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Tina Cousins - Mysterious Times
Sash! - Ecuador (The Best Of)
Sash! Megamix
Sash - Ecuador
Sash! - Stay (The Best Of)
Sash! - Megamix
SASH! - Encore Un Fois
Sash! - Adelante (The Best Of)
Stay - Sash
the sash my father wore
SASH! Feat. Stunt - Raindrops (Encore Une Fois) (Out NOW)
SPB, SINGING THE SASH.
sash! -adelante-
shash euro dance videoclip disco remember...
Tina Cousins - Mys­te­ri­ous Times
3:36
Sash! - Ecuador (The Best Of)
3:35
Sash! Megamix
4:42
Sash - Ecuador
3:31
Sash! - Stay (The Best Of)
3:34
Sash! - Megamix
10:00
SASH! - En­core Un Fois
3:44
The Sash My Fa­ther Wore / Der­rys Walls - Red Hand De­fend­ers Flute Band New­town­stew­art
4:12
Sash! - Ade­lante (The Best Of)
3:47
Stay - Sash
3:37
the sash my fa­ther wore
3:53
SASH! Feat. Stunt - Rain­drops (En­core Une Fois) (Out NOW)
3:44
SPB, SINGING THE SASH.
1:52
sash! -ade­lante-
3:48
remove add to playlist video results for: sash!
Ecuador - Sash
3:38
Sash ! - La pri­mav­era
3:31
Sash! I Be­lieve
3:48
Wolfe­tones - The Sash
3:29
Sash! - Stay (Ex­tend­ed Mix)
6:01
Sash! - La Pri­mav­era (The Best Of)
3:49
Sash - Gan­bareh [HQ Music Video]
3:49
Liam Clan­cy - The Sash My Fa­ther Wore
3:38
OMD Enola Gay (Sash Remix)
4:06


  • Sash Window Repairs Your Home Needs
    WN / 7dayhandyman
  • Tengu and a Buddhist monk, by Kawanabe Kyōsai. The tengu wears the cap and pom-pommed sash of a follower of Shugendō.
    Creative Commons / Kotengu
  • Rousseff receiving the presidential sash from Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Dilma Roussefff was inaugurated as President of Brazil on January 1, 2011.
    Creative Commons
  • Brazil´s outgoing President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, right, raises the arm of Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff, left, after placing the presidential sash on her at the Planalto palace in Brasilia, Brazil, Saturday, Jan. 1, 2011.
    AP / Silvia Izquierdo
  • A flight of stone steps leads from an asphalt car park up to the main entrance of a white two-story building. The ground floor has two sash windows, the first floor has three shorter sash windows.
    Creative Commons
  • Obi (sash).
    Creative Commons / Pitke
  • Exceptionally wide sash window (approximately 2m wide) in a pub in Bromyard, Herefordshire, England
    Creative Commons
  • A Georgian house in England with sash windows
    Creative Commons
  • The Renz Block was a historic commercial building in downtown Lima, Ohio, United States. Located along North Main Street across from the Allen County Courthouse, the block was built in 1900 in a late variant of the Victorian style.[1] A three-story building, the Renz Block was constructed primarily of brick with stone details; the roof was flat and made of asphalt. Among its leading aspects were an elaborate parapet and heavily decorated facade, including windows with doubly sashed transom light
    Creative Commons / Nyttend
  • JULY 21 , 2008 , SAN JUAN CITY , PHILIPPINES - FLOWERS IN A STAND AND A SASH FOR A GRAND OPENING OF SMALL VIDEOKE BAR ALONG N. DOMINGO STREET
    WN / Renzelle Mae Abasolo
  • MUSLIM SASH—President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo receives a Sablay, a traditional Muslim sash, before she presided over the groundbreaking ceremony for the construction of an additional four-classroom, two-storey building for Muslim school children in Barangay Sirawan, Toril District in Davao City Wednesday (Feb. 27).
    OPS/NIB / Rey Baniquet
  • Felipe Calderon, center, is sworn in as outgoing President Vicente Fox, left, holds the presidential sash at the National Congress in Mexico City on Friday Dec. 1, 2006. They are surrounded by security and congressmen who support Calderon.
    AP/Dario Lopez-Mills
photo: AP / Charles Dharapak)
President Barack Obama makes a statement to reporters about debt ceiling negotiations, Tuesday, July 5, 2011, in the James Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House in Washington.
Austin American Statesman
29 Feb 2012
WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama is meeting at the White House with the four top Republican and Democratic leaders of Congress, the first such meeting since last July when the administration...
photo: US Navy / Senior Chief Mass Communication Specialist Michael Lewis
Gen. Carter F. Ham, commander of U.S. Africa Command, meets Sailors assigned to the guided-missile destroyer USS Stout (DDG 55) on the pier in Augusta Bay.
Austin American Statesman
29 Feb 2012
WASHINGTON — The top U.S. commander for Africa says he is increasingly concerned about the likelihood that terrorist groups in Somalia, North Africa and Nigeria want to coordinate their...
photo: AP / Virginia Mayo
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, center, speaks with the media as she arrives for an EU summit of eurogroup members at the EU Council building in Brussels on Thursday, July 21, 2011.
Austin American Statesman
29 Feb 2012
BERLIN — A poll shows German Chancellor Angela Merkel's popularity at its highest since her second term began in 2009, despite new turbulence in her center-right coalition. The poll for Stern...

