video,youtube_link,musiccaps_caption,youtube_published,youtube_channel,youtube_description,musiccaps_names,musiccaps_aspects,musiccaps_author,youtube_id,musiccaps_rowid https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9QEm6u4bowQ&start=30&end=40,"{""label"":""Boss DN-2 Dyna Drive Demo: Gear Up"",""href"":""https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9QEm6u4bowQ&start=30&end=40""}","This music is instrumental. The tempo is medium fast with an energetic electric guitar lead. The music is minimalist with no accompaniment. It is youthful, powerful, enthusiastic, controlled, engaging and intense. This music is Hard Rock/Heavy Metal.",2012-05-03T16:21:42Z,gearuptmntv,"Let your pick set the gain. The Dyna Drive by Boss is very responsive to pick attack. This allows you to lighten up your touch and the drive will clean up. This technology was borrowed from the Roland Cube-60. So if you want a responsive distortion pedal this might be the one for you. Gear Up Be Sure You Go To The Gear Up Channel For Past Episodes http://www.youtube.com/gearuptmntv If you want to request a piece of gear you want on the show just send me a message!!! Also Go Stop By The Musician Network Channel for Other Great Content. http://www.youtube.com/tmntv","[""Echo"", ""Effects unit"", ""Electric guitar"", ""Music"", ""Distortion""]","[""instrumental"", ""fast tempo"", ""electric guitar"", ""metal"", ""heavy metal"", ""hard rock"", ""amplified guitar"", ""external amplification"", ""minimalist"", ""youthful"", ""loud"", ""powerful"", ""lead"", ""stringed instrument"", ""rock"", ""heavy metal""]",7,9QEm6u4bowQ,1003 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XzTBNfQ7_GA&start=30&end=40,"{""label"":""Ancient Egyptian Music - Nenchefka's Orchestra"",""href"":""https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XzTBNfQ7_GA&start=30&end=40""}","This music is instrumental. The tempo is slow with an Oud lead with atmospheric synthesiser . The music uses minimal instrumentation to emphasise on the lead instrument. The hollow sound in the background is either a synthesiser or a wind instrument. The music is intense, grim, mysterious, suspenseful, sinister and enigmatic.",2011-07-24T23:36:23Z,MisterAncientMusic,"From New England comes Douglas Irvine, a composer, sound artist and instrument maker, the sounds that he creates are inspired on the musical traditions of ancient Middle Eastern cultures, like ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia. This record have a great aura, with different sensations, its ritualistic, relaxed, deep, dark, ethereal and mystic. This are some of the old instruments that you could ear on this great record that e real advice: bass lyre, bells and miscellaneous percussions, shoulder harp, clappers, pan pipes, double Oboe etc. Ambient Egypt is a varied collection of musical soundscapes inspired by ancient Egyptian traditions. Although music existed in prehistoric Egypt, the evidence for it becomes secure only in the historical (or ""dynastic"" or ""pharaonic"") period--after 3100 BCE. Music formed an important part of Egyptian life, and musicians occupied a variety of positions in Egyptian society. Music found its way into many contexts in Egypt: temples, palaces, workshops, farms, battlefields and the tomb. Music was an integral part of religious worship in ancient Egypt, so it is not surprising that there were gods specifically associated with music, such as Hathor and Bes (both were also associated with dance, fertility and childbirth). All the major categories of musical instruments (percussion, wind, stringed) were represented in pharaonic Egypt. Percussion instruments included hand-held drums, rattles, castanets, bells, and the sistrum--a highly important rattle used in religious worship. Hand clapping too was used as a rhythmic accompaniment. Wind instruments included flutes (double and single, with reeds and without) and trumpets. Stringed instruments included harps, lyres, and lutes--plucked rather than bowed. Instruments were frequently inscribed with the name of the owner and decorated with representations of the goddess (Hathor) or god (Bes) of music. Both male and female voices were also frequently used in Egyptian music. Professional musicians existed on a number of social levels in ancient Egypt. Perhaps the highest status belonged to temple musicians; the office of ""musician"" (shemayet) to a particular god or goddess was a position of high status frequently held by women. Musicians connected with the royal household were held in high esteem, as were certain gifted singers and harp players. Somewhat lower on the social scale were musicians who acted as entertainers for parties and festivals, frequently accompanied by dancers. Informal singing is suggested by scenes of workers in action; captions to many of these pictures have been interpreted as words of songs. Otherwise there is little evidence for the amateur musician in pharaonic Egypt, and it is unlikely that musical achievement was seen as a desirable goal for individuals who were not professionals. The ancient Egyptians did not notate their music before the Graeco-Roman period, so attempts to reconstruct pharaonic music remain speculative. Representational evidence can give a general idea of the sound of Egyptian music. Ritual temple music was largely a matter of the rattling of the sistrum, accompanied by voice, sometimes with harp and/or percussion. Party/festival scenes show ensembles of instruments (lyres, lutes, double and single reed flutes, clappers, drums) and the presence (or absence) of singers in a variety of situations.","[""Traditional music"", ""Music""]","[""instrumental"", ""slow tempo"", ""oud"", ""acoustic"", ""intense"", ""wind instrument"", ""hollow sound"", ""serious"", ""sinister"", ""grim"", ""atmospheric synthesiser"", ""minimal"", ""lead"", ""grim"", ""enigmatic"", ""mystical""]",7,XzTBNfQ7_GA,3244