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Indian Music healing potential Shwetaambara - Yodhakaa



Shwetaambara - Yodhakaa


Song: Shwetaambara

Written by Adi Shankaracharyar
www.yodhakaa.com



Darbuka Siva -- Percussion
Pradeep Vijay -- Vocals & Slide Guitar
Kalyani Nair -- Vocals
Akshay Chakrapani -- Bass Guitar
Sean Roldan -- Guitar



Listening to this Indian song, it gives me more reason to believe that music can changes us and can moves you to that unknown dimension. I believe that all things that make our daily space, vibrate all in differents frequencies. We are different, but the same. we vibrate in different frequencies and as a sorted table of behaviors and sensibilities, music flows our body and we react as results of them. When efforts are made,  vibrations suites to our soul acceptance and we call it music when it suites to our convenience. 

Here is some useful content from https://yodhakaa.wordpress.com/song-lyrics/
shwetaambara
written by Adi Shankaracharyar
Everything seems to be white. Her face, her lotus seat, her music instrument-the veena and the swans… white, the universal symbol of purity, takes both the form and the formless, in a subtle sense that holds a vacuum of all colors, faces, spirits and sounds in one endless white. The goddess ‘Saraswathi’ said to be the patron god of music, is a perfect example of Adi Shankaracharyar’s ideas and philosophical doctrines that propagated the unity of the ‘soul’ and the ‘Brahman’ (in other words, the unity of the self and the whole). Adi Shankaracharyar (788- 820 AD), one of the pioneers of a revived understanding of the Sankskrit scriptures, brought in a train of thought called ‘Advaitha’, which refers to ‘non- dualism’.

shwetaambara- dharaam deveem shweta- gandhaanulEpitaam
vandE’ham shaaradaam nityaam shwetha- padmaasanaam shubhaam

shwetha veenaa dharaam deveem shwetha hamsollaasineem
vandEham shaantaam shubhraam shwethaalankaara bhooshitaam

vanditaam suraasuraih sarvaih Rishibih munibih sadaa

vandEham varadaam vidyaam jnyaanadaam cha sarasvateem

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