Yahoo Daily News Haynes and Boone, LLP Partner Sashe Dimitroff has been invited by the Qatar University College of Law to instruct international energy lawyers and executives on the available commercial and litigation options when catastrophic events disrupt oilfield projects. Houston, TX (PRWEB) March 06, 2012...(size: 3.5Kb)
The Daily Mail Some people will do anything to be a beauty queen. The reigning Miss Washington was astonished when she woke up this morning to find her car was stolen - but worse than that - in the car was her crown, pageant sash, four evening gowns, shoes and wallet. The 2011 GMC Terrain was unlocked when it was...(size: 6.6Kb)
Breitbart EDGEWOOD, Wash. (AP) - The reigning Miss Washington says thieves made off with her car—as well as her crown, pageant sash, wallet and four evening gowns. Pierce County, Wash.,...(size: 1.2Kb)
Yahoo Daily News EDGEWOOD, Wash. - The reigning Miss Washington says thieves made off with her car — as well as her crown, pageant sash, wallet and four evening gowns....(size: 1.0Kb)
The Washington Post EDGEWOOD, Wash. — The reigning Miss Washington says thieves made off with her car — as well as her crown, pageant sash, wallet and four evening gowns. Pierce County, Wash., sheriff’s deputies recovered the car a few...(size: 1.5Kb)
WPXI The crown and sash belonging to current Miss Washington Brittney Henry were stolen, along with her car, while it was parked in her driveway Tuesday morning. Henry, who lives in Edgewood, said she...(size: 1.3Kb)
The Daily Mail Help: How can I stop my wooden sash windows from losing so much heat A home energy expert, from not-for-profit energy group Ebico, replies: This is a question frequently asked by people living in period properties with sash windows, which are certainly an attractive design feature but can be a...(size: 6.1Kb)
Belfast Telegraph My ancestors came from Belfast and I am trying to unravel a family...(size: 0.5Kb)
more news on: Sash!

A sash (, ''shash'') is a cloth belt used to hold a robe together, and is usually tied about the waist. The Japanese equivalent of a sash, ''obi'', serves to hold a kimono or yukata together. Decorative sashes may pass from the shoulder to the hip rather than around the waist. Sash is an Arabic loanword that was introduced into the English language in 1590.

Military and official use

Sashes traditionally form part of formal military attire (compare the sword-belt known as a baldric, and the cummerbund). Most of the European Royal families wear sashes as a part of their royal (and/or military) regalia. Some orders such as the Légion d'honneur include sashes as part of the seniormost grades' insignia. In Latin America and some countries of Africa, a special presidential sash indicates a president's authority. In France and Italy, sashes, featuring the national flag tricolours and worn on the right shoulder, are used by public authorities and local officials; likewise Italian military officers wear light blue sashes over the right shoulder on ceremonial occasions.

