Task 8: Golden Record Curation

Making the Cut

I first listened to each of the 27 pieces of music two times through.  The third time I reviewed the songs, I listened with intention:  Following Rumsey’s lead I wondered which songs I could afford to lose? Which songs truly speak to the diversity of humankind?  I really loved some of the instrumental pieces:  Symphony No. 5 is such a powerful piece for example, and the images conjured by “Sokaku Reibo” are breath-taking; Roncadoras and Drums seems whimsical and fun to me.  However, I wanted to hear humanity.

Setting aside my Western musical training/preferences, I found ten songs that I think truly represent humanity on Earth:  each song I’ve chosen has human voices at its center.  From the lamentations of  a young woman married too young (the Peruvian folk song, “Wedding Song”), to one of the most recognizable songs in rock & roll history, “Johnny B. Goode”, every song I chose includes human voices.  (I would’ve liked to have included Edda Moser’s version of Mozart’s “Queen of the Night” aria, but I ran out of spots and the rest of my sample wasn’t really orchestral in nature.  Somehow, all the other musical pieces seem to fit together and I felt that the Queen of the Night Aria did not work with the other pieces I have chosen).

My Golden Record Playlist

  1. Track 2: Kinds of Flowers (“Ketawang Puspawarna”:  Indonesian folk song)
  2. Track 4: Pygmy Girls’ Initiation Song (“Alima Song”: Indigenous people in the rainforests of the Congo)
  3. Track 5: Morning Star & Devil Bird (“Australia Barnumbirr and Moikoi Song”: Indigenous Australian song)
  4. Track 6: El Cascabel ( Mariachi from Mexico)
  5. Track 7: Johnny B. Goode (Chuck Berry from America)
  6. Track 12: Tchakrulo (Georgian Choir)
  7. Track 19: Izlel je Delyo Hagdutin (Bulgarian folk song)
  8. Track 20: Night Chant (“Yeibichai Dance”: Navajo Night Chant)
  9. Track 23: Wedding song (Peruvian folk song)
  10. Track 25: Jaat Kahan Ho (from India)

 

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