Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A good example of this is Damh the Bard, [10] who is involved in the UK groves and running the podcast. Damh runs his own website where he has just completed work on a bardic version of Branch Three of the Mabinogion, [ 11 ] makes regular house concerts on YouTube, [ 12 ] and contributes regularly to another podcast, The Celtic Myth Podshow ...
In 2021 the new "Chosen Chief of OBOD", Eimear Burke, was installed in the presence of Dave Smith (Damh the Bard), the Order's Pendragon, and Stephanie Carr Gomm, the Order's scribe. [citation needed] [7] Immediately preceding this Philip Carr Gomm gave a short farewell speech regarding his thirty two years in the role of Chosen Chief of OBOD. [8]
Spiral Dance is an Adelaide-based Pagan folk rock band whose musical focus is on the concepts of magic, myth and legend.. Fusing folk-lore and legend with a good heady serve of pagan mystery, Spiral Dance presents an eclectic blend of traditional English folk-rock with powerful self-penned songs and tunes.
In one of his last poems, Chuala Mi 'n Damh Donn sa Mhòintich ("I Heard the Brown Stag on the Moor"), Dòmhnall relates how, old and blind, he heard the cry of a red deer stag. The bard then looked back on his past hunting exploits and struggled to accept both his present inability to hunt and the fact that his final departure from his beloved ...
The root of this name is "damh", which according to Dineen [1] means an "ox or a Stag". It is also used figuratively as "hero". It is also used figuratively as "hero". Confusingly, scholars in the 19th and early 20th centuries sometimes thought it was derived from " dámh ", meaning a bard or poet but this is no longer accepted.
Dymphna's name (pronounced / ˈ d ɪ m f n ə / DIMF-nə or / ˈ d ɪ m p n ə / DIMP-nə) derives from the Irish damh ('poet') and suffix -nait ('little' or 'feminine'), therefore meaning 'poetess'. It is also spelled Dimpna, Dymphnart, Dympna or Damnat; this last spelling is closer to the Irish spelling Damhnait [ 10 ] ( pronounced ...
The trend was joined by other YouTubers, including Latvian band Auļi, Graywyck, Constantine Bard and Samus Ordicus. [2] Elmira Tanatarova in i-D suggests bardcore "carries with it the weight of years of memes made about the medieval era, and the bleak darkness of that time period that appeals to Gen Z 's existential humour."
"Lady in Black" is a song by the rock band Uriah Heep. It is the fourth track of their 1971 album Salisbury.. The song is credited to Ken Hensley.It narrates the story of a man wandering through war-torn darkness and encountering a goddess-like entity who consoles him.