<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<metadata>
  <identifier>ROGC_UnderADimCrescentMoon</identifier>
  <title>ROGC: Under a Dim Crescent Moon (vol.1)</title>
  <creator>Shirley and Spinoza Internet Radio</creator>
  <mediatype>audio</mediatype>
  <collection>opensource_audio</collection>
  <description>*NOTE - this volume 1 of 2 - the other is located at:&#13;
&lt;a target="_blank" href="http://www.archive.org/details/ROGC_UnderADimCrescentMoon_2"&gt;HERE&lt;/a&gt;&#13;
&#13;
For most of 2003, I lived in the northwestern-most province of China - officially known as Xinjiang : Uyghur Automomous Region....sometimes referred to by some as China's other, lesser known "Tibet" for situational parallels.&#13;
I'd recieved a generous grant to document the folk music (as opposed to the classical muqam music) of the Turkic muslim cultures traditionally native to the region - focusing mainly on the largest population: The Uyghurs, but also including the Kazakhs and Kyrgyz.&#13;
&#13;
For this show, I was live-mixing right to your ears many of these field recordings, which while mostly consist of music, also include ambiences, regional pop &amp; traditional sounds on cassettes &amp; cd's I picked up - plus recordings of shortwave radio.&#13;
&#13;
The field recorded music you hear was, with only a few exceptions, performed by common folk (farmers, carpenters, (incl. mystics and beggars)) demonstrating something that's very much a cultural part of everyday life. With east China's ever accellerating blitzkrieg development of it's claimed west though, these beautiful cultural traditions are going up in smoke fast.&#13;
&#13;
The recordings were done with head-worn binaural microphones - in yurts, homes, under grape trellises, in mud brick courtyards, orchards and in the streets of oasis towns &amp; villages in areas surrounding the expansive Taklamakan desert.&#13;
Several of these recordings - in purer yet more carefully curated form - will be released later this year on the fantastic Sublime Frequencies label. (!!!)&#13;
&#13;
-Fausto (s of s&amp;S)</description>
  <date>2006-01-15</date>
  <year>2006</year>
  <subject>Uyghur, Xinjiang, Kazakh, China, Central Asia, field recording, radio, collage, webcast, shirley, spinoza</subject>
  <licenseurl>http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/</licenseurl>
  <publicdate>2006-01-16 12:25:55</publicdate>
  <addeddate>2006-01-16 20:05:21</addeddate>
  <uploader>crap@compound-eye.org</uploader>
  <updater>bluewig</updater>
  <updater>bluewig</updater>
  <updater>bluewig</updater>
  <updater>bluewig</updater>
  <updater>bluewig</updater>
  <updater>bluewig</updater>
  <updater>bluewig</updater>
  <updatedate>2006-01-16 12:29:13</updatedate>
  <updatedate>2006-01-16 13:36:53</updatedate>
  <updatedate>2006-01-17 00:57:39</updatedate>
  <updatedate>2006-01-24 13:24:22</updatedate>
  <updatedate>2006-01-24 13:34:37</updatedate>
  <updatedate>2006-02-14 18:36:55</updatedate>
  <updatedate>2006-12-14 02:43:05</updatedate>
  <runtime>2 hrs</runtime>
  <notes>info &amp; playlist at: &#13;
&#13;
http://compound-eye.org/radio/playlists/ss2006-01-15.html</notes>
  <updatedate>2007-01-26 09:39:17</updatedate>
  <updater>bluewig</updater>
</metadata>
