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Cosmopoly

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Download links and information about Cosmopoly by Andreas Vollenweider. This album was released in 1999 and it belongs to New Age genres. It contains 21 tracks with total duration of 01:12:12 minutes.

Artist: Andreas Vollenweider
Release date: 1999
Genre: New Age
Tracks: 21
Duration: 01:12:12
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $9.49
Buy on Songswave €1.60

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Morning Poem 1:12
2. Stella 5:18
3. Elle Chelle 3:13
4. Vals del Sur 3:32
5. Hush, My Heart, Be Still... 5:42
6. Petit Smile 1:54
7. Under One Moon 4:55
8. Ancient Pulse 4:00
9. Peachtree Valley 3:35
10. Bright Moon, Still Shining 1:06
11. At the Forest Fountain 6:08
12. Your Silver Key 1:55
13. Long Road to You 2:40
14. Capriccio 1:59
15. Will-O'-The-Wisp (Ignus Fatuus) 3:56
16. Cor Do Amor 2:35
17. The Fishbirdtree - Little Snap 3:45
18. Li'l Limba (Featuring Bobby McFerrin) [Bonus Track] (featuring Bobby McFerrin) 3:54
19. Mountain Song (Featuring Djivan Gasparyan) [Bonus Track] (featuring Djivan Gasparyan) 3:49
20. Secret Garden (Featuring Abdullah Ibrahim) [Bonus Track] (featuring Abdullah Ibrahim) 3:52
21. Hey You! Yes, You... (Special Edit from the New DualDisc VOX, 2005) 3:12

Details

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Andreas Vollenweider's Cosmopoly finds the Swiss harpist collaborating with artists like Carlos Nunez, Abdul Ibrahim, and Ray Anderson, and exploring the music of Africa, Brazil, China, Ireland, and the U.S. Fittingly, Vollenweider's palette of instruments on this album includes the ocarina, gu cheng, baby koto, 12-string guitar, Bavarian folk harp, Celtic harp, and Chinese harp, along with his usual custom-made rhythm harp. "Morning Poem," Vollenweider's Celtic-inspired duet with Nunez, is all the more moving for its restraint, and the unusual fusion of Bobby McFerrin's vocals with Chinese harp on "Elle Chelle" is another highlight. Ibrahim and Vollenweider create a smoky Armenian atmosphere on their doudouk/harp duet "Hush, My Heart, Be Still," and "Peachtree Valley" evokes a lush Chinese landscape, though the overly glossy production is somewhat distracting. Carly Simon's recitation of part of Finnegan's Wake on "Your Silver Key" is also slightly jarring, and some of the album's jazzier tracks seem out of place, but for the most part, Cosmopoly offers an intriguing fusion of traditional, indigenous styles, and new musical ideas. [This version of the album contains an additional CD of bonus material.]