Sashes are a distinctive feature of some regiments of the modern French Army for parade dress. They are worn around the waist in either dark blue or red by corps such as the Foreign Legion, the Spahis, the Chasseurs d' Afrique and the Tirailleurs which were originally raised in North Africa during the period of French colonial rule. In its traditional Franco-Algerian or zouave form the sash ("ceinture de laine") was four metres in length and forty centimetres in width. In the historic French Army of Africa, sashes were worn around the waist in either blue for European or red for indigenous troops.

At the time of the American Civil War (1861-65) silk sashes in crimson were authorized for officers and red woolen sashes for non-commissioned officers of the regular US Army (''Army Regulations of 1861''). U.S. Generals continued to wear buff silk sashes in full dress until 1917. In the Confederate Army of the Civil War period sash colour indicated the corps or status of the wearer. For example: gold for cavalry, burgundy for infantry, black for chaplains, red for sergeants, green or blue for medics, and grey or cream for general officers.

Today the West Point cadet officer is the only person in the Army who wears a sword and sash, the sole guardian of the tradition.

The modern British Army retains a scarlet sash for wear in certain orders of dress by sergeants and above serving in infantry regiments, over the right shoulder to the left hip. A similar crimson silk net sash is worn around the waist by officers of the Foot Guards in scarlet full dress and officers of line infantry in dark blue "Number 1" dress. The same practice is followed in some Commonwealth armies.

The present day armies of India and Pakistan both make extensive use of waist sashes for ceremonial wear. The colours vary widely according to regiment or branch and match those of the turbans where worn. Typically two or more colours are incorporated in the sash, in vertical stripes. One end hangs loose at the side and may have an ornamental fringe. The practice of wearing distinctive regimental sashes or cummerbunds goes back to the late nineteenth century.

In addition to those detailed above, several other modern armies retain sashes for wear by officers in ceremonial uniforms. These include the armies of Norway (crimson sashes), Sweden (yellow and blue), Greece (light blue and white), the Netherlands (orange), Portugal (crimson) and Spain (red and gold for generals, light blue for general staff and crimson for infantry officers). The Spanish Regulares (infantry descended from colonial regiments formerly recruited in Spanish Morocco) retain their historic waist-sashes for all ranks in colours that vary according to the unit.

Until 1914 sashes were worn as a peace-time mark of rank by officers of the Imperial German, Austro-Hungarian and Russian armies, amongst others. Japanese officers continued the practice in full dress uniform until 1940.

Cross-belts resembling sashes are worn by Drum Majors in the Dutch, British and some Commonwealth armies. These carry scrolls bearing the names of battle honours.

Modern civilian and cultural use

In the United States, the sash has picked up a more ceremonial and less practical purpose. Sashes are used at higher education commencement ceremonies, by high school homecoming parade nominees, in beauty pageants, as well as by corporations to acknowledge high achievement.

In Canada, hand woven sashes (called ''ceintures fléchées'' and sometimes "L'Assumption sash" after a town in which they were mass produced) were derived from Iroquoiuan carrying belts sometime in the 18th century. As a powerful multi-use tool this sash found use in the fur trade which brought it into the North West. In this period the weave got tighter and size expanded, with some examples more than four metres in length. Coloured thread was widely used. Today it is considered to be primarily a symbol of the 1837 Lower Canada Rebellion Patriotes and the Métis peoples.

In Ireland, especially Northern Ireland, the sash is a symbol of the Orange Order. Orange Order sashes were originally of the ceremonial shoulder-to-hip variety as worn by the British military. Over the 20th century the sash has been mostly replaced by V-shaped collarettes, which are still generally referred to as sashes. The item is celebrated in the song 'The Sash my Father Wore'.

Sashes are indicative of holding the class of Grand Cross or Grand Cordon in an Order of Chivalry or Order of Merit.

Sashes are also worn by Girl Scouts and Boy Scouts. Badges are sewn onto the sash, to indicate achievements of the Scout.

Many modern schools of Chinese martial arts use sashes of various colors to denote rank as a reflection of the Japanese ranking system using belts.

