Gaia - Music

Music

Albums
  • Gaia (2002), an album by the Japanese rock band Janne Da Arc
  • Gaia, the Japanese title for the album Valensia (1993) by the Dutch rock singer Valensia
  • Gaia (1994), an EP by the Swedish metal band Tiamat
  • Gaia (album) (2003), an album by the Spanish folk- heavy-metal band Mägo de Oz
  • Gaia: One Woman's Journey (1994), an album by the Australian singer Olivia Newton-John
  • Gaia-Onbashira (1998), an album by the Japanese New Age musician Kitarō
Songs
  • "Gaia", a song from the album Fireships (1993) by the English singer Peter Hammill
  • "Gaia", a song from the album Gaia-Onbashira (1998) by the Japanese New Age musician Kitarō
  • "Gaia", a song from the album Hourglass (1997) by the American singer James Taylor
  • "Gaea", a song from the album So Early in the Spring (1989) by the British rock band Pentangle
  • "Gaia", a song from the album Synchestra (2006) by the Canadian rock musician Devin Townsend
  • "Gaia", a song from the album Valensia (1993) by the Dutch rock singer Valensia
Other
  • Gaia, the name of the collaboration between Armin van Buuren and Benno de Goeij
  • GAIA Chamber Music Festival, a music festival in Thun, Switzerland
  • SH-01 GAIA, a synthesizer manufactured by Roland Corporation

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Famous quotes containing the word music:

    Music is either sacred or secular. The sacred agrees with its dignity, and here has its greatest effect on life, an effect that remains the same through all ages and epochs. Secular music should be cheerful throughout.
    Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe (1749–1832)

    The basic difference between classical music and jazz is that in the former the music is always greater than its performance—Beethoven’s Violin Concerto, for instance, is always greater than its performance—whereas the way jazz is performed is always more important than what is being performed.
    André Previn (b. 1929)

    I think sometimes, could I only have music on my own terms; could I live in a great city and know where I could go whenever I wished the ablution and inundation of musical waves,—that were a bath and a medicine.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)