This disc is the first chapter of new century pure music that I listened to. Since then, I have embarked on this path of loving new century music. Friends can also know the importance of this disc to everyone. It is a classic. masterpiece!
This is a memorable music album that marks the iconic music genre and definition of REAL MUSIC and NEW AGES MUSIC. The light and majestic electronic percussion combined with the vocal ensemble of the music melody outlines the extremely magnificent future of NEW AGES music. This is a work from 1995!
Location: Arizona, Nevada desert, east of Las Vegas
Flute player Nichloas Gunn has a large number of electronic synthesizers and percussion instruments to create a richer effect. The extremely famous "Grand Canyon" must be familiar to everyone. Many times it is like an eagle soaring over the canyon, overlooking this natural work of art, one of the seven wonders of the world. But in addition to those golden scenes with bright sunshine, Gunn also used the keyboard to describe the colorful scenery when day and night change, and he even added narration. This ALBUM can be said to be the most popular one from real Music, a New Age new music brand.
==== The Grand Canyon is not only an important national park in the United States, but also one of the seven wonders of the world. Its magnificent and steep cliff scenery is fascinating and attracts countless tourists. Nicholas Gunn used music to describe his trip to the Grand Canyon, but the musical vocabulary he used was New Age. Through his expertise in wind instruments and the appropriate rendering of electronic synthesizers, he makes the music rhythmic and original, and strongly expresses modern people's reverence for nature.
Nicholas Gunn combines the wind instruments he is good at with the rendering of electronic synthesizers, creating a hearty rhythm and original atmosphere.
Listening to the music of the Grand Canyon is an exciting adventure. You can seem to hear the long sound echoing among the canyon cliffs. The Grand Canyon is the music of trees and plants. It allows you to see the most spectacular natural scenery, and it contains a variety of the most exciting musical components.
In this album, each piece of music is given a different picture with realistic sounds such as wordless singing, natural water sounds, birds and animals, etc., forming different themes. The hidden helicopter effect in the third song gives people the illusion of flying over the Grand Canyon and having a bird's-eye view of the wonders at its northern end; the fifth song uses a protocol to express the tranquility of the golden sunset at dusk; the last song The first watch uses the sound of cicadas to lead to the flowing slow piano performance, creating a space of great static beauty. ===Internet excerpt
==The following content is excerpted from the Internet====== 2000 New Era Music Magazine? All rights reserved==
1995 New Era Musician Nicholas Created with a genuine concern for protecting the planet's environment, this album perfectly represents the Grand Canyon. Listening to the music of the Grand Canyon is an exciting adventure, as you can hear the long sounds echoing through the canyon walls. The Grand Canyon is the music of trees and plants. It allows you to see the most spectacular natural scenery. It contains a variety of the most exciting musical components, and its musical effects were recorded locally (again A characteristic of New Age music), it is worth noting that there is also a voice of Nicholas Gunn himself in the music, and there is also the voice of an indigenous Indian, Razor Saltboy.
Like all natural parks, the Grand Canyon has suffered from serious external threats to its reputation - air pollution, overcrowding, crime, lack of funding. Now people have recognized the Grand Canyon. The spiritual wealth and open-minded feeling it brings to us are unparalleled treasures in our lives. This is why these New Age musicians created the National Parks series - to awaken people's awareness of protecting nature.
The composer and label will donate 10 percent of the album's proceeds to the National Park Service, a nonprofit organization that protects national parks.
Leave it as it is.
You cannot improve on it, not a bit.
The ages have been at work on it, and man can only mar it.
Leave it as it is
You can't improve it at all
It's been so long and all people have done is hurt it
U.S. President Roosevelt uttered these simple but powerful words when he visited the Grand Canyon in 1903. He expressed his profound understanding of nature protection. It now seems that in many places, he is correct.
As one of the seven natural wonders of the world, the Grand Canyon is irreplaceable. It is a land of gloomy souls, with mountain peaks like sentinels faithfully guarding the vertical cliffs that rise up, and beyond the cliffs lies the unfathomable Grand Canyon. Sharp stone slabs are like fossils of the floor of this ancient canyon, stretching in light and shadow along the ridges and between the cracks in the rocks. In that solemn atmosphere, the sunset and the fallen leaves of autumn are forever recorded on the rock walls of the Grand Canyon. People come to the canyon to experience the magnificence of nature. They are all shocked by the depth of the Grand Canyon. Every tourist - no matter which country he comes from - will calm down in front of the Grand Canyon and listen to the canyon passing through. The sound of the earth. The depth of it shocked everyone. It has become increasingly important since early Spanish explorers named it Gran Ca?on more than 400 years ago.
