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September 22, 2017

Which Photo will you share in Best in Travel Award 2017?

Which Photo will you share in Best in Travel Award 2017?

For our first ever WSGT Travel Photo Award : 2017 Best in Travel Photo Award, share your favorite shot! Why do you love it? How did you create it? Submit a photo taken in the last two years.

Thank you for your participation!

What Picture will you share in WSGT Travel Photo Award 2017Date: Enter from August 1, 2017 to October 1, 2017

Theme: Your Favorite Photo

Deadline: Enter by midnight PST on October 1, 2017

Fees: This competition has no fee.

WSGT Travel Photo Award 2017

Prizes:

1st Prize – $200 usd
2nd Prize – $100usd
3rd Prize – $50 usd

Winners will be selected by our judges and We Said Go Travel Team. Cash prizes will be paid through PayPal in United States Dollars. All winning entries will be promoted on We Said Go Travel.

REQUIREMENTS

RULES

Photos will be published with the accompanying information given with the entry dependent on appropriateness and being family friendly (G rated). If your photo information is written in a language other than English, please also send an English translation.

Travelers of all ages and from all countries are encouraged to participate. You may submit up to three photos for our first photo competition.

We are looking for an inspiring travel-oriented image that shows us your experience in the world with great subject, composition, lighting, perspective and storytelling. It must be your original photo that shares the people, places or cultures you have encountered. Do not submit studio or commercial photos.

All photos, which meet the requirements, will be published on this site, WeSaidGoTravel.com. Void where prohibited.

JUDGING

Jeana

Jeana Surf and Sunshine Travel Photo AwardTravel / Lifestyle Blogger | Geeky Mom (the cool kind, of course)
North American Travel Journalists Association
International Travel Writers Alliance
Huffington Post / Surf and Sunshine

Rarely caught without a camera, Jeana is an adventurous traveler with a passion for people, cultures and food that has led her to 38 countries in 5 years. Recently named by Social Media Week as one of eight people who have more social influence than some large travel brands, Jeana is also consistently listed in Klout’s top 10 Travel influencers as well as the top 5 of Rise Global’s Top 1000 Travel Blogs. When she’s not using her powers for social good, she enjoys photography, cooking and building LEGOs with her son. On occasion, you may also find her crocheting cute things to hide in her husband’s underwear drawer.

www.surfandsunshine.com

Gary Arndt

Gary is a self-taught travel photographer who was named Travel Photographer of the Year by both the Society of American Travel Writers and the North American Travel Journalists Association. Join his Travel Photography Academy!

www.everything-everywhere.com

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A musical mix from Hungary: Cimbalom at Union Station

Union Station has long been a repository of emotional memory and civic history. 

Many generations of displaced Easterners got off the train there to begin their new lives.  Multitudes of military personnel moved through America’s last great urban train station, which opened in 1939. And any movie buff can look around that stately tiled annex and summon a flood of movie and TV memories.

On Sept. 22, a free drive-time performance by The Cory Beers Cimbalom Band in the historic ticketing hall will give Union Station commuters a taste of Old World soul. It’s part of the Metro Art Presents, a music-weighted series that brings poetry, movies and other events to the city’s train stops.

It’s likely that many people have never seen or heard a cimbalom, Hungarian for a mallet instrument, introduced in the 1870s, that looks like a cross between a large dulcimer and the guts of a piano.  With warm, soothing tones that conjure Eastern European cafés, the Hungarian Gypsy instrument found its way into classical music: Stravinsky and Lizst wrote it into their “Renard” and “Hungarian Rhapsody No. 91,” respectively.

Cimbalom, formed in 2014, plays traditional music from various Eastern European regions as an outgrowth of Romanian folk music, crossed with jazz and klezmer. Though the band uses violin and accordion, Beers will be joined by trumpeter Charles De Castro, guitarist Alex Novice and bassist Dave Tranchina.   

“What we do jibes pretty well with the music of that region,” Beers said.

