Lhamo, Yungchen / Ama
Album: | Ama | Collection: | World | |
Artist: | Lhamo, Yungchen | Added: | Apr 2006 | |
Label: | Realworld Records |
A-File Activity
Add Date: | 2007-03-04 | Pull Date: | 2007-05-06 | Charts: | Reggae/World |
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Week Ending: | Apr 22 | Mar 25 | Mar 18 |
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Airplays: | 1 | 1 | 1 |
Recent Airplay
1. | Jan 15, 2011: | Music Casserole
Fade Away |
4. | Mar 21, 2007: | Eran Althoff Mukamel (KMFEBM)
Fade Away |
|
2. | May 08, 2010: | Music Casserole
9/11 |
5. | Mar 16, 2007: | No Cover, No Minimum
Nyebe Nilam |
|
3. | Apr 17, 2007: | 3:00 AM till 6:00 AM
Tara |
Album Review
Red West
Reviewed 2007-02-27
Reviewed 2007-02-27
Pretty cool recordings of Tibetan singer with an amalgam of world-class instrumentalists (though Annie Lenox on track 9 threw me!). Soulful and exotic, sultry and lingering. This is for the really cool coffehouses. All tracks good!
1. Starts minimal with voce and "danyen"- asian string instrument? Then fills in with bass and tribal percussion, viola, more voices, etc. Good intro.
2.Pastoral, early morning music. Lingers on the vowels. gentle guitar
3.Starts with a Xena-like vocal trill, then sings a catchy mantra.Scary Tibetan chanting/horns in the middle, then fast bollywood-style!
4.mid-slow, lots of "thank yous"... decent, more japanese sounding, but one of my less favorites
5.starts quiet with only voices chanting in a round, then a clear voice on top, slightly sad. bamboo flute & a bell gently respond, mostly acapella, some cello at end. Restrained.
6.Clear acapella intro, then accompaniment reminiscent of later Dead Can Dance. Mood is like cooly describing a tragedy.
7.Folk-like sing-song quality, a little playful. tabla(?) & bamboo flute, etc
8.Entirely a-capalla, lots of long syllables, wistful
9.Mid-slow, powerful. Instrumental intro reminds me a bit of something Bill Laswell would do. Guest vocals halfway through a welcome surprise (and the first English on the disc!)
10.Happy simple and simply-produced song. Gentle and uplifting
1. Starts minimal with voce and "danyen"- asian string instrument? Then fills in with bass and tribal percussion, viola, more voices, etc. Good intro.
2.Pastoral, early morning music. Lingers on the vowels. gentle guitar
3.Starts with a Xena-like vocal trill, then sings a catchy mantra.Scary Tibetan chanting/horns in the middle, then fast bollywood-style!
4.mid-slow, lots of "thank yous"... decent, more japanese sounding, but one of my less favorites
5.starts quiet with only voices chanting in a round, then a clear voice on top, slightly sad. bamboo flute & a bell gently respond, mostly acapella, some cello at end. Restrained.
6.Clear acapella intro, then accompaniment reminiscent of later Dead Can Dance. Mood is like cooly describing a tragedy.
7.Folk-like sing-song quality, a little playful. tabla(?) & bamboo flute, etc
8.Entirely a-capalla, lots of long syllables, wistful
9.Mid-slow, powerful. Instrumental intro reminds me a bit of something Bill Laswell would do. Guest vocals halfway through a welcome surprise (and the first English on the disc!)
10.Happy simple and simply-produced song. Gentle and uplifting
Track Listing
1. | Ranzen | 6. | Look Down On Us | |||
2. | Gebu Shere | 7. | Nyebe Nilam | |||
3. | Om Mani Padme Hung | 8. | Someday | |||
4. | Tara | 9. | Fade Away | |||
5. | 9/11 | 10. | Lhasa |