Jim Couza

Jim Couza was an American hammered dulcimer player born in New Bedford, Massachusetts, April 27, 1945 and resident in England since 1982; he died in 2009. In addition to the hammered dulcimer, Couza also played Appalachian dulcimer and guitar. He made several recordings, both solo and with the D'Uberville Ramblers. He also worked with Björk on the album Post, and with Peter Gabriel on OVO (Couza is featured on a track called "The Time Of The Turning (reprise) / Weavers Reel"). He also worked with Celtic singer songwriter Jim Fox, performing at many venues and festivals around the UK. Couza suffered a number of health problems in his later years resulting in amputation of both his legs. He died on 2 August 2009.

Jim Couza
Born(1945-04-27)April 27, 1945
New Bedford, Massachusetts, United States
DiedAugust 2, 2009(2009-08-02) (aged 64)
England
Occupation(s)Instrumentalist
InstrumentsHammered dulcimer, Appalachian dulcimer, guitar, banjo
Associated actsD'Uberville Ramblers, Björk, Peter Gabriel, Jim Fox

Jim was one of the early musicians at Tryworks Coffeehouse in New Bedford, Massachusetts. In those days he played a well used but good sounding Gibson guitar and a banjo, and sang mostly British Isles music with a distinctive voice. He was living in Acushnet, Massachusetts in the early '70s when he started to play the hammer dulcimer.

Discography

  • Angels Hoverin' Round, Folktrax FTX-909 (1972)
  • Brightest And Best, Greenwich Village GVR211 (1982)
  • Music For The Hammered Dulcimer (aka The Enchanted Valley) (with Eileen Monger), Saydisc CD-SDL335 (1983)
  • Friends & Neighbors, Greenwich Village GVR221 (1983)
  • Appalachian Beach Party (with the D'Uberville Ramblers), Dragon Records, DRGNCD922 (1992)
  • Out Of The Shadowlands, Folksound Records, FSCD14 (1993)
  • Welcome To The Fair, Folksound Records, FSCD16 (1998)
  • Jubilee, Folksound Records, FSCD06 (2002)
gollark: ```python def check_ticket(self, ticket): # compare ticket and winner order-insensitively return sorted(self.winner) == sorted(ticket)```
gollark: ```python def generate_winner(self): self.winner = self.generate_ticket() return self.winner```
gollark: `self.chosen_ticket = whatever`
gollark: You should probably just make them attributes.
gollark: Also, it seems terribly architected. Why is it always one `Lottery` class even though you can't run `check_ticket` on it until you do `generate_winner`? Why does it say to return the result of that but also implies you have to save it?

References


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