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Tibetan Meditaiton Music For | 
enlarge | Artist: Nawang Khechog Label: Sounds True Category: Music
List Price: CDN$ 18.99 Buy New: CDN$ 14.20 You Save: CDN$ 4.79 (25%)
New (17) Used (3) from CDN$ 14.20
Sales Rank: 10838
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 5.5 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 1109 UPC: 600835110921 EAN: 0600835110921 ASIN: B000OCY6YU
Release Date: August 1, 2008 Availability: Usually ships within 1 - 2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: BRAND NEW - Shipped within 24 hrs via Airmail from the USA - Average 5 to 10 workdays delivery time. Excellent customer service. NEUF - Envoy? par avion des USA sous 24 hrs - Livraison en moyenne de 5 a 10 jours ouvres. Service clientele en francais.
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| Tracks:
| • | Under the Wings of Blessing | | • | Great Prince of Peace and Universal Compassion | | • | Five-Peak Wisdom Mountain | | • | Daily Prayer and Practice of the Dalai Lama | | • | Walking into the Himalaya to Meditate | | • | Infinite Love | | • | Great Arya Tara | | • | Wisdom and Compassion | | • | Perfection of Wisdom | | • | Dagkar Taso Mila's Cave | | • | For as Long as Space Endures |
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| Editorial Reviews:
From Amazon.com A lot of artists evoke the spirit of Tibet, but Nawang Khechog is actually a former Tibetan monk, who took off the robes and took up the flute to travel the world 20 years ago. His albums are usually slotted in the New Age and meditation genres, and certainly his packaging and imagery inspire that. Unfortunately, it overshadows a music that is perhaps deeper, or at least more artistically profound, than that. Tibetan Meditation Music scans less like a background for contemplation and more like a tone poem to the spirit. The opening track seems like an Asian refraction of "Amazing Grace," with Tsering Khechog singing over Nawang Khechog's flute. Khechog's music draws on folk and spiritual traditions but takes them further afield. Think Arvo Paert on the Tibetan plateau with strings droning a minor-key refrain while Tibetan bells and chimes sound in the background and Khechog chants. I do wish Khechog had brought along just a touch of the drama and shifting moods heard on some of his earlier discs, like the Kitaro-produced Karuna. Tibetan Meditation Music is unvarying in its somber tone. Khechog's chants, which are intimately spoken, whispered more than sung, don't always work on a musical level. But his performances on wood flute are deep explorations into tone and melody. --John Diliberto
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