Sanguay
Bum has performed on both the East and West Coast of the United
States and in India while in exile from his homeland in Amdo,
Tibet. You can see the faces of the people in his village, hear
the majesty of the mountains and open spaces, and feel the beauty
of Tibet in his voice. He sings of the simple everyday things
in life that we sometimes take for granted and rejoices in the
happiness they bring.
Suzanne
Teng - China Lily
Written by Suzanne Teng (Weishiu Music ASCAP)
Recorded on October 13, 1999 at First Presbyterian Church of
Encino
Suzanne Teng - Dizi (Chinese bamboo flute)
Gilbert Levy - percussion Suzanne
Teng is a flautist, dancer, percussionist, composer, teacher
and recording artist from Berkeley, California. Her world
music ensemble, Mystic Journey, creates and performs original
music blending the east with the west, the ancient and the
new, and the ethereal with the ecstatic. With a background
in Ethnomusicology from Boston University and UCLA she focuses
on the healing power of music.
Pasha
Ninateen - M'bira Song
Written by Sharon Berman, Anna Homler, and Stephanie Payne
Recorded on October 14, 1999 at the University Catholic Center,
UCLA
Anna Homler (voice, toys, found objects)
Stephanie Payne (mbira, keyboard, samples, melodica)
Sharon Berman (accordion, hurdy gurdy, tromba marina)
Pasha
Ninateen have been performing in North America and Europe
since the 1970's. The trio is composed of Anna Homler, internationally
renowned artist (music, spoken word, installation and intermedia
artist); Stephanie Payne, most notably recognized in LA for
her performance and recording work as "Dark Arts";
and Sharon Berman, visual anthropologist and ethnomusicologist,
focusing on religious folk arts and artists. They sing in
melodic invented languages that transcend words and cultures
using 'nonsense' syllables believed to hold magic and spiritual
powers. Their eclectic array of instruments includes both
ancient and modern.
Robert
Een - Buddha Boat
Written by Robert Een (Robert Een Music ASCAP)
Recorded on October 13, 1999 at Kol Tikvah Temple
Robert
Een, acclaimed composer, singer, and cellist, is a recipient
of a 1998 Bessie Award for music composition. Een has performed
his music throughout the world, including the Buddhist Caves
of Ellora, India, a Shinto shrine in Tsurugi, Japan, and the
Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York. "Buddha
Boat" is inspired by a story of the discovery of a Viking
ship. The ship carried among its possessions a small statue
of the Buddha. Robert humorously comments that perhaps the
Vikings had become Buddhist.
Ulali
- My People, My Land
Written by Pura Fe (Corn, Beans and Squash Music ASCAP)
Recorded on October 16, 1999 at the Warner Grand Theater
Ulali,
the Tuscarora word for "the song of the wood thrush"
is the name these three Native American women have chosen
for their a cappella ensemble, founded in 1987. Pura Fe (Tuscarora),
Soni Moreno Ciballero (Mayan, Apache, Yaqui), and Jennifer
Elizabeth Griesberg (Tuscarora) often perform using traditional
drums and rattles. In this song they use only their voices
to create music that captures the spirit of Native America
while evoking the hallowed harmonies of blues and gospel.
Lila
Downs - Semilla de Piedra Ntikin nuyuu
Written by Lila Downs (Nara Music, Inc. / Cloud People
Music BMI)
Courtesy of Narada World Records
Recorded on October 18, 1999 at the Harold M. Williams Auditorium,
The Getty Center
Lila Downs - voice
Celso Duarte - harp and violin
Armando Montiel - percussionist
Angel Chacon - guitar
Jose de Jesus Mendoza - bass
Paul Cohen - piano and saxophone
According
to the tradition of the Mixtec "cloud people", Lila
Downs' umbilical cord was buried under a maguey plant in the
mountains of Oaxaca, Mexico, ensuring that she would always
return there. Lila grew up in Minneapolis and in Tlaxiaco
in the Oaxacan mountains. Her interpretations of traditional
Mixtec and Zapotec songs, boleros, rancheras, and her own
compositions exhibit a vocal range and color inspired by her
ancestry.