See also

  • Presidential sash
  • References

    Bibliography

    Category:Arabic loanwords Category:Belts Category:Fashion accessories Category:Shawls and wraps

    ca:Faixa da:Skærf de:Schärpe es:Faja (tela) lt:Juosta_(apranga) fr:Écharpe (symbole) it:Fusciacca he:אבנט nl:Sjerp nds-nl:Sjarpe no:Ordensbånd simple:Sash

    This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.



    NameLiam Clancy
    Backgroundsolo_singer
    Birth nameWilliam Clancy
    Birth dateSeptember 02, 1935
    DiedDecember 04, 2009Cork, Ireland
    OriginCarrick-on-Suir, County Tipperary, Ireland
    InstrumentVocals, guitar, concertina
    GenreFolk, traditional Irish
    OccupationMusician, songwriter, actor
    Years active1955–2009
    Associated actsThe Clancy Brothers, Makem and Clancy
    Websitehttp://www.liamclancy.com/ }}
    William "Liam" Clancy (2 September 1935 – 4 December 2009) (Irish ''Liam Mac Fhlannchadha'') was an Irish folk singer and actor from Carrick-on-Suir, County Tipperary. He was the youngest and last surviving member of performing group The Clancy Brothers. The group were regarded as Ireland's first pop stars. They recorded 55 albums, achieving global sales of millions and appearing at a sold-out Carnegie Hall, New York and the Royal Albert Hall, London. whilst Gay Byrne described him as one of the “most famous four Irishmen in the world”. He was a central figure during the 1960s folk revival,

    Biography

    As a child he was known as William or Willie. He displayed an artistic disposition at an early age, while growing up in Carrick-on-Suir, County Tipperary. Born there he was in 1935 as one of eleven children of Robert Joseph Clancy and Joanna McGrath. The first song he learned was "The Croppy Boy". He received a Christian Brothers education before taking a job as an insurance man in Dublin. Whilst there he also took night classes at the National College of Art and Design.

    However, while still in his teens, Liam explored writing and painting, though he was particularly drawn to the theatre. In his early performing days, he began to call himself Liam rather than William or Willie. Before he was twenty years old, Liam had founded the local dramatic society now called "Brewery Lane Theatre and Arts Centre", and had produced, directed, set-directed, and starred in John Millington Synge's ''The Playboy of the Western World''. Liam also performed at the renowned Gaiety Theatre in Dublin. He encountered Diane Hamilton Guggenheim when she came to his hometown to visit his mother, and set off on a tour of Ireland alongside her. There were international tours, which included performances at Carnegie Hall (a sell-out in 1962) and the Royal Albert Hall. Liam Clancy was the last surviving member of the original Clancy Brothers; Tom Clancy died on November 7, 1990, Patrick Clancy died on November 11, 1998 and Tommy Makem died on August 1, 2007. Liam said of his status as last known survivor,

    “There was always a pecking order, especially when you’re working with family. But they all died off, and I got to the top of the pecking order, with nobody looking over my shoulder. There’s a great sense of freedom about that”.

    After The Clancy Brothers split, Liam had a solo career in Canada. In 1975, he was booked to play a festival in Cleveland, Ohio, USA, where Tommy Makem was also playing. The two played a set together and formed Makem and Clancy, performing in numerous concerts and recording several albums as a duo, until 1988. The whole ensemble also got back together in the 1980s for a reunion tour.

    His final album ''The Wheels of Life'' was released in 2009: this included duets with Mary Black and Gemma Hayes as well as songs by Tom Paxton and Donovan.

    Liam was an ardent proponent of political views and often outspoken on matters of social injustice right up until his death. He criticised both Gulf Wars and the grim, harsh economic climate which gripped Ireland during his last months alive. He told ''The Irish Times'' in September 2009 that he was on his “last legs”. He had already given his final performance, at the National Concert Hall the previous May, during which he recited the Dylan Thomas poem "And death shall have no dominion". He was unable to perform a full-length show on the final night of a two-night sold-out run but put in a 40-minute appearance nonetheless. His manager described it as “a very profound moment. He expressed his fear of dying, but he did it with great dignity”.

