| | Authentic Native American Music CD
Each CD in this box set is also available separately on Delta. Authentic Native American Music Music Authentic Native American Music Review
GuidelinesRemember to focus your comments on Authentic Native American Music CD. Check our review guidelines for specific details regarding customer review policy. To submit your review, please fill out the above form and click "Submit Review." A staff member will then verify your review meets our guidelines. Upon approval, your review will be published within a few days. Please do not use this form to comment on web site errors or for order related questions. If you have concerns of this nature, please contact customer service by filling out this form.
Purchase Authentic Native American Music CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Armik Gypsy Flame CD (1995)
Authentic Native American Music album
$12.29
| | Best Of The Guess Who CD (1977) Bonus Tracks
Authentic Native American Music CD music
$6.79
| | Ireland's Greatest Hits CD (1996)
Authentic Native American Music music CDs
$6.75
| | Italian Hits La Piu Bella Musica Italian Hits: La Piu Bella Musica CD (2007) (Import)
Authentic Native American Music songs
$12.65
|  | | Also Bought |
| Jose Maceda Ugnayan / José Maceda CD (2009)
$12.78 | | Celtic Thunder The Show CD (2008)
Authentic Native American Music album
$13.65
| | Up Steady Splash CD (2005) (Import) Japan
$22.35 | | Fun-Kids Meine Lieblingslieder V.3 CD (2005) (Import)
Authentic Native American Music CD music
$8.29
| | Klik Whispers & Lies CD (2006)
Authentic Native American Music music CDs
$16.45 St. Petersburg, FL 2001- a party, an attitude, a magnetic force... Truth be told, one repelled and the other attracted. Thats the big bang of KLIK! read here for more history... http://www.sptimes.com/2004/09/16/Weekend/Two_of_a_kind__almost.shtml ...
| | Deen Diamonds CD (2006) (Import)
$51.25 | | Ed Kuepper King In The Kindness Room CD (2008) (Import) Import
Authentic Native American Music songs
$26.29
| | Igneous Flame Astra CD (2006) (Import)
Authentic Native American Music album
$18.55
| | Dream Brothers Full Of Life Now- Love Songs Of Walt Whitman CD (2008)
Authentic Native American Music CD music
$16.45 THE DREAM BROTHERS: Full Of Life Now- Love Songs Of Walt Whitman is a collection of songs using the poetry of Walt Whitman and written by The Dream Brothers, Gary Glickman and Stephan David Hewitt. Also included in this CD is a setting of W.B. Yeats’ Innisfree and two of the Dream Brothers\' original songs. Inspired by the beauty and power of Whitman’s bold poetry, written mostly in the 1850’s, these poems are as relevant today as they were in the time Whitman was writing: a country torn apart at the seams by war, economic hardship, and yet a longing to express the deep soulful yearnings of human existence.Stephan and Gary are both classically trained musicians and composers, with degrees in music, and were led by a series of synchronistic events to write music to Whitman’s lyrics. Stephan’s training has also included the world of early electronic music (see his album Inroads by Stephan David, also available on CDBaby) while Gary has written several operas and is a voice teacher. Both are writers and counselors as well. Their idea was to make the words of Whitman come alive again, so that people would be able to hear the emotional quality of the longing and celebration of life and passion that Whitman so beautifully wrote about around the time the U.S. was falling into Civil War. Walt Whitman was born on Long Island, N.Y. in 1818, in an age of candles, quill pens, and American enslavement of Africans. John Adams and Thomas Jefferson were both alive and active. In 1855, at age 36, Whitman self-published his initial volume of Leaves of Grass, and in 1860, a year before the start of the Civil War, published his third edition, “Calamus,” from which most of these songs have sprung. By war’s end, 1865, Whitman’s Leaves of Grass was world famous, but in America the poems themselves—full of references to sex, naked bodies, and physical love between men—were often dismissed as obscene and obnoxious. He lost his government job when his manuscript was discovered by his boss. Near the end of his life, Whitman saw the disaster that a materialist America was leading itself to. In 1888 he declared: “every man is trying to outdo every other man—giving up modesty, giving up honesty, giving up generosity, to do it: creating a war, every man against every man: the whole wretched ...
|
|
|
|
 |
|

|