Music is making our life so much more beautiful! Music is abstract, is sound, but there are composers who see colors when they experience their music before writing all down in notes.
In one of his books Jozef Rulof also writes about the Hereafter, the Spheres of Light, the music there, and indeed, also the colors that automatically flow freely around, together with the sounds.
Music can be experienced while passively listening, or by actively using the voice or a musical instrument. Music is always working therapeutical. Also when not intending to use it therapeutically. But, not all what is categorized as music IS music.
Music is there via the songs of our mother or father, or both, what we heard in the kindergarten, on schools, in discos, bars, cafes, in concert halls. There are several categories in music, but not all can be used to relax or for meditating. Though not specifically categorized as relaxing, also classical music can relax. You can find videos in uploads and playlists in my YT channel EttasFavourites.
Therapeutical:
Relaxing and/or therapeutical music or sounds:
- Aeoliah
- Al Gromer Kahn
- Andreas Vollenweider (harp)
- Binaural beats and solfeggio
- Brian Crain (piano)
- Brian Eno
- Bruno Sanfilippo (piano)
- Chill out
- Erik Berglund (harp)
- Imee Ooi
- Karunesh
- Kitaro
- Klaus Wiese
- Lisa Gerrard
- Llewellyn
- Ludovico Einaudi (piano)
- Mantras
- Mantras – Hein Braat –
- Mathias Grassow
- Max Corbacho
- Medwyn Goodall
- Mike Rowland
- Music for meditation
- Natural sounds
- Om Mani Bêmê Hum (mantra)
- Robert Rich
- Sacred Space Sounds
- Secret Garden
- Singing Bowls
- Steve Roach
- Terry Oldfield
- Tibetan singing bowls and gongs (15 minutes) 1
- Tibetan singing bowls and gongs (15 minutes) 2
- Tibetan singing bowls and gongs (70/90/110 minutes)
- Yanni
Additional:
It is possible to see what music waves create in water. It has been made visible via a method named cymatics. The liquid that is used here is water and colour. The music which is used is the Piano Sonata No. 14 in C♯ minor “Quasi una fantasia”, Op. 27, No. 2, known as the Moonlight Sonata, composed by Ludwig van Beethoven. The piano in this video is performed by a synthesizer, or a combination of a like a guitar sounding instrument, and a synthesizer. It is rather slow, which is in many classical music performances not the case: it is usually much faster in tempo. The slow version though is according to the composition of Beethoven. This video is also used in Brian Josephson‘s lecture at the Royal Society of Medicine in London: at 13:23 – Dynamic effects in water – in this video.
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