Tibetan Chanting Trance aum IOCOB GOA chill music overtones chant tibet psychedelic meditative crystal OM
"One night in 1433 AD, the Tibetan lama Je Tzong Sherab Senge, awoke from a startling dream. He had head a voice in the dream unlike any voice he knew. It was a low voice, unbelievably deep, sounding more like the growl of a wild bull than anything human. Combined with the first voice, there was a second. This voice was high and pure, like the sound of a child singing. These two voices, so totally different, had come from the same source and that source was himself.
In this dream, Je Tzong Sherab Senge had been instructed to take this special voice and use it for a new chanting style that would embody both the masculine and the feminine aspects of the divine energy. It was a tantric voice, a sound that could unite those chanting it in a web of universal consciousness.
The next morning, Je Tzong Sherab Senge began to chant his daily prayers. The sound that came out of him were the sounds he had heard in his dream -- unearthly sounds, tantric sounds -- and he gathered his fellow monks together to tell them of his dream." (Jonathan Goldman, Healing sound)
That year, 1433 AD, more that 500 years ago, the Gyume Tantric Monastery began in Lhasa, Tibet. The monks of this monastery learned to chant in the same voice which Je Tzong Sherab Senge have heard in his dream. It was a voice that enable each monk to chant three notes at the same time, creating the "One Voice Chord". Within that same century, another monastery in Lhasa, the Gyuto Tantric college, was founded.
What is throat singing
In the western world Throat singing is also called overtone singing, harmonic singing, or harmonic chant. The most known Throat singing is the Tibetan and Mongolian chanting but also many other regions in the World are practicing a similar type of singing, that manipulates the harmonics resonance's created as air travels through the human vocal folds and out the lips.
The harmonic frequencies created by the human vocal apparatus are harnessed in throat singing to select overtones by tuning the resonance in the mouth. The result of tuning allows the singer to create more than one pitch at the same time, with the capability of creating six pitches at once. Generally the sounds created by throat singing are low droning hums and high pitched flutelike melodies.
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lightangel92 5 months ago
I would do myself harm than good with this sound. :-)))
AJSwisgirl 11 months ago
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Xploitert 1 year ago
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jodiefoster3 3 years ago
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jodiefoster3 3 years ago