For an example of their music, see YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IWQpvcmnOF0
See also: http://www.myspace.com/2skinnydorks
and http://midwestconcertguru.blogspot.com/2007/06/skinny.html
Lake Forest College's Coffee House, non-alcoholic, existed from the mid 1990s to the mid 2000s in the lower level of Commons, prior to construction in 2006 of the Mohr Student Center and the reconfiguration of the Stuart Commons.
]]>This acoustic-based pop/funk band or musical group flourished in 2004-09--2 Skinny Dorks, later just Skinny--playing colleges and clubs/pubs in Ohio, Illinois, and in the east. In 2007 the group included frontmen Jake Blazer and Eric Penrod, plus Matt Corey, Eric Daniels, Joel Luggo.
For an example of their music, see YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IWQpvcmnOF0
See also: http://www.myspace.com/2skinnydorks
and http://midwestconcertguru.blogspot.com/2007/06/skinny.html
Lake Forest College's Coffee House, non-alcoholic, existed from the mid 1990s to the mid 2000s in the lower level of Commons, prior to construction in 2006 of the Mohr Student Center and the reconfiguration of the Stuart Commons.
The two views of the one-sided document are to allow for both the top border and the bottom borde to be viewed.
The two reference antiphonal pages captured from the internet show the two traditional motifs that Seymour was referencing: the decorated initial capital letter, oversized, and the docorative border, respecitively.
Seymour since the late 1890s was much taken with the Arts & Crafts Movement of William Morris and his circle, and their return to medieval art forms and traiditons of decoration. Typically employed in his book deisgns, here it is reflected in his recreational life, and shows the emphasis on fostering ocmmunity among firends in the post-industrial revlution reform period and after. See his autobiography, Some Passed This Way (1945).
]]>Polychoral music
Lake Zurich Golf Club
The decorations recall those of medieval antiphonals, song sheets or books for monastic and church choirs. The song is for the Lake Zurich Golf Club, Lake Zurich, Lake County, Illinois, mid-twentieth century. The four parts are tenor 1 and 2, baritone and base, with the melody for the tenor 2.
The two views of the one-sided document are to allow for both the top border and the bottom borde to be viewed.
The two reference antiphonal pages captured from the internet show the two traditional motifs that Seymour was referencing: the decorated initial capital letter, oversized, and the docorative border, respecitively.
Seymour since the late 1890s was much taken with the Arts & Crafts Movement of William Morris and his circle, and their return to medieval art forms and traiditons of decoration. Typically employed in his book deisgns, here it is reflected in his recreational life, and shows the emphasis on fostering ocmmunity among firends in the post-industrial revlution reform period and after. See his autobiography, Some Passed This Way (1945).
The alumni are standing left to right, F. Barry Fitzgerald '32 and Milton W. Swanton '28; seated are Eleanor (Linnell) Swanton '28, and Dorothy (Eckstrand) Stang '30. The Swanton family is descended from the earliest settlers in east Lake Forest, the Cole-Swanton-Atteridge family that arrived on North Green Bay Road in 1837. The Swantons were the parents of Virginia Swanton '54, also a local resident and former editor at Scott Foresman pulbishers, who died in 2007 (Chicago Tribune, November 7, 2007).
]]>As published in the Lake Forest College magazine Spectrum in the Summer 1991 issue, this photo shows then student Dave Wakabayashi '93 (right, standing), Carrie Collopy '93 (left, seated) and Mary Beth Sirois '92 (right, seated) with some alumni, exploring the subject.
The alumni are standing left to right, F. Barry Fitzgerald '32 and Milton W. Swanton '28; seated are Eleanor (Linnell) Swanton '28, and Dorothy (Eckstrand) Stang '30. The Swanton family is descended from the earliest settlers in east Lake Forest, the Cole-Swanton-Atteridge family that arrived on North Green Bay Road in 1837. The Swantons were the parents of Virginia Swanton '54, also a local resident and former editor at Scott Foresman pulbishers, who died in 2007 (Chicago Tribune, November 7, 2007).