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Showing posts with the label traditional instruments

In review--Love Songs for the Tibetan Homeland

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World/ Folkloric   Techung   Tibet (On The Road)   Arc Music     Many years ago, my first introduction to Tibetan music came when friends and I attended a Tibetan monk choir performance at the University of Washington.   Since that time I have heard Tibetan folkloric, sacred, and operatic songs.   Mostly, I’ve heard new age versions of Tibetan songs by artists such as Nawang Khechog.   Techung (his solo artist name), who now resides in San Francisco where he co-founded Chaksampa Tibetan Dance and Opera Company brings us love, folk and anthemic songs played on traditional and contemporary instruments on his CD, Tibet (On The Road) .   The opener, Lok Dro , a contemporary folk song asks Tibetans to return to the homeland.   The universal themes of the text showed up as the perfect song for the Native American documentary, A Good Day to Die , about the Native American civil rights movement.   The song B...

In review--Aye, es Bueno!

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World Best of Buena Vista (An homage to Buena Vista Social Club) Arc Music In 1999 when I sat with my film colleagues and a film festival audience to watch Wim Wender’s documentary Buena Vista Social Club , I fell in love with Cuban son.   Coming from a background of youthful rock music, I felt in awe as I watched the octogenarian musicians that comprised Buena Vista Social Club perform sweet songs with total abandonment.   I realized that it takes multiple generations to preserve and perform music.   Since that time, several of the Buena Vistas died, including Compay Segundo, Ibrahim Ferrer, and Rùben Gonzalez.   However, the spirit of Cuban son and Buena Vista Social Club is alive and well, as it appears on Best of Buena Vista. This CD features Pio Leyva, Juan De Marcos (musician responsible for the formation of Buena Vista Social Club), Puntilitta   Licea, Ruby Calzado, Maracaibo Oriental, Josè Artemio Castañeda, Raul Planas an...

In review--Streets of Toledo

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World Ana Alcaide La Cantiga Del Fuego Arc Music I heard about the Spanish traditional musician Ana Alcaide last December.   Alcaide interests me because the musician/culture preserver/composer/performer went from playing her nyckelharpa (a traditional Swedish keyed-fiddle) on the streets of Toledo, to producing the album La Cantiga Del Fuego which landed on the top of the World Music Chart in Europe. Alcaide’s journey has lasted over a decade thus far, and which also includes higher education in music conservatories in Sweden and Spain, studies in biology, and a fascination with both musical traditions of the Sephardic Jews of Spain and North Africa, as well as, the nyckelharpa.   If you want to know how all of that fits together, then you must listen to La Cantiga Del Fuego , an album filled with stories about love, tragic loss, exile and hope, brimming with the sounds of exotic European and Middle Eastern instruments. Journalists have compared Alca...

In review--Soaring & Swooping

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Techung Songs from Tibet Arc Music (2006) My first encounter with Tibetan music occurred when I attended a concert featuring Tibetan Buddhist choir in 1994.   My friends and I were exploring various “new age” spiritualities and felt curious about the Tibetan Buddhist monks and the Dalia Lama.   In 1998, I saw Yungchen Lhamo perform Tibetan songs a cappella at WOMAD USA and then I saw her perform at WOMAD again in 2001.   Then in 2006, I saw performances by former Tibetan Buddhist monk-turned musical performer Nawang Khechog.   I also interviewed Lhamo and Khechog during those times.   Now, I’m introduced to a new performer to my ears, Techung, who resides in San Francisco and performs mostly secular folkloric songs with traditional Tibetan instruments, Damnyen (a long-necked lute) and Piwang (spiked fiddle). I doubt I would have found this material on a Nawang Khechog recording which leans towards more spiritual aspects of living or on Yu...