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CONTRIBUTORS
Allan Atlas (aatlas@gc.cuny.edu) is on the Musicology faculty at The
Graduate Center of The City University of New York, where he is the Director of the Center
for the Study of Free-Reed Instruments. He performs on the English concertina with the New
York Victorian Consort.
Les Branchett (squeezy@easy.com) holds a Masters Degree in
International Law, and recently retired as a lecturer with a specialization in law and
social-psychology. He was introduced to the concertina when a teenager as a means of
recuperation following extensive injuries sustained in a train accident. He recently wrote
the tutor Conquering the English Concertina: A Comprehensive Guide to the English
Concertina (Gloucester: Sherborne House Publications, 2002).
Roger Digby (rdigby@hoppits.demon.co.uk) has been playing Anglo
concertina for over thirty years. Playing in a fiercely English style when performing with
Flowers and Frolics, he extends the instruments range far beyond its assumed
limitations, stretching it most fully when accompanying the wide repertoire of Bob
Davenport. He has a passionate belief in the integrity of traditional music.
Jody Kruskal (jody@kruskal.net) is a multifaceted musician: composer
of theater, dance, and concert works, performer for adult and family audiences, freelance
educator, and inventor of musical instruments. Although he has accompanied New York-area
English morris and sword dancers since 1983, he is best known for developing a distinctly
American style of harmonic playing on the Anglo with the country dance bands Grand Picnic
and Squeezology. His solo CD, Naked Concertina, was released in 2006 and can be heard at
http://cdbaby.com/cd/jody kruskal.
Gearóid Ó hAllmhuráin (gearoid_ohallmhurain@umsl.edu) is a
fourth-generation traditional musician and a native of County Clare. He is the
Smurfit-Stone Professor of Irish Studies and Professor of Music at the University of
Missouri-St Louis. A holder of five All-Ireland Championship music titlesas
concertina player, uilleann piper, and member of the Kilfenora Céilí Band, the oldest
traditional dance band in Irelandhe is the author of A Pocket History of Irish
Traditional Music (Dublin: OBrien Press, 1998), as well as numerous monographs on
Irish music and folk culture, and has served as a consultant for several documentaries on
Irish traditional music in Europe and North America, as well as US correspondent for
Raidió na Gaeltachta, Irelands Irish-language radio network. During the past thirty
years, he has presented more than one thousand concerts on four continents, and has worked
with such luminaries as Liam Clancy, David Grisman, Martin Hayes, Sharon Shannon, and the
Chieftains. His CD recordings include Traditional Music from Clare and Beyond (1996),
Tracin'Traditional Music from the West of Ireland (1999), and The Independence
SuiteTraditional Music from Ireland, Scotland and Cape Breton (2004), all issued on
the Celtic Crossings label.
Pat Shipman (pls10@psu.edu) is a biological anthropologist who
specializes in human evolution. In 1990, she resigned her academic positionthough
she continues to hold an Adjunct Professorship at Penn State Universityin order to
take up full-time writing, which includes books about science for the general reader and
biographies. She became interested in Florence and Sam Baker while conducting fieldwork in
East Africathe region that the Bakers exploredand then wrote the first
biography of Florence with the kind assistance of the Baker family.
Susan Wollenberg (susan.wollenberg@music.oxford.ac.uk) is Reader in
Music at the University of Oxford. She is the author of Music at Oxford in the Eighteenth
and Nineteenth Centuries (Oxford University Press, 2001) and was co-editor, with Simon
McVeigh, of Concert Life in Eighteenth-Century Britain (Ashgate, 2004). Current projects
include a book, edited jointly with Therese Ellsworth, under the working title Pianos and
Pianists in Nineteenth-Century Britain. |
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