Beers, 33, grew up in Norfolk, Mass., near Boston.  A lifelong drummer, he was playing tympani in junior high school. After his family moved to Santa Barbara before he was out of high school, he found his way to Cal Arts for its unparalleled music resources, celebrated pedagogy and percussion studies.

 “Experimentation and exploration are the main things there,” he said. “I learned a lot of things there you can’t learn elsewhere.”     

Boobears, a percussion group that uses dryer drums and plates as part of its instrumentation, was formed at Cal Arts and still convenes. Beers studied in Moldova for two years, beginning in 2012. 

“I went to the Conservatory of Music in Kishinev,” he said.  “I lived there just to learn the cimbalom.”

The music of Romania holds special fascination for Beers. “It’s difficult to point to what drew me,” he said, “except that it has to do with the rhythms and the scales and the harmonies and how they all fit together.  You can hear far-out rhythms and harmonies elsewhere, of course, but you won’t hear the soul and the melancholy.”

Heidi Zeller of the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority is behind the Union Station booking. 

“We started this four years ago,” she said, “and saw it as a chance to reflect L.A.’s wide cultural array of different media, genres and different ethnic communities. We see the free series as a chance to experiment by bringing different bands, soloists and unusual instruments to the public.”

With a background in arts presentation, Zeller formerly programmed for the Craft and Folk-Art Museum and contributed to shaping the Freeways series.  She’s been with the L.A. County Metropolitan Transportation Authority for six years.  “I’ve always been interested in exposing people to art in public places,” she said. “We tried a video program on the busses. It didn’t go over so well because people spend so much time looking at their hand-held devices. I saw the Metro program, in particular, as a chance to leverage the relationships we had with all of the incredible talents living here.”        

One of Zeller’s presentations was Sk Kakraba from Ghana.  He plays gyil, a xylophone with its own resonating gourds.  “Sometimes the performers we have are playing beautiful, one-of-a-kind objects d’art,” she said. “He builds his own instruments, and I noticed these white spots on the gourds.  I thought they were paint but they were actually spider webs; apparently they help create the sound.”   

“We’re attempting to integrate art into the transit experience,” Zeller said. “Beautiful music at the end of you day is a nice respite from the working day.  We like to think we send people home with something special.”

A musical mix from Hungary: Cimbalom at Union Station Read More »

7 Haiku for Parsha Ha’azinu (in which arrows and swords drink like pirates) by Rick Lupert

7 Haiku for Parsha Ha’azinu (in which arrows and swords drink like pirates) by Rick Lupert

I
The final concert
A solo performance – Words
of Moses like rain

II
We are protected
with clouds – like eagle babies
We are like God’s eye

III
When we drank the blood
of grapes – When we sucked honey
from rocks – Who did that?

IV
Poseurs – pretending
they could bring us down – God burns
up their vanities

V
You know you’ve lost God’s
favor if your wine tastes like
serpents’ bitterness

VI
Let your arrows and
swords drink ’til they’re drunk – Let them
vanquish enemies

VII
Did you hear the song
Moses sang? It is the last
one you’ll hear from him


God Wrestler: a poem for every Torah Portion by Rick LupertLos Angeles poet Rick Lupert created the Poetry Super Highway (an online publication and resource for poets), and hosted the Cobalt Cafe weekly poetry reading for almost 21 years. He’s authored 21 collections of poetry, including “God Wrestler: A Poem for Every Torah Portion“, “I’m a Jew, Are You” (Jewish themed poems) and “Feeding Holy Cats” (Poetry written while a staff member on the first Birthright Israel trip), and most recently “Donut Famine” (Rothco Press, December 2016) and edited the anthologies “Ekphrastia Gone Wild”, “A Poet’s Haggadah”, and “The Night Goes on All Night.” He writes the daily web comic “Cat and Banana” with fellow Los Angeles poet Brendan Constantine. He’s widely published and reads his poetry wherever they let him.

7 Haiku for Parsha Ha’azinu (in which arrows and swords drink like pirates) by Rick Lupert Read More »