    Death

    Liam Clancy died from pulmonary fibrosis on 4 December 2009, in Bon Secours Hospital in Cork, Ireland. Bobby Clancy died of the same disease seven years previously His son Eben was in the process of coming over from the United Kingdom and he had had a chat with his son Donal who was in the middle of a tour of California. The other three sat beside him as he died. Alan Gilsenan described the death as the "end of an era". Radio disc jockeys in New York paid tribute to the man who, according to the ''New York Daily News'', "played a major role in defining how Americans heard Irish popular music over the last half century", with one DJ saying The Clancy Brothers had "broke down a wall that was long overdue". Christy Moore, on a prescheduled appearance on ''The Late Late Show'' aired live on the night of Liam's death, said, "I would have been listening to Radio Luxembourg and rock 'n' roll as a young fellow and then I got to hear of the Clancy brothers, when I was 16 I came to Dublin to hear them in a concert. It was about 1962, I think it was the Olympia, it was the most exciting concert I had ever attended. It was Irish, it was rock 'n' roll, it was funky and it was even sexy".

    Clancy's lunchtime funeral at St Mary's Church in Dungarvan on 7 December was attended by hundreds of mourners, including both the Aides de Camp of the Taoiseach and President of Ireland, Minister Cullen and various musicians and artists. He was later buried in Ring.

    Discography

    Solo recordings

  • 1965 – ''Liam Clancy'' – Vanguard LP/CD
  • ''*re-released with bonus tracks as 'Irish Troubadour' on Vanguard CD''
  • 1974 – ''Farewell to Tarwaithie'' – Plainsong LP
  • ''*on Shanachie CD as "The Dutchman"''
  • 2007 - ''Yes Those Were The Days'': ''The Essential Liam Clancy'' Dolphin Records
  • 2008 - “The Wheels of Life”, Dolphin Records
  • ''Kerrygold Cheddar Cheese'' – special edition 45rpm – unknown year
  • Guest recordings

  • 1955 – ''The Lark in the Morning'' – Tradition LP/Rykodisc CD
  • 1956 – ''The Countess Cathleen'' – Tradition LP
  • 1989 – ''Phil Coulter: Words and Music'' – Shanachie CD
  • 1992 – ''Phil Coulter: A Touch of Tranquility'' – Shanachie CD
  • 1994 – ''Joanie Madden: Whistle on the Wind'' – Green Linnet CD
  • 1999 – ''Cherish the Ladies: At Home'' – RCA CD
  • 2000 – ''The Boys Won't Leave the Girls Alone'' – Windham Hill CD
  • 2002 – ''Danú: All Things Considered'' – Shanachie CD
  • Clancy Brothers & Tommy Makem

    Tradition Records
  • ''The Lark in the Morning'' – Tradition LP/Rykodisc CD – (1955)
  • ''The Rising of the Moon'' (or ''Irish Songs of Rebellion'') (1956, 1959 second version)
  • ''Come Fill Your Glass with Us'' (or ''Irish Songs of Drinking and Blackguarding'') (1959)
  • ''The Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem'' (self-titled) – (1961)
  • Columbia Records
  • ''A Spontaneous Performance Recording'' (1961)
  • ''Hearty and Hellish! A Live Nightclub Performance'' (1962)
  • ''The Boys Won't Leave the Girls Alone'' (1962) – 2 stereo issues (one includes alternate mixes)
  • ''*the last two albums were issued on now out of print Shanachie CDs''
  • ''In Person at Carnegie Hall'' (1963) – also on Columbia CD
  • ''The First Hurrah!'' (1964)
  • ''Recorded LIVE in Ireland'' (1965)
  • ''Isn't It Grand, Boys'' (1966)
  • ''Freedom's Sons'' (1966)
  • ''In Concert'' (1967) – also on Columbia CD
  • ''The Irish Uprising'' (1967)
  • ''Home, Boys, Home'' (1968)
  • ''Sing of the Sea'' (1968)
  • ''The Bold Fenian Men'' (1969)
  • ''Reunion'' (1984) – Released on Blackbird LP/Shanachie CD
  • ''Luck Of The Irish – Columbia/Sony compilation. Contains 1 new song (Wars Of Germany) and 3 new performances of previously released songs: (Home Boys Home, The Old Orange Flute and They're Moving Father's Grave To Build A Sewer)'' (1992)
  • ''Bob Dylan 30th Anniversary Concert Celebration'' (1992)
  • ''Irish Drinking Songs'' (1993) – contains unreleased material from the Carnegie Hall album
  • ''Ain't it Grand: A Collection of Unissued Gems'' (1995) – unreleased material from the 1960s era
  • The Clancy Brothers (Liam, Tom, Pat, Bobby)

