The music has been acclaimed by various artists such as
Paul Simon,
Kate Bush,
George Harrison,
David Bowie,
Frank Zappa, Peter Murphy of Bauhaus,
Elizabeth Fraser of
Cocteau Twins,
Bobby McFerrin, Medwyn Goodall,
Enrique Morente,
Glen Phillips of
Toad the Wet Sprocket, the
Grateful Dead,
Robert Plant and has prompted worldwide interest. The American artist
Linda Ronstadt stated that the music was "some of the most beautiful [she's] ever heard". The British-American musician
Graham Nash of
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young declared after listening to the album: "Every musician who considers himself accomplished should listen to (this group's album) and rethink everything he knows (about singing)."
Dead Can Dance's singer
Lisa Gerrard was so inspired by this album, she declared: "If anybody is changed by this, it's me..." The soundtrack for the film
Ghost in the Shell (1995) by
Kenji Kawai was inspired by the music of the Mystery of the Bulgarian Voices. The track "Polegnala e pshenitsa" features in the soundtrack for the film
Skeletons (2010). The British band Leftfield also sampled this same track, the sample being featured on their Leftism album (1995) in the beginning of the album's opening track- "Release the pressure" (referenced here by Dan Leuca). Composer
Joseph LoDuca wrote the
theme music and
incidental music for
Xena: Warrior Princess; The theme music was developed from the traditional Bulgarian folk song "
Kaval sviri", sung by the Bulgarian State Television Female Vocal Choir. The original "Kaval sviri" can be heard when
Xena races into battle in the
Hercules episode "
Unchained Heart". The song "
Parasite Eve" by
Bring Me the Horizon starts with a sample from the song "Ergen deda". Their vocalist
Oli Sykes shared in an interview for
Kerrang! that he chose to include the snippet from "Ergen deda" because it felt euphoric but at the same time foreign and instilled a sense of panic and chaos. It was ranked number 10 on
Spins list of "The 35 Best Albums of the Last 35 Years". ==Track listing==