The Delta brain wave is the “unstruck music.”
Music capable of activating it is rare, mostly limited to bagpipes, oboe, white noise, and sustained notes on a synthesizer (e.g., the Prism-er of Love “Sonic Colonic”).
Adano Ley (Swami Nitty-Gritty) called music the “nutrient of the living soil,” saying …
“Man does not live by bread alone, but by the induction pattern of feeding oneself through the medulla oblongata. Music is never old. It’s always brand-new to the brain.”
Regarding Delta, Adano said …
“What you’re listening to is your biocellular sonics [clapping his hands together] at its momentum in respiratory unison, and that’s what they call the audible life stream.”
Oswald Spengler (The Decline of the West, Vol. Two: Perspectives of World History, 1928) wrote …
“For music is the only art whose means lies outside the light-world that has so long become co-extensive with our total world, and music alone, therefore, can take us right out of this world, break up the steely tyranny of light, and let us finally imagine that we are on the verge of reaching the soul’s final secret – an illusion due to the fact that our waking consciousness is now so dominated by one sense only, so thoroughly adapted to the eye-world, that it is incapable of forming out of the impressions it receives, a world of the ear.”
Adano walked big circles around Light-Workers, reminding us that “Lucifer descended as a light.”
Zen Student: “In meditation, Buddha came to me and he was glowing with light!”
Zen Master: “Keep meditating and he’ll go away.”
There’s SPECIFIC music for the (1) entire body, (2) feet, (3) hands and arms, (4) heart, (5) hips, (6) knees, (7) legs, (8) mouth, (9) pelvis, (10) throat, (11) torso, (12) intuition, (13) spinal flow, (14) crown chakra, (15) cervical chakra, (16) coccyx, (17) sacral chakra, (18) solar plexus, etc.
All this – and lots more – will be taught at my School of Time Conscious Living when it finally opens in or around Ojai, California.
To take STCL from imagination to actuality, DONATIONS are gratefully accepted.
You can contact me at [email protected] for more information.
'Music For the Biological Soil' have 4 comments
January 26, 2012 @ 7:32 pm atomb
Back in the day Paramahansa Yogananda said …
“Recently we read in the New York Times that an experiment was conducted in which a certain vibration of the violin extinguished the light of a candle. Vibrations act like waves. As waves washing over an unclean area can wash it of impurities, so also strong tremors of vibrations moving through the fine tissues of the ultra-sensitive human body cells, wash away the diseases lodged therein. That is why good songs when properly listened to often dispel dark sorrow from the brain.”
January 27, 2012 @ 5:53 pm atomb
Martin …
In case you read this, I answered your private e-mail but your address didn’t work. :(
I may convert the answer into a blog entry.
January 29, 2012 @ 3:10 pm suz
The book “Secret Life of Plants” discusses how the growth of plants is affected by music. I know a farmer who plays classical music in the greenhouse where sprouts grow. I used to dance after juicing and drinking those sprouts ;)
January 30, 2012 @ 4:33 am atomb
Yes, plants and even metals and gemstones have “nervous systems” and emotions and are aware of their own life and death as much as we are.
(My karma was to find this out days after I became a vegetarian in 1969, a phase of my life that lasted 14 years.)
I put “nervous systems” in parentheses because a plant or a mineral’s sensitivity is closest to the GLIAL SYSTEM, the power behind the drone of the human “nervous system.”
Masters in India (and the U.S. too) have known for centuries that the “white matter” of the brain takes precedence over the “gray matter.”
Sir Jagdish Chandra Bose (1858-1937) proved this in his laboratory by poisoning platinum, tin, and zinc samples, and measuring their “convulsions” with a crescograph.
Dr. Bose invented the crescograph, and an improved electronic version is in use today.
Horticultural pioneer Luther Burbank (1848-1926) routinely changed the genetics of plants by loving them – he literally “loved” the spines off a cactus to produce a spineless variety.
True civilized people – we call them “primitive” – understand this sublime sacrifice animals, plants, and minerals make to sustain human life, and treat the sacred process of “eating” with extreme reverence and gratitude.
Maybe I’ll expand on this subject in a future blog entry. :)