  • ''Christmas'' – Columbia LP/CD (1969)
  • ''Flowers in the Valley'' – Columbia LP (1970)
  • Audio Fidelity Records
  • ''Welcome to Our House'' (1970)
  • Lou Killen, Paddy, Liam, Tom Clancy

    Audio Fidelity Records
  • ''Show Me The Way'' (1972)
  • ''Save the Land!'' (1972)
  • ''Live on St. Patrick's Day'' (1973)
  • Vanguard Records
  • ''Clancy Brothers Greatest Hits'' (1973) – Vanguard LP/CD
  • ''*This was reissued as 'Best of the Vanguard Years' with bonus material from the 1982 Live! album with Bobby Clancy and Robbie O'Connell.''

    Liam Clancy and Tommy Makem

    Blackbird and Shanachie Records
  • ''Tommy Makem and Liam Clancy'' (1976)
  • ''The Makem & Clancy Concert'' (1977)
  • ''Two for the Early Dew'' (1978)
  • ''The Makem and Clancy Collection'' (1980) – contains previously released material and singles
  • ''Live At The National Concert Hall'' (1983)
  • ''We've Come A Long Way'' (1986)
  • Bob Dylan

  • ''The 30th Anniversary Concert Celebration (Pat, Liam & Bobby Clancy sing "When The Ship Comes In" with Tommy Makem and Robbie O'Connell)''
  • The Clancy Brothers (Tom, Pat, Bobby) and Robbie O'Connell

  • ''Mini CD (3 inch disc)''
  • The Clancy Brothers (Liam, Pat, Bobby) and Robbie O'Connell

  • ''Older But No Wiser'' – Vanguard (1995)
  • Clancy, Evans, and Doherty

  • 1996 – ''Shine on Brighter'' – Popular CD
  • Clancy, O'Connell & Clancy

    Helvic Records
  • ''Clancy, O'Connell & Clancy'' – (1997)
  • ''The Wild And Wasteful Ocean'' – (1998)
  • Filmography

  • 1984 – ''The Story of the Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem'' – Shanchie
  • 1984 – ''Reunion Concert: Belfast'' – Shanachie
  • circa 1985 – ''Pete Seeger's Rainbow Quest (1965)'' – Central Sun / Shanachie (reissue)
  • 1997 – ''Farewell to Ireland'' – Pinnacle Vision
  • 2007 – ''Yes...Those Were the Days: Liam Clancy – Live at the Olympia, Dublin'' – unknown distributor
  • ''*originally released in 1992 as "In Close Up: Volumes 1 and 2"''
  • 2007 – ''The Best of 'Hootenanny''' – Shout!
  • 2009 – ''The Yellow Bittern: The life and times of Liam Clancy''http://www.liamclancymovie.com/
  • References

    External links

  • Official site
  • Liam Clancy on ''Tubridy Tonight'' (22 March 2008)
  • Obituary at ''The Irish Times''
  • Obituary in ''The Daily Telegraph''
  • Obituary
  • Sineád Crowley, RTÉ Arts & Media Correspondent, looks back at the life and career of folk legend Liam Clancy (Video)
  • Troubadour who didn't do justice to his talent- Saturday, December 12, 2009, ''The Irish Times''
  • Clancy Brother's Festival
  • The Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem
  • The Yellow Bittern - Director's Note
  • Category:1935 births Category:2009 deaths Category:Deaths from pulmonary fibrosis Category:Disease-related deaths in Ireland Category:Irish guitarists Category:Irish folk singers Category:Irish male singers Category:Irish tenors Category:People from County Tipperary Category:Irish concertina players

    cy:Liam Clancy ko:리엄 클랜시 nl:Liam Clancy sv:Liam Clancy

    This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.



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