Meredith
Monk - Gotham Lullabye
Written by Meredith Monk (Meredith Monk Music ASCAP)
Recorded on October 12, 1999 at the Harold M. Williams Auditorium,
The Getty Center
Meredith Monk - voice and piano
Meredith
Monk is a composer, singer, and creator of opera, musical
theater works, and films. She is a pioneer in what is now
called "extended vocal technique" and "interdisciplinary
performance". This song is inspired from lullabies her
mother sang. She has created more than one hundred works during
a career that spans some thirty years. She has been acclaimed
by audiences and critics as a major creative force in the
performing arts.
ADAAWE
- Aye Buur Yalla
Traditional song from Senegal (Adaptation by ADAAWE for
Calabash Music)
Recorded on October 14, 1999 at University Catholic Center,
UCLA
Adaawe
is six dynamic, and diverse women percussionists / vocalists.
They create music in the tradition of Ghana, West Africa,
where women gather in the moonlight to sing about life's joys
and sorrows. Adaawe's music unites the sounds of the African
Diaspora by weaving together original and traditional music
from America, Cuba, Ghana, Jamaica, Nigeria, Senegal, and
South Africa.
Jai
Uttal with Sheva - Om Namah Shivaya
Written by Jai Uttal (Pavana Suta Music BMI)
Recorded on October 16, 1999 at the John Anson Ford Amphitheater
Jai
Uttal is a pioneer in the world music community whose east-meets-west
sound has put his music at the forefront of the world beat
movement. His musical roots embrace a rich variety of cultures
and traditions that span the globe and the centuries. From
the hillbilly music of the Appalachian mountains to the passionate
strains of Bengali street singers, from the haunting rhythms
and melodies of ancient India to contemporary electric rock
sounds, Jai's music distills the essence of diverse musical
forms.
Sheva
is an Israeli group of seven individuals who create and perform
transformative world music from the ancient cultures of the
Middle East. The band is representative of the new wave in
Israel, in which Middle Eastern and Eastern musical traditions
are often combined with spiritual quests, meditation, chanting,
and an activist attitude toward peaceful resolution to conflicts.
The
Zurich Boys Choir - Herr, nun lasset Due Deiner in Frieden
farina
Written by Felix Mendelssohn
Recorded on October 16, 1999 at the Beverly Hills Presbyterian
Church
The
Zurich Boys' Choir, under the tutelage of founder and conductor
Alphons von Aarburg, is a non-professional 70-member choir
of boys aged six thru fourteen. They perform classical and
traditional Swiss music in the four languages of Switzerland
(German, French, Italian, Romanch). The choir has been performing
for more than 38 years.
Pacific
Winds (Bill Shozan Shultz, Nawang Khechog & Qi-Chao Liu)
- Song for Judy
Written by Bill Shozan Shultz, Nawang Khechog and Qi-Chao
Liu
Recorded on October 14, 1999 in the Main Sanctuary, Sinai
Temple
Qi-Chao Liu - Sheng (mouth organ), Bawu (bamboo flute)
Bill Shozan Schultz - Shakuhachi
Nawang Kechog - Tibetan flutes
Bill
Shozan Schultz moved to Japan in the spring of 1985 to study
Shakuhachi under the renowned Grandmaster Koyama Seizan sensei.
In February 1993, he received his Shihan certificate (Master)
from the Tozan School of Shakuhachi and was awarded the name
"Shozan".
Nawang
Kechog was born into a nomadic family in Eastern Tibet, on
a high mountain plateau, where trees cannot grow and wind
whispers through the grasslands. As an adult, having spent
more than thirty years in India as a Tibetan refugee, Nawang
now seeks strength and tranquillity in the Rocky Mountains
of Colorado and thru the expression of his music.
Qi-Chao
Liu is a composer, performer, scholar, teacher, and a founding
member of the Pacific Zheng Ensemble and of Chi Music. Born
in China, trained at the prestigious Shanghai Music Conservatory,
Mr. Liu has performed around the world in both traditional
and non-traditional settings.
Together
for the first time, these three musicians from different traditions
share the stage to create a tapestry of music dedicated to
Festival Chairwoman Judy Mitoma.
