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This Saturday


Velvet

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October 22nd at 4th Stage at the NAC is a concert featuring the teachers from the Ottawa Folklore Centre.

As many of you know, I've been teaching there for quite a while, and I love the place to death, but I gotta gush one more time:

The playing level of the teachers at the OFC is really quite astounding (and humbling), and there is going to be some seriously heavy playing going on at this show. There is almost 50 teachers at OFC and the concert will feature a myriad of ensembles involving probably twenty of so teachers.

This show will feature a huge variey of music, I hope to see some of you there. I'll be playing guitar on a klezmer piece written by Kurt Walther along with Sarah Ross on fiddle and Kurt on bass.

Tickets are $15 I think, and I suppose they are available at OFC and the NAC.

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i expect that you know theat they mean well...funny that "break a leg" in this context is actually a good thing, where in the rest of life, it's generally not.

from the interweb:

There is a superstition in the theatre that wishing an actor

good luck "tempts the gods" and causes bad luck, so negative

expressions are substituted. In French one says _Merde!_ ("Shit!")

when an actor is about to go on stage. The German expression is

_Hals und Beinbruch_="neck and leg fracture" (_Bein_ used to mean

"bone" in German, so the translation "neck and bone break" may be

correct if the expression is sufficiently old). The leading

theory is that the English expression came from the German, possibly

via Yiddish. Other suggested origins are: John Wilkes Booth, the

actor who broke his leg shortly after he assassinated Abraham

Lincoln in 1865; the great French actress Sarah Bernhardt, who "had

but one leg and it would be good luck to be like her"; wishing

someone a "big break", that is, good luck leading to success; and

the Hebrew _hatzlacha u-brakha_ = "success and blessing".

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