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digeridoo, an instrument used by the Aborigines in Ausatralia......I don't know shit about it to be honest, but it is fairly cool to listen to, as all of her submittals have been.......I'm going to give ya a handful of information on this instrument/music, but of course I say thanks to Angie, just coz I love her, and I love her contributions here.......The Monks, the Singing Bowls, the native American stuff........all great for opening up the mind and the soul.......here is more, PLEASE let me know what you think of Madame Angela's stuff, after all, she IS the future "Mrs BigScott62"........
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The didgeridoo is a musical instrument that comes from the North Eastern parts of Australia. It is most often made from a hollow eucalyptus log, with no side holes. Didgeridoo is a western, onomatopoeic word name for what is known by many names in aboriginal languages (of which there are many), such as yidaki or thambaljig.
Some Aboriginal folks say that every yidaki has a spirit inside, which wakes up whenSOMEONE
who ‘lives on the land and breathes the air’ breathes into the dij in the right way, resulting in the characteristic drone sound.
Yidakis have beenPLAYED
by Aboriginal men for at least 2000 years. Some would have it that the yidaki has been played for 40,000 years, yet this suggestion has not been proven by scholars. Nonetheless yidakis have been very much part of social and ritual gatherings in aboriginal society for hundreds of years. Didgeridoos are ‘men’s business’ and so have not been traditionally played by women, though things are changing and some aboriginal societies are not so strict about this now.
Non-sustainable Didgeridoo production
Since the mid 1990’s dijes have become the ‘must have’ souvenir to bring back from Australia, being symbolic of Aboriginal Culture. Traditional Australian aboriginal culture is inherently part of the natural systems of the land, and in itsWAY
Dreamtime Myths and Sustainability
The Dreamtime is the Aboriginal understanding of the world, of its creation, and it's great stories. The Dreamtime is the beginning of knowledge, from which came the laws of existence. For survival these laws must be observed. The Dreamtime is the time before time when things came to be and it is also right now. Dreamtime MythsWORK ON
many different levels, sometimes within the same story, giving the listeners a physical and moral/spiritual landscape to exist within. Yidakis have been around long enough for yidaki creation myths to be told. One dreamtime story tells us that when the first hollow log was played as a yidaki, the termites that were hollowing out the log were blown up into the night sky and became the milky-way.
So how does this story relate to sustainability and what can we learn from it?
The Dreamtime is the Aboriginal understanding of the world, of its creation, and it's great stories. The Dreamtime is the beginning of knowledge, from which came the laws of existence. For survival these laws must be observed. The Dreamtime is the time before time when things came to be and it is also right now. Dreamtime MythsWORK ON
So how does this story relate to sustainability and what can we learn from it?
Well, for a start, stories such as this one impart a sense of wonder and awe at features of the natural world. Anyone who finds the world wonderful and awesome, in an innocent or intellectual way (or both!), is more likely to want to live in a way that is sensitive to ecological systems. We alsoLEARN
that termites are the creatures that hollow out the logs. Termites are of crucial importance in the natural systems they are ‘meant’ to live in. One of their jobs is toCONVERT
plant matter into nutrients that go back into the soil directly, via the compost heaps they grow their food on, or indirectly through food webs. Termites are tasty! The termites show us that even small, seemingly insignificant creatures are of equal importance to all others in the web of life – a vital perspective to have in the vision of sustainability.
The characters within aboriginal myths are often creator spirits. These spirits are everywhere and in everything, though now not necessarily in the same form they were way back then, in the time before time, when the stories were first told and the events occurred. Many of the characters in the Dreamtime stories are seen as our ancestors and if not our direct ancestors then certainly our relations. We see that allKINDS
of natural phenomena have come about through the actions of creator spirits. The Dreamtime is still going on now, and so we also learn that we humans are changing the world around us through our actions, in all kinds of ways, often unforeseen at the time. The stories show us that one of the only unchanging laws is that everything changes! They also instil a connection with the landscape that is so personal, so intrinsic, that traditional aboriginal societies see themselves as part of natural systems, part of the landscape, part of the ongoing mythical landscape in the same way that a rock formation, billabong, kangaroo or honey ant would be.
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The story of Tidalik the frog, who drinks all the water on earth and wont share it, shows us that greed affects all creatures, all our relations and that laughter is the solution to many of our problems! Human greed, seemingly unquenchable thirst for resources is causing an unprecedented shift in the balance of nature, with the resulting catastrophic loss of biodiversity. What people may need, more than things, is fellowship and laughter and light heartedness to achieve a balance more in balance with rest of nature. It also points to the future, where precious resources may be fought over as they become scarce. We are already seeing this with oil, andPRICES
are rising steadily. The practice didges I use are made of plastic that is made by the petrochemical industry.
Contemporary didgePRODUCTION
Didgeridoos are now made from all kinds of materials: pottery,GLASS
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01 Dawn, With an Elder/02 Tribal Techno/03 An Elder Speaks part 1/04 Faces of Culture/05 Cave Dance/06 Mali Mali Dusk Chant/07 Echoes of Kakadu/08 To Arnhem Land/09 An Elder Speaks part II/10 Into the Dreaming/11 Turning Sky/12 Spiritual Wind/13 An Elder Speaks/14 Two Seeds/15 Laughing Kookaburra/16 Mind Awakening/17 In the Outback/18 Corroboree/19 Bush Tucker Song/20 Closing Thoughts
This is really cool stuff like all of Angie's submittals, great for meditation, relaxation, and just pulling oneself together......Angie's taste in music is her uniquely own, and she is a wonderful woman, whom I love. She literally saved my life, and I truly do love her, and I thank her publicly (here) for all she has done for me in the past few months.
http://www59.zippyshare.com/v/ACq79yI6/file.html
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