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Healing Music
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Amazon Book, CD & Video/DVD
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Our recommended "Must - Haves" for
building your healing library.
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Our Selection of:
Books
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Video/DVD
Accelerating Learning

Stephen Halpern presents music that
aides concentration, study, intellectual thought, memorization and
innovative thinking.
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Pure Moods, Vol. 3

Features some of the best New Age
and modern instrumental music around including Enya, Peter Gabriel,
Moby, Kitaro, Sacred Spirit, Sheila Chandra, Suzanne Ciani, Blue Man
Group, Jessie Cook, Monom David Lanz, Brian Eno, Geoffrey Oryema,
Enigma, Sarah Brightman, Yanni and Ryuichi Sakamoto.
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Ambient 2: The Plateaux Of Mirror

Brian Eno and Harold Budd present
dreamlike textures on this CD which paint gauzy dreamlike worlds of
filtered-light images. The piano used on this CD has haunting tonal
qualities and sets the mood for the album.
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Brian Eno: Ambient 1: Music for Airports

This complex sound sculpture was created
by Brian Eno in 1978 and was even installed for a while at the Marine
Terminal of New York at LaGuardia Airport. The ambient-minimalist
soundscape has been alternately described as background Muzak, a
profoundly artificial musical milieu, and a groundbreaking studio
creation.
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Harold Budd & Brian Eno: The Pearl

This sublime, tranquil recording features
11 haunting ambient tone poems for treated piano. They are crafted from
simple chords, arpeggios, or melodies that are frequently trailed by
delicate electronic whispers to produce dreamy results. Even though Budd
and Eno chose to compose and record in a minimalist style, their
gorgeous, moody music evokes so much more, for the reverberating spaces
between the notes are just as important as the notes themselves.
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The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring Soundtrack

Score composer Howard Shore has informed
this first installment of the Lord of the Rings trilogy with his
distinctly modern sensibilities. Revolving loosely around a brief,
heroic brass theme, this epic is infused with a powerful rhythmic thrust
and a musical range that encompasses centuries (from the Renaissance
pastoralism of "Concerning Hobbits" to the fiery, Prokofiev-influenced
drama of "A Knife in the Dark"). Key to the score's sense of mystery and
magical place are the rich choral passages that are interspersed
throughout.
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A Day Without Rain - Enya

Enya's fourth release since her 1988
breakthrough, Watermark, establishes new artistic heights for the gifted
Irish vocalist and keyboardist. The project, polished and refined over a
five-year period in the company of longtime collaborators Nicky Ryan
(producer) and Roma Ryan (lyricist), may qualify as her best yet--a
radiant, beatific collection of works that command attention with their
cathedral-like resonance as they soothe your spirit with some of Enya's
loveliest, most graceful voicings ever. |
Paint the Sky with Stars: The Best of Enya

The most melodic and atmospheric examples
of Enya's lovely Celtic-flavored songwriting shine on this disc. Those
unfamiliar with the former Clannad member will find charm in such sweet
lullabies as "Marble Halls" and "China Roses" while delighting in the
more energetic "Book of Days," "Storms in Africa," and "Caribbean Blue." |
The Book of Secrets - Lorenna McKennitt

McKennitt's recordings always have
the quality of a spiritual sojourn; her songs are those of a seeker,
whether she's setting Yeats, Scripture, or her own words to her
compositions. It's this that attracts people to her music, and The Book
of Secrets is no exception, whether it's the lazy rhythms of "Marco
Polo," the sober joy of "The Mummers' Dance," the poignancy of "Skellig"
or "Dante's Prayer," or the drama of Alfred Noyes's "The Highwayman."
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Only Time: The Collection - Enya

A wonderful gift, this handsomely packaged
four-CD box set (purple velvet cover, gold-foil lettering) also serves
as an inviting midcareer retrospective of an uncommon vocalist-sonic
architect. Only Time: The Collection is a mix-and-match assortment of
tracks spanning Enya's first five U.S. releases (including her 1987
debut, The Celts) and embellished with a half-dozen B-sides not found on
her previous U.S.-released albums. Chief among them are "May It Be"
(from the Lord of the Rings soundtrack); "Isobella," a hushed, slowly
evolving beauty formerly available only in Japan; and "Oiche Chiun
(Silent Night)."
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The Visit - Loreena McKennitt

