Genghis Blues
Download links and information about Genghis Blues by Paul Pena. This album was released in 2000 and it belongs to Theatre/Soundtrack genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 01:05:14 minutes.
Artist: | Paul Pena |
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Release date: | 2000 |
Genre: | Theatre/Soundtrack |
Tracks: | 16 |
Duration: | 01:05:14 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | What You Talkin About? | 1:50 |
2. | Alash Hem (The Alash River) (featuring Kongar - Ool Ondar) | 2:43 |
3. | Kaldak Hamar (The Other Side of the Mountain) | 5:11 |
4. | Tras D'Orizão (Beyond the Horizon) | 4:30 |
5. | Ondarnyng Ayany (Ondar's Medley) (featuring Kongar - Ool Ondar) | 5:24 |
6. | Kargyraa Moan | 4:19 |
7. | It's Hard to Lose a Friend (featuring Kongar - Ool Ondar) | 1:00 |
8. | Kongurey (Where Has My Country Gone?) | 6:27 |
9. | Dürgen Chugaa (Fast Talk) (featuring Kongar - Ool Ondar) | 1:36 |
10. | Sünezin Yry (Soul's Song) (featuring Kongar - Ool Ondar) | 6:34 |
11. | Center of Asia | 2:53 |
12. | Got to Move | 2:43 |
13. | Tuva Farewell | 8:34 |
14. | Genghis Blues Soundbites | 5:29 |
15. | Kaldak Hamar (Live) | 2:36 |
16. | Eki A'ttar (Good Horses) [Live] | 3:25 |
Details
[Edit]The soundtrack to one of the most unlikely tales (and a film nominated for a 1999 Academy Award), Genghis Blues is the story of blind American bluesman Paul Pena (who wrote Steve Miller's "Jet Airliner") who heard Tuvan throat singing and finally taught himself to do it, meeting one of the greats, Kongar-ol Ondar, at a concert the throat singer performed in Pena's home of San Francisco. The fairy tale comes with Pena traveling to Tuva, the center of Asia, to compete in a throat singing contest, carrying away two prizes in the end. The music, a mix of Pena's blues, like the autobiographical "What You Talkin' About?" — possibly the first piece to mix blues and throat singing — or the rollicking "Gonna Move," highlight that side of his talent, while "Beyond the Horizon" harks back to his family's Cape Verdean roots. But the meat is the throat singing, whether from Ondar, the two together, or Pena himself, whose "Kargyraa Moan," really connects the dots between gutbucket blues and Asia, or "Sunezin Yry." One of the album's most moving pieces, however, is neither blues nor throat singing, but Pena taped in a hotel room singing "Center of Asia," a gorgeous song that deserves to be widely heard. "Tuva Farewell" brings it all together, Pena's excellent song, Ondar's singing, with the two on a duet, complementing each other. It's a great story, and perfectly documented on this album, with its unearthly vocals (especially on the live "Eki A'ttar") and rooted — in both American and Asian — mood.