Tag Archives: music

Music Meditation Sessions.

Many of you know that I conduct what I call Music Meditation Sessions. However, many seem to have ideas about this that are not accurate. Perhaps the time has come for me to explain it.

 

About 15 or so years ago, I had an arrangement with a yoga and martial arts center in Brooklyn. I would play live music for some of their classes, and in return, I would get to take whatever classes I wished. There was a kung fu instructor who had a system he developed based on the Five Elements (wood, fire, water, metal, and earth). During one of his classes, it occurred to me that there exists musical forms that correlate with each element. For example, water can be invoked by the Dorian mode, or raga Kafi. I experimented with using these musical forms (as well as taking musical cues from the movements and action in the class, anticipating movements, directing energies, etc.) as the templates for my improvisations.

 

It was successful. The only problems that arose were when management insisted upon bringing other musicians into the classes. The other musicians, as talented as they were, couldn’t understand what I was attempting to accomplish.

 

I used this for yoga classes with success; and continue to do so to this day.

 

About three years ago, I came up with the idea of further developing these improvisational techniques, and applying them to guided meditation. Using Indian raga as a basic template, and applying elements of other music, I would use specific musical forms to evoke specific emotional and visceral responses in the listener. I did not confine myself to acoustic instrumentation; the careful use of electronics was equally effective.

 

I call this the Sacred Forbidden Music.

 

The results were successful. Participants reported a wide variety of experiences. Many would report relaxation and deep meditative states. Some would report about recovering lost or repressed memories.

 

Some have described more intense experiences with visions (a few examples: one man told me he was walking in a forest and speaking with winged serpents. Another participant, a woman, said she found herself at the foot of a hill, atop which was an enormous crystal goblet with books and scrolls revolving around it). Others reported astral travel and out-of-body experiences.

 

I should point out that the Sessions are NOT sound meditations. They use elements of sound meditation, but it is a different thing. It is a guided meditation wherein suggested imagery is replaced with musical form.

 

For years I refused to record the Sacred Forbidden Music. I didn’t think the real spirit and essence of the music could be captured in a recording. However, after constant requests, I relented and produced a CD of the music.

 

The development of the Music Meditation Sessions and the Sacred Forbidden Music continues. It’s an ongoing project; and the possibilities are limitless.

HELP!

OK, maybe I’m being overly dramatic. And asking for help is not my strong suit (ask my wife. She’ll tell you. I’m the guy who, when driving somewhere, will never ask directions). But I do need your help. 

God’s Unruly Friends has a YoTube channel. OK: this is not an unusual thing. But I’m trying to get a custom URL (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpI7wAuCWOYswkLcQopZPzA is so clumsy).

The thing is, the new eligibility requirements mandate that I have 100 subscribers. 

Since this is a new channel (and I been a bit busy to promote it), I do not have 100 subscribers yet.

Would you help me, and subscribe? Just go here, and click “subscribe.” That’s it.

Thanks!!

New Videos!

I Put Together A Few Videos.

Yes. For your viewing and listening pleasure, I compiled two new videos one is excerpts from live God’s Unruly Friends concerts, and the other is from the recent solo performance I did at Wow Theater NYC (opening for John Kruth).

Enjoy!

https://youtu.be/Zq-iC7o351w

https://youtu.be/XWTR7WwAWck

The Perils of Musical Technology

I have a confession.

Well, not really a confession, but something I should share. A few days ago (as I write this) I was doing a Music Meditation at Namaste. About 15 or 20 minutes into it, one of my electronic devices I use in this and other musical applications died. Well, I had to think fast. I bypassed it, and continued.

The quality of the performance was not affected in any way. Frankly, I’d be a pitiful excuse for a musician if I let it be affected.

It reminded me of some years ago when I played at the Apollo in NYC. I was doing a solo sitar performance with laptop accompaniment. As the first of my allotted three songs ended, my laptop froze up. So, I improvised my way around it. Later, I mentioned this to a friend in the audience. She said she wasn’t aware that I was having technical problems. I siad “You weren’t meant to.”

