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Paul Halley
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1999 Grammy Award Winner | Best New Age Album
A contemporary celebration of the summer solstice. This music, both original and traditional, emerged from the 'Celtic Solstice' events held in the Cathedral of St. John the Divine during two summer solstice celebrations. Featuring Paul Winter and Friends.
1994 Grammy Award Winner | Best New Age Album
Celebrating the Northern Rockies with Paul Winter and his new Earth Band accompanied by the voices of twenty-seven mammals and birds and Native American singing and drumming by Arlie Neskahi and the White Eagles Singers.
Eighteen guest artists and some remarkable voices from the wild join the Consort in a celebration for the twentieth anniversary of Earth Day. New compositions in tribute to the seven continents and the oceans interweave the sounds of African elephant, Amazonian "musical wren," Australian lyre-bird, orca, and endangered spotted-owl in a far-reaching musical journey.
Eugene Friesen and Paul Halley blaze a new path for their instruments in this landmark album of spontaneous compositions recorded in the warm and radiant acoustics of New York's Cathedral of St. John the Divine. Says producer Paul Winter: "Thanks to Eugene Friesen, one of the most sexy and soulful instruments in the world has been liberated."
This milestone collaboration, recorded in Moscow and New York in 1987, was the first album of original music created by Americans and Russians together. The Paul Winter Consort's western harmonies and Afro-Brazilian rhythms floating over the ancient circle songs and village chants revitalized by the dynamic Dmitri Pokrovsky Singers make this into an energetic, reverberating layering of sound.
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