sexta-feira, 24 de dezembro de 2010

The Sounds of Christmas


“Joy to The World” is Pink Martini's first holiday album.
Cover Art from Pink Martini's first holiday album.
Source: www.voanews.com


Doug Johnson: Welcome to American Mosaic in VOA Special English
(MUSIC)
I’m Doug Johnson.
The winter holiday can be beautiful and bright.  Christmas lights, boxes wrapped in pretty paper and excited children are everywhere.
But it can be a difficult and demanding time, too.  There is a lot of preparation for Christmas: shopping, cleaning, cooking and decorating.
So today on our show we invite our listeners to slow down while we play holiday music released this year.
(MUSIC)
That is “Pie Jesu” sung by ten-year-old Jackie Evancho of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.  Jackie was discovered earlier this year on the television show “America’s Got Talent.” She did not win the competition.  But she did get a record deal.
Jackie Evanko sang at the National Christmas Tree lighting ceremony with President Barack Obama and his family in Washington.
AP

Jackie Evanko sang at the National Christmas Tree lighting ceremony with President Barack Obama and his family in Washington.
Her Christmas album, “O Holy Night,” came out November sixteenth.  The Recording Industry Association of America just rated the album platinum. That means it has sold one million copies or more.  Billboard magazine says Jackie Evancho is the country’s top-selling new artist.
“Carols and Christmas Songs” is the name of Bryn Terfel’s new album.  The Welsh opera singer sings a beautiful Austrian song called “Still, Still, Still.” The German words to the first verse mean:
Still, still, still
For the baby wants to sleep
The angels jubilate with beauty
Making music by the manger
Still, still, still
For the baby wants to sleep
(MUSIC)
The Putamayo World Music company’s seasonal album is called “World Christmas Party.”  The recording features songs and artists from Brazil, Cape Verde, New Zealand and many other parts of the world.
The Putamayo World Music company’s seasonal album is called “World Christmas Party.”
One of the performers is the Heritage Hall Jazz Band from New Orleans, Louisiana. The band has been playing traditional New Orleans jazz around the world for almost thirty-five years.  Here the band performs “Barra de Navidad Blues.”  Barra de Navidad is a beach town in Jalisco, Mexico.  It means “Christmas Sandbar” in Spanish.
(MUSIC)
Scottish singer Annie Lennox released her first holiday album this year.  However, she says she has been singing the songs on “A Christmas Cornucopia” since her childhood.  In fact, some of the songs were probably playing when was born -- on Christmas night, nineteen fifty-four.  Here she performs “Silent Night” which she recorded with the African Children’s Choir in South Africa.
(MUSIC)
One of America’s favorite television shows also has a record out for the holidays.  “Glee: The Music, The Christmas Album,” went to number three on Billboard’s special holiday sales chart.
Critics’ reactions were mixed.  Some praised the producers for trying new things with traditional Christmas songs.  Others said the producers did not choose the right singers for the songs.
However, most critics thought Matthew Morrison, who plays a teacher on the show, performed this song well.  Here is “O Christmas Tree.”
(MUSIC)
The number one album on Billboard’s Top Two Hundred is a holiday recording.  Scottish singer Susan Boyle’s “The Gift” has been in that position for four weeks.
Susan Boyle's album "The Gift" reached number one on Billboard’s Top Two Hundred albums chart.
Boyle launched her career in January of last year. She performed on the television show “Britain’s Got Talent.”  Her performance was posted on YouTube.  Her beautiful voice and shy personality got the attention of huge numbers of people.  She became famous almost overnight.
Here Susan Boyle sings “The First Noel” from her album, “The Gift.”
(MUSIC)
The O’Jays are a rhythm and blues group from Canton, Ohio.  They formed in the late nineteen fifties and have had seven studio albums on Billboard’s top twenty chart.
This year the O’Jays released their second holiday album, “Christmas with the O’Jays.”  It includes traditional songs, but also this danceable number, “Cause It’s Christmas.”
(MUSIC)
Finally, Pink Martini is a twelve-member orchestra from Portland, Oregon.  The group made its first holiday album this year.  “Joy to The World” includes songs for Christmas and Hanukkah.  There are also holiday songs from around the world like “Shehedryk (Ukrainian Bell Carol).” It is known in America as “Carol of the Bells.”  The song tells the story of a swallow flying into a family’s home to declare the good fortune they will have in the New Year.
(MUSIC)
I’m Doug Johnson. I hope you enjoyed this holiday program.  It was written and produced by Caty Weaver.  You can get transcripts, MP3s and podcasts of our shows at voaspecialenglish.com. You can also find us on Facebook and Twitter at VOA Learning English. If you have a question about American life, write to mosaic@voanews.com.  We might answer your question on this show. So please include your name and country.
Join us again next week for AMERICAN MOSAIC, VOA’s radio magazine in Special English

