Tribal Drift are a band of nomads, travelling the world with their trance music. An entity since 1991 they have been through several member changes, shedding and collecting musicians as the need arises. Cyrung aka Craig Miller is Tribal Drift's founder member and a native Australian. He is responsible for the mesmerising shadows cast by the didgeridoo - he tells us:
"The instrument is 40,000 years old, and has an endless range of sounds and expressions. In years to come people will still be finding new ways to use it."
After being involved with an all Didgeridoo band in Australia and a rock outfit, he travelled through Asia for 7 years collecting musical information and experiences and on arrival in the UK in the 1989 was in demand. This being the beginning of the dance scene, working a club led him to collaborate with Boy George and his partner on live PA's, delivering a live feel with DJ's. This spawned the idea that led to Tribal Drift's birth. Through the support of Nation Records a single was released that went on to become single of the week in the NME music magazine.
Tribal Drift's sound does not fit into any moulded form of trance, preferring to draw influences from world-wide music. They use a wide variety of instruments, from foraging gongs lurking within timeless Egyptian melodies to vertical bells, and cultivate a groove from it�s musical elements. For them, trance is:
"...an accessible form of music that is audience based, i.e. it allows people to focus on their own interpretation of the sounds, instead of forcing them to comply to a mass perspective. An Aborigine told us 'dance is an initiation, so when you can dance don�t walk again, and when you can sing don�t talk again'. When a journey beckons go with it, let go and enjoy and you might surprise yourself as to what's lurking below the surface.
The ancient sounds of the didgeridoo as well as the various percussion drums like the tabla, the birds, animals and insects that are sampled create a memory of times past. As people are so into the technology of today they need a reminder to put their feet back on the earth."