The Power of Sound and Music
The Power of Sound and Music
The Power of Sound and Music
So the sounds that surround us have an impact on our bodies and energy.
Sound also has an impact on inanimate matter. In 1967, the late Hans Jenny, a
Swiss doctor, published Cymatics - The Structure and Dynamics of Waves and
Vibrations. In this book, Jenny showed what happens when one takes various
materials and places them on vibrating metal plates and membranes. Using a
sine wave generator and a speaker to vibrate powders, pastes and liquids, Jenny
succeeded in making visible the subtle power through which sound animates
matter.
Jenny invented a tonoscope to set these plates and membranes vibrating. The
tonoscope was constructed to make the human voice visible. This yielded the
amazing possibility of being able to see the physical image of the vowel, tone or
song a human being directly produced. Not only could one hear a melody - one
could see it, too!
One astounding result of his experiments is on the cover of your leaflet. The
photo on the right is the shape that is created when the word, "Om" is spoken
through a tonoscope. Om is the 39th (or last) letter in the Sanskrit alphabet.
This mystic syllable is venerated by Hindus and Buddhists alike and is
considered to be the primordial sound from which the Universe evolved. The
picture on the left is the ancient mandala for the word Om. It is as if science is
revealing a deeper mystery. How is it that these ancient peoples arrived at this
particular structure for Om?
In his research with the tonoscope, Jenny noticed that when the vowels of the
ancient languages of Hebrew and Sanskrit were pronounced, the sand took the
shape of the written symbols for these vowels. Experimentation with modern
languages generally produced chaos. Is it possible that the ancient Hebrews and
Indians knew this? Could there be something to the concept of "sacred
language?" These languages have always proposed that they have the capacity
to influence and transform physical reality through the recitation or chanting of
sacred syllables and mantras. There are legends of Navajo shaman being able to
whisper words that created patterns in the sand. We have all heard the bible
verse, "First there was the word, and the word was with God, and the word was
God" John 1:1 KJB.
Do you remember the movie, "Contact" with Jody Foster? It began with a view of
the earth from outer space. You could hear our radio and television broadcasts
emanating from the planet. As the camera slowly panned away from the earth
into outer space, the broadcasts got older the further away you got. The camera
passed the other planets in our solar system and proceeded into other galaxies.
As the signal got fainter and further away, you could hear older broadcasts like
Martin Luther Kings, "I have a dream" speech and finally the first broadcasts of
Adolph Hitler.
Virtually every sound ever uttered on TV and radio is being broadcast from our
planet and continuing on into the universe. Think about it; what a scary thought!
That means that in addition to the best of humankind going out into the universe
to represent our world, there are things like people arguing on call-in radio talk
shows, reality TV, Judge Judy, All-Star Wrestling, Gilligan's Island, and the
images of the World Trade Center falling.
I’d like to take this a step further. Could you imagine if every sound you've ever
uttered in your life, (every time you cursed at someone in traffic, or lied, or talked
about someone behind their back), was still continuing on into the universe riding
on the sound current? It makes me shudder and has stopped me more than
once from saying what I had in mind to say.
My own career in music has been an odd journey through many unusual
circumstances and experiences. In addition to playing for weddings and hotel
gigs, I have also played music for people in hospice for the past 11 years. When
my father died suddenly, I had never experienced the loss of a close family
member. I was drawn to find a way to use music in a healing way with the dying
and their loved ones. I can only describe it as a calling; it is certainly not for
everyone but it gives me great spiritual nourishment to use music in this way.
I was first influenced by the work of a brilliant scholar and harpist named Theresa
Shroeder-Schecker. She developed a method of working with music for the
dying which she calls Music Thanatology. It is based on an 11th century French
monastic tradition of tending to the sick with prescriptive music. Schecker
teaches this method in a hospital in Missoula, Montana.
The hospital owns 42 harps. When a patient is dying, a team of two people goes
to the room and plays music on the harps. If you can picture this, it looks like
angel's wings as the harps are poised on either side of the bed. They play music
that matches the breathing of the patient. Her belief is that if familiar music is
played, it binds the person to this life at a time when the point is to help them let
go.
In an excerpt from her article entitled, "Musical Sacramental Midwifery", she
writes about her first experience tending a death-bed vigil when she was a
young, naïve, undergraduate student proceeding only from intuition. In her
words, her first patient was
"a sinewy man in his eighties who was the terror of a geriatric home. He was a
mean old buzzard, and deteriorated into downright viciousness in the moments
most clearly revealing his brokenness. It is true; he was not the favorite of the
caregivers.
When I entered the room, he was struggling, thrashing, frightened, unable to
breathe. He was dying of emphysema. No more respirators, dilators,
tracheotomies, or surgical procedures were available. No more medicine could
resolve his disintegrated lungs. Both fear and agony filled the room. There was
no-one to call for mediation or assistance. At first I held us both in interior prayer,
but without knowing what to do, had leaned down into his left ear and had begun
to sing gregorian chant in an almost inaudible pianissimo.
He rested and began to breathe much more regularly, and we, as a team,
breathed together. The chants seemed to bring him balance, dissolving fears,
and compensating for those issues still full of sting. How could they do anything
less? These chants are the language of love. They carry the flaming power of
hundreds of years and thousands of chanters who have sung these prayers
before. It seemed that the two of us were not alone in that room. When his heart
ceased to beat, I stayed still for long moments.
When you are really peacefully present with someone whose time has come, all
that matters is that they are allowed to shine through the matrix. People ask: isn't
the work depressing? Aren't you filled with fear or sorrow? None of that exists if
you are really with the dying person: it is their time, not yours. You hold the
person and keep vigil while they quietly, almost invisibly, shimmer an
indescribable membrane of light. If a midwife is practicing inner-emptiness, and
is capable of profound stillness, this gossamer film can be guarded for a moment
or an hour. When the dying person's stillness fills the entire room, you can gently
let go and lay them to rest. Then you thank them for affirming what is so bright."