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Being goodhumoured under Africas sun watching watching the giraffes having sex
A very tender pensive track. Indian/Arabic elements create a wondrous, curious mood with a lot of age and soul. Features tender guitar arpeggio, ethnic female vocals and chimes.
Continual drone atmosphere with ambient electronics, didgeridoo, gutteral vocal incantations, and ethnic percussion make up this visual, hynotic, smokey tribal piece. Great for Docs, nature and ethnic scenes.
Slow reflective tune with acoustic guitar, flute, bassoon and strings.
Big uplifting African theme, very energetic, happy and driven and sweeping. Percussion, Voices, Strings, Flutes.
Ethnic Flute and Drums, sparse and mystic in a tribal setting. Medicine man.
Smart Folk spectacle with an Irish feel
Starts out with an ethnic/indian flute and sitar drone followed by light Rhodes phrases violin phrases. Sense of time and progress thought and time.
Imagine a modern market in India with all kinds of wares out for sale, lots of people, hustle and bustle.
A dramatic saxophon cries over an ever evolving lonely drone escape, pad with bells and contemporary filmic sound design. A pitiful vibe of reflection expectation and uncertainty is in the air. "What will we do now?". Loss and sadness ends in a crescendo of confusion and panic.
A dense confused evolving soundscape with an Asiatic flavor.
A relaxed, reflective track with modern pentatonic chord vibe sound design and a wide evolving bed carrying a hint of sadness and concern.
Traditional wedding music fom The Kangra region of Himachal Pradesh in India. The instruments used are the Pipdi - a reed blowing instrument some what similar to the Shenai used in other regions of India (Played by Mangal Ram from Bir Village), and the Nagara Drums - similar to the nagras in the plains (these are very old pieces) they are made of metal with skin stretched on the playing surface. The skin is tightened with straps that weave into the edge of the skin and meet at the centre bottom of the drums. Two drums are placed opposite each other and the drummer plays them with a cross stick action. The drummer here is Jondu Ram (father of Mangal Ram.) Please note: This is a genuinely live, on-the-spot recording, and as such, there may be slight flaws in the performance and recording.