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Jan, It's a damned shame you're not moving to Dallas. I could really use someone like you in the band I'm trying to put together (Ambient/Dance/Industrial/Pop/Rock/Tribal/World music). Which Asheville are you leaving - the one in North Carolina? Friend of mine, named Geoff Elmore used to dwell there, before he dropped off the face of the earth. That was a beautiful piece of writing there, man! Do write lyrics for your music? I've been trying to find music, to learn from, from those same parts of the world. I would suggest the catalogs from realworld.com, & oneworld.com. Additionally, there is a great World Music channel on spinner.com, that can expose you to a lot of wonderful stuff. As for polyrhythmic, try Hossam Ramzy from Egypt - Amazing percussionist! As for Tribal instruments from various parts of the world, I highly recommend Novica.com. They feature hand-made instruments from real indigenous artists in various far-flung parts of the world. You can buy a beautiful Djembe from West Africa for a mere $125, and you would know the name and history of the artist, and how he makes the instruments. Certainly a much better route than buying those mass-produced remo rip-offs from Guitar Center at twice the price. Good luck on your physical, musical, & spiritual journeys. PLEASE let us know whenever you have some tunes for us to listen to. I'd love to hear it. Blessed be, :-)Michael From: "Jan Pek" <swirlee@angelfire.com> so, i have a request for yall. im looking for South American tribal music, spirit of the rainforest, grandfather drum, voice of the cloud, to South America what Farafina is to Africa... something polyrhythmic, polymetric, whatever you want to call it, building repetition. someone, give me the words! i'm moving Asheville -> NYC feeling as though i may get spit out on another world journey, and am magnetizing africa (guinea? senegal? dogon and the nommo?) and s. america (ecuador? brazil? bolivia?) for world bridging. i know i'm here to embody spirit, to bring magic to the flesh. the way of technology magic-- i've spent most of my life there, on the outside, in the crystal megahertz. so i am learning another way, the long road back to embodiment, the 'red pill', if you will. because the guides tell me the next leg of training as shaman is in the primitive, embodying spirit in dance, breath, voice, drum, trance. the animals. so where can i exist on that edge? can i place myself where i can honor and learn from the tribes without eroding their culture? how to exit the tourist conveyorbelt and become of service to these indigenous people, so that we can recognize, we are all indigenous. is there not a mystery school somewhere, teetering on that precipice where the voice is the synthesizer, the body is levity, the breath is operating system upgrade, time is echoplex, where Western magic is tenderly and appropriately introduced, built with spirit of the local land, not bulldozed like formula over tender rainforest shoots? shit, there must be. where is it? right under your nose? fuzzy and blue, yon