also an upcoming Bravo!FACT screening featuring a spotlight on Vancouver, May 9 at the ScotiaBank Dance Centre.
The event is FREE but get there early, it will be “sold out”. Following
in the screening Citytv's CineCity and Bravo!FACT will host a
reception. Here's a link to the screening:

Also, something to note, Citytv supported film PINK LUDOOS, produc

Gung Haggis dragon boat team April 17th practice review + more


Gung Haggis dragon boat team April 17th practice review + more


Good challenging practice last Sunday – to get us going and see what we
can do – consider it as setting our base piece.  Every thing is up
from here on. You can really see how well people are learning to paddle
better, and to work together as a group. Very noticable differences
between the start of the practice and the end. Good job by Bob to lead
us through the exercises and paddle lessons to help us improve.

Great to have Bob Brinson coaching with us.  He as raced since
1991, and coached many teams at novice and recreation levels –
achieving many medals with the top Seniors and Breast Cancer dragon
boat teams.

Craig Brown commented that he sees great potential in this team, and is
excited by it. On Sunday we had 14 people paddling – Only 7 people had
paddled before which means for 7 people it was only their 1st or 2nd
time ever in a dragon boat.  We have 5 more paddlers coming out
with lots of racing and paddling experience – so expect the boat to
“jump” when they climb aboard and put their paddles in the water.

Craig is currently paddling with the Jericho Paddling club and vying to
be on one of their top outrigger teams this summer. He has paddled at
the local competitive level for dragon boats since 2001. It is a great
opportunity to have him be part of the Gung Haggis team and family for
2005.

A few things:

1) Please send me your shirt sizes
to confirm what I can give you for your team uniform. I have ordered 35
dry fit shirts + addition cotton shirts to use as fundraisers,
promotions, cheering squad etc.

2) Please give or send me a cheque for $130 ($110 for students). Please make it out to Gung Haggis. This confirms your spot on the team.

3) 1 boat or 2 boats? There
is enough “interest” to run 2 boats. This is wonderful, as it is my
vision to have enough people to run two teams side by side for mini
races, and to help develop both experienced and beginner paddlers. But
in order for this to happen, I need paddler committments and $ to enter
teams.

4) Next Sunday – practice is at 2pm.
The address of the MATCON warehouse is 215 West 1st avenue at the foot
of Cook St. Just West of Olympic Fitness.   Parking available
on the West 1st Ave. or in the gravel parking lot North of Columbia St.
– just drive to the North end, park your car near the sea wall, and
walk Westwards along the seawall to the next gate.

5) We are organizing the Pre-festival Paddler's Party.
$10 wrist band gets the wearer one free drink at Doolin's, The Cellar
or the Roxy. Tanya is working with me on this one. We get to keep $10
from each wrist band sold – but we will donate 50% proceeds to help
develop and support a junior dragon boat program for ADBF.

6) May 7th is a team social at Doolin's Irish Pub.
Details are in the works – but expect: $15 dinner special – Irish Stew
+ lamb shank + pint of Guinness Beer. watch on video – the French
documentary on dragon boating filmed for the Thalassa program –
featuring our 2004 team. watch on video – the CBC TV Leo Award
nominated performance special “Gung Haggis Fat Choy” – featuring
cross-cultural musical performances by “The Paper Boys, Silk Road
Music, George Sapounidis, Brave Waves + the origins of Robbie Burns
Day, Chinese New Year and Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Toddish McWong's Robbie
Burns Chinese New Year Dinner.

7) Ideas are open for apres-practice activities. This can include food, drinks, picnic, swimming, jacuzzi, health food or beer.

Cheers to all!
Todd Wong
604-987-7124

CBC Radio One Book Club features “Terry” with author Douglas Coupland and Darrell Fox

CBC Radio One Book Club features “Terry” with author Douglas Coupland and Darrell Fox.


I won tickets to the CBC Radio One “Terry” Book Club.  The show will tape on Thursday, April 21, from 6:30pm to 8pm. and his hosted by CBC Radio host Sheryl Mackay

The Terry Book Club
will air on North by Northwest on CBC Radio One.

