Javier Paxariño — Temurá
Album: Temurá
Avg rating:
Your rating:
Total ratings: 657
Released: 2002
Length: 7:35
Plays (last 30 days): 0
Avg rating:
Your rating:
Total ratings: 657
Length: 7:35
Plays (last 30 days): 0
(instrumental)
Comments (64)add comment
glen velez is a hero and I like ney sound
kcar wrote:
(fading hope that this song will be over someday...)
Nah. I'm sure that's not right? Surely you lift all your fingers (little one slightly before the others) before you bring them down (little one first).
I did enjoy the music though.
(fading hope that this song will be over someday...)
Nah. I'm sure that's not right? Surely you lift all your fingers (little one slightly before the others) before you bring them down (little one first).
I did enjoy the music though.
Kind of pleasant as background music while working on a drawing. Works in a passive/ambient sort of way but I wouldn't go shopping for this recording.
(fading hope that this song will be over someday...)
Wonderful !
Make it stop...please!
...oh, showing off throat singing in the music library now, are we?..
Tagish_girl wrote:
Did y'all ever hear of a movie called "Serendipity", with John Cusak? The heroine had a kooky boyfriend who played this kind of music, all very pretentious and into himself. Kind of reminds me of him....
Played perfectly and annoyingly by John Corbett. He was icky.
coffee-eyes wrote:
Trying to like it, but it's hurting my ears. Nope.
kinda boring. Awfully long
Trying to like it, but it's hurting my ears. Nope.
Part of it reminds me of a track from Dead Poets Society.
rascal420 wrote:
Where's my hookah? I forget
Dude! it's like right here .. like next to the Oreo cookies and, uh, uh, uh the Doritos and uh, uh, I for got ..
Mugro wrote:
This song hurt my ears!! Literally!!
Mine too.
It's reminescent of something off the "Diva" soundtrack, the French movie for which Vladimir Cosma did amazing work
Did y'all ever hear of a movie called "Serendipity", with John Cusak? The heroine had a kooky boyfriend who played this kind of music, all very pretentious and into himself. Kind of reminds me of him....
Very very cool stuff!
Ooh, I do love a bit of hammered dulcimer, me - very Middle Eastern and exotic :)
This song hurt my ears!! Literally!!
Good thing my dog was not in the room, or she would be howling...
Paul Pena taught himself how to throat sing while listening to a russian broadcast of tuvan music. He was an amazing man who was featured in the movie "genghis blues". He also wrote the song "jet airliner", an amazing story of an amazing musician, check it out!
this is not only a hard one for my ears, it's also a test of endurance. sucko-barfo. for sure.
The fellow playing the frame drum is a cat named Glen Velez. He's gotten himself into some really cool sounding stuff over the years. He was also part of a great three piece with Howard Levy and Gene Friesen called Trio Globo. They release a couple discs in the mid 90's the earliest of which was quite good and worth seeking out if you like this sound. I think it was just title Trio Gobo. Velez has learned the beautiful harmonic throat singing technique most often heard from Tuva. And even creates an eerily similar sound on the frame drum.
Oh I quite like this!
(Now if I could just the Bush bellydancer out of my head...)
;-)
fuh2 wrote:
This rather EXCELLENT tune needs a belly dancer
hard to be a belly dancer when you're wading through the shi-
Very nice!
This has a very similar atmosphere to Peter Gabriel's "Passion" album.
ploafmaster wrote:
That's no flute...those are vocal harmonics...if people are talking about what I'm thinking...think this is some Tuvan throat singing in here...
That's a vocal style from an area around Nepal, I believe - quite wonderful and amazing!
If you like the Tuvan throat singing here, have a listen to "Tuva: Voices from the Land of the Eagles". It is a CD of more traditional music. I got to see them live a while ago before they became fairly well known. Their vocal techniques are amazing. Also check out the "Friends of Tuva" website for information about their culture and ties to Richard Feynman, an American physicist.
What is this, Al-Jazzera radio?
This is GREAT! And what a set for the last 49 minutes:
12:16 pm - Javier Paxariño - Temurá
12:12 pm - Pearl Jam - Daughter
12:08 pm - Cake - You Turn the Screws
12:04 pm - Miles Davis - It Ain't Necessarily So
11:58 am - Philip Glass - Anthem Part 1
11:55 am - Ashley MacIsaac - Brenda Stubbert
11:50 am - Mark Knopfler - Don't You Get It
11:45 am - Tracy Chapman - Heaven's Here on Earth
11:42 am - Thievery Corporation - Doors Of Perception (Feat Gunjan)
11:39 am - Jimi Hendrix - Little Wing
11:37 am - Taj Mahal - Lovin' In My Baby's Eyes
11:31 am - Zwan - Friends as Lovers
11:27 am - Calexico - Minas de Cobre (live)
I LOVE RP.
Careful of the snake....
This rather EXCELLENT tune needs a belly dancer
snore....zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz....
At first I thought it was Dead Can Dance.
I like it!
Liked the beginning, but the pygmee ruined it for me.
Stopped me in my tracks... at least for a second listen... and "who is that?"
Possibly the coolest tune I've heard all day
Simultaneously earthy and spacey.
I was just walking out the door and had to turn around for a listen.
Very nice indeed!
Where's my hookah? I forget
smolan wrote:
Ups, here we are again. It's nice to hear this music after a decade. Does anyone know about his new works. Anyway, I have a different edition of Temurá - paper box without any leaflets.
Got a different edition as well, with the story of Temura - he did another CD 2 years ago (if I remember correctly) got it too, very nice as well, but does not have the magic of Temura - but that's me, someone else might think differently.
physicsgenius wrote:
The beginning was interesting, but I hardly remember that long ago so it's hard to appreciate the end.
They have medication now for ADHD...maybe that explains your poor taste in music?
Very cool tune...only on RP.
rah wrote:
the journey this song travels through is astonishing...
Totally, just about floated out of my body! Gotta get this!
Ups, here we are again. It's nice to hear this music after a decade. Does anyone know about his new works. Anyway, I have a different edition of Temurá - paper box without any leaflets.
VERY cool! I like, I like.
That's no flute...those are vocal harmonics...if people are talking about what I'm thinking...think this is some Tuvan throat singing in here...
That's a vocal style from an area around Nepal, I believe - quite wonderful and amazing!
more tabla!
rah wrote:
the journey this song travels through is astonishing...
Hey, you should see the post cards
ooooOooo exotic!!!
loving the strumming guitar, soft percussion, and woodwinds..esp wat sounds like a bamboo flute (anyone know wat instrument that is?)
jberko wrote:
For those of us who like percussion, this is pretty powerful.
It is very nice and different. Two thumbs up (and down)
For those of us who like percussion, this is pretty powerful.
:sunny.gif:
The beginning was interesting, but I hardly remember that long ago so it's hard to appreciate the end.
phew! that was intense!!
"MMMMMMMMMMMMMMM...........Tempura!............Aurghhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!" =P~
the journey this song travels through is astonishing...
Ãice tilde.
8)
What a wonderful trip..Amazing..Don't want to wake up... :-({|=
:sunny.gif:
Nice hand drumming.
I like it. Layers and layers of transcendent movement weaving in and through.
:headshake:
Here is a link for Javier Paxarino