Browse Titles - 130 results
Sourwood Mountain
Kurdish Folk Music from Western Iran
Courte Danse and Shoefly
Morasha: Traditional Jewish Musical Heritage
Biblical chanting, prayers, holy and profane songs, tunes for the Sabbath, feasts and Holy Daysthese largely vocal "authentic songs" were collected by Dr. Amnon Shiloah from highly accomplished, non-professional musicians. "Morasha" means "heritage."
Biblical chanting, prayers, holy and profane songs, tunes for the Sabbath, feasts and Holy Daysthese largely vocal "authentic songs" were collected by Dr. Amnon Shiloah from highly accomplished, non-professional musicians. "Morasha" means "heritage."
Music for the Harpsichord and Virginal
Recorded in 1961, Stewart Robb’s collection of early to mid seventeenth-century keyboard music comes from the British Isles and continental Europe. He performs on two instruments: one, the commonly-heard harpsichord, and the other the virginal, a word often used to describe plucked keyboard instrument of the 16...
Recorded in 1961, Stewart Robb’s collection of early to mid seventeenth-century keyboard music comes from the British Isles and continental Europe. He performs on two instruments: one, the commonly-heard harpsichord, and the other the virginal, a word often used to describe plucked keyboard instrument of the 16th and 17th centuries. The selections include both sacred and secular works.
Music from an Equatorial Microcosm: Fang Bwiti Music from Gabon Republic, Africa, with Mbiri Selections
Music from Petuake of Northern Rhodesia, Vol. 2
A continuation of Music from Petuake of Northern Rhodesia, Vol. 1 (FW04201),this sampling of music of the Nsenga people of Petauke, in what is now called Zambia, was collected and annotated by renowned ethnomusicologist John Blacking and anthropologist Raymond Thorpe.
A continuation of Music from Petuake of Northern Rhodesia, Vol. 1 (FW04201),this sampling of music of the Nsenga people of Petauke, in what is now called Zambia, was collected and annotated by renowned ethnomusicologist John Blacking and anthropologist Raymond Thorpe.