The Sacred Music of Sat Kartar
Kaur.
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here for Sat Kartar Kaur CD's.
Sat Kartar Kaur Khalsa has been teaching,
facilitating, recording, and performing chant music and devotional
kirtan(music sung in call and response style) for almost 30 years.
Her personal journey with these potent spiritual tools was initially
orchestrated, in 1971, when she stumbled upon Kundalini Yoga,
Naad Yoga, Indian classical music, and Sikhism, and became a
student of her spiritual teacher, Yogi Bhajan.
Sat Kartar's childhood was full of music.
Both parents played piano and her father frequently performed
at parties and restaurants. There was music around of every kind--musicals,
standards, and classical music. Sat Kartar played piano at 5,
guitar at 14, and picked out everything on piano and guitar,
from the Beatles to the Spanish classical "Malaguena".
She trained in ballet, and other dance forms.In college, she
was gigging, doing covers of singer-songwriters and folk artists.
One big influence was Joni Mitchell, whose open tunings and unusual
melodies were a doorway and vicarious permission to explore uncharted
territory, musically.
Trying to find her lyric voice to express
the rising spiritual revolution she felt, in this time, she tried
a Kundalini yoga class, hoping for some kind of release from
songwriter's Sat Kartar recalls, " My first experience of
chanting was being mezmerized with the sound of this yoga teacher,
named Livtar Singh , who was singing these words over and over
to someone named Guru Ram Das (a spirit guide in the Sikh faith)
while playing a drone instrument called a tamboura. " I
felt as though I had opened Pandora's Box on a mysterious unknown
world of sound." Sat Kartar went on to sing in 2 Sikh spiritual
bands, Sat Nam East, one of the first American chant groups,
and later the Khalsa String Band. In the mid-seventies, she began
what would be a life study of Northern Indian classical kirtan,
with numerous Sikh musicians, called Ragis ( who sing devotionally
in Eastern raga scales). "I wanted to bring the enchantment
of this world of music to an American audience in a simpler,
sensuous form, so Westerners could appreciate the haunting beauty
of these ancient scales."
In 1984 and '85, collaborating with veteran
New Age producer Liv Khalsa, they created 2 timelessly beautiful
Invincible recordings, "Spirit in Blossom" and "Domain
of Shiva" a group of hymns from the sacred Sikh texts, containing
4 raga scales. Symphonically orchestrated and ahead of its time,
this music found a new audience, in the early stages of the World
and New Age Music movement. As spiritual music started to spread,
Sat Kartar and Liv worked on 2 meditation recordings, as part
of a series called "Healing Sounds of the Ancients."
"Naryan," a Sikh hymn, can be used as a sound tool
to help bring clarity, and to generate wealth. "Pran Sutra"
from the Sikh scriptures, is meditative preparation to make the
journey from life, through death, into eternal being with the
Divine.
After a period of personal transitions,
Sat Kartar's quest for spiritual musical expression found form
in a genre of dance electronica, then called Trance House. A
chance meeting with musician-producers Akinchina das and Lalita
Dasi, whose background was also Indian classical, truned out
to be instant musical chemistry, and the techno group Overlords
of the UFO was born. Both parties wanted to do something which
was devotional but hip. When the vinyl EPs "Imagine"
and "Transcendental Overdrive"were released in 1994
and 1997, respectively, they drew critical acclaim in the international
dance and DJ market. Most recently, Sat Kartar released a new
CD of chants for starting the day called "Daily Practice"
Many spiritual paths have this pre-dawn regime of chants, called
sadhana. This album is her most groove-driven work to date. The
soaring gutsy side of her voice is backed with a world music
potpourri of djembe, guitar, bass, tamboura, and temple bells.
She is currently touring with her band in support of this release.
Don't miss their show; you will experience chant, celebration,
and vibrating the Divine. And you might just want to dance--that's
fine too.