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Happy Xmas, War is Over



Source: www.englishexercises.org
Author: Teacher Claudia



Jonh Lennon - Happy Xmas War is over
Listen and Fill in:
So this is 
And  have you done
Another  over
And a  one just begun
And so this is 
I hope you  fun
The near and the  one
The old and the 
A very  Christmas
And a happy New 
Let's hope it's  a  one
Without any fear
And so this is 
For weak and for 
For  and the poor ones
The world is so wrong
And so happy 
For  and for white
For yellow and   ones
Let's  all the fight
A very Merry Christmas
And a  New Year
Let's hope it's a good 
Without  fear
And so   is Christmas
And what have we done
Another year  and a new one just begun
And so happy Christmas
I hope you have 
The  and the dear one
The old and the young
 Merry Christmas
And a happy New Year

  hope it's a good one
 any fear
War  over
If you  it, War is over, Now...

Travelling with Family

story image

quinta-feira, 23 de dezembro de 2010

Family Album, part XV



Source: Family Album USA


Improve your English through Family Album's episodes available for free on youtube.


Ireland: The Cost of Celtic Tiger

 Dublin City Images


Language Level: Advanced
Source: Speak Up
Standard: British accent

The Cost of the Celtic Tiger

Only a generation ago the Republic of Ireland was considered a poor and relatively backward country, in the grasp of the Catholic Church. It lived in the shadow of its former colonial master, Great Britain, and it was losing its young people to immigration.

That all changed in the mid-1990s, with the advent of the “Celtic Tiger” economic boom. Today Ireland is one of the most dynamic, flexible and globalised economies in the world. It seems the Irish have never had it so good. According to a recent OECD (Organisation for Economic/ Cooperation and Development) report, Ireland is now the second richest country in the EU. Dublin is said to be the world’s sixteenth most expensive capital while, according to The Economist, it is – as a  place to live – the best city on our planet.

NEW MONEY

Ireland now has new immigration, mainly from Eastern Europe – some 8 per cent of the population are foreign-born. In his book The Pope’s Children –Ireland’s New Elite, David Mc Williams claims that the Irish middle-class has grown by an incredible 25 per cent in the past 10 years. Ireland’s young and highly qualified workforce work hard in the IT, (Information Technology) telecoms and service sectors, achieving the highest productivity in Europe. And yet, if they work hard, then they party even harder. So is this a success story with no sting in the tail? Perhaps not. Some people argue that Ireland is losing its soul, that the traditional values of Irish society – friendliness,   a laid-back attitude, a sense of community and charity – are threatened by this rush, for money and success. In order to find out more, Speak Up asked people in Dublin what they thought. The first to speak is Thomas Saunders, who works as a Senior Porter for a college:

Thomas Saunders:
(Irish accent)

It depends on yourself, how you’re going to…how you should act, how morally you should act, with money or money. The way it is…the way it is with, I think, money shouldn’t change people, really, their morals, but it does, unfortunately, you know, I think anyway. But in my case, probably no, I’m still the same person I was probably when I had no money.

SOCIAL PROBLEMS

Alan Markey is the owner of a menswear shop down the road. He feels that money has definitely changed the country’s values and that crime is now a major problem:

Alan Markey
(Irish accent):

Years ago everybody used to have the key in the door and neighbours would walk in and everything was the way it was, but now, you could never do that, you’d have to have on alarm on now or you’d be robbed.

