Sacred Spirit
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Sacred Spirit is a musical project by Claus Zundel, Ralf Hamm and Markus Staab. The music is of electronic, new age, world and ambient genres. Sacred Spirit's total worldwide album sales estimated to be over 15 million copies.[citation needed] For each album sold, a donation was made to the Native American Rights Fund, the non-profit Native American organization devoting all its time to restoring the legal rights of the native American people.
History
The first album, Chants and Dances of the Native Americans was released in 1994. The album was nominated for best New Age album Grammy Award.[1] In keeping with the Native American theme, Zundel adopted the pseudonym 'The Fearsome Brave', and on his many other projects he is simply credited as 'The Brave'. The music conveys the stories, legends and plight of the Native Americans by combining sampled chants of the Navajo, Pueblo and Sioux tribes and Sami people yoik with synthesizer backings, all driven forth by a combination of traditional drumming and electronic dance-beats. The first single released off the album was "Yeha-Noha" (Wishes of happiness and prosperity) which was largely responsible for catapulting Sacred Spirit into the limelight. The single reached #1 position in number of countries, including 6 weeks at #1 in France. In the US, "Yeha Noha" sung by Navajo elder Kee Chee Jake of Chinle, Arizona reached top 20 in Billboard Hot 100. The album is arguably one of the most successful enigmatic projects ever, garnering sales of more than seven million albums worldwide.[2] It reached top 10 and charted for twenty seven weeks in the UK Albums Chart.[3]
A second album was released by Sacred Spirit, but it was a complete divergence from the original. The focus this time was around the blues singing of America. In keeping with the change of theme, the American release saw the group name also being changed, to Indigo Spirit.
Virgin Records released the third Sacred Spirit album in 2000. The album was nominated for best New Age Grammy Award in 2001.[4] This time the project's name was slightly altered to Indians' Sacred Spirit (and in some areas even that was abbreviated to Indians' Spirit), probably to inform listeners that it was different from the second album. The subtitle is More Chants and Dances of the Native Americans. The album continues the mood and production of the first, however the album was more instrumental. Although all the tracks did feature chants or speech, each song was composed of many short samples pieced together, unlike the first album which tended to use one extended sample per song.
In 2003, two Sacred Spirit albums were released on Higher Octave music label. The first one, Jazzy Chill Out, featured the vocal samples from Lightnin' Hopkins, John Lee Hooker, Anita O'Day and Ella Fitzgerald.[5]
On the other 2003 album, Bluesy Chill Out, Zundel collaborated with fellow Ibiza resident Dave “BK” Jeffs, a Northern Ireland native and former street musician, who plays regularly at a local club named Teatro Perera. Each track was created organically, with Jeffs (who also sings and plays flute and harmonica) composing improvisational slide and steel guitar riffs as a foundation for The Brave to build upon.
Controversy
On the first album, the song "The Counterclockwise Circle Dance" was presented as a native American chant, however the main vocals are an authentic Sami yoik ("Normo Jovnna" by Terje Tretnes), recorded in 1994 by Dutch Channel 4 during an interview as an example of a yoik. The recording, despite Channel 4's denial of having sold it, then ended up in a Virgin Records studio in the Netherlands.[citation needed] The Sami organisation Sámi kopiija demanded royalties from Virgin Records but this has so far been unsuccessful.
