Inde Centrale - Traditions musicales des Gond 1990
01. Danse de la pluie
02. Danse des cornes de bison
03. Cérémonie de chasse
04. Retour des chasseurs
05. L’escorte de la mariée
06. Les conseils de la mariée
07. Affection
08. Mari Rosana
09. Conseils pour la vie conjugale
10. Fleurs pour Sarie
11. Ghor Saheb
12. Chant de récolte
13. Chanson comique
14. Des poissons à vendre
15. Improvisation relo
16. Danse instrumentale
17. Musique de fête instrumentale
18. Ode au Bastar
19. Pani mali gala jai
20. Jhaliana, jhalipora
21. Ye jolire
India is the homeland for more than 40 million "tribals" -- aboriginals or indigenous peoples -- whose ancestors lived there before the Aryans arrived in approximately 1500 B.C. Many of these people live in the more inhospitable forests and mountain regions, or work as hunters or farmers; some have become "outcast" Hindus. There are about four or five million Gond who speak an unwritten Dravidian language, and this recording is primarily of the Gond who live in Bastar, the southernmost district of Madhya Pradesh. Many of their villages show characteristics of megalithic civilization, with menhir grave monuments and enormous stone slabs that serve as roofs and fences. There is a wide variety of songs presented here: a drumming "Rain Dance"; the fascinating "L'Escorte de la Mariée" ("Bridal Escort") for antiphonal chorus of friends and family wishing her farewell as she makes a strange noise like weeping; the joyous "Pani Mali Gala Jai" ("The Rainshowers Pour Down"); and a heartfelt "Ode to Bastar" sung in elegant Halbi by a famous poet met on a deserted mountain road on the hottest day of the year. ~ "Blue" Gene Tyranny
https://rapidshare.com/files/67247086/IC-TmdG.part1.rar
https://rapidshare.com/files/67256036/IC-TmdG.part2.rar