Where Young Grass Grows

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Where Young Grass Grows album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 44:57

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The Connected Heart

NundaSunna

If you ever wanted to find a place to sit and listen to a bunch of guys performing Tuvan music in an afternoon breeze, this album as rousing as it is does that. With its traditional vocal intonations coupled with the solitide evoked in the heart by singular stringed instruments you are carried into the natural world and more importantly perhaps, to the earliest times of our ancient traveling ancestors. For all peoples have a nomadic past. You can picture this sound traveling and transversing the ions over the plains, steppes and desserts of the earth. I refer to this as the connected heart of humankind. This album and much of this genre of music takes us there and reminds us of how we are all related.

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Low bitrates

Ghandi_2

Good music, but these are the bitrates for the tracks: 125 166 129 139 133 147 161 134 136 161 143 130 174 152 168

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They Say All Music Guide

The members of Huun-Huur-Tu continue to amaze with their acrobatic throat singing and the eerie, haunted overtones it produces. While this continues to be their trademark sound, it’s easy to overlook the fact that they’re also excellent instrumentalists and composers who have moved well beyond the traditional music of the region to create their own songs — not all of which involve throat singing. At the core of it, as with all Tuvan music, is the irresistible rhythm of the hoof beat, since the culture of the horse is so greatly ingrained in the national psyche, where horses are currency, transportation — everything. On this album they forge a Scottish connection through the addition of harpist Mary MacMaster and young and adventurous piper Martyn Bennett; the combination of musics might initially seem unlikely, but it works. Bennett is especially fine, skillfully integrating his small pipes into tracks like “Ezir-Kara” and making them sound as exotic and unearthly as the igil. The brief live recordings of bandmembers throat singing while on horseback on the steppes are the essence of Huun-Huur-Tu, however, doing what their people have done for centuries; they capture the sound of history, while the new material brings it into the present. – Chris Nickson

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