Mixing a variety of styles with a Celtic
base, this was McKennitt's breakthrough album and remains one of her
most musically interesting. "All Souls Night" begins the album, with
dance-like rhythms and McKennitt's wonderful voice singing about the
Celtic New Year. Other features include a musical setting of Tennyson's
"Lady of Shalott" which is an enchanting listen. There's also an
interesting rendition of "Greensleeves" and the Spanish-flavored "Tango
to Evora", as well as the haunting "Courtyard Lullaby" and the wistful
"The Old Ways".
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The Mask and Mirror - Loreena McKennitt

McKennitt's travels through Spain
and Morocco flavor this album with a distinctly Mediterranean tinge,
from the opening "The Mystic's Dream," with its dancing percussion
arrangements, to "Marrakesh Night Market," to "Full Circle" and the
instrumental "Santiago." "Marrakesh Night Market" is an especially
strong performance, with an interesting musical texture; the balalaika,
udu drum, and dumbek are played alongside a synthesizer. As usual,
McKennitt has set a poem to music, this time Yeats's "The Two Trees,"
with a lovely introduction on the Uillean pipes.
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Watermark - Enya

Enya's 1988 recording Watermark achieved
landmark success with her groundbreaking use of multi-tracking
technology to fuse new age and Celtic themes and instrumentation. The
meticulous production defines her sound and achieves continuity even
while weaving together tender ballads, piano pieces, massively layered
vocal harmonies, and symphonic synthesizer movements. Although Enya's
pristine voice isn't especially strong, her lead vocals possess a
vulnerability that reflects the lyrics' sense of personal searching.
From the ubiquitous, frothy single "Orinoko Flow" to the hard, bold edge
of "Cursum Perficio," Enya's style remains fresh and engaging today.
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The Memory of Trees -Enya

To many people, Enya has become
synonymous with new age music. Her haunting voice, clear and crisp above
richly woven musical arrangements and adaptations, represents some of
the best in the genre. Her performances on The Memory of Trees justify
the Celtic songster's reputation. Songs like "China Roses" and "Hope Has
a Place" complement the simple elegance of traditional folk music with
luxuriantly layered instrumentation and highly crafted studio
production. The ultimate effect is dazzling, to be sure. Whether she
sings in English, Gaelic, or Latin, Enya conveys a profound, if slightly
disconcerting, mix of spirituality and sensuality.
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The Celts - Enya

Born Eithne Ni Bhraonain, this
classically-trained pianist was kid sister in the musical family that
became Clannad, joining the Irish band in 1979 but dropping out amicably
three years later to pursue her own muse. This music, produced in the
mid-'80s as the soundtrack to a BBC series, was released as her debut in
1987 and promptly ignored--yet its mix of atmospheric soundscapes and
Enya's lush, layered vocals, sung in both English and Gaelic, is the
template for her subsequent global hits, beginning with Watermark the
following year. Exquisitely haunting!
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Shepherd Moons - Enya

The success of her first
international hit, Watermark, confirmed Enya as less a singer or
songwriter than a sonic architect: working with producer Nicky Ryan and
his wife, lyricist Roma Ryan, the classically-trained pianist built
vaulting cathedrals of sound, framed by luminous piano, shimmering
synthesizer orchestrations, and, above all, the seemingly infinite
layers of vocal harmonies she plied on every song. The deeply romantic
Celtic pop on its 1991 successor, Shepherd Moons, sustains the same
spectrum of hushed reverie and surging, rhapsodic releases, as well as
its mix of ballads, floating midtempo pieces, and forays into Celtic and
Latin--and it's every bit as seductive.
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Parallel Dreams - Loreena McKennitt

Parallel Dreams captures harpist/vocalist
Loreena McKennitt at her absolute finest. Fully immersed in the Celtic
style, this London, Ontario, performer's voice is lush and layered in
warm harmonies, soaring overtop equally beautiful instrumentation.
Flowing between traditional ("Annachie Gordon") and original ("Dickens'
Dublin") fare, McKennitt slows down time and relaxes furrowed brows on
this disc by staying true to her red-headed roots.
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