🎶 Sacred Music

Happy happy!

Love the “grooving” sound of this one… thank you.

a dear friend sent me this gem today:

Laboratorium Pieśni - Lecieli żurauli (online healing concert #1)

“Sounds have a healing power. That is why we bring you songs, hoping that they will fill your hearts with love, peace and gratitude for your life. These are songs of our ancestors, where the ancient vibration is enchanted, releasing from fear and bringing harmony to the spirit. They are also songs born from our intuition, from a joyful space and free femininity that invites us to dance and to live. Sing and dance with us beautiful spirits! Let us unite in one melody, one song for the whole World, for all living beings.” - Laboratorium Pieśni

@YelienaT you might appreciate this… :fire:

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I love them! Where are they from?
Sounds Bulgarian.

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:heart:

Poland. I have a dear friend from Poland who once taught me that “Boguini” is “Goddess”, in Polish. These musicians are wonderful “Boguinis” :fire:

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Ganjafest . . .

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" Shakti (Devanagari: शक्ति, IAST: Śakti; lit. ‘energy, ability, strength, effort, power, might, capability’)[1] in Hinduism, is the “Universal Power” that underlies and sustains all existence. Conceived as feminine in essence, Shakti refers to the personified energy or power of a male deity and often personified as the female consort of the Hindu god.[2][3][4]

In Tantric Shaktism, Shakti is the foremost deity, akin to Brahman.[5][5] In Puranic Hinduism, Shiva and Shakti are the masculine and feminine principles that are complementary to each other. The male deity is purusha, pure consciousness, which creates the universe through the female creative energy of Shakti, which is prakriti, ‘nature’.[6][7]

The term Shakta is used for the description of people associated with Shakti worship. The Shakta pithas are shrines, which are believed to be the sacred seats of Shakti.

Etymology and overview

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According to the Monier-Williams dictionary, the term Shakti (Śakti) is the sanskrit feminine word-meaning “energy, ability, strength, effort, power, might, capability”—thereby implying “capacity for” doing something, or “power over” anything.[1][8] Shakti is also considered feminine noun of linguistic term Sanskrit.[9] Though the term Shakti has broad implications, it mostly denotes “power or energy”.[8]

Much has been written in an effort to describe, define and delineate the principle of Shakti, which is held as the “most complex” goddess related theological concept.[9] Shakti is primarily identified with the feminine, and with the numerous Hindu goddesses, who are seen as “tangible” expressions-visible personifications of the intangible Shakti, such an ideation for Shakti took place over many centuries.[8]

Metaphysically, Shakti refers to “energetic principle” of the ultimate reality, which is ideated as “primordial power”.[8] Shakti is believed to constitute such important factors as: “cit (consciousness, intelligence), ananda (joy, bliss), iccha (will), jnana (knowledge), and kriya (action)”.[9] In the study of Indian religions and their associated philosophies, one finds terms that combine Shakti with other concepts, giving rise to various expressions, such as; “adya Shakti (primal energy, primordial force), cit Shakti or vacya Shakti (the energy of consciousness), vacaka Shakti (manifested consciousness), and para Shakti (supreme energy, cause of all)”—all of which, by their connection with Shakti, indicate that the respective concept is essentially feminine.[9]

Relatedly, the term Shakta (Sanskrit: शक्त, Śakta) is used for people and customs associated with Shakti worship.[10] The term Shakta became popular from the ninth-century onwards, before that the term Kula or Kaula, which referred to clans of female ancestry, besides to the menstrual and sexual fluids of females, was used to describe Shakti followers.[10]

Origins and development

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Pre-Vedic Goddess-worship

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The origins of Shakti concept are prevedic.[11] Sites related to worship of Mother goddess or Shakti were found in Paleolithic context at the Son River valley, where a triangular stone known as the Baghor stone, estimated to have been created around 9,000–8,000 BCE was found.[12] The excavation team, which included Kenoyer, considered it is highly probable that the stone was associated with Shakti or the female principle.[13] The representation of Shakti in a stone is considered an early example of yantra.[14]

Scholars assume goddess worship was prevalent in the Indus Valley Civilisation (3300–1300 BCE) as many terracotta female figurines with smoke-blacked headgears, suggesting their use in rituals, had been found in almost all the houses of Mohenjo-daro and Harappa.[15] Numerous artefacts that appear to portray female deities were also found.[16] This development however is not assumed to be the earliest precursor of goddess worship in India; it has evolved for over a long period of time before.[16]

In the Vedic era

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The Veda Samhitas are the oldest scriptures that specified the Hindu goddesses. The Rigveda and the Atharvaveda are the main sources of knowledge about various goddesses from the Vedic period.[16] Ushas, the goddess of dawn was the most praised. Though male deities such as Indra and Agni have been more popular in the Vedic era, female deities were represented as personifications of important aspects like Earth (Prithvi), Mother of Gods (Aditi), Night (Ratri), and Speech (Vāc/Vāk).[16]

