Chöying Drolma & Steve Tibbetts

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Padmakara 00:00 Tools
Gayatri 00:00 Tools
Palden Rangjung 00:00 Tools
Mandala Offering 00:00 Tools
Song Of Realization 00:00 Tools
Vakritunda 00:00 Tools
Chenrezi 00:00 Tools
Kyamdro Semkye 00:00 Tools
Yumchen Tukar 00:00 Tools
Chendren 00:00 Tools
Je Lama 00:00 Tools
Ngakso 00:00 Tools
Shengshik Pema Jungney 00:00 Tools
Kyema Mimin 00:00 Tools
Kangyi Tengi 00:00 Tools
Om Pana Phem 00:00 Tools
Kyabdro Semkye 00:00 Tools
Chö Chendren 00:00 Tools
Nubchok Dechen 00:00 Tools
Dechen Monlam 00:00 Tools
Ney Ogmin Chöying Podrang 00:00 Tools
Tal 00:00 Tools
Senge Wangchuk 00:00 Tools
Ngani Tröma Pt. 1 00:00 Tools
Leymön Tendrel 1 00:00 Tools
Leymön Tendrel 2 00:00 Tools
Ngani Tröma Pt. 2 00:00 Tools
Yumcehn Tukar 00:00 Tools
Ngani Tröma Part 1 00:00 Tools
Ngani Tröma Part 2 00:00 Tools
Leymön Tendrel Pt.1 00:00 Tools
Cho Chendren 00:00 Tools
Kyamdro Semke 00:00 Tools
Madala Offering 00:00 Tools
Leymön Tendrel Pt.2 00:00 Tools
Ngani Tröma Pt.2 00:00 Tools
Ney Ogmin Choying Podrang 00:00 Tools
Yimcehn Tukar 00:00 Tools
Ngani Tröma Pt.1 00:00 Tools
Ngani Tröma, Pt. 2 00:00 Tools
Leymon Tendrel 2 00:00 Tools
Leymon Tendrel 1 00:00 Tools
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Ani Chöying Drolma and the nuns of Nagi Gompa, a Buddhist nunnery in the foothills of the Himalayas, sing songs that have been passed down in an unbroken living tradition for hundreds of years. In 1994, guitarist Steve Tibbetts visited their remote monastery and recorded their music, which he later framed with elegant and restrained arrangements to create a stunning recording called Chö, released on Ryko/Hannibal Records. In the Autumn of 1998, Steve Tibbetts and Chöying Drolma performed a small number of live concerts in select cities. For Chöying and two other nuns from the Nagi Gompa nunnery in Nepal, this was not only their first concert tour, it was the first time they performed these chants in public, for anyone. The rare opportunity to hear a live performance of traditional Tibetan Buddhist chanting, transformed by the sonic atmospheres of Steve Tibbetts, came to Philadelphia on 5 November 1998, (as part of The Gatherings Concert Series) in the peaceful surroundings of St. Mary's Hamilton Village. Accompanying the chanting, guitarist Steve Tibbetts and percussionist Marc Anderson created a soundscape that ranges from serene to surreal. Tibbetts is a renowned guitarist with such critically acclaimed recordings on the ECM jazz label as Yr, Northern Song, Safe Journey, Exploded View, Big Map Idea and A Man About A Horse. Long-time collaborator Marc Anderson has appeared on most of Tibbetts' albums, and has his own CD of world-music fusion called Timefish on the EastSide Digital label. Tibbetts' musical colleague on the CD Chö, Chöying Drolma, was born in Kathmandu in 1971 to Tibetan exiles who fled the Cultural Revolution (and their homeland) in 1959. At the age of twelve, Chöying asked her father to allow her to pursue the monastic life. She was accepted as a nun and student at the Nagi Gompa nunnery under the tutelage of Lama Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche, one of the greatest teachers of non-conceptual meditation and a resident of the nunnery for 34 years. Up until his death in 1996, Rinpoche instructed Chöying in monastic rituals and meditation and taught her many of the chants and feast songs which appear on the CD Chö (and were performed live at their 11.05.98 concert in Philadelphia). Tibetans do not regard this music as folk music, but rather perceive the depth of meaning in these songs as capable of enhancing understanding and transforming ordinary experience. The highly anticipated follow-up to their acclaimed first release, 1997's Chö, Selwa is a beautiful sound tapestry of haunting songs evoking a sense of peace that cuts through any language barrier. Tibbetts' subtle arrangements mixed with percussion from long time collaborator Marc Anderson perfectly frame Drolma's unforgettable voice. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.