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Bunggul Bunggul is a style of music that arose around the Mann River[?] and is known for its intense lyrics, which are often stories of epic journeys and continue, or repeat, unaccompanied after the music has stopped. Clan songs A particular clan in Aboriginal culture may share songs, known as emeba (Groote Eylandt), fjatpangarri (Yirrkala[?]), manikay (Arnhem Land[?]) or other native terms. Songs are about clan or family history and are frequently updated to take into account popular films and music, controversies and social relationships. Karma Karma is a type of oral literature[?] that tells a religious or historical story. Didgeridoo A didgeridoo is a type of musical instrument, a woodwind aerophone, traditionally made out of eucalyptus or bamboo. Aborigines used the didgeridoo to communicate over long distances, as well as to accompany songs. Krill Krill The Krill Krill song cycle is a modern musical innovation from east Kimberley[?]. A man named Rover Thomas[?] claims to have discovered the ceremony in 1974 (see 1974 in music) after a woman to whom he was spiritually related was killed after a car accident near Warmun[?]. Thomas claimed to have been visited by her spirit and received the ceremony from her. In addition to the music, Thomas and others, including Hector Jandany[?] and Queenie McKenzie[?], developed a critically acclaimed style of painting in sync with the development of the ceremony. Kun-borrk Kun-borrk arose around the Adelaide[?], Mann[?] and Rose Rivers[?], distinguished by a didgeridoo introduction followed by the percussion and vocals, which often conclude words (in contrast to many other syllabic styles of Aboriginal singing). Wangga Wanga arose near the South Alligator River[?] and is dintinguished by an extremely high note to commence the song, accompanied by rhythmic percussion and followed by a sudden shift to a low tone.
Classical and contemporary Composer Peter Sculthorpe[?] is notable for his incorporation of the sounds of the Australian bushland and outback in his symphonic works such as Kakadu, Mangrove and Earth Cry.
Jazz and new music The trio of Tony Buck (drums), Lloyd Swanton (bass) and Chris Abrahams (piano), known together as The Necks[?] since forming in 1987 (see 1987 in music), was notable for its hour-long jams of jazz and ambient music textures, gaining widespread attention both in Australia and internationally.
Some electronica artists also gained limited international fame, including Southend[?], Boxcar[?] (which had several 12" dance singles in the Billboard magazine Dance Top 10) and Itch-E and Scratch-E[?] (whose track "Sweetness & Light" gained the award for the best dance single from the Australian Recording Industry Association [ARIA] in 1995). Also part of rising popularity of electronic music in the late 1990s were the The Avalanches[?] which became widely known outside their native Australia. Less well-known internationally, but nonetheless important Australian electronic acts included the The Lab[?] active in the early to mid-1990s and Infusion[?], Wicked Beat Sound System[?] and The Bird[?] in the late 1990s, early 2000s.
Directions in Groove[?] from Sydney began in the early 1990s as a groove jazz (sometimes referred to as "acid-jazz") outfit but towards the end of that decade had introduced elements of live drum and bass to their music. This fusion approach to jazz and electronica performed live was extended in the late 1990s and early 2000s by The Hive (renamed The Bagsmen in 2002 to avoid confusion with a Swedish-based band with a similar name).
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