Home     Cart     Contact Us     About Us     Research     The Oceania Project    
Humpback Whale Icons
Buy DVDs
Whale Song CD
Whale Books
Expeditions
Support
Who is The Oceania Project
Subscribe to iWhales Updates Today


Power Search
All Movies
All Photos
All Whales

Contact Us
Privacy Statement
Terms & Conditions
FAQs


PayPal


Hear

Male Humpback Whale song is transferred from year to year and evolve in a similar fashion to the verbally transmitted tribal lore of Aboriginal cultures from where the term Songlines is derived.

Hear Whale Songs Greatest Composers

The East Australian Humpback Whales travel in an unending cycle of migration between their breeding area in the inter-reef lagoon of the Great Barrier Reef off the coast of Queensland and their Antarctic feeding areas. Their world is comprised of vast stretches of ocean where the music composed by the male Humpback Whales

can be heard over great distances. Each year the whales sing a new song. Haunting melodies of radiant joy which fill the ocean along the East Coast of Australia.

When environmental systems across the planet are collapsing and species are becoming extinct at an accelerating rate, the East Australian Humpback Whales are making a remarkable recovery. They have become Australia’s national treasure and a symbol of hope for our imperilled environment.

Songlines documents the evolution of the intricate and beautiful East Australian Humpback Whale song. An hour of pristine digital audio recordings selected from five different years between 1992 and 2008 which draw the listener into a mysterious and majestic ocean world.

Track 3 features white whale Migaloo, recorded in 1998.

Purchase from Songlines: Songs of the Eastern Australian Humpback Whales

Whale Song CD
 
Who is The Oceania Project
No items in Cart


View Cart
Checkout
Wishlist
Gift Registry
Your Orders

Gift Certificates
Search for events

Username

Password


 
Forgot password?
If Javascript is disabled in your browser click here.


iWhales™ is powered by X-Cart and NetRegistry e-commerce solutions
Copyright © 1988-2024 The Oceania Project (iWhales.org) Google+