| Heather & Benjy
Wertheimer - Award-winning international artists
known as Shantala (www.benjymusic.com)
open hearts around the world with their passionate music. Shantala
creates a sublime soundscape of musical harmony between
East and West with soul-stirring vocals, sacred lyrics, and exotic
instrumentation. The music carries the audience through a journey
of ethereal beauty, ecstatic percussion, and singing with the devotion
of the heart. Call and response chanting with Shantala is fun, uplifting,
and inspiring.
Benjy Wertheimer is an amazing multi-instrumentalist (playing
tabla, congas, percussion, esraj, guitar, and keyboards) and world-class
musician trained in Indian Classical music. He has opened for such
artists as Carlos Santana, Paul Winter, and Narada Michael Walden.
Heather is a gifted vocalist, guitarist, and singer-songwriter.
Together, Benjy and Heather lead devotional chanting across the
country and abroad and they tour and record with international
musicians, including Krishna Das and Deva Premal. They have released
a number of critically acclaimed CDs, including The Love Window,
which features devotional chanting, and Circle of Fire which reached
#1 on the international New Age radio charts in November 2002.
Chatting about Chanting
with Benjy and Heather Werthheimer
by Stephanie Gailing
Reprinted with permission from:
http://www.samadhi-yoga.com/jai/music.htm
As more and more people turn to yoga and the inspirations of Eastern
wisdom in their quest for peace and understanding, the traditional
Indian style of devotional chanting known as kirtan (pronounced “KEER-tun”)
has been growing in popularity.
Notable among the talented musicians who are sharing this ancient
art with modern day audiences are Portland natives Benjy and Heather
Wertheimer, who perform as Shantala. Through their live kirtan performances
and their latest CD, The Love Window, they take audiences on heart
opening musical journeys, layering beautiful vocals with rhythmically
transformative instrumental sounds. Benjy has studied Indian classical
music for over 20 years with some of the greatest masters of the
tradition, including Ali Akbar Khan and Zakir Hussain, and also tours
and records with Krishna Das. Heather is an accomplished singer,
songwriter, guitarist and yoga teacher with a soul-stirring voice
who also performs with virtuoso guitarist Michael Mandrell.
I have been blessed to have attended a kirtan with Benjy and Heather
and to have had the opportunity to learn more about their experiences
of and insights into devotional chanting.
What happens during an evening of kirtan?
Heather: We often open our kirtans with a musical meditation before
we start singing, which might involve Benjy singing an invocation
in the classical Indian style or playing the esraj, which is
like an Indian violin. Then the group sings OM together and we
start
doing call and response singing. We often teach the Sanskrit
words to the group in advance, especially if they're complex,
and we
explain something about what the words mean. If there are a lot
of people chanting for the first time, I explain something about
the process and encourage them not to be self-conscious about
their singing. I suggest they sing to whatever they love.
When we're chanting, we increase the tempo of many of the chants,
and the energy of the group rises with it. Eventually, Benjy
breaks out into a drum solo. When the chant ends, there is the
most serene
and delicious silence. The energy of the chant then moves deeper
inside us. You can feel it in the room. Those are the sweetest
moments.
Benjy: One short way I sometimes describe it is as the yogic
equivalent of really rocking gospel music!
What role does mantra play in kirtan?
Heather: The chants, the mantras, we sing are praising the names
of ancient deities. It is said that chanting these names evokes
the qualities of the names themselves. People have been chanting
these names for thousands of years. I believe that chanting them
is like stepping into a river that's been flowing forever. We
get taken along in the current. Whether or not you know exactly
what
they mean, chanting these sacred names is transforming. The practice
leads to change, a heightened awareness of love, which can be
either rapid or gradual.
The chants we know are in Sanskrit. The Sanskrit language is
incredibly old and is made up of sounds that are considered to
be sacred, primal
sounds of the universe. The sounds themselves can have an energetic
impact on the physical and spiritual levels.
Benjy: One of the functions of Sanskrit is to focus pranic energy,
the central life energy that many people know as "chi" in
the Chinese tradition. This approach to the spiritual sound of
the mantras themselves joins with the beauty of the melodies and
power
of the rhythms. All together, it makes the practice of kirtan a
unique and powerful expression of Bhakti yoga, the yoga of devotion. Do you have to practice Hinduism to enjoy chanting?
Heather: I believe that kirtan is not at all limited to people who
claim to be Hindu. Having knowledge of Hinduism could certainly
add a lot of depth and richness to understanding the mantras, as
would knowledge of Sanskrit. Yet most of the people I know who
love to chant in the U.S. don't identify as Hindus, and they don't
know much Sanskrit. I've been a yogi for a long time, but I have
strong influences of Buddhism in my belief system. I don't think
chanting needs to conflict with any particular belief system because
the Gods and Goddesses in the chants are all faces of the One.
Benjy: I struggled at first with chanting to Hindu deities because
I identify as a Quaker. Even though it felt really good to me to
do kirtan, I wasn't sure how they fit together. I eventually tuned
more into the undercurrent of oneness that flows through all of it.
Can you speak more about how chanting may play a role in someone’s
spiritual path? Heather: I see chanting as the yoga of devotion, or Bhakti yoga.
There is a conscious intention to open the heart with the love
of Spirit. Devotion is a path of immense joy. Our Anusara yoga
philosophy
teacher Douglas Brooks would say that the goal of yoga is to experience
the beauty of embodiment. The goal and the practice are inseparable.
The practice of kirtan creates a direct experience of incredible
beauty. That's what happens when we praise the creator of the beauty.
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