Cheap Vox de Nube (Music) (Anonymous, Joa Bolendas, Byzantine Chant, Gregorian Chant, Hildegard of Bingen, Peader O Riada, Irish Traditional, Nóirín Ní Riain) Price
CHEAP-PRICE.NET ’s Cheap Price
$17.98
Here at Cheap-price.net we have Vox de Nube at a terrific price. The real-time price may actually be cheaper — click “Buy Now” above to check the live price at Amazon.com.
| ARTIST: | Anonymous, Joa Bolendas, Byzantine Chant, Gregorian Chant, Hildegard of Bingen, Peader O Riada, Irish Traditional, Nóirín Ní Riain |
| CATEGORY: | Music |
| MANUFACTURER: | Sounds True Direct |
| FEATURES: | Import |
| TYPE: | Antiphon, Celtic, Celtic/Irish, Choral, Eastern Orthodox Chant, Hymn, Int'l & World Music, Kyrie, Miscellaneous, Miscellaneous Music, Pop, Vocal, Vocal Music, Western European Chant, World Music |
| MEDIA: | Audio CD |
| TRACKS: | Magnificat Cum Alleluia (Song Of Praise), Pater Noster (Our Father), Lob/Ehre, Christe (Praise/Glory To Christ), A Dhia Ghleigil (Oh Glorious God), O Viridissima Virga (Most Holy Virgin), A Song For Mary Magdalen/Pater Superni Luminis (Our Father Of Light), Kyrie Eleison: Hildegard Of Bingen (Lord, Have Mercy), We Venerate Thy Cross, Cum Processit: Hildegard Of Bingen (When You Came Forth), An Taiseirl (The Resurrection), Go Mbeannaitear Duit (Hail, Mary), Homilia Sancti Bernardi Abbatis (Homily Of Saint Bernard), The Beatitudes, Regnavit Dominus (The Lord Now Reigns), Saint Brigid's Prayer, O Frondens Virga (Oh, Flowering Stem), Seacht Suailci Na Maighdine Muire (The Seven Rejoices Of Mary), Ar Nathair (Our Father), In Paupertatis Praedio (In The Farmland Of Poverty), Vater Unser: Joa Bolendas (Our Father) |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
| UPC: | 600835131827 |
Related Products
Customer Reviews of Vox de Nube
heavenly (literally) There are voices that crack glass. That's impressive, always. Noirin Ni Riain has a voice that stops you in your tracks and fills your eyes with tears and makes all that is holy to you as real as your hand. If you don't believe that, listen to ten seconds of "Magnificat cum alleluia" and see if you don't suddenly feel the impulse to drop to your knees. <
> <
>Noirin Ni Riain --- in America, she'd be Noreen O'Ryan --- is not much known outside Ireland. There's a reason. As a child, she learned 1,000 traditional Irish songs in a style that's hundreds of years old. She made her first recordings with the choir of Benedictine monks at the Glenstal Abbey in Limerick, Ireland in 1979. The monks were, in essence, her record company. A very non-commercial company --- the monks filled orders but did not engage in the worldly practice of promotion. <
> <
>Noirin Ni Riain was an Irish national treasure for a decade. (Sinéad O'Connor called her "my biggest influence and heroine in music.") Then she began performing outside of Ireland, often in support of peace groups. She's learned to sing the sacred music of India in Hindi and to play Indian instruments. In 2003, she earned a PhD. in theology from the University of Limerick. Her thesis subject: "Theosony," a theology she devised that marries listening to Spirit. <
> <
>An Irish critic, Brendan Kennelly, nails her appeal: "Noirin Ni Riain's special magic springs from her ability to meditate coherently on the nature and consequences of her own passion for music, song and chant. She is a very conscious artist who has a direct, articulate link with her unconscious powers. The beautiful clarity of her singing and thinking is born of her intrepid ability to confront and express the complexity of her dreams, instincts, aspirations and longings. I believe that is why her genius, at once contained and soaring, creates in the listener's heart an atmosphere of serenity and calm, a peace that is all the more profound and convincing for being voiced in a world of horror, greed and compulsive destruction..." <
> <
>I don't understand the words she sings. But I don't need to use the liner notes to know what they say. Her music comes across time, from a place out of time. Her voice is of this earth, and not. (The title of the CD means "voice from a cloud.") There is no arguing with it --- this music is truth, beyond judgment. And this is the most wonderful thing about it: There's no negativity. Noirin Ni Riain may knock you to the floor, but she will never fail to lift your heart to the heavens. <
> <
>But I don't want to get all heavy about Noirin Ni Riain's gifts. Of course this CD will have special appeal to those who are hurt and lost and alone and feeling all of that every minute of the day. But this music can also be played for enjoyment --- in "Saint Brigid's Prayer," she sings: "I'd like to give a lake of beer to God/ I'd love the Heavenly Host/ to be tippling there/ For all eternity." So much for stuffy "church" music! (Consumer warning: There are some prayers spoken at one point. But they're not long, and they don't fatally break the mood.) <
> <
>I wish I could give this CD to everyone in the world. <
> <
>
Exquisite and haunting
Noirin Ni Riain's music here, together with the monks of Glenstal Abbey, is
<
>nothing less than equisite - and haunting. A superb example of the ability of the arts, including music of course, to mediate religious experience. (And for those who find the word "religious" to be impolitesse - "spiritual" experience.)
<
>
<
>It is, of course, the music of worship - of monasteries ancient, of poetic longings and deepest enchantment with God.
<
>
<
>To the reviewer who complained of the distraction of the inclusion of some spoken word - the complaint is astonishing - "like reading from the Bible!"
<
>Well . . . as another reviewer wrote, what would one expect from Christian music of a worship nature? Prayer and scripture. Poetic prayer. Ancient prayers of great beauty. For the Irish, the spoken word, prayer and poetry are themselves musical reckonings.
<
>
<
>I hope no one is dissuaded by a comment like that that simply arises from either misconceptions or simply ignorance of the form.
Sublimity somewhat impaired
Noirin Ni Riain's voice is often competing with the instrument that she is playing at the time, e.g. harmonium, and this is sometimes to the detriment of audibility.
She is often overwhelmed. When you can hear her, however, the singing is sublime. And the monks are as clear as monks should be. (Almost said "clear as a bell.")
The monks of Glenstal Abbey are Benedictines, not Trappists.