Saturday, March 23, 2013

Music, Meditation, and Weather

Weather and music seem to be intimately connected at times. That makes sense when you think about it: the first music people ever heard was the rush of the wind, the fall of rain, the crunch of snow. As winter and spring are negotiating the weather in my neck of the woods just now. it has me thinking about music, weather, and contemplation.

R. Carlos Nakai plays Native American flutes; Will Clipman plays all manner of percussion, including Frame drums, claves, Tibetan bowls, bodhrans, all sorts of other things. For Awakening The Fire they’ve paired up the fluid melodies of flutes with striking, beating and chiming notes of percussion in a dialogue which leads them through ten tracks of original music. By turns fast paced and reflective, pieces including Kindling the Essence, First Morning, and Portal evoke the landscapes of the southwestern United States, landscapes which often suggest mediation themselves with the fall of light and shadow.

The landscapes of the Highlands of Scotland have a different character altogether. They inspire and evoke reflections as well, though, through their wooded glens, dramatic coastlines and rugged crags, all with falls of northern light with characters all of their own as well. For Celtic Airs and Reflective Melodies Ian Green of Greentrax Recordings has chosen eighteen slow airs and reflective tunes from across the Greentrax catalogue, a creative companion and a doorway to meditation that speaks without words. Harp, fiddle, and pipes are the primary instruments as artists including Fiddlers’ Bid, Ceolbeg, and Tony McManus lead the way through tunes including Cairn Water, Ye Banks and Ye Braes, and Wendel’s Wedding.

you may also wish to see
Hanneke Cassel: For Reasons Unseen

-->If you'd like to support my creative work,
here is a way to do that, through PayPal. Note that you do not have to have a PayPal account to do this.Thank you.

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Bookmark and Share
posted by Kerry Dexter at 1 Comments

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Road trip music: American west

western snowfall copyright kerry dexter
The Great American Road trip winds its way from the southwestern desert of Arizona, up through the Front Range and the Wasatch, through Colorado. Utah, and Wyoming, from the turn of autumn into the depth of winter. For listening, folk, country rock, songs of the west, and a cowboy Christmas.


Linda Ronstadt is an icon of pop music, whose work as spanned rock, country, Spanish, and big band music, just to mention a few of the musical avenues she’s explored. She is an Arizona native. To begin our western soundtrack, there’s Hand Sown Home Grown / Silk Purse, a CD reissue of two of her early albums. Check out He Dark the Sun and Life Is Like a Mountain Railway to hear how singing should be done. That's something Ronstadt was still a master at decades later when she returned to her hometown to record an album with long time friend Emmylou Harris. It is called Western Wall: The Tucson Sessions.

R. Carlos Nakai has collaborated with classical musicians, artists from Japan, and created all manner of other works. He too is from Arizona, and is a master of the Native American flute. A good place to hear his work is on the album In Beauty, We Return.

Gretchen Peters and Judy Collins both spent years that were important to their music in Colorado. Collins wrote a song called Mountain Girl that really gets that transition between mountain and city. A gifted songwriter in her own right, Peters recently looked at her western connections through the work of other writers on the album One to the Heart, One to the Head.

It is turning toward winter. In the coming weeks the focus here along the music road is on seasonal reflections and connections. Connecting the road trip with that, and with songs of the western states, take a listen to Michael Martin Murphey’s Cowboy Christmas, which comprises songs lively and reflective, in a thoroughly western take on the season.


you may also wish to see
Music Road: holiday gift list: American harvest
Music Road: music for Thanksgiving
Music Road: Ian Tyson: Yellowhead to Yellowstone
more music from the road trip

This is part of The Great American Road Trip, in which I’m partnering up with A Traveler’s Library to add musical ideas to the book and film suggestions for journeys through the regions of the United States which you’ll find there. Stop by and see what the Library has in mind to inspire travels through the west.
For more about the road trip (and a look at some great road songs) see Great American Road Trip: Music begins


do you work in the arts or education and need to present your ideas professionally? I can help.

UpTake Travel Gem

-->Your support for Music Road is welcome and needed. If you are able to chip in, here is a way to do that, through PayPal. Note that you do not have to have a PayPal account to do this. Thank you.

or perhaps you would rather help this way...

You can also Buy Me a Coffee at ko-fi.com

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Bookmark and Share
posted by Kerry Dexter at 1 Comments

Tuesday, November 04, 2008

R Carlos Nakai: Talisman

R Carlos Nakai
Talisman



RC Nakai’s latest recording begins with music that’s like a quiet walk into evening darkness, and continues with wonder and the stars, the many version of night, and then through early morning hours through sunrise. Speaking as I just was in the post about Billy McComiskey about music that could last through the turn of seasons, this also could be a quiet soundtrack of preparation for the work of winter.

Nakai, who is of Navajo and Ute heritage, plays traditional Native cedar flutes here. It is to the spare sound of solo and duo flute her returns, in the midst of a career long exploration of the possibilities of Native music on the cedar flute, and exploration which has seen him found an ethnic jazz quartet, play with many symphony orchestras, collaborate with a Japanese ensemble, and work with many other artists as well as create adventurous music of his own. He has earned two gold records - the only Native American recording so far to do so -- and has received eight Grammy nominations. And is is to simplicity that he returns.

yuo may also want to see

Music Road: looking toward Christmas: Bill Miller

Music Road: season of change: music for autumn 2008

Music Road: now playing: cathie ryan: the farthest wave

-->Your support for Music Road is welcome and needed. If you are able to chip in, here is a way to do that, through PayPal. Note that you do not have to have a PayPal account to do this. Thank you.

Labels: , , , , , ,

Bookmark and Share
posted by Kerry Dexter at 0 Comments