J.S. Bach and Guru Gobind Singh lived during a similar time period and both created profound spiritual music. With this in mind, what if these two great composers were to able to collaborate and combine the sounds of Europe with those of India? With this in mind and the addition of modern instruments and technologies Samadhi Bach was born.
Johann
J.S. Bach and Guru Gobind Singh lived during a similar time period and both created profound spiritual music. With this in mind, what if these two great composers were to able to collaborate and combine the sounds of Europe with those of India? With this in mind and the addition of modern instruments and technologies Samadhi Bach was born.
Johann Sebastian Bach; (31 March [O.S. 21 March] 1685 - 28 July 1750) was a German composer and musician of the Baroque period. Compared to most other major composers, Johann Sebastian Bach's life and career were confined to a very limited geographical space. Born and raised in Thuringia, he never went farther north than Hamburg and Lubeck, or farther south than Carlsbad. In a similarly confined way, his east-west range stretched from Dresden (east) to Kassel (west).
Bach's abilities as an organist were highly respected throughout Europe during his lifetime, although he was not widely recognized as a great composer until a revival of interest and performances of his music in the first half of the nineteenth century. He is now generally regarded as one of the main composers of the Baroque period, and as one of the greatest composers of all time.
Guru Gobind Singh born Gobind Rai; (22 December 1666 - 7 October 1708) was the tenth of the ten Sikh Gurus, the eleventh guru being the living perpetual Guru, Guru Granth Sahib (the sacred text of Sikhism). He was a warrior, poet and philosopher. He succeeded his father Guru Tegh Bahadur as the leader of Sikhs at the young age of nine. He contributed much to Sikhism; notable was his contribution to the continual formalization of the faith which the first Guru Guru Nanak had founded, as a religion, in the 15th century. Guru Gobind Singh, the last of the living Sikh Gurus, initiated the Sikh Khalsa in 1699, passing the Guruship of the Sikhs to the Eleventh and Eternal Guru of the Sikhs, the Guru Granth Sahib.
-
0:00/18:14
-
0:00/8:40
-
0:00/3:40
-
0:00/3:37
-
0:00/4:12
-
0:00/3:45
-
0:00/3:51
-
0:00/4:33