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Global Sound Live

Live from the 2008 Smithsonian Folklife Festival
Enjoy the music of the 2008 Smithsonian Folklife Festival through live webcasts from Smithsonian Global Sound. The Smithsonian Folklife Festival, produced by the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage, honors and celebrates traditional cultures and peoples during an annual living exhibition on the National Mall of the USA. At the Festival, people present their culture and speak for themselves. The 2008 Smithsonian Folklife Festival features the Texas, Bhutan, and NASA. More about the Festival. Note: Windows Media Player is required to view broadcasts.

Festival Webcast Archive

Past shows archived below


Music and Dance from the Land of the Thunder Dragon
Sunday, July 6, 2:00pm EDST

This concert will celebrate the diverse music and dance traditions from Bhutan, offering performances of dramatic masked dance, a highly symbolic and complex performance art form, and secular music, including songs about daily activities such as rice planting and harvesting, house-building, weaving, carpentry, and animal tending.


Viva El Paso: Building Connections with Bhutan
Artists from Bhutan Royal Academy of Performing Arts and the Buddhist Monk Community
Mariachi Los Arrieros

Thursday, July 3, 6:00pm EDST

This unique concert experience will present the music and performance arts of Bhutan alongside Texas mariachi. It will be a special treat to see these artists side-by-side, demonstrating the music of their own vibrant traditions together for this once-in-a-lifetime performance.


Texas Blues and Zydeco Dance Party
Tutu Jones and the Soul Crew
CJ Chenier

Wednesday, July 2, 6:00pm EDST

This concert offers two unique dance music genres from Texas: Texas Blues and Zydeco. Tutu Jones is a born bluesman who exemplifies the music of South Dallas, where he was raised. CJ Chenier plays original and standard tunes representing Houston zydeco. Both performers on this bill are the sons of pioneers in their genres, Johnny B. Jones and Clifton Chenier, and both pay tribute to their fathers’ legacies while demonstrating their own significant contributions.


Waltz Across Texas Dance Party
Gillette Brothers
Sunday, June 29, 6:00pm EDST

This concert of Western swing music will offer some of the finest musicians of the genre. The Gillette brothers played an important role in the revival of Western music and musical lore in Texas.


Saturday Night and Sunday Morning
The Jones Family Singers Texas Johnny Brown
Saturday, June 28, 6:00pm EDST

This double-billed concert will offer the music of two great gospel groups. The Jones Family Singers, led by Bishop Fred A. Jones Sr., are a quartet-style gospel group from Markham Texas who have performed for audiences nationwide. Guitarist Texas Johnny Brown leads his own ensemble performing blues, gospel, and R&B and has recorded with some of the greatest musicians of those genres.


Sounds of San Antonio
Los Texmaniacs with Mingo Saldivar, Augie Meyers, and Fiddlin' Frenchie Burke
Thursday, June 26, 6:00pm EDST

The distinctive sounds of contemporary San Antonio conjunto include a mixing of traditional instrumentation and repertoire with blues, rock, and country music into a genre-bending new style that will keep you out of your seat dancing. Conjunto group Los Texmaniacs will perform new songs and surprising arrangements of standards alongside Augie Meyers, accordionist Mingo Saldivar, and Fiddlin’ Frenchie Burke.

SI Folklife Contact Copyright Privacy Credits

Full Text Only Catalog

Smithsonian Global Sound

www.smithsonianglobalsound.org

"The ethnographic answer to iTunes" -- New York Times

Smithsonian Global Sound is an unparalleled experience of world music. Download music and sound from acclaimed international archives such as Smithsonian Folkways Recordings, the International Library of African Music, the Archives & Research Centre for Ethnomusicology in India, and Central Asian recordings from the Aga Khan Trust for Culture.

Many tracks at www.smithsonianglobalsound.org are rare, newly preserved recordings that are now extensively cataloged and easily accessible around the world. Royalties support artists and archives, honoring and establishing intellectual property rights. By distributing these exciting sounds, Smithsonian Global Sound increases interest in traditional world music and promotes the appreciation of cultural diversity around the world.

Smithsonian Global Sound increases interest in traditional world music and promotes the appreciation of cultural diversity around the world. Royalties support artists and archives, honoring and establishing intellectual property rights. Many tracks are rare, newly preserved recordings that are now extensively cataloged and easily accessible. By distributing these exciting sounds around the world, Smithsonian Global Sound aims to inspire future generations of musicians to continue to promote their cultural heritage.

The Smithsonian Global Sound Experience

Browse, sample, and download thousands of beautiful and culturally significant tracks of music and sound. Don't know where to start? Listen to Radio Global Sound, watch video on Global Sound Live, read fascinating and in depth Artist Profiles, or discover exciting new music through our Musical Journeys from world music celebrities.

Downloads are available in versatile MP3 format or CD quality FLAC files. Our open files allow access through any computer or any portable media player. Smithsonian Global Sound is unique in that it offers a rich store of free material to accompany the audio, including original Folkways liner notes and new contextual information created by archival collaborators.

"Smithsonian Global Sound - the most exciting online music happening in quite some time." -- Salon.com

Enhancing Education via music in the Classroom

Smithsonian Global Sound is an invaluable tool for ethnomusicology, social sciences, and language arts educators. This virtual music library of the future gives teachers, students, and scholars instant access to original recordings and extensive documentation from diverse cultures all over globe. Many libraries from Harvard University to the University of Wisconsin to the Denver Public Library have already enhanced their collections with a subscription from Smithsonian Global Sound.

"The Smithsonian Global Sound site is a fabulous resource of authentic music, and I am looking forward to sharing it with my students." – DeKalb, Illinois
Middle school teacher

Supporting Musicians and Archives of Traditional Music

Royalties earned from the sale of music on the site go to the artists, their communities, the archives that preserve their recordings, and further development of Smithsonian Global Sound. These groundbreaking practices give musicians and artists a chance to maintain their cultures and profit from their work while forging new bonds between local sound archives and the communities whose music they preserve.

If you are an archive or collection interested in joining with Smithsonian Global Sound, please contact smithsonianglobalsound@si.edu.

"When we saw the blossoming of the Internet, we thought, what if we could use this as a device for opening up the archives? People who are not usually heard can project their voices around the planet." - Richard Kurin, Director of the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage