Last Voices From Heaven

Release Date: 6th September
Label: Sony TV
To record LAST VOICES FROM HEAVEN, Anthony Copping embarked upon what
National Geographic describes as "the most dangerous journey ever
undertaken in the search for indigenous music."
His quest to discover the ancient and endangered music of the South
Pacific took in 300 islands, 200 performers and hundreds of different
languages. The results can be heard on a unique album and the extraordinary
story behind the recording can be seen in the accompanying National
Geographic film, Last Voices From Heaven. It is the first time the National
Geographic channel has ever commissioned a music documentary.
Copping's travels took him to some of the world's remotest places where
he found some of the most extraordinary music on the planet, thousands
of years old in its origins and still untouched by western civilisation.
Music from another world and another time.
While collecting and recording these extraordinary sounds, Copping
was confronted by cyclones, civil wars and erupting volcanoes and his
life threatened with spears, bows and arrows and guns.
Invaluable support has also come from manager John Wadlow, whose former
clients included Seal. "This is the most exciting project I have
been involved in over the last ten years. In fact, it's the only reason
I am still in the music business," he says.
Copping,
British-born but resident in Australia, began travelling in the South
Pacific 15 years ago and released his first album based on the music
he found there in 1997. But he knew he had only scratched the surface
and to record Last Voices From Heaven, he knew he had to go deeper.
Accompanied by the Solomon Islands-born singer and guitarist Pascal
Oritaimae and a single cameraman, he set off to explore the islands
of Vanuatu, the Solomons and West Papua in the vast area of the South
Pacific known as Melanesia.
He knew the best chance of finding traditional music still being performed
meant seeking out the most remote villages. None of the locations were
accessible by road and none of them had electricity. He spent weeks
travelling by log canoe hundred of miles up uncharted rivers and deep
into dense, unexplored jungle.
And he truly found the Last Voices From Heaven. The music he recorded
included ritual and ceremonial songs, lullabies, laments for the dead
and sacred spirit songs. In most cases, he was almost certainly the
first white person ever to hear such music. He also recorded one of
the last practising sorcerers in the South Pacific.
For the most part, the islanders were enormously open and warm. But
not always. "We got held up. There were guns and machetes and there
were a lot of upset people because they've been displaced and they've
had a really hard time. We had occasions when we thought we were going
to be attacked and a lot of times when we simply had to run away,"
he admits.
Then there were more natural but equally hostile elements. In Vanuatu,
they ran into Cyclone Zoe. Then, in the Solomons, they encountered Cyclone
Benny. On another island, they encountered an active volcano and were
hit by flying volcanic rocks. "We had a lot of danger. But we got
some incredible music. We recorded literally the last people on earth
who know some of these songs. I knew that some of the music was potentially
going to die unless I recorded it'."
Back in his studio in Sydney, Copping took the recordings he had made
and set about creating a bridge between the world of the islanders and
modern western civilisation, helped in the studio by Pascal Oritaimae
and mixed in London with Adam Wren (Leftfield / Afro Celt Sound System).
While Copping didn't want an album of field recordings, like some dry
exhibit in an ethnological museum, he also wanted to avoid the grab-some-vocal-samples-and-chuck-some-beats-over-them
approach. The result is a unique record that is quite unlike anything
else in the marketplace of world music.
Woven into a loose song cycle, the melodies are all derived from traditional
sources and the songs performed in their original tongue. And yet Last
Voices From Heaven also sounds highly accessible to western ears. "I
wanted to preserve the music's integrity but also to create something
in harmony with the modern world," Copping says.
A percentage of the proceeds from the album is being ploughed back
into the islands via local cultural centres and ultimately, Copping
would like to set up a local music school. "The islands are being
invaded by western culture and realistically we can't save all of this
traditional music," he says. "But if we can help to preserve
some of it, then we will have achieved something."
Tracklist
1. Mana Part 1
2. Ma'a Mera
3. Shadow Of Life
4. Spirit
5. Mo're
6. Mamberamo
7. Wuroman
8. Lullaby Of The Dead
9. Taria Waraku
10. Lament
11. Possessed