Part One: Sat., April 30, 7 – 8 a.m.
Part Two: Sun., May 1, 8 – 9 a.m.

CBC Radio is actively helping to collect stories about Terry Fox to be
published in a book by Douglas McIntyre to help celebrate the 25th
Anniversary of  Terry Fox's Marathon of Hope.  All the
stories will be given to Douglas Coupland to select and edit, as well
as be broadcast on CBC Radio and Television.

Here's what will be happening:

Microphones are set up for audience questions and
Terry Fox memories and stories. We encourage you to
join in, your participation in the CBC Studio One
Book Club is an important part of the broadcast.
This Book Club is part of CBC's national partnership
with the Fox family, Douglas & McIntyre publishing,
and Douglas Coupland to collect memories, stories,
artwork, photos and souvenirs that describe how
Canadians feel about Terry Fox. Doug will be
turning some of this material into a new book called
"Memories of Terry: Canada's National Scrapebook",
as a companion book to "Terry". As with "Terry",
all his work and royalities are being donated to the
Terry Fox Foundation for cancer research. "Memories
of Terry" will be published in the Fall of 2006, to
commemorate the 25th anniversary of the very first
public Terry Fox Run.

This is very cool as I am a Terry's Team member – a
cancer survivor who attends and/or speaks at Terry Fox Runs, serving as
a living example that cancer research has made a difference.

I think I will wear my Terry's Team t-shirt to the event.  The Terry Fox Run Foundation gives me a shirt each year to wear at the event.

For more details of the CBC Radio One Terry Book Club, Check out
http://www.cbc.ca/bc/bookclub/

For more about Terry Fox check out:
http://www.terryfoxrun.org/

George Sapounidis new cd of East West music is almost ready!

Here's
a message from George Sapounidis – that affable Greek-Canadian who
sings in Mandarin Chinese.  He is producing his new indepedent CD
and invites people to support him.  I gave him my $20 when he was
last in Vancouver for a Spring concert at the Michael J Fox Theatre in
January.

image   image

check out these pictures of me with George and the story of how we met

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Hello,

Thanks to those of
you who have contributed to the upcoming CD “George, from Athens to Beijing”.
I
have extended the deadline to April 29 in time to include your name in
the CD booklet
in return for your
support. See options below.
The TV documentary
will appear in Canada soon.
I will let you know.
Please support the
CD in advance.
  See www.beinggeorge.com
 
Thanks
!   George
  Sapounidis,
Canada
 
———————————————————
Dear
friends,

 

I
would like to thank all of you who supported my previous CD and to those of you
who attended my series of 'East meets West' concerts. This letter is an
invitation to you to be part of the new CD recording project described below.

 

My musical
journey connecting the music of China and Greece is about
to reach a very exciting level in 2005 for two reasons
!

 

First, my new CD “George,  from Athens to Beijing” will be released
in June 2005 !
    I'm pleased to say that after having taken two
years to promote, perform and write songs in between lots of travelling and
jetlag to places like Beijing and Athens I returned to the recording studio last
December 2004. The songs have all been recorded and are at the mixing stage.
There are 14 Greek and Chinese songs on which I sing and play guitar or Greek
bouzouki. Some of the songs were recorded in Beijing and Guangzhou with Chinese backup musicians and
singers. One song was recorded live on the Great Wall. Most of the songs have
been recorded in Ottawa with Canadian and Greek guest artists
and consist of folksongs, popsongs and Greek rembetika using a wide variety of
world instruments. The CD is unique not only because it juxtaposes Greek and
Chinese repertoire but because it combines Chinese lyrics and instruments in
Greek songs and Greek instruments in Chinese songs along with unexpected
instrumentation. It is truly an inter-cultural musical recording that you and
your children will enjoy listening to !

 

Second, an
international documentary film chronicling my personal and musical odyssey
through China and Greece during
the last two years will also be released in 2005 !
This
one-hour television documentary movie has been produced by EyeSteelFilm in
Montreal. It will appear in Canada on CTV and in Europe on BBC. It will appear at film festivals and have a
theatrical release. This international film will be in a position to provide
excellent publicity for the CD.

