Gordon Hempton, Sound Tracker: South America, Amazon Rain Forest CD Track Listing

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Gordon Hempton, Sound Tracker South America, Amazon Rain Forest
Amazon Rain Forest\nNature Recordings, Quiet Places Collection\nGordon Hempton, The Sound Tracker\n\nTitled selections are actual events presented in "real time" without mixing. However, selections do overlap briefly. Listed times are actual lengths of selections, including transitions. Stereo speaker listening produces enhanced depth of field. Headphone listening creates an amphitheater of three dimensions.\n\nNature Recordist: Gordon Hempton - The Sound Tracker\nDigitally recorded on location in Binaural Stereo\nPost-Production: Albert Swanson, Seattle, WI\nExecutive Producer: Richard Hooper\nAssociate Producer: Sharon Hooper\nGraphic Design: Laura Eagan\nPhotography: Gary Braasch (Rio Sarapique Dawn and Tropical Forest)\n\nNature Recordings\nProduced and Distributed by World Disc Productions\nP.O. Box 2749. Friday Harbor. WA 98250 (206) 378 -3979\n1992 World Disc Productions. All rights reserved.\n
This data cd contains 9 tracks and runs 60min 47sec.
Freedb: 8e0e3d09

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  1. Gordon Hempton, Sound Tracker - ThunderSky (13:00)
    The sound of the Amazon is unmistakably that of a tropical rain forest. The strong sunlight and ample, life-giving water provide both the energy and the means for the loudest of quiet places. The many diverse sounds speak of an ancient ecosystem with many
  2. Gordon Hempton, Sound Tracker - Frog Rain (05:08)
    Inside the forest amphitheater a single drop falls many times... from leaf to leaf. As it does, the countless voices of tree frogs create a sonar type image of the space. This is the setting for our discovery of time in the changing voice of a tropical st
  3. Gordon Hempton, Sound Tracker - Dawn Stream (06:35)
    As I drank, it appeared to me that I was inside a kind of hour glass. In fact, as I learned, it is possible to know the time of day within several minutes by the combination of sounds in the jungle. Notice that the time appears to change more quickly at t
  4. Gordon Hempton, Sound Tracker - Morning (06:10)
    Listen to the six chronological stream selections and see if you can learn to read the clock of the jungle. Notice that the time appears to change more quickly at the beginning and the end of the day. This, of course, corresponds directly with the positio
  5. Gordon Hempton, Sound Tracker - Noon (05:40)
    Listen to the six chronological stream selections and see if you can learn to read the clock of the jungle. Notice that the time appears to change more quickly at the beginning and the end of the day. This, of course, corresponds directly with the positio
  6. Gordon Hempton, Sound Tracker - Afternoon (03:07)
    Listen to the six chronological stream selections and see if you can learn to read the clock of the jungle. Notice that the time appears to change more quickly at the beginning and the end of the day. This, of course, corresponds directly with the positio
  7. Gordon Hempton, Sound Tracker - Evening (09:28)
    Listen to the six chronological stream selections and see if you can learn to read the clock of the jungle. Notice that the time appears to change more quickly at the beginning and the end of the day. This, of course, corresponds directly with the positio
  8. Gordon Hempton, Sound Tracker - Night (05:43)
    Listen to the six chronological stream selections and see if you can learn to read the clock of the jungle. Notice that the time appears to change more quickly at the beginning and the end of the day. This, of course, corresponds directly with the positio
  9. Gordon Hempton, Sound Tracker - Sleeping Jungle (05:50)
    We conclude the program with the relaxing sounds of a Sleeping Jungle.\n


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