Posts Tagged ‘Chants’
Gregorian Chant
Posted in Alte Musik, Hören&Hörspiel, Medien, tagged Alte Musik, Calixtine Codex, Chants, Gregorianischer Gesang on 6. Mai 2022|
Chinese Buddhist Morning Chant
Posted in Blütensthaub, Hören&Hörspiel, Journal, Kultur, Medien, Meditation, MUSIK, Z E N, tagged Chants, Chinese Mahayana Buddhist Monks, Herz Sutra, Mantra, Surangama mantra on 21. April 2022|
Surangama mantra, Great Compassion mantra, Heart Sutra, Amituofo recitation and misc. Language is in Chinese. This morning chant is done by Chinese Mahayana Buddhist Monks. This is all you need!
Chants et poêmes zen – Taisen Deshimaru
Posted in Geschichte, Hören&Hörspiel, Journal, Persona, Z E N, tagged archive.org, Chants, Taisen Deshimaru, Tumblr, Zen on 20. April 2022|
The Gyuto Monks – Freedom Chants From the Roof of the World
Posted in Blütensthaub, Hören&Hörspiel, Journal, Kultur, Medien, MUSIK, Persona, Religion, Wissen, tagged Chants, Hören, MUSIK, Tibet, trad. tibetanische Musik on 10. Dezember 2021|
Sacred Chants Of Tibet – The Gyuto Monks Tantric Choir
Posted in Blütensthaub, Geschichte, Hören&Hörspiel, Journal, Kultur, Medien, MUSIK, Persona, tagged Chants, Gesang, Gyuto, Jetsun Kunga Dhondup, MUSIK, Sacred Chants Of Tibet, The Gyuto Monks Tantric Choir on 3. Dezember 2021|
The Perfect Jewel: Sacred Chants Of Tibet by The Gyuto Monks Tantric Choir 00:00 Initiation Ceremony of Guhyasamaja Tantra; 05:40 Offering of Seven Royal Emblems; 14:14 Consecration Ceremony of Yamantaka „Raining Good Fortune“; 25:43 Eighty Thousand Obstructions 28:02 Offering of Tea; 29:32 Mahakala Chanting; 47:41 Praise and Request to Kalarupa
Gyuto (Tibetan རྒྱུད་སྟོད་ , Wylie rGyud sTod) was founded in 1475 by Jetsun Kunga Dhondup and is one of the main tantric colleges of the Gelug tradition. In Tibet, monks who had completed their geshe studies would be invited to join Gyuto or Gyume, another tantric institution, to receive a firm grounding in vajrayana practice. Both of these monasteries used to be in Lhasa, Tibet, but they have been re-established in India. At the time of the Chinese invasion in 1950, about 1000 monks were part of the monastery. On 21 March 1959, soon after the 14th Dalai Lama had left Lhasa for exile in India, Ramoche was a focus of military operations by the Chinese People’s Liberation Army…