 

You can
see a trailer of the film AND listen to songs from the CD at


www.beinggeorge.com
 

You can
meet me to listen to all the songs on the new CD.

You may
call me to arrange an appointment.

 

Having
given you a taste of the artistic details, I'll get to the financial point. The
most challenging part of the album is raising funds to cover the costs. The
production (studio rental, engineer, co-producer, musicians, mixing and
mastering) of this album will cost approximately $15,000. This includes
manufacturing and artwork. Yes, it's a big project. For those of you who are
seeing this for the first time – the cost is VERY reasonable and considered low
by industry standards.

 

In
addition to private fundraising, I am contributing to some of the funds myself.
EyeSteelFilm will cover part of the manufacturing costs. Please take a look at
the ideas and perks BELOW and I hope you will consider supporting this project.
It would be very helpful to hear from you before APRIL 29 . Feel free to pass this letter on to
people you know who may be interested.

 

Thanks very much for your support !   George
Sapounidis

—————————————-————————————–—– 

 

“GEORGE
FROM ATHENS TO
BEIJING”

CD
SPONSORSHIP

I'D LIKE
TO PRE-BUY A CD….$20 each

 

COUNT ME
IN…              
$50+

A
contribution towards the production. You will receive a CD and your name will be
included in a draw for a free house concert. The location must be within a
reasonable 1 hour drive from Ottawa. (If this is outside your area you can
give it to someone inside the area. It would make a great
gift.)

 

I'D LOVE
TO…..      
        $100+

A
contribution to overall production costs. You will receive two CDs and your name
will be added to the house concert draw detailed above.

 

SONG
SPONSOR….       
$400+

A
contribution towards production costs of one song you like. You will receive
three CD's. Your name will appear in the CD booklet. Your name will also be
included in the draw for a free house concert. See details under 'Count Me
In'.

 

INVESTOR…..         
           
$1000+  loan

A LOAN
towards the production costs. To be paid back in
installments.

You may
call to discuss the amount you wish to contribute.

You will
receive two CD's and your name will appear in the CD booklet.

 

If mailing
cheques or money orders, please make them payable to

George
Sapounidis and send to the address below. 
If paying by cash, please deliver to the address below – you may call
first. Don't forget to fill out the info and send it
along.

 

————————————–—————  

 

Please
complete, detach and mail.

 

INVESTOR…..         
           
$1000+     
$________

 

SONG
SPONSOR….           
$400+     
$________

 

I'DLOVE
TO…       
               
$100+     
$________

 

COUNT ME
IN….     
           
$ 50+     
$________

 

I'LL
PRE-BUY       
               
$20  X
_______=________

 

                                                                                                             

NAME______________________________________

 

ADDRESS__________________________________

 

CITY_____________________PROV.____________

 

POSTAL
CODE_______________TEL.___________

 

EMAIL______________________________________

 

Comments?_________________________________

 

 

Mail
to:

 

George
Sapounidis

18 Bertona
Street
,

Ottawa,
ON 
K2G
0W1
 

Tel:           (613 228-5307  

Email:      george.sapounidis@rogers.com

Wed April 27th World Poets' Night Out

World Poets’ Night Out

With Hosts: Ariadne Sawyer and & Lucey Ortiz

Wednesday, April 27,
7:30 – 9:00 pm 

Behind the Scenes
Books and Coffee Shop

243 West Broadway, Vancouver B.C.

Featured Poets:

Vera Manual, First Nations

Bernice Lever, Canada

Yoli García, Guatemala

Umberto  Assandri, Italy

Actor Luis Gutiérrez, México

Featured Musician:

Wayne Lavallee, First Nations

www.waynelavallee.com

 
Multilingual readings in English & and the language of the poet.

Contact: Ariadne Sawyer: ariadnes@uniserve.com

Check out Creativity Rocks! At worldpoetry@www.urbanvancouver.com

 *Approved by World
Poetry Reading Series
at the
Vancouver Public Library