If I use a single acoustic instrument, or an arsenal of instruments and electronic devices, it all exists to derve the same purpose. Each one is but a tool. You either use it, or not.

In the end, the music, and its effects in the hearts of the audience are all that matter. All else are details.

Technicality vs Simplicity: the Ongoing Battle

Many musicians argue about technicality vs simplicity. They work themselves into a lather over one side of this idea or another. And there’s been no resolution one way or another. After 44 years of listening to people yapping about this, I have come to an inescapable conclusion.

If a specific piece of music works, it works. John Coltrane’s solos on A Love Supreme have a lot of notes, and they all create a singular transcendental beauty. On the other hand, I was watching a video of BB King recently. At one point he played one note, just one note, and it stopped me dead in my tracks. Same thing with the first time I saw Ravi Shankar live. He could play a gazzillion notes like anyone, and it all makes a deep and sublime statement; but during an alap that night he played one note that was the most perfectly executed note I ever heard. Jimi Hendrix,,, well, you get the point.

These arguments about technicality vs simplicity are ultimately irrelevant.

I say; by all means, develop technique and your knowledge of music. It’s impossible to do anything without some measure of technical skill. This is not the end, it’s a means to an end. Beyond this,  look first and foremost to the psychoactive properties of music. Look to what music does, and what it means. Start at the end of the process; I.e. start with what you’re hoping to achieve with the music you make. If you need to play a lot of notes or just a few notes to achieve a specific result, there’s your answer. And if you’re just improvising and allowing the music to unfold, don’t concern yourself about any of it. Allow the music to happen as it happens; and make sure your instrument – including the instruments of your body and mind – are up to the task.

Now, pick up your instrument, or open your mouth, and make some music.

More writing for doobeedoobeedoo!

I have a confession.

When I go out to hear live music, I almost always end up writing a review for doobeedoobeedoo.info. I’m one of the magazine’s main writer / contributors. PLease check out the magazine, and support our efforts.

My latest:

http://www.doobeedoobeedoo.info/2015/05/05/concert-review-subtle-realms-trio-lives-up-to-its-name/

This is what you’ll find if you search my name:

http://www.doobeedoobeedoo.info/?s=dawoud+kringle

Musician’s rant

I must offer the musicians and artists who visit my wall some food for thought.

After DECADES of participating in performances (using my musical skills it took even more decades of hard work and sacrifice to acquire), to offer yet another performance in hopes of “exposure” leaves a bad taste in my mouth.

I did my first professional gig when I was 14. I’ve done dozens, maybe hundreds of gigs wherein I was promised “exposure.” It produced absolutely no result at all.

Permit me to share a personal anecdote with you.

Some years back, I was part of a music collective that traded musical directorship between members. We got a call for the Disney Corporation. They were holding a corporate function at a hotel in midtown. We spoke with them, got the details, etc. Then, we asked what the gig paid, their answer was this: NOTHING. Not a penny. But we were told it would be “good exposure.”

I told them “NO FUCKING WAY!!” From that moment, I had a personal vendetta against Disney.

Think about this: Disney (whose corporate earnings in 2013 was $90.1 million) were renting a hall in one of Manhattan’s most expensive hotels, paying for caterers, paying security, limo company, etc. etc – and they wouldn’t scrape a few thousand for the live music.

Try telling a catering business or a security firm they should work for free because it’s “good exposure.”
The reason is obvious: they have NO respect for us. They, and hundreds of others, see us as chumps who will work for nothing if they dangle the prospect of “exposure” in our faces.
Power respects power. We need power, or we will be doing free gigs and going to people like this with our hats in our hands and walking away with nothing to show for our work the rest of our lives.

I learned this lesson late in life: I’ve been making music for 44 years. It may very well be too late for me. Don’t make the same mistake I made.