Is the rise in crime, personal debt, obesity, drug-taking and suicides part of the price to pay? More mothers work than ever before: the second income is needed for a new Irish lifestyle, which features expensive restaurants, fancy holidays and second homes abroad. Ireland’s wealth is built on property – in the past decade, house prices have risen faster than in any other OECD country – and this bubble could burst. Poverty is still a real issue, while the health system system is struggling Ann Hart. For example, works ata n alternative health centre:

Ann Harty

(Irish accent)

I’ve just been here for the Celtic Tiger roaring its way through, and its been good, and it’s been, you know, bad. It has great positive things, I mean, the country has grown, the youth have a lot offered to them now, they have lots of courses they can do, there’s an awful lot happening. But, from my perspective, I would be dealing with health issues, and there’s a lot of stress.

DON’T WORRY, BE HAPPY

Nevertheless the Irish still consider themselves to be among the happiest people in Europe. In the 2006 Euro-barometer survey, 82 per cent of the Irish interviewees said they were happy either “all” or “most of the time.” The Irish are second only to the Dutch, while the European average for “population happiness” is only 56 per cent. Maeve McLoughlin, a pharmacy manager in here early 30s, thinks that there’s more to life than money:

Maeve McLoughlin

(Irish accent):

I don’t think money is the be all and end all ether, as long as you’re happy and health, and for me, that’s what’s important so.

Fiacre Forde is retired, but volunteers at a local football club across the road from the pharmacy. He feels that things in the country have charged for the worse:

Fiacre Forde:

(Irish accent)

We’re losing all sorts of things, like our charitable concern for others, and I have to say we’re still very good that way, but it has to be a big deal, like it’s no longer a case of if Mrs. Matoney next door falls that we worry. We don’t, generally speaking, except among the older people: the younger people would probably step over her body!

 The Celtic Tiger:  
The Cost of the Celtic Tiger

Only a generation ago the Republic of Ireland was considered a poor and relatively backward country, in the grasp of the Catholic Church. It lived in the shadow of its former colonial master, Great Britain, and it was losing its young people to immigration.

That all changed in the mid-1990s, with the advent of the “Celtic Tiger” economic boom. Today Ireland is one of the most dynamic, flexible and globalised economies in the world. It seems the Irish have never had it so good. According to a recent OECD (Organisation for Economic/ Cooperation and Development) report, Ireland is now the second richest country in the EU. Dublin is said to be the world’s sixteenth most expensive capital while, according to The Economist, it is – as a  place to live – the best city on our planet.

NEW MONEY

Ireland now has new immigration, mainly from Eastern Europe – some 8 per cent of the population are foreign-born. In his book The Pope’s Children –Ireland’s New Elite, David Mc Williams claims that the Irish middle-class has grown by an incredible 25 per cent in the past 10 years. Ireland’s young and highly qualified workforce work hard in the IT, (Information Technology) telecoms and service sectors, achieving the highest productivity in Europe. And yet, if they work hard, then they party even harder. So is this a success story with no sting in the tail? Perhaps not. Some people argue that Ireland is losing its soul, that the traditional values of Irish society – friendliness,   a laid-back attitude, a sense of community and charity – are threatened by this rush, for money and success. In order to find out more, Speak Up asked people in Dublin what they thought. The first to speak is Thomas Saunders, who works as a Senior Porter for a college:

Thomas Saunders:
(Irish accent)

It depends on yourself, how you’re going to…how you should act, how morally you should act, with money or money. The way it is…the way it is with, I think, money shouldn’t change people, really, their morals, but it does, unfortunately, you know, I think anyway. But in my case, probably no, I’m still the same person I was probably when I had no money.

SOCIAL PROBLEMS

Alan Markey is the owner of a menswear shop down the road. He feels that money has definitely changed the country’s values and that crime is now a major problem:

Alan Markey
(Irish accent):

Years ago everybody used to have the key in the door and neighbours would walk in and everything was the way it was, but now, you could never do that, you’d have to have on alarm on now or you’d be robbed.

Is the rise in crime, personal debt, obesity, drug-taking and suicides part of the price to pay? More mothers work than ever before: the second income is needed for a new Irish lifestyle, which features expensive restaurants, fancy holidays and second homes abroad. Ireland’s wealth is built on property – in the past decade, house prices have risen faster than in any other OECD country – and this bubble could burst. Poverty is still a real issue, while the health system system is struggling Ann Hart. For example, works ata n alternative health centre:

Ann Harty

(Irish accent)

I’ve just been here for the Celtic Tiger roaring its way through, and its been good, and it’s been, you know, bad. It has great positive things, I mean, the country has grown, the youth have a lot offered to them now, they have lots of courses they can do, there’s an awful lot happening. But, from my perspective, I would be dealing with health issues, and there’s a lot of stress.

