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Alive Participated by Sa Dingding Studio : Wrasse Records by Wrasse Records Release Date : 2008-07-29 Publisher : Wrasse Records Availability : Usually ships in 1-2 business days EAN : 0875232006829 UPC : 875232006829 Avg. Customer Rating: (based on 4 reviews)
List Price : $16.98 Our Price : $7.49
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Album Description |
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Imagine Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon scored by the Cocteau Twins, Alive is a mix of Tibetan, Mandarin and Sanskrit built around traditional Chinese folk music but exquisitely executed with refined use of programmed electronic sounds and beats in tandem with Chinese instrumentation creating a totally original blend. The songs are inventive and adventurous, as she switches between soulful ballads and gutsy Tibetan influenced chanting. One of the hardest things to achieve is the marriage between modern arrangement and traditional instrumentation and melodies. On " Alive" Sa Dingding has achieved this with exceptional grace. |
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Magical musical adventure. |
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I really don't know how to describe this music. New age with an edge? World music meets electronica? It often sounds like thoroughly modern pop, but some of her lyrics seem to come from religious texts. (They're not translated, so I can't say for sure.) Fascinating rhythms, vocal tricks, blends of Western and Chinese instrumentation -- just fascinating from beginning to end. And very, very addictive. Buy this for a magical musical adventure. And then wait anxiously for her next one! |
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Asian Mystery Singer |
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I came across an article in Der Stern, a German magazine, in which I was introduced to Sa Dingding. When I went to her website I listened to some songs and was completely intrigued. This entire CD is thrilling and beautiful. The languages include Mandarin, Tibetan, and a self made up language. If you want to hear something differant. This is it. |
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ALIVE - Sa DingDing |
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First play had me wondering what I was listening to, but by CD end I was totally hooked. Subsequent playings have only increased interest in this unique artist. Have heard her descibed as a Mongolian Bjork, but some of her music is more remeniscent of Portishead. Definately a CD to add the unusual collection. |
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A Sonic Trek to the East |
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Contemporary in its high production values with layering of varied instrumentation and electronic accents, fine sonics, back-up vocalists, strong beats, and very melodic tunes sung in Tibetan, Chinese, Sanskrit, and Sa Dingding's own invented language (Asian scat?), this album is not what you would expect to reach American shores from China, but Shang-Hai has always been progressive and inventive. From the beginning, the album captures our interest with exotica. It would make a great soundtrack; indeed, it reminds me of the music to the film "Himalaya". It takes us from temples to discos, from mountaintops to tropical beaches. Sa Dingding seems to have found an atypical niche, an original East Asian popular sound. The insert includes lyrics, but they are in Tibetan, Chinese, Sanskrit, and transliteration of her own idiom. Some are mantras, anyway. Although two songs, Alive and Holy Incense, are repeated with the same arrangements, the strong difference in phrasing and rhythm between Tibetan and Chinese languages makes the respective vocals unique. The last song on the CD, however, is entirely out of character, being a simple Western style popular song with piano accompaniment. It seems to serve as a transition to ease us back to our customary life after this audio adventure. This album won the BBC 3 World Music Award for Asia/ Pacific recordings. |
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