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This is an
interesting mix of electronic dance music fused with various
traditional song forms from Tibet (with a bit from Nepal and
Thailand, as well). Waterbone is actually a pair of American
artists, Kendall Jones and Jimmy Waldo, who simply composed
bits and pieces of song motifs before traveling to the
Himalayas to record the bulk of the album's material. A few of
the pieces are pre-composed works for synthesizers, drum
machines, and flutes, but the majority is a synthesis of
synthesizer and drum loops with recordings of the native
musicians. While the performers from the various schools,
temples, and street corners are all enjoyable, the excitement
here comes from the fusion between the old vocal and modern
technological music forms. The vocalists range from young
female singers of Bangkok to ancient monks of Katmandu. The
seamless transitions from one to another and the delicate
fusion with electronica make the album worth hearing. Mixing
Asian vocals with electronica is hardly anything new
(especially since the success of Enigma's "Return to
Innocence"), with notable albums in the vein coming from
any number of Asian dub groups, Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, and a
lump of single singers enhancing their own abilities from
throughout the continent. Any of these can compete with this
Waterbone album, and, musically, many might outdo it, as Tibet
stays relatively conventional in its ways as far as
electronica goes. Give it a listen as a solid album, but look
elsewhere for the groundbreaking sounds.
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