Home
Songs from the Bardo
Barnes and Noble
Songs from the Bardo
Current price: $17.99
Barnes and Noble
Songs from the Bardo
Current price: $17.99
Size: CD
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
The Bardo Thodol is referred to in English as The Tibetan Book of the Dead. It's part of a larger body of sacred texts in the Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism. Written in Sanskrit by Padma Sambhava during the eighth century CE, then hidden; it was discovered during the 14th century by Karma Lingpa. It was first translated into English in 1927. The book is a spiritual instruction manual designed for being read aloud to one who has entered the intermediate (bardo) state after death, so the being's consciousness escapes the endless cycle of death and rebirth known as samsara. It is often represented in Anglo literature, music, philosophy, and art.
Songs from the Bardo
is a gorgeously articulated, 80-minute recording project. It was conceived in 2008 by Tibetan musician
Tenzin Choegyal
and American composer and instrumentalist
Jesse Paris Smith
after a joint performance at the Annual Tibet House U.S. Benefit Concert.
Choegyal
suggested they collaborate on a new approach to the work to promote understanding of its concepts. They recruited
Laurie Anderson
to read the excerpts and later, cellist
Rubin Kodheli
. In 2014, they met at the Rubin Museum of Art and improvised a performance. The following year, the group performed a shorter version at the Tibet House event. The recording, from the
Smithsonian Folkways
label, features
Anderson
reading and playing violin,
singing, chanting, and playing various Tibetan reed, string, and percussion instruments,
Smith
on piano, crystal bowls, and gongs,
Kodheli
's cello, and
Shazad Ismaily
on percussion. The package includes copious notes from the three performers and the writer
Khamo
.
This presentation is a sustained, evolving meditation, delivered in
's calm, compassionate speaking voice; her deliberative reading offers directions and cautions to the one traveling the various states and stages of consciousness after death (according to Tibetan religion, the bardo states last 49 days), and describes visions, spiritual beings, entities, and obstacles one encounters in this disembodied state. The improvising musicians surround her with empathy and a (mostly) gentle spaciousness. This instinctive approach to the material is striking and moving, artful and lovely, even when the root text vividly describes what are potentially fearful episodes along the soul's journey. Piano, bowed, strummed, and plucked cello, droning violin, modal chanting, and Tibetan lingbu (flute) and dranyen (lute), percussion, and a floating piano commingle, interact, and slip by as quickly as they appear, forming a fluid narrative as profound as it is unassuming. Track selections such as "Heart Sutra - Song," Jigten," and "Lotus Born, No Need to Fear" contrast with others, including the long "Brilliant Lights," which are far more abstract. The closing selection, "Awakened Heart," is sung in falsetto by
; it's freed from the rest of the text by a melody representing the clarity of consciousness needed to attain freedom from the samsaric cycle.
adds immeasurably to the body of art inspired by The Bardo Thodol; it is presented without sensation, artificial drama, or tension. It is not only lovely and moving, but profoundly instructive, as only the best art can be. ~ Thom Jurek
Songs from the Bardo
is a gorgeously articulated, 80-minute recording project. It was conceived in 2008 by Tibetan musician
Tenzin Choegyal
and American composer and instrumentalist
Jesse Paris Smith
after a joint performance at the Annual Tibet House U.S. Benefit Concert.
Choegyal
suggested they collaborate on a new approach to the work to promote understanding of its concepts. They recruited
Laurie Anderson
to read the excerpts and later, cellist
Rubin Kodheli
. In 2014, they met at the Rubin Museum of Art and improvised a performance. The following year, the group performed a shorter version at the Tibet House event. The recording, from the
Smithsonian Folkways
label, features
Anderson
reading and playing violin,
singing, chanting, and playing various Tibetan reed, string, and percussion instruments,
Smith
on piano, crystal bowls, and gongs,
Kodheli
's cello, and
Shazad Ismaily
on percussion. The package includes copious notes from the three performers and the writer
Khamo
.
This presentation is a sustained, evolving meditation, delivered in
's calm, compassionate speaking voice; her deliberative reading offers directions and cautions to the one traveling the various states and stages of consciousness after death (according to Tibetan religion, the bardo states last 49 days), and describes visions, spiritual beings, entities, and obstacles one encounters in this disembodied state. The improvising musicians surround her with empathy and a (mostly) gentle spaciousness. This instinctive approach to the material is striking and moving, artful and lovely, even when the root text vividly describes what are potentially fearful episodes along the soul's journey. Piano, bowed, strummed, and plucked cello, droning violin, modal chanting, and Tibetan lingbu (flute) and dranyen (lute), percussion, and a floating piano commingle, interact, and slip by as quickly as they appear, forming a fluid narrative as profound as it is unassuming. Track selections such as "Heart Sutra - Song," Jigten," and "Lotus Born, No Need to Fear" contrast with others, including the long "Brilliant Lights," which are far more abstract. The closing selection, "Awakened Heart," is sung in falsetto by
; it's freed from the rest of the text by a melody representing the clarity of consciousness needed to attain freedom from the samsaric cycle.
adds immeasurably to the body of art inspired by The Bardo Thodol; it is presented without sensation, artificial drama, or tension. It is not only lovely and moving, but profoundly instructive, as only the best art can be. ~ Thom Jurek