Perla
Batalla - Iberia
Written by: Perla Batalla and David Batteau (Music Pieces
BMI & David Batteau Music)
Recorded on October 12, 1999 at the Performing Arts Center,
Cal State Northridge
Perla Batalla - voice
David Batteau - guitar and vocals
Debra Dobkin - drums and vocals
Simeon Pillich - bass
Perla's
seemingly effortless ability to make her music live and breath
is no accident of birth. Born in Los Angeles, Perla's music
education began in her father's record store and continued
while touring and singing backup vocals with the legendary
Leonard Cohen. Cohen encouraged her to compose, arrange and
write lyrics. Perla's music is a continuation of her pilgrimage
retracing the composite of myths, colors and cultures known
as Mexico.
Elk
Whistle - Prayer for the Great Family
Written by Bill Neal (White Path Music ASCAP)
Recorded on October 13, 1999 Kol Tikvah Temple
Bill
Neal, also known as Elk Whistle, is a Native American flautist,
recording artist, storyteller, and teacher. Neal, of Cherokee
ancestry, plays the plain style cedar flutes of the Lakota,
Kiowa, and Comanche Nations, as well as the river cane flutes
of the Choctaw and Cherokee. He plays only the songs he hears
from within, drawing upon the sounds of nature.
Nawang
Khechog - Prayer for My Teacher
Written by Nawang Khechog
Recorded on October 14, 1999 at the Main Sanctuary, Sinai
Temple
Nawang Kechog - Tibetan Long Horn & Voice
Nawang
dedicates this prayer and song, which came to him in a dream,
to the memory of his deceased teacher.
"For
as long as space endures
For as long as living beings are there
May I remain until then and solve
the suffering of other beings
For as long as there is one sentient being
unliberated from (this) suffering world
Even if I may attain (a) pre-enlightened state
Still may I remain in this world to serve them."
Ahmad
El-Asmer - Call to Prayer
Traditional Islamic
Recorded on October 12, 1999 at Immanuel Presbyterian Church
Ahmad
El-Asmer, a much-admired Arab singer and percussionist, studied
from childhood with an established drummer in Jerusalem. He
continued his studies while working with musicians in Amman,
Jordan. El-Asmer then spent many years in Europe where he
performed at festivals, and with ensembles from the Near East
and North Africa. He is highly respected for his vocal talent
and mastery of the Arab song tradition.
June
Kuramoto - Rokudan
Written by: Kengyo Yatsuhashi in the 16th Century (adaptation
by June Kuramoto)
Courtesy of Windham Hill Records
Recorded on October 9, 1999 at Senshin Buddhist Temple
Born
in Japan and raised in the Crenshaw District of Los Angeles,
June epitomizes America's evolving art and music culture.
Under the tutelage of Madame Kazue Kudo, June is authorized
by the Miyagi School of Koto in Japan and has received all
of the classical degrees. She is one of the founding members
of the band Hiroshima and has continued to merge her classical
Koto roots with world music. She is recognized as one of the
foremost Koto players in the world.
Marlui
Miranda - Hedigo/Tchori Medley
Traditional Tupari Indian piece adapted and arranged by
Marlui Miranda
Recorded on October 12, 1999 at the Performing Arts Center,
Cal State Northridge
Marlui Miranda - voice
Rodolfo Stroeter - acoustic bass
Caito Marcondes - percussion
Ruria Duprat - piano & keyboards
Singer,
composer, and researcher, Marlui Miranda has studied the musical
traditions of the Brazilian Amazon Indians for two decades
and is widely recognized as the consummate performer of Amazon
indigenous music. She has interpreted and adapted traditional
chants and songs from many Brazilian Indian nations. In 1986
Marlui received funding from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial
Foundation for her project "The Recreation and Preservation
of the Brazilian Amazon Indigenous Music". She has helped
to author legislation in Brazil dedicated to protecting Indigenous
Intellectual rights.