Discography
Albums
This list (which may have dates, numbers, etc.) may be better in a sortable table format. (December 2012) |
1994 - Sacred Spirits Yeha-Noha (ISBN 1-885381-27-1)
Track No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | Yeha-Noha (Wishes Of Happiness & Prosperity) | 4:00 |
2. | Tor-Cheney-Nahana (Winter Ceremony) | 6:58 |
3. | Ya-Na-Hana (Celebrate) | 7:05 |
4. | Dawa (Cradlesong) | 4:18 |
5. | Ly-O-Lay Ale Loya (Circle Dance) | 5:14 |
6. | Ta-Was-Ne (Elevation) | 2:38 |
7. | Gitchi-Manidoo (Advice For The Young) | 6:01 |
8. | Heya-Hee (Intertribal Rain Song) | 7:37 |
9. | Shamanic Chant (Heal The Soul) | 1:31 |
10. | Yo-Hey-Ohee (War Cries) | 6:16 |
11. | Outro & Eulogy (How The West Was Lost) | 3:00 |
1995 - Chants and Dances of Native Americans (sometimes labeled Indians)
Track No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | Intro & Prelude (How the West was Lost) | 3.00 |
2. | Ly-O-Lay Ale Loya (The counterclockwise circle dance) | 6:58 |
3. | "Normo Jovnna" remix | 5:14 |
4. | Ya-Na-Hana (Celebrate Wild Rice) | 7.05 |
5. | Dawa (The Cradlesong) | 4.18 |
6. | Gitchi-Manidoo (Advice for the Young) | 6.01 |
7. | Yeha-Noha (Wishes of happiness and prosperity) | 4.02 |
8. | Ta-Was-Ne (Elevation) | 2.38 |
9. | Heya-Hee (Intertribal song to stop the rain) | 7.37 |
10. | Shamanic Chant No. 5 (Heal the soul) | 1.31 |
11. | Yo-Hey-O-Hee (Brandishing the Tomahawk) | 6.16 |
1997 - One Little Creature - Music of Fading Cultures (Pieces of Time)
Released only in Japan
Track No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | Intro / Prelude | 0:56 |
2. | One Little Creature (Bulgarian gaida bagpipes (large ensemble) & a Korean folksong from the kangwon province) | 4:13 |
3. | You've Gotta Learn (three kingdoms japon) | 3:54 |
4, | Talk to Me (throat singers from tuva meet tibetian monks) | 3:53 |
5. | Interlude-what is aloomné? (copper eskimos of Canada's northwest territories) | 1:24 |
6. | Mêdunya - dancing naked in the summer rain | 4:12 |
7. | Aloomné - the inuiit salute the daylight | 4:04 |
8. | Final call (statement of the noble warrior) | 4:45 |
9. | Silent prayer (o´eh´bee´eh) (mouthmusic from northern island) | 4:33 |
10. | Interlude - love's not time's fool | 2:07 |
11. | É souber son (7 days of songs & dances with nomads of the desert) | 3:37 |
12. | O jamboo - the mirror of the great void | 4:20 |
13. | Don't be afraid (with love from the mekong delta) | 4:55 |
1997 - Culture Clash (Sacred Spirit 2)[4] ( Belgium #42, Austria #43, Sweden #53, Netherlands #59 )
Track No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | Intro | 1:55 |
2. | Culture Clash | 4:32 |
3. | Lay Down | 4:40 |
4. | On the Road | 4:14 |
5. | Legends | 7:02 |
6. | i. No More Cotton, ii. Interlude To Be a Slave | 3:45 |
7. | The Sun Won't Talk no More | 7:46 |
8. | Black Progress | 3:18 |
9. | Roots | 6:38 |
10 | Babes in the Juke House | 3:20 |
11. | i. Brownsville, Tennessee (instr.), ii. Interlude To Be a Slave #2 | 5:14 |
12. | Slow and Easy | 3:15 |
13. | Sonnet XVIII | 4:07 |
2000 - More Chants and Dances of Native Americans (Sacred Spirit II)[5] ( Italy #14, France #37, Netherlands #88)
Track No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | Intro: Gods & Heroes | 1:31 |
2. | Looking for north | 4:18 |
3. | Dela Dela | 4:41 |
4. | Land Of Promise | 5:47 |
5. | The State of Grace | 4:26 |
6. | Yane — Heja — Hee | 4:49 |
7. | A — la — Ke | 4:42 |
8. | May you walk in sunshine | 3:57 |
9. | The Spirit | 3:03 |
10. | O — Loa — Ki — Lee | 3:18 |
11. | That Noble Dream | 4:51 |
12. | The Sad Eyed Chief | 4:03 |
Track No. | Title |
---|---|
1. | You're Gonna Love (feat. Tampa Red) (Theme from Vangelis Ask The Mountains) |
2. | Bad Luck (feat. Lightning Hopkins) |
3. | Da Cool (feat. Anita O'Day) |
4. | The Roots |
5. | A New Dawn (feat. Carla Rums) |
6. | Last Nite (feat. Lightning Hopkins) |
7. | The Last Unicorn (edit) |
8. | Love Comes My Way (feat. Ela Fitzgerald) |
9. | The Sun (feat. John Lee Hooker) |
10. | Chillin' |
11. | Some Like It Easy (feat. John Lee Hooker) |
12. | That "rive gauche" - Vibe |
Track No. | Title |
---|---|
1. | Driftin' |
2. | This Earth |
3. | Interlude: The Wide Open |
4. | Black Rain |
5. | Love Is Blind |
6. | Down In Louisiana |
7. | Interlude: The Loneliness of the Slide Guitar |
8. | That's Right |
9. | My Mother Told Me |
10. | Oh Yeah |
11. | Wasteland |
12. | Why |
See also
References
- ^ a b [1] Archived 2007-04-17 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Home.global.co.za
- ^ Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 478. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.
- ^ [2] Archived 2007-06-11 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b [3] Archived 2006-12-13 at the Wayback Machine