Side one
- Lumbuk the Top-Knot Pidgeon, Didgeridoo solo – David Blanatji
- Goro-goro the Kookaburra, Didgeridoo solo – David Blanatji
- Lumbuk the Top-Knot Pidgeon – singer Tjoli Laiwangka, didgeridoo David Blanatji
- Gun-ngwaral the White Cloud – singer Tjoli Laiwangka, didgeridoo David Blanatji
- Waiyara the Shadow – singer Tjoli Laiwangka, didgeridoo Tom Yorkdjanki
Side two
- Gordoh the Brolga, Didgeridoo solo – David Blanatji
- Djamu the Dingo, Didgeridoo solo – David Blanatji
- Bungalin Bungalin a love song – singer Tjoli Laiwangka, didgeridoo Tom Yorkdjanki
- Dalubun a love song – singer Tjoli Laiwangka, didgeridoo Tom Yorkdjanki
Bamyili is a small town situated 270 miles (430 km) from Darwin in the Northern Territory of Australia. The people of Bamyili are from tribes of Arnhem Land, principally the Djauan, Maiali, Rembarrnga and Ngalkbun.
This area of Australia is notable for the throbbing sound of the Margu (Didgeridoo) as presented on this recording by David Blanatji and Tom Yorkdjanki; for the singing demonstrated by Tjoli Laiwanga; and for the superb dancing which has been presented to the outside world by dance groups led by Tjoli Laiwangka and David Gulpilil. The Bamyili dancers have appeared in the United Kingdom, United States, Canada, Mexico, Japan, Malaysia, Fiji, and recently at the South Pacific Festival, Rotorua, New Zealand.
For the first time this exciting, age-old music, related to the Australian environment for over thirty thousand years, is presented to the world through the medium of stereo recording, jointly undertaken in Arnhem Land by the Aboriginal Artists Agency and the Australian Broadcasting Commission at the request of the Aboriginal Arts Board.