8 Royalty-Free Audio Tracks for "Native American Music"

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All the music is generated with audacity! toda la música fue hecha con audacity!.
Author: Luis Audp
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01:48
from the Library of Congress Piute. Gambling Song.
Author: This file is lacking author information.
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00:54
De-noised and de-breathed from spawnofsirius. Original:https://www. Freesound. Org/people/spawnofsirius/sounds/188468/.
Author: Petrucio
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00:29
Hon'hewachi Song (Night Dance Society Song)
Author: Miller, George (Iⁿke'toⁿga) (Big Shoulder) (Performer) Merrick, Joseph (Gioⁿ'zethiⁿge) (None to teach him) (Performer) Unidentified Woman (Performer) La Flesche, Francis, 1857-1932 (Recordist) Mi'gthiⁿtoⁿiⁿ (Return of New Moon) (Performer) Fletcher, Alice C. (Alice Cunningham), 1838-1923 (Collector) La Flesche, Francis, 1857-1932 (Collector)
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Dance song of the Thompson River Indians, recorded on phonograph cylinder by Professor Franz Boas, British Columbia. Saved in the Berlin Phonogramm-Archiv.
Author: Traditional song
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01:39
Recording of a day of the dead celebration at the museum of native american history in washington, d. C. (2014) features drumming, flute playing, chanting, yelling / whooping, whip crack sounds. Drenched in natural reverb (recorded from top floor of a circular performance space with a stone ceiling), with lots of low-frequency rumble. Possible use: could be processed for horror ambience.
Author: Jaegrover
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02:09
Eagle Song of the Hopi Indians in Arizona, recorded on phonograph cylinder by Otto Abraham. Saved in the Berlin Phonogramm-Archiv.
Author: Traditional song
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00:45
library of congress recording, and before 1911 -- public domain traditional Omaha Indian song. From here Notes This song was collected by Alice Cunningham Fletcher and Francis La Flesche. It is included on Omaha Indian Music: Historical Recordings from the Fletcher/La Flesche Collection (AFC L71). From the liner notes of the Omaha Indian Music album: Composers of love songs used melody and vocables to convey emotion (1893, pp. 53-54, 146-150; 1911, pp. 319-321). The true love-song, called by the Omaha Bethae waan, an old designation and not a descriptive name, is sung generally in the early morning, when the lover is keeping his tryst and watching for the maiden to emerge from the tent and go to the spring. They belong to the secret courtship and are sometimes called Me-the-g'thun wa-an - courting songs. . . . They were sung without drum, bell or rattle, to accent the rhythm, in which these songs is subordinated to tonality and is felt only in the musical phrases. . . . Vibrations for the purpose of giving greater expression were not only affected by the tremolo of the voice, but they were enhanced by waving the hand, or a spray of artemesia before the lips, while the body often swayed gently to the rhythm of the song (Fletcher, 1894, p. 156). George Miller's probable year of birth is 1852.
Author: Performed by Miller, George (Inke'tonga) (Big Shoulder), Recorded by Alice Cunningham Fletcher and Francis La Flesche.
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