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Dream Time
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A song that comes from the Aboriginal story of 'Dream Time' how the world came to be.
flute native native american flute contemporary native ameri
Artist picture
Love , peace and Fry Bread grease !!!!
, as well as performed with the internationally renowned. Additionally, I have also appeared at the Hiroshima Flame Walk, the Run for Freedom, the One Day of Peace run, and as a guest musician at numerous Powwows around the Ohio, Indiana and the Kentucky area. , , Cincinnati, OH)
Song Info
Charts
Peak #5
Peak in subgenre #1
Author
Albert RunningWolf
Rights
2004
Uploaded
February 04, 2007
Track Files
MP3
MP3 2.6 MB 128 kbps 2:50
Story behind the song
This is the story of Dreamtime. It comes from the Aborigines of Australia. When the earth was new-born, it was plain and without any features or life. Waking time and sleeping time were the same. There were only hollows on the surface of the Earth which, one day, would become waterholes. Around the waterholes were the ingredients of life. Underneath the crust of the earth were the stars and the sky, the sun and the moon, as well as all the forms of life, all sleeping. The tiniest details of life were present yet dormant: the head feathers of a cockatoo, the thump of a kangaroo's tail, the gleam of an insect's wing. A time came when time itself split apart, and sleeping time separated from waking time. This moment was called the Dreamtime. At this moment everything started to burst into life. The sun rose through the surface of the Earth and shone warm rays onto the hollows which became waterholes. Under each waterhole lay an Ancestor, an ancient man or woman who had been asleep through the ages. The sun filled the bodies of each Ancestor with light and life, and the Ancestors began to give birth to children. Their children were all the living things of the world, from the tiniest grub wriggling on a eucalyptus leaf to the broadest-singed eagle soaring in the blue sky. Rising from the waterholes, the Ancestors stood up with mud falling from their bodies. As the mud slipped away, the sun opened their eyelids and they saw the creatures they had made from their own bodies. Each Ancestor gazed at his creation in pride and wonderment. Each Ancestor sang out with joy: "I am!". One Ancestor sang "I am kangaroo!" Another sang "I am Cockatoo!" The next sang "I am Honey-Ant!" and the next sang "I am Lizard!" As they sang, naming their own creations, they began to walk. Their footsteps and their music became one, calling all living things into being and weaving them into life with song. The ancestors sang their way all around the world. They sang the rivers to the valleys and the sand into dunes, the trees into leaf and the mountains to rise above the plain. As they walked they left a trail of music. Then they were exhausted. They had shown all living things how to live, and they returned into the Earth itself to sleep. And, in honour of their Ancestors, the Aborigines still go Walkabout, retracing the steps and singing the songs that tell the story of life.
Song Likes
On 12 Playlists
Comments 1
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Pinecats
Jan 22, 2013
Great Native American Fusion. Love all the subtle touches and cool effects. creative and interesting. Is that a Didge i hear? Nice work!