View allAll Photos Tagged didgeridoo
Taken at gathering for a procession at Salisbury Cathedral Close during the International Arts Festival. The flags were made of painted silk and topped with papier mache 'masks' on top. There was also a very good gospel choir singing praise accompanied by didgeridoo players - in keeping with the Australian aboriginal theme of this year's festival.
I make it a habit to play didgeridoo everyday. It’s time I use to clear my head, meditate, recharge, and create something from nothing.
Photo by: Lance Page
YouTube - Troy Page Didgeridoos
Tumblr Blog - Troy Page Didgeridoos
PHOTO - on Troy Page Didgeridoos Tumblr Blog
He aquí el Didgeridoo que me agencié en Cairns, y me envié por DHL a casa. Eso sí, los cabrones de aduana decidieron que no había pagado bastante y decidieron cobrarme 60 euros más. Malditos hijos de su madre...
Source: livinghistories.newcastle.edu.au/nodes/view/21755
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It made me very happy when Harper & Midwest Kind stomped through "When the Levee Breaks" with a digeridoo!
Leoooon amigoooo weon te amo asi de vdd :D me ecanto esta foto qe te saqe hoy :D
muy buena tarde hoy con leon guille bruno(pack de... incluido ksjakjskja xdd) y cn mi javier ♥ *-*
todavia media atonta si XD entre el sonido del didgeridoo y el djembe jajaja :P mas la shela loca y todo :P
► Bendita ~ Elixir de beat ♫
Empieza a prender la planta,
eleva el pensamiento ese qe duerme ya y descansa ♪
MUY buen tema ese :D
Taken in my front garden in Salford.
i would like to thank my Daughter
little weastewoman for
doing the face painting for me.
and the Didgeridoo is mine. LOL
little weastewoman www.flickr.com/photos/candicequinn/
face paint www.flickr.com/photos/weasteman/3660675378/
Best seen large.
There was solid rock on three sides of me and the lapping sound of ocean waves from the front. No one on the beach, nothing to distract from my concentration. I feel centered, I feel alive. To be all the way down under and not have an experience like this would have been a regret.
In the spring of 2010 I took a trip to Australia to help my friend Justin Krumb film a couple of projects. On one of the projects we were working with Dave Rastovich, a professional surfer and marine conservation activist who lives in Byron Bay, New South Wales. Among many other amazing instruments, Dave plays didgeridoo. Rastovich stoked me out by letting me borrow one of his personal didgeridoos for the duration of our nearly three-week stay. Thanks to Dave I was able to continue my daily practice on the road. So grateful for the generosity and hospitality I received from Rasta and his friendly Ozzie mates.
Shortly after I took these photos I bought a fresh bar of bees wax and re-waxed the mouthpiece nice and clean. Again, so grateful for the opportunity.
Photo's by: Troy Page
YouTube - Troy Page Didgeridoos
Tumblr Blog - Troy Page Didgeridoos
AUSSIE “RASTA” DIDGERIDOO - on Troy Page Didgeridoos Tumblr Blog
Didgeridoo player at the Pamagirri amphitheater located in the RainForeStation Nature Park in Kuranda (northeast AU).
Hang and didgeridoo players on Domplatte ("cathedral plate", meaning the free space around the cathedral), Köln (Cologne), Nordrhein-Westfalen (North Rhine-Westphalia), Germany.
---quotation from en.wikipedia.org about the instrument Hang:---
The Hang (German pronunciation: [haŋ], plural form: Hanghang) is a musical instrument in the idiophone class created by Felix Rohner and Sabina Schärer in Bern, Switzerland. (...)
The instrument is constructed from two half-shells of deep drawn, nitrided steel sheet glued together at the rim leaving the inside hollow and creating a distinct 'UFO shape'. The top ("Ding") side has a center 'note' hammered into it and seven or eight 'tone fields' hammered around the center. The bottom ("Gu") is a plain surface that has a rolled hole in the center with a tuned note that can be created when the rim is struck.
The Hang uses some of the same basic physical principles as a steelpan, but modified in such a way as to act as a Helmholtz resonator. The creation of the Hang was the result of many years of research on the steelpan and other instruments. The inventors of the Hang have continued to refine the shape and materials and have produced several variations over the years.
---end of quotation---
---quotation from en.wikipedia.org about the instrument didgeridoo:---
The didgeridoo (/ˌdɪdʒərɪˈduː/) (also known as a didjeridu) is a wind instrument developed by Indigenous Australians of northern Australia around 1,500 years ago and still in widespread use today both in Australia and around the world. It is sometimes described as a natural wooden trumpet or "drone pipe". Musicologists classify it as a brass aerophone.
There are no reliable sources stating the didgeridoo's exact age. Archaeological studies of rock art in Northern Australia suggest that the people of the Kakadu region of the Northern Territory have been using the didgeridoo for less than 1,000 years, based on the dating of paintings on cave walls and shelters from this period. A clear rock painting in Ginga Wardelirrhmeng, on the northern edge of the Arnhem Land plateau, from the freshwater period (that was begun 1500 years ago) shows a didgeridoo player and two songmen participating in an Ubarr Ceremony.
A modern didgeridoo is usually cylindrical or conical, and can measure anywhere from 1 to 3 m (3 to 10 ft) long. Most are around 1.2 m (4 ft) long. Generally, the longer the instrument, the lower the pitch or key of the instrument. However, flared instruments play a higher pitch than unflared instruments of the same length.
---end of quotation---
September 2007
Unusual sound, to say the least. Here is a clip of what he sounds like youtu.be/2ZAsN9CSTmQ
Oregon Country Fair, Veneta, Oregon USA
Narungga Nation elder performed a special marriage smoking ceremony at this Australian wedding. He was assisted by a didgeridoo player. Fire sticks were used to start the fire. Special bushes for smoking were gathered from Point Pearce Aboriginal lands on Yorke Peninsula. This was preceded by a Chinese Tea ceremony and followed by an Australian Civil Marriage service