DON’T WORRY, BE HAPPY

Nevertheless the Irish still consider themselves to be among the happiest people in Europe. In the 2006 Euro-barometer survey, 82 per cent of the Irish interviewees said they were happy either “all” or “most of the time.” The Irish are second only to the Dutch, while the European average for “population happiness” is only 56 per cent. Maeve McLoughlin, a pharmacy manager in here early 30s, thinks that there’s more to life than money:

Maeve McLoughlin

(Irish accent):

I don’t think money is the be all and end all ether, as long as you’re happy and health, and for me, that’s what’s important so.

Fiacre Forde is retired, but volunteers at a local football club across the road from the pharmacy. He feels that things in the country have charged for the worse:

Fiacre Forde:

(Irish accent)

We’re losing all sorts of things, like our charitable concern for others, and I have to say we’re still very good that way, but it has to be a big deal, like it’s no longer a case of if Mrs. Matoney next door falls that we worry. We don’t, generally speaking, except among the older people: the younger people would probably step over her body!



 Celtic Tiger is a term used to describe the economy of Ireland during a period of rapid economic growth between 1995–2007, which underwent a dramatic reversal by 2008, with a GDPcontraction of 14%[1] and unemployment levels at 14% by 2010.

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After Harding Dies, President Coolidge Tries to Rebuild Trust in the Government

Source: www.voanews.com I recommend you  visit this site, excellent for beginners.

Calvin Coolidge making speech at his inauguration in 1925
Photo: loc,gov
Calvin Coolidge making speech at his inauguration in 1925


