Hailed in New York, Aboriginal singer transcends barriers of language and time
Indigenous folk artist receives support from Sting, Elton John and Quincy Jones as he performs for capacity crowd in New York

Gurrumul is painfully shy, blind and grants no interviews, but the indigenous Australian singer's music is so striking that he has won star backing for a first American tour.
With a plaintive yet mellifluous voice, Gurrumul transcends language barriers as he sings in his Gumatj dialect which is understood only by around 3,000 people.
Gurrumul has sold more than half-a-million albums worldwide, largely in Australia where the reserved 45-year-old has become an unlikely chart sensation with his two albums both entering the charts in the top five.
After several plans fell through to play in the US, Gurrumul opened a tour Wednesday night in New York with the support of legendary producer Quincy Jones.
"It's unbelievable. I know you're going to get blown away as much as I was when I first heard him," Jones, best known for his work with Michael Jackson, said of Gurrumul in a video message.
"This is one of the most unusual and emotional and musical voices I've ever heard," he added.