Gwen
Wyatt Chorale - Ain't Got Time to Die
Written by Hall Johnson (G. Schirmer, Inc. ASCAP)
Recorded on October 15, 1999 at Wilshire United Methodist
Church
Gwen Wyatt Chorale with the Wilshire Cathedral Choir
John Black - soloist
The
Gwendolyn Wyatt Chorale sings African-American spirituals
in the time-honored traditional way as coached by conductor
and musicologist Dr. Jester Hairston. This a cappella style
is enhanced with choreographed movement to complete the music's
storytelling. Gwendolyn Wyatt, DMA has sung in environments
as diverse as the Projects of South Central Los Angeles and
on the Sea of Galilee.
Agape
International Choir featuring Niki Haris - Someone Needs a
Prayer
Written by Rickie Byars & Reverend Dr. Michael Beckwith
(Eternal Dance Music BMI)
Recorded on October 15, 1999 at the John Anson Ford Amphitheater
The
Agape Choir Ministry "comes together for the sole purpose
of revealing the Kingdom of God through the medium of music."
With the combined writing and composing talents of music director,
Rickie Byars, and founder/minister, Reverend Dr. Michael Beckwith,
the choir has evolved and grown in artistry and membership.
Over the past ten years, the Agape Choir has become known
for its signature sectional harmonies and devotional creative
expression.
Cantor
Eva Robbins - Rozzo d'Shabbos
Music by Cantor Pierre Pinchik (19th century)
Lyrics from the mystical text "Zohar"
Recorded on October 13, 1999 at Westwood United Methodist
Church
Cantor
Eva Robbins, the voice of Congregation N'Vay Shalom (Oasis
of Peace), is devoted to inspiring the love of Judaism and
spiritual growth through music. She believes that music not
only opens paths to wholeness but is a constructive course
for creating a stronger sense of community between all people.
Gamelan
Sekar Jaya - excerpt from "Penyambutan Selat Segara"
Traditional Balinese Arranged by I Wayan Rai S.
Recorded on October 9, 1999 at Schoenberg Hall, UCLA
Performers: (* guest artists)
Luh Estiti Andarawati, Scott Barnes, *I Dewa Putu Berata,
Avi Black,Kathy Bouvier, Marianne Cherry, Phil Cox, Kompiang
Metri Davies, *I Wayan Dibia, Sonja Downing, Carla Fabrizio,
Al Finn, Mary Francis, Sasah Friedlander, Lisa Gold, Barbara
Golden, Todd Greenspan, James Harding, Reiko Hasegawa, Jim
Hogan, Maddie Hogan, Lars Jensen, Andreas Johns, Steve Johnson,
Colum Keelaghan, Nick Lenzmeier, Debbie Lloyd, Edmundo Cruz
Luna, Paul Miller, Susanna Miller, Mudita Nisker, Rose Nisker,
Jeff Pumont, Made Putrayasa, *I Wayan Rai S., Mark Salvatore,
*I Gusti Ayu Srinatih, Emiko Saraswati Susilo, Ken Jaya Susilo,
*I Wayan Suweca, Wayne Vitale, Richard Wallis, Samuel Wantman,
Zac Weiner, *I Nyoman Wenten, Sarah Willner, *I Nyomar Windha,
*Ni Made Wiratini, Ken Worthy, Rotrease Yates, Caren Zilber
Gamelan
Sekar Jaya is a nonprofit performing arts organization composed
of San Francisco Bay Area artists dedicated to the study and
performance of Balinese music and dance. Since the group's
inception in 1979, Sekar Jaya has invited many of Bali's finest
performing artists to join the group for residencies as Guest
Artistic Directors. The ensemble has toured extensively around
the world, and sponsored the creation of more than fifty new
music and dance works by Balinese and American artists.
Ali
Jihad Racy Ensemble - Spirit of Festivities
Written by Ali Jihad Racy (Racy Notes ASCAP)
Recorded on October 12, 1999 at Immanuel Presbyterian Church
Ali Jihad Racy - nay, salamiyyah, buzuq, mijwiz
Khaled Khalifa - cello
Ahmad El-Asmer - voice
Souhail Kaspar - tar, tablah, darbukkah, riqq
Nasser Musa - 'ud
Ali
Jihad Racy, virtuoso performer, composer, and scholar of Middle
Eastern music is a Professor of Ethnomusicology at UCLA. Dr.
