ROGC: Under a Dim Crescent Moon – Vol. 1

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ROGC: “Under a Dim Crescent Moon” – part 1

live-mixed webcast of field recordings: January 15th, 2006

PLAYLIST & INFO PAGE HERE!

this is # 1 of a 2-show series (part 2 is located HERE)

For most of 2003, I lived in the northwestern-most region of China…

officially known as:Xinjiang : Uyghur Autonomous Region

and sometimes referred to by some as China’s “other, lesser known Tibet” for situational parallels.

I’d recieved a generous grant to document the folk music (as opposed to the classical muqam music) of the Turkic muslim cultures traditionally native to the region… focusing mainly on the largest group: the Uyghurs , but also including examples of Kazakh and Kyrgyz songs.

For this show, I live-mixed many of those field recordings, which while mostly consist of music, also include ambiences, pop & traditional music on cassettes & cd’s I picked up…and recordings of shortwave radio.

The field recorded music you hear was, with only a few exceptions, strictly performed by common folk (farmers, carpenters, (incl. mystics and beggars)) demonstrating something that’s very much a cultural part of everyday life. With east China’s ever accellerating blitzkrieg development of it’s west though, these cultural traditions are going up in smoke fast.

The recordings were done with head-worn binaural microphones – in yurts, homes, under grape trellises, in mud brick courtyards, orchards and in the streets of oasis towns in areas surrounding the expansive Taklamakan desert

**photos of these recordings and more can be found HERE. / ** more info on Uyghur music can be found HERE.

-Fausto Caceres (s of s&S)

PLAYLIST & INFO PAGE HERE!

running time: 2 hours

[podcast]http://www.archive.org/download/ROGC_UnderADimCrescentMoon/SS_Jan15_2006_ROGC_DimCrescent_entoto.mp3[/podcast]

1 Comment

  1. Pigeon Whistles – Scan or Be Scanned said,

    December 14, 2018 at 2:41 am

    […] China in 2003. The second track down on this playlist features the sound of pigeon whistles. This collection of folk music and ambient sounds from Xinjiang feels particularly valuable right now at a time […]

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