great2c
DAY 11... Lookin' for a job with music: DIDGERIDOO AND HOW DO YOU DO !
This is a "Tip of the hat to you, lady, for your successfully finding two possible jobs to send a resume to, today" HURRAH FOR ME !
Photo taken years ago in Seaport Village in San Diego, California, during the Art Walk
George liked the "live-in-motion art" better than the static art !
This is George and his musical friend who plays a "DIDGERIDOO"
The musical man taught himself to play it and designed his own instrument. He made "special" sounds come out of it, like "thank you" when he tipped his hat... it sounded just like "thank you" but it came from his musical instrument, as if the hat was making the sound when he raised the hat on high...
He had a flyer that said something like:
"The (Didjeridu) is a Euro-Australian name for the sacred Aboriginal wind instrument shaped naturally by termites from a Euralyptus tree. " "... the Aboriginal people have shared this instrument outside of the tribe on a RECREATIONAL LEVEL in much the same way as they would teach their uninitiated boys. RECREATIONAL PLAYING TEACHES US TO STUDY NATURE, LEARNING TO IMITATE OR CAPTURE THE SPIRIT OF THE AUSTRALIAN LANDSCAPE AND ITS INHABITANTS WHILE LEARNING A GREATER RESPECT FOR MOTHER EARTH." ".. known to be the oldest wind instrument known, probably as far back as forty-thousand years."
to paraphrase:
FLICKR photos and comments, titles, and descriptions are to study nature ... trying to capture the landscapes and the peoples on mother Earth in order to show greater respect for each of them. ....
be well, be happy, and enjoy the adventure of each day....
DAY 11... Lookin' for a job with music: DIDGERIDOO AND HOW DO YOU DO !
This is a "Tip of the hat to you, lady, for your successfully finding two possible jobs to send a resume to, today" HURRAH FOR ME !
Photo taken years ago in Seaport Village in San Diego, California, during the Art Walk
George liked the "live-in-motion art" better than the static art !
This is George and his musical friend who plays a "DIDGERIDOO"
The musical man taught himself to play it and designed his own instrument. He made "special" sounds come out of it, like "thank you" when he tipped his hat... it sounded just like "thank you" but it came from his musical instrument, as if the hat was making the sound when he raised the hat on high...
He had a flyer that said something like:
"The (Didjeridu) is a Euro-Australian name for the sacred Aboriginal wind instrument shaped naturally by termites from a Euralyptus tree. " "... the Aboriginal people have shared this instrument outside of the tribe on a RECREATIONAL LEVEL in much the same way as they would teach their uninitiated boys. RECREATIONAL PLAYING TEACHES US TO STUDY NATURE, LEARNING TO IMITATE OR CAPTURE THE SPIRIT OF THE AUSTRALIAN LANDSCAPE AND ITS INHABITANTS WHILE LEARNING A GREATER RESPECT FOR MOTHER EARTH." ".. known to be the oldest wind instrument known, probably as far back as forty-thousand years."
to paraphrase:
FLICKR photos and comments, titles, and descriptions are to study nature ... trying to capture the landscapes and the peoples on mother Earth in order to show greater respect for each of them. ....
be well, be happy, and enjoy the adventure of each day....