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TAG ARCHIVES: varanasi

BROOME STREET TEMPLE BENEFIT CONCERT TONIGHT

Rehearsing1 BROOME STREET TEMPLE BENEFIT CONCERT TONIGHT

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Tonight, the Soundwalk collective will assemble at the Broome Street Temple for the live premiere of Soundwalk’s Death Must Die, a soundscape created from original recordings collected in Varanasi, India, the sacred Hindu city of Shiva and cremation. ”Whereas love for God leads to the death of death, to Immortality. Forget the forgetting, Death Must Die” - Shree Anandamayi Ma. Photo Maciej Kobielski


DEATH MUST DIE LIVE PREMIERE + BENEFIT FOR BROOME STREET TEMPLE

Tuesday March 1st, 7:30 PM Soundwalk will be recreating the sonic landscape of Varanasi, India using custom cut records of original field recordings from Soundwalk’s Death Must Die in a live performance to benefit the Broome Street Temple. Video preview created by Christopher Bren.


FUNDRAISER FOR BROOME STREET TEMPLE

varanasi2 FUNDRAISER FOR BROOME STREET TEMPLE

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Soundwalk’s Death Must Die will be performed on March 1st, 2011 at a fundraiser to benefit the Broome Street Temple, an authentic Hindu shrine located in Soho.  Death Must Die is a sound piece set in Varanasi, India, reproducing the cycle of a day in this sacred city of Shiva where cremation rituals are held along the banks of the Ganges river.  The performance will be held in the temple, RSVP to nikki@ayny.org to attend.


SOUNDS OF VARANASI

dmd SOUNDS OF VARANASI

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Extract from Soundwalk’s Death Must Die, a sound piece set in Varanasi, India, reproducing the cycle of a day in this sacred city of Shiva where cremation rituals are held along the banks of the Ganges river.  On March 1st, Soundwalk will re-create Death Must Die as a live turntable performance, for a fundraiser to benefit the Broome Street Temple, an authentic Hindu shrine located in Soho.


TRANSMISSIONS | DEATH MUST DIE

 TRANSMISSIONS | DEATH MUST DIE

This week’s transmission is an extract from Death Must Die, which, like La Brulure, is one in a series of limited-edition Soundwalk releases with custom-designed letterpress packaging.

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“Death Must Die is a sound piece that begins before the rising of the sun and reproduces the cycle of a day in Varanasi… Benares, Kashi; a sacred city, where death is everywhere, bathed in light. It is here that the Hindus come to die and burn their dead. It is here, on the river’s edges, that the wrath and the grace of Shiva are expressed.

The sound intoxicating as death itself, it is a hammering song of the dead, playing until one is transfixed. It’s the murmuring of the Ganges… the power of silence.

[Death Must Die] revisits the cycles between life and death, using sound as a metaphor: the laughter of children playing, dogs barking – it contrasts the extreme accumulation of bells, the infernal trance of religious songs, the peculiar sound of bodies burning upon wood… the voice of a young nun coming from an ashram in the silence of the night.”

We hope you enjoy this second installment in the summer Transmissions series.


Aaron Ximm | Editions – Issue#5

Artist:         Aaron Ximm | Quiet American
Title:           Lassitude  | ©
Date:          2010
Duration:    10′12

EDITIONS ISSUE5 XIMM 1 Aaron Ximm | Editions – Issue#5

photo by: Aaron Ximm

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THE SOUND

If in the city of Kashi all things are sanctified; to drown in the city of light one is to walk home upon the water. Take care what you drink, we heard, for the chai is made of river water, and the river is veiled in light but full of death. Take care for the lassi is full of bhang, and the bhang is full of light and darkness in unknown measure. Drop off the ghats and into the river if you dare. The afternoon is gone and the ears are full of night.

On our honeymoon my wife and I spent several weeks in Varanasi, India.  As a city sacred to Shiva one may, even as a western tourist, partake, with discretion, of bhang in many preparations, including the moderately infamous bhang lassi. Opium from the government bhang shop amplified a gold and pastel afternoon; but denser in the memory is the city I entered through the trapdoor of bhang: the plunge into deep water where the sacred city of ritual and the filthy city of junkies became indistinguishable.