Racy has authored numerous publications on Middle Eastern
music. In addition to his virtuosity on the nay and 'ud, he
is a master of the buzuq, long-necked fretted lute, the mizmar
double reed, the rabbab spiked fiddle, and the mijwij double
pipe. He is joined in this performance with an equally distinguished
ensemble of musicians.
Lakshmi
Shankar - Song of Devotion to Krishna
16th Century Traditional by Meera Bai
Recorded on October 12, 1999 at Immanuel Presbyterian Church
Lakshmi Shankar - voice
Samar Das - tabla
Rajendra Vaishampayan - harmonium
Lakshmi
Shankar is one of India's most renowned vocalists. Her unique
background encompasses both Karnatak and Hindusthani traditions.
After performing as a Bharata Natyam dance soloist under the
tutelage of guru Kandappa, she received vocal training from
Ustad Abdul Rehman Khan of the Patiala Gharana. She continued
studies with musicologist and singer B.R. Deodhar and Pandit
Ravi Shankar.
Danse
Celeste - excerpt from "Buong Suong"
Traditional Cambodian classical dance piece (arranged
by Danse Celeste)
Recorded on October 9, 1999 at Schoenberg Hall, UCLA
Under
the artistic direction of Sophieline Cheam Shapiro, Danse
Celeste preserves the exquisite Majesty and refinement of
Classical Cambodian dance & music that was almost lost
forever in 'the killing fields'. The Buong Suong melody is
performed at the climax of an ancient Cambodian ritual. The
musicians and dancers seek mystical unity through poetic songs,
pin peat music, stylistic dance movement, and offerings. By
uniting with the heavens, the musicians also unite with absolute
beauty, bringing rain and fertility to the rice fields.
Nobuko
- To All Relations
Written by: Nobuko Miyamoto (Ayyubi Music ASCAP)
Recorded on October 17, 1999 John Anson Ford Amphitheater
Nobuko
Miyamoto, singer, songwriter, and dancer began writing music
twenty-five years ago. She created the first album of Asian
American music in collaboration with Chris Iijima and Charlie
Chin. "A Grain of Sand" is now part of the Smithsonian
Institution Collection. Since 1987, she has been the artistic
director of Great Leap, Inc, a non-profit arts organization
dedicated to using the arts to promote a deeper understanding
between the diverse cultures of America.
Andrae
Crouch & the Valley Gospel Choir - Total Praise
Written by: Richard Lee Smallwood
Published by: T Autumn Music (BMI), Zomba Songs Inc.(BMI)
Recorded on October 14, 1999 at Temple Israel of Hollywood
Andrae
Crouch, Grammy-winning vocalist, songwriter, producer, and
performer, is without question one of the most vital and influential
artists in contemporary music today. His artistry has touched,
and changed, millions of lives around the world. His songs
transcend color, class and creed with a vibrant message of
hope, faith, and joyous celebration. With his music Andrae
Crouch testifies to the enduring power of faith through times
of trial, tribulation, and life-changing choices.
Produced
by Derek Nakamoto for Bindu Records
Executive Producer: Judy Mitoma
Project Coordinators: Jeanette Volturno and Trey Wilkins for
CatchLight Films
Music Clearance & Licensing: David G. Powell for The Music
Bridge
Music Consultant: George Nauful
Mixed
by Craig Burbidge
Mixed at Bindu Studios Santa Monica, CA
Mastered by Steve Hall at Future Disc Systems Studio City,
CA
Graphic Design & Layout by Christian White
Additional artwork by Marika van Adelsberg
Liner Notes Edited by Joe Goodman
Live
Recording Engineers:
Craig Burbidge (Head Recording Engineer), Ron Corbet &
Jim Cyfero,
Keith Endo, Mark Sharkajian, Jim Aparicio, Tony Beecher, Ryan
Freeland, Chris Hawpe, David Koenig.
Special
Thanks:
Walter Morita & TDK, Craig Huxley & Audio Affects,
Doug Bernhardt & BASF/EMTEC
Michel Colombier, Design EFX's, Ron Corbet & Master Control,
Ray Shields & Black Dot Management
Foundation for World Arts
© 2000 Interdependent Productions
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