When you meditate facing those well-defined rocks and towering stone walls, you can feel the most essential things in nature and hear their whispers confirming your existence. As you creep down along the limestone with livid spots, you can hear the long echo in the canyon, and you can feel the wind, rain and moonlight echoing silently in the endless space around you. The magic of the Grand Canyon lies in its numerous rock faults and the secrets hidden in the huge rock gaps. The 1,904-square-mile (1.2 million-acre) Grand Canyon is home to wildlife including mule deer, bighorn sheep, cougars, and coyotes.
There are many other smaller mammals, insects and amphibians and reptiles in the canyon. There are also more than 1,500 species of plants in the canyon. Wild roses, mahogany, pear, and cacti are all in the Grand Canyon. thrive in.
On the banks of the Colorado River, there is a settlement that was abandoned by the local Indians more than 800 years ago. It has the best-protected desert scenery there. This Indian tribe, the Anasazi—meaning: the ancient people—were the first to inhabit the lowlands of the Grand Canyon, living peacefully here from about the fifth to the twelfth century AD. Approximately two thousand Anasazi camps were discovered in the Grand Canyon.
Although the Hopi tribe of New Mexico (residents of Indian villages in southeastern Arizona, USA) and the residents of 19 Indian villages are the continuation of this ancient civilization, the only tribe still living in the canyon is the Havasupai (meaning "people of the blue-green water"), their ancestors arrived here about 150 years after the Anasazi migrated to the canyon highlands. Havasupai maintained farming in the western part of the canyon for centuries.
Tracing back to the origins and ancient traditions of the American Indian tribes (Hualapai, Havasupai, Hopi, Navajo) will allow people to appreciate the mysterious nature of life on this land.
The Paiute Indians call it Kaibab, or "lying mountain," Havasupai calls it Wikatata, or "rough edge," and Hakatai calls it "the roar caused by the torrent." The Hopi call it Sakwatupqa, and the Navajo call it Bidahaztii, which means "the way up the canyon cliffs." No matter what they call the Grand Canyon, they all believe that the Grand Canyon is a mysterious place created by God.
According to American Indian legends, every living thing in the world is related to a god. For the Havasupai? tribe who still live in the lowlands of the canyon, the rocks in the canyon represent that God is watching over their tribe. Poets, writers and naturalists say that a journey through the canyon is a journey through time. Indeed, the canyon is a witness to natural history. The unsheltered rocks tell you stories of various geological periods. You can find here a record of the powerful collision between the continents of North America and Africa that created the Pacific Ocean. This collision Lifted what is now the Colorado Plateau. The rocks of the Grand Canyon tell the history of the land. The black rocks at the bottom of the canyon are 1.7 billion years old (the oldest rocks on earth). It shows that these mountains were once lifted and twisted for about 5 to 6 years. Miles high. The rocks with the shortest history in the canyon are volcanic sedimentary rocks, which are the result of massive river sediments and dune deposits in the canyon in the past.
These sedimentary rocks covered the entire region millions of years ago, and then slowly sank into the Pacific Ocean as the Earth's crust evolved. Within these limestones, sandstones, granites, and bright shales are preserved the fossils of life long ago. The fossils, which include prehistoric snails, nautiluses and vertebrate remains in the sand, are like markers in Earth's long history.
This is the music of the Grand Canyon. This is the sound of rock. It is the music of trees and plants, a symphony of vivid memories in the Grand Canyon.
It tells us how the creek passes through the red rocks in the canyon, and how the river passes through the splashing waterfalls and rolls down into the turquoise-clear reefs. Through this music, you can seem to see a red-tailed hawk gliding across the sky, and then with the roar of the Colorado River, nature uses its brush to outline bright reds, dim purples, delicate pinks, bright tender colors and Flashing gold.
But like all natural parks, the Grand Canyon is being damaged. Its underlying structure is crumbling, and that demands attention.
By 1954, the park received 50 million visitors a year. Now, 40 years later, it is estimated that it will receive 270 million tourists in the next 15 years. Many natural parks, including the Grand Canyon, see almost 25% more visitors each year. Nearly 5 million tourists visited Grand Canyon National Park last year.
While people try their best to protect national parks, they are still plagued by air pollution, overcrowding, crime, industrial waste, and a lack of funding. These things are eating away at our beautiful natural scenery. Now, we should realize the precious wealth that nature has given us, and we should realize the significance of protecting nature to us. The importance of nature to us is not only those beautiful scenery, but also provides us with all knowledge about human beings.
This is why New Age musicians created this series. Each album tells a story about our planet. They hope that through their music, people can see the sacred and solemn natural scenery and make people realize the significance of protecting nature, so that the legacy left by nature can continue to be preserved in our generation.
Clear mountain springs, meadows dotted with spring wildflowers, and the echo of leaping waterfalls through desolate canyons are our most precious heritage. It exists in the memory of each of us. When you listen to the music of the New Age, you should think of these glorious scenery, because when we integrate into nature, we will be close to our true selves.