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3.906 Ft
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1. | Ku-Isa Tama Laug (Weaving Song)
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2. | Lugu Lugu Kan-Ibi (Diligent Child)
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3. | Mudanin Kata (The Journey Home)
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4. | Manas Kala Muampuk (Joy Tonight)
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5. | Malas Tapag (Celebration)
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6. | Wulu Dream
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7. | Macilumah (Song for Concluding Work)
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8. | Pasibutbut (Prayer for a Rich Millet Harvest)
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9. | Mataisah-Hik Sagan (My Dream Last Night)
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10. | Wulu Mist
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11. | Bunun Tuza (The Bunun People)
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12. | Sima Cisbug Bav (Who Is Shooting on the Mountaintop?)
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13. | Malkakiv Malvanis (Song of the Trap)
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14. | Wulu Sky
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15. | Pis Lai (Song of Prayer for Rifles)
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Jazz / Contemporary Instrumental
Recorded: Apr 2002-Nov 2002
Apig - Performer Biug - Performer Buah - Performer Che Chien Chang - Children's Chorus Cheng Cheng Hu - Children's Chorus Chiao Ying Ku - Children's Chorus Chien An Chiu - Children's Chorus Chien Hui Chen - Translation Chih Hsin Chang - Children's Chorus Chin Lung Chiu - Children's Chorus Chin Niang Hu - Vocals Chin Sheng Chen - Children's Chorus Chiu Yu Hu - Vocals Chun Nan Chiu - Children's Chorus Chun Yu Chiu - Vocals Dahu - Performer David Darling - Arranger, Cello, Editing Duncan Baker - Design Coordinator Elaine Hsiung - Translation Elsa Ke - Project Coordinator En Tien Lu - Children's Chorus Guang Da Chen - Project Coordinator Hsin Hsien Chiu - Children's Chorus Hui Chen Chiu - Children's Chorus Hui Wei Chiu - Children's Chorus James Tuttle - Editing Jin Niang Hu - Translation Jon Moon - Mixing Lanihu - Performer Meng Hsin Chiu - Children's Chorus Mickey Houlihan - Engineer, Mastering, Mixing Mu Tsun Chiu - Children's Chorus Roger Li - Assistant Engineer Sean Fu - Executive Producer Sean Houlihan - Assistant Engineer Sheng En Chiu - Children's Chorus Sheng Hui Lin - Children's Chorus Sheng Wei Chiu - Children's Chorus Tommy Skarupa - Editing, Engineer, Mixing Valis - Performer Wei Li - Children's Chorus Winter Chiang - Photography Yun Ju Chen - Children's Chorus
The Wulu Bunun people of Taiwan specialize in a gloriously subdued style of harmony singing. In fact, their song "Pasibutbut" changed the way Western ethnomusicologists thought about the evolution of harmony. It's included here, a mystical, magical vocal prayer with a coda from David Darling's expressive cello. The vast majority of the pieces here intertwine voice and cello more closely, although there are solo cello pieces ("Wulu Dream" and "Wulu Mist") and pieces just for the singers. Recorded in a valley near the village of Bunun, it's cloaked in ambient natural sounds which blend perfectly alongside Darling's individual playing style and the voices of adults and children. The marriage is close to perfect as the styles complement each other, as on "Bunun Tuza," where Darling simply lets bowed notes hang under the voices. The harmonies themselves are exquisite and without thought, and obviously fire Darling's plentiful imagination. He never adds too much, just what's needed to color and enhance the singing, whether something simple like arpeggios, or even a single note, or decorating with harmonics. The parts themselves are impressive; together they make something wonderful, more than their sum. It may never receive the exposure it deserve, but it's a gem. ---Chris Nickson, All Music Guide
David Darling
Active Decades: '70s, '80s, '90s and '00s Born: Mar 04, 1941 in Elkhart, IN Genre: Jazz Styles: Avant-Garde, Chamber Jazz, Classical, Contemporary Instrumental, Film Music, Post-Bop
Eclectic composer/cellist David Darling incorporates jazz, classical, country, pop, and new age music into his playing and compositions. Starting as a child, Darling displayed facility with many different instruments and styles of music; he began with piano at age four, moved to cello six years later, and played string bass in his high school band (while also serving as bandleader). After finishing his studies in classical cello at Indiana State College in 1965, Darling stayed on as an instructor for four more years. In the '70s, Darling divided his time between working in Nashville, working as a studio musician with country artists including Johnny Cash, and touring the world with the Paul Winter Consort as a soloist, composer, and singer until 1978. 1979 saw his solo debut as well as the beginning of his collaboration with Ralph Towner, with whom Darling founded the chamber jazz group Gallery. After Gallery ended in the mid-'80s, Darling went on to work with artists as diverse as Glen Moore, John Clark, Spyro Gyra, and Bobby McFerrin. During those years, he also collaborated with ECM producer Manfred Eicher in a series of dark, introspective works. The '90s found Darling continuing to challenge musical boundaries. His score for the 1992 Wim Wenders movie Until the End of the World drew great acclaim, as did his solo recordings of that decade, including 1993's The Tao of Cello and Dark Wood, which feature Darling's renowned improvisational skills. At the turn of the century, Darling did two albums for Relaxation Music's Musical Massage series: Musical Massage: In Tune and Musical Massage: Balance. He also recorded Cello Blue for Hearts of Space in 2001. ---Heather Phares, All Music Guide |
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