Chinmaya Dunster - Mindfulness (2019)

Artist: Chinmaya Dunster
Title: Mindfulness
Year Of Release: 2019
Label: New Earth Records
Genre: New Age, World, Ambient
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 43:52 min
Total Size: 219 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Mindfulness
Year Of Release: 2019
Label: New Earth Records
Genre: New Age, World, Ambient
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 43:52 min
Total Size: 219 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Beneath the Bo Tree
02. Turning the Wheel of Dharma
03. Sermon in the Deerpark
04. Mahakasyapa's Flower
05. The Elephant’s Spawn
06. Mahaparanirvana
Chinmaya Dunster has just released an album called “Mindfulness” on New Earth Records. Inspired by vignettes from the life of Gautam Buddha, it will motivate the listener to focus on the Here and the Now.
Chinmaya Dunster says:
“Playing Indian classical music is my favorite mindfulness practice. The intense attention on the form and feel of the raga I am playing is a way of transcending my mind. It is a search for the innermost core of the raga, just as mindfulness is a search for the innermost core of my being, what Osho and the Zen masters call ‘no-mind’.
Outwardly the form of each raga is simply a set of rules about which notes may be used, which of these emphasized, and a set of restrictions about which way they may be approached from each other. Yet many great artists have commented on the curious sense that, rather than being created, a raga is something to be explored as if it pre-exists beyond the act of performance.”
Chinmaya Dunster says:
“Playing Indian classical music is my favorite mindfulness practice. The intense attention on the form and feel of the raga I am playing is a way of transcending my mind. It is a search for the innermost core of the raga, just as mindfulness is a search for the innermost core of my being, what Osho and the Zen masters call ‘no-mind’.
Outwardly the form of each raga is simply a set of rules about which notes may be used, which of these emphasized, and a set of restrictions about which way they may be approached from each other. Yet many great artists have commented on the curious sense that, rather than being created, a raga is something to be explored as if it pre-exists beyond the act of performance.”