The Devīsūkta in the Rigveda, addressed to the goddess Vāc, became the progenitor of goddess theology that evolved later.[16] Here (10.125.6), Vāc states: “I bend the bow for Rudra that his arrow may strike and slay the hater of devotion. I rouse and order battle for the people, and I have penetrated Earth and Heaven”.[16] This hymn presented the goddess as an all powerful pervasive being, who is both “immanent and transcendent”, and is bestower of power to both gods and humans.[16] The prominent characteristics of Vāc were later incorporated into the identity of Saraswati, who was a minor river goddess in the Vedas, but later became the goddess of knowledge and the “Mother of the Vedas”.[16]

Most of the goddesses in the Vedic era were presented as wives of the gods.[16] They had no special powers nor an individual name either, rather they took their respective husband’s name with feminine suffixes, as with Indrani, the wife of Indra.[16] Though the goddesses had no power, one Rigvedic hymn (10.159) addressed Indrani as Śacī Poulomī and presented her as the “deification” of Indra’s power. The term Śacī meant “the rendering of powerful or mighty help, assistance, aid, especially of the ‘deeds of Indra’.”[16] This use of the term Śacī is seen as a major step in the later conception of Śakti as the divine power that is separate from a deity and something which is not inherently present within it.[16]

In later Hindu texts, the idea of Shakti as divine feminine energy became more pronounced as wives of the gods began to personify the powers of their husbands.[16] Despite arriving at this stage, it was only later, after a lot of philosophical speculation and understanding the connecting factor underlying the universe that the idea of Shakti as being the feminine unity pervading all existence was developed.[17]

Late Vedic-Upanishad era"

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OK great. I have a brother-in-law from Poland. I’ll have to send it to him. Their style of singing reminds me a lot of the Women’s Bulgarian Choir. Check them out if you haven’t heard them.

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@_Barry

Many of the Shiva Yogis use ganja as their sacramental plant medicine.
This mentions the legend that cannabis came from drops of poison that were transmuted by Shiva.

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Continuing the discussion from :notes: Sacred Music:

@NightHawk999 Shakti is the female consort of Shiva, also known as Parvati. Shakti is also the underlying energy or power of the Universe.
The Hindu “Trinity” is Brahma (the Creator), Vishnu (the Sustainer) and Shiva (the Destroyer). All are manifestations of the ultimate underlying Divine energy of the Universe called Brahman (different than Brahma the Creator). (The Wikipedia article above says that in the Shaivite tradition, Shakti is the underlying energy equivalent to Brahman). Since Shiva is the destroyer, he is connected with the energy of impermanence. My understanding is that the Vajrayana Buddhism (which has mostly survived in Tibet) was influenced by the Shaivite Tantric tradition. At one time in India, the Shaivite Tantric Hindu yogis hung out a lot with the Tantric Buddhist yogis and exchanged a lot of ideas and practices. These were the yogis that hung out in cremation grounds (as a meditation on death and impermanence) and sometimes did Tantric sexual rituals.
@NightHawk999

Wah! is the OG Western Kirtan artist!
Back in the 80’s she was living in an Ashram in New York and singing Kirtan. She decided to leave the Ashram and begin performing her Kirtan in L.A. clubs, accompanying herself on electric bass and opening for the likes of Courtney Love. This was way before the contemporary Western Kirtan scene, pre-dating even Krishna Das and Jai Uttal.
Check her out, she’s amazing!

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Thank you for clarifying this, I had thought Parvati was Shiva’s wife, good to know there are multiple names for her

It is very cool that each of these 3 divine forces of the Universe, also have female counterparts, (possibly to show the male and female aspects of each of these energies):

" Parvati (Sanskrit: पार्वती, IAST: Pārvatī, IPA: /pɑɾʋət̪iː/), also known as Uma (Sanskrit: उमा, IAST: Umā, IPA: /ʊmɑː/) and Gauri (Sanskrit: गौरी, IAST: Gaurī, IPA: /gə͡ʊɾiː/), is one of the principal goddesses in Hinduism, revered as the goddess of power, energy, nourishment, harmony, love, beauty, devotion, and motherhood. Along with Lakshmi and Sarasvati, she forms the trinity, known as the Tridevi.[9]"

Love her voice, you are right, very talented!

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@NightHawk999 Check out the video I just posted under Sacred Teachings. It tells the whole story of Shiva & Shakti/Parvati.

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Really looking forward to this one, thank you

:green_heart:
:pray:

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A Song For Your Heart

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José González - Crosses (Live on KEXP)

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All In - Samuel J.

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A song by Shantala celebrating Shiva as “Nataraja”- the One who does the eternal dance of creation and destruction.

Jai Uttal’s celebration of Shiva as Nataraja.

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Grand Slam song, really LOVED her voice, pure perfection

:green_heart:
:pray:

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Healing Voices Of Spirit - A song from a collective of the Galactic Heart

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Dreaming with Mapacho. (Mapacho is the South American tobacco used in ayahuasca ceremonies).

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Amen Brother

Dreams we should all strive for

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