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Kirtan Music articles

Below are the best articles we could find on Kirtan Music.

Kirtan is a form of collective praise in song originating in the Vedic tradition in India and practiced in several religions. A kirtan is essentially a call-and-response chant set to music, in which singers either recite or describe legends, sing devotionals to various Indian gods, or examine important spiritual concepts. It is also a type of folk song or performance art, and in both forms, kirtan carries forward generations of the beliefs, ideals, histories, and stories of the people who perform it, both religiously and secularly. In the West, kirtan has become a somewhat popular collective spiritual or healing practice, with various well-known singers including Snatam Kaur, Jai Uttal, and Krishna Das serving as modern proponents of this traditional spiritual practice.

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The Power of Love: A Q&A with Krishna Das

Kirtan master Krishna Das spoke with us about spiritual practice, suffering, and finding love within.

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You’ve Heard of Kirtan, But Have You Heard of Bhajan?: These Devotional Gatherings—Tied to Bhakti Yoga—Bring Family and Friends Together. Learn Their History, Significance (And How Not to Appropriate Them).

For us—two Indian-American yoga teachers—The word kirtan used to conjure images of simple and regular community gatherings, or even Hare Krishnas parading down the street.

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Chanting and Kirtan: Everything You Need to Know (Plus a Few Chants to Try!)

Have you been to a yoga class where the yoga instructor offered chanting? Were you a little uncomfortable because you didn’t know what exactly was going on?

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Yoga Enthusiasts Hear the Call of Kirtan

More Americans are introduced to chanting through yoga classes and they’re warming up to the practice.

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The Soul Singer

During this time of biopsies and surgeries and pathology reports, I rediscovered the music of Krishna Das, whose low, sonorous voice had been the soundtrack to my weekly yoga class for years.

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Kirtan: The Easy Meditation That Can Improve Your Brain: Discover How 12 Minutes a Day Can Improve How You Think and Feel.

Discover how 12 minutes a day can improve how you think and feel.

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'The Music of Yoga': Agnostics, Christians Find Spiritual Benefits in Kirtan's Hindu Chants

In the 1990s, American musician Dave Stringer went to India for a pay cheque and came back with a calling. Hired by an Indian guru to make videos, he was tasked with translating the philosophy of yoga and the music of yoga, known as kirtan, into film.

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The Benefits of Chanting: How Kirtan Can Heal You in Both Body and Spirit

Yoga is on fire in the West, and so it kirtan, or yogic chanting. Kirtan combines music and mantra — words and sounds that vibrate at the highest level of awareness. It is an effortless and joyful way to meditate.

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The Kirtan Revolution Brings an Ancient Practice to a Modern Audience

An American kirtan revolution turns chanting God's name into something hip as well as holy.

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Krishna Das Talks About His Music, His Guru, and His Practice

He’s driven a school bus, dabbled in the blues, and meditated in the jungles and ashrams of India, but today Krishna Das is known as the King of Kirtan.

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