Lassitude was constructed with field recordings made during those few weeks, including a long nightwalk home along the ghats, during which we witnessed the idle torment of a scavenging dog; the snuffling of a sacred cow in a private courtyard; the chant of “Ram’s name is truth” as a passing body is taken down to the river to be cremated; and devotional music echoing in the atrium of New Vishwanatha chapel at Banares Hindu University.

Best heard with headphones.

THE ARTIST

Aaron Ximm is a San Francisco-based field recordist and sound artist.  He is best known for his composition, installation, and performance work as Quiet American. From 2001 to 2005, Aaron curated and hosted the Field Effects concert series, which, like his own work, sought to showcase the quiet, fragile, and lovely side of sound art, particularly that working with found sound and field recordings. Recently he has become increasingly interested in taking as his subject the problems and limitations of documentation itself.

links: http://quietamerican.org http://www.facebook.com/pages/Quiet-American/134809495529


INDIA SOUNDSCAPE: DJ CHEB-I-SABBAH MIX (PART FOUR)

India Blog shiva stick 1024x768 INDIA SOUNDSCAPE: DJ CHEB I SABBAH MIX (PART FOUR)

“The river Ganga itself cascades from its home in the Milky Way down onto Shiva’s head and, from his head, down onto the earth. In this way, Shiva represents the tangential point between the unphysical and the physical world. The physical world, which you and I live in, is one in which name and form are particularly important. The nonphysical world is one for which far more important is the unlimited consciousness, from which name and form have substantially been purged. Shiva is usually represented as sitting in the posture known as Ardha Malinda. This means his eyes are half-closed, which allows him to be aware of what is going on outside of him just as, at the same time, he is aware of the ocean of consciousness that exists behind his eyes that is not defiled or disturbed by any kind of action from the outside.” – Robert Svoda

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Noted DJ, Cheb-i-Sabbah, mixes this unique 70 minute sonic journey of India made with Soundwalk field recordings. Available to Soundwalk fans here, in five distinct audio excerpts.

Check it: INDIA: Soundscape and Varasani City of Light Audio Tour

Image: Dug Winningham   Audio: Soundwalk and Cheb i Sabbah


INDIA SOUNDSCAPE: DJ Cheb-i-Sabbah Mix (Part One)

blog varanasi river oar 1024x768 INDIA SOUNDSCAPE: DJ Cheb i Sabbah Mix (Part One)

“Varanasi, which most residents prefer to call Banaras or Kashi, has been a city for 6,000, perhaps as long as 10.000 years. It was originally a city where you came to die or to do sadhana. It was also a place where people came to be alone… as it encourages the kind of interiority that enables people to get a better reality that they might have when they are constantly in the current of human life… Continuously moving, continuously in flux, even Banaras’s greatest temple, the Vishvanath, has not stayed in one place, but has traveled along, moving as the energies and focus of the city have moved. What has remained, though, is an awareness of the vitality of human life and of the finality of death. In this sense, Banaras is completely unchanged from the moment of its founding.” -Robert Svoboda

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Noted DJ, Cheb-i-Sabbah, mixes this unique 70 minute sonic journey of India made with Soundwalk field recordings. Available to Soundwalk fans here, in five distinct audio excerpts.

Check it: INDIA: Soundscape and Varasani City of Light Audio Tour

Image: Eddie Stern  Audio: Soundwalk and DJ Cheb i Sabbah


VARANASI: CITY OF LIGHT

blog india boomshiva 1024x684 VARANASI: CITY OF LIGHT

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Soak in the sounds of Varanasi, a city older than history and legend to imagine sailing with us as we navigate the River Ganges.

“[Varanasi] is older than history, older than tradition, older even than legend, and looks twice as old as all of them put together.”
- Mark Twain

Check it: Varasani City of Light Soundwalk and INDIA: Soundscape

Images: Stephan Crasneanscki Audio: Soundwalk


BOOM SHIVA

soundwalk india final boat BOOM SHIVA

Varasani, City of Light. One of the oldest and most holy places in India. Imagine yourself taking a guided boat ride along The Ganges River as you listen.

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Check it: Varasani City of Light Soundwalk and INDIA: Soundscape

Image: Eddie Stern Audio: Soundwalk