BOB DOUGHTY: Welcome to THE MAKING OF A NATION – American history in VOA Special English.
This week in our series, Steve Ember and Shirley Griffith talk about Calvin Coolidge and how he became president of the United States.
STEVE EMBER: The early nineteen twenties were a troubled time for the United States. Congress and the public began to discover crimes by several officials in the administration of President Warren Harding. Harding himself became seriously sick during a trip to Alaska and western states. He died in a hotel room in California in August, nineteen twenty-three.
Harding's vice president, Calvin Coolidge, became the new president. Both men were Republicans. Their policies on issues were much the same. Coolidge, however, was a very different man. He was completely honest. He was the kind of president the country needed to rebuild public trust in the government.
Calvin Coolidge, around 1919
loc.gov
Calvin Coolidge, around 1919
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: Calvin Coolidge was quiet and plain-looking. He was the son of a farmer and political leader from the small northeastern state of Vermont.
Young Calvin worked at different jobs to pay for his college education. He became a lawyer. He moved to another northeastern state -- Massachusetts -- where he became active in Republican Party politics. First he was elected mayor of a town. Then he was elected to the state legislature. Finally, he was elected governor of Massachusetts.
It was as governor that Coolidge first became known throughout the United States.
STEVE EMBER: In nineteen-nineteen, a group of policemen in the city of Boston tried to start a labor union. This violated the rules of the police department. So the commissioner of police suspended nineteen of the union's leaders. The next day, almost seventy-five percent of Boston's policemen went on strike.
Criminals walked freely through the city for two nights. They robbed stores and threatened public safety. Frightened Americans all across the country waited to see what Governor Coolidge would do.
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: He took strong action. He called on state troops to end the strike. He said: "There is no right to strike against the public safety by anybody, anywhere, any time."
Most Americans approved of what Coolidge did. The people of Massachusetts supported him, too. They re-elected him governor by a large number of votes. Then, in nineteen twenty, Republicans nominated Warren Harding for president. They nominated Calvin Coolidge for vice president. When President Harding died in California, Coolidge, his wife, and two sons moved to the White House.
STEVE EMBER: America's thirtieth president was, in some ways, an unusual kind of person to lead the country. He said little. He showed few feelings. Coolidge's policies as president were not active. He tried to start as few new programs as possible. He was a conservative Republican who believed deeply that government should be small.
Coolidge expressed his belief this way: "If the federal government should go out of existence, most people would not note the difference." And once he said: "Four-fifths of our troubles in this life would disappear if we would only sit down and keep still."
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: Coolidge believed that private business -- not the federal government -- should lead the country to greater wealth and happiness. He continued President Harding's policy of supporting American business both inside the United States and in other countries. The government under President Coolidge continued high taxes on imports in an effort to help American companies.
STEVE EMBER: Many Americans shared Coolidge's ideas about small government and big business. In the early nineteen twenties, many of them were living better than ever before.
At that time, companies were growing larger. The prices of their stocks rose higher and higher. There were lots of jobs. And the wages of many workers increased. Americans agreed with their president that there was little need for government spending and government programs, when private industry seemed so strong.
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: The American economy grew in the nineteen twenties for several reasons. The world war had destroyed many factories and businesses in Europe. The United States did not suffer the same destruction. It was still a young country. It had great natural resources, trained workers, and a huge market within its own borders. When peace came, Americans found their economy stronger than any other in the world.
STEVE EMBER: Changes in the American market also helped economic growth. "Installment buying" became popular. In this system, people could buy a product and pay for it over a period of several weeks or months.
The total cost was higher, because they had to pay interest. But the system made it possible for more people to buy more goods. It also made the idea of borrowing money more acceptable to many Americans.
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: The growing importance of the New York stock markets also helped economic growth in the nineteen twenties. Millions of Americans bought shares of stock in companies that seemed to grow bigger every month.
Such investment almost became a national game. People would buy shares of stock, then sell them when the stock rose in value. There were many stories of poor people who became rich overnight by buying the right stocks.
The American Congress also helped the economy by lowering income taxes. People had more money to spend on new goods. Another important reason for economic growth was a change in the way American companies were operated.
STEVE EMBER: During the nineteen twenties, the idea of manufacturing goods in the most scientific way became very popular. The father of this idea of "scientific management" was an engineer, Frederick Taylor.
Mister Taylor developed a system to study manufacturing. He studied each machine involved in the process. He studied how much work each person did. He studied how goods moved from one part of a factory to another. Then he offered ideas to business owners about ways to produce goods faster and for less cost.
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: Taylor's ideas of scientific management appealed to business owners. Automobile manufacturer Henry Ford proved that the ideas could work in his new car factory in the state of Michigan. Ford used the assembly line system of production. In this system, each worker did one thing to a product as it moved through the factory. This helped cut prices and increase wages.
STEVE EMBER: Ford and other businessmen learned a great deal about how to control costs, set prices, and decide how much to produce. All these changes in production and marketing helped Ford and other American companies grow larger and stronger.
Henry Ford's Model-T car became popular throughout the country. So did other new products. Radios. Refrigerators for cooling food. Vacuums to clean carpets. Ready-made cigarettes. Beauty products.
Americans in the nineteen twenties began to buy all kinds of new products they had never used before.
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: Calvin Coolidge was in the White House. However, business led the nation. Times were good. Americans trusted business and its leaders. It became an honor to call someone a businessman. Colleges organized business classes. Middle-class citizens in almost every city and town gathered to discuss business ideas.
President Coolidge spoke for millions of Americans when he said: "The chief business of the American people is business."
STEVE EMBER: Coolidge represented traditional values and a simple way of life. He knew exactly how every dollar he earned was saved or spent. And he spent no more money than was necessary.
The strange thing was that Coolidge was extremely popular with a public that was spending large amounts of money. Some economic experts warned that the country's quick economic growth would end in economic depression. Most Americans, however, believed that the good times had come to stay. They enjoyed the good things in life that work and success in business could bring.
On our next program, we will see how the economic growth of the nineteen twenties brought exciting changes to the day-to-day life of millions of Americans.
(MUSIC)
BOB DOUGHTY: Our program was written by Nancy Steinbach. The narrators were Steve Ember and Shirley Griffith. You can find our series online with transcripts, MP3s, podcasts and historical images at voaspecialenglish.com. You can also follow us on Facebook and Twitter at VOA Learning English. Join us again next week for THE MAKING OF A NATION -- an American history series in VOA Special English.
___
This is program #168
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