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In collaboration with Brendan Perry, Lisa Gerrard is half of the duo Dead Can Dance, which started releasing arty goth rock on the 4AD label in the mid-'80s. Gerrard began her solo career with the 1995 release The Mirror Pool, which contained a lot of work that wouldn't fit comfortably into the DCD oeuvre. Combining these fragments with music that she composed and arranged digitally before reconfiguring them into scores that could be performed, it also draws on a composition by Handel and traditional Iranian music. Recorded and produced largely at her home in rural Australia, it extends the world music inclinations of recent Dead Can Dance albums by featuring bouzouki, tablas, and camel drums; though the somber, orchestrated pomp of Dead Can Dance is also present in her operatic, often wordless vocals, and string/woodwind passages (some of which were performed by Australia's Victorian Philharmonic Orchestra). Gerrard released her second album, Duality, written and performed with Pieter Bourke, in the spring of 1998. Gerrard composed the score for director Niki Caro's Whale Rider in 2003, followed by Immortal Memory, a collaboration with Irish composer Patrick Cassidy in 2004. Another collaboration followed in 2005, this time with composer Jeff Rona for the soundtrack to the Native American drama A Thousand Roads. ~ Richie Unterberger, Rovi
this soundtrack made the movie Gladiator. Who ever chose this for the movie is a genius. have to give a shout out to www.surfbrothers.net check them out.
cpmiller19755
Going to have to watch Gladiator again now!!
ibycusreggio
The lyrics aren't made up idioglossia; they are in Gaelic, Aramaic, and Latin.
I'm blown away. This music places me in another state. Amazing!!
mrmichener
Lisa Gerrard channels so much humanity. Haunting, familiar, ancestral, relevant to the struggles and triumphs we experience living on this planet. She is a jewel, timelessly moving with us on our collective journeys.
Deharmonizing. All feels right, yet somewhere there is the little inkling, presented by a haunting voice, in a soothing tone. The softness however, does not cause the sould to find peace, even for the briefest moment. It aids in a hellish introspection, that is very unsettling. I am by no means speaking in a manner that should be considered rude, distasteful, or contradictory. I am simply stating the way the music had spoken to me.
It got put on a station I didn't want it on, but now I'm gonna keep her stuff there because the artists parallel each other
mblewett1
This music definitely stirs the soul. Some music just makes you want to cry and this is one of them. Not because it's sad but something "higher up". Margaret Blewett
Comments
2.A piece of music in a mournful style.