Mark Gergis - Radio Vietnam (2015) 320 / Lossless
Artist: Mark Gergis
Title: Radio Vietnam
Year Of Release: 2015
Label: Sublime Frequencies
Genre: World
Quality: 320 / FLAC
Total Time: 71:11
Total Size: 163 / 387 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Radio Vietnam
Year Of Release: 2015
Label: Sublime Frequencies
Genre: World
Quality: 320 / FLAC
Total Time: 71:11
Total Size: 163 / 387 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Induction Temperature 5:01
02. Home Village Identity Event 5:49
03. Morning Exercise In The Coded Ether 5:29
04. America Lost The Vietnam War 6:55
05. Medium Wave Youth Choral And String 5:48
06. Hit Zones 5:18
07. Population Control And The Origins Of The Legend Of Cam Huong 5:58
08. Message To The Age Of Twenty7:19
09. Mun Mun - Doctor Of Ethnicities 5:36
10. Phát Sóng Tổng Hợp 5:48
11. Triumph And Folklore In The Year Of The Horse 6:55
12. Xin Chao Immortal 5:15
**A fascinating insight to Vietnamese radio - crammed with electroid jingles, news excerpts and haunting folk songs - recorded, compiled, sequenced and assembled by Mark Gergis on location between 2013-2014. Housed in gatefold sleeve with 8-page booklet** "This disc continues the Sublime Frequencies locale-specific radio collage series with Vietnamese radio recordings culled and assembled from signals received in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City between December 2013 and November 2014. Inside the program are moments of outstanding folkloric, traditional and pop music – including performances on the electric guitar and the dan bau (one stringed guitar-like instrument), eclectic Vietnamese folk and rock stylings, dramatic effects-laden radio theater and musical segues, new wave pop forays, traditional percussion and vocal chants, news segments, dynamic radio bumpers, jingles and advertisements, comedic interludes, phoned-in karaoke sing-a-longs, English-language programming, early-morning exercise regimens, and coded messages from the outer ether. The grand total sum of these radio recordings doesn’t aim to present a certified ethnographic study of contemporary Vietnam. Rather, the material here aims to distill and replicate the excitement, engagement and discovery gained during heavy exposure to Vietnamese broadcasts over an eleven-month period during the teenage years of the twenty-first century."
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