|
|||||||||||
Ravenna Michalsen trained as a classical cellist for fourteen years until developing arthritis and fibromyalgia. She turned to voice and song writing in college, but it wasn’t until a retreat with Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche in 2002 that the combination of dharma and music occurred. During that retreat Mipham Rinpoche wrote a song-like poem for Ravenna to set to music, “Just A Seed Waiting to Grow”, which appears on her first album Bloom. Two years after this retreat Ravenna dropped out of graduate school and spent a year living at various retreat centers working and writing. She recorded Bloom at the urging of Tsultrim Allione, the author of Women of Wisdom and founder of the retreat center Tara Mandala in southwestern Colorado. Dharmasong is Ravenna ’s second album. After two years of concerts on the songs from Bloom, it became apparent there was, and is, an appetite and an audience for American Buddhist-inspired music. Both Bloom and Dharmasong are essentially devotional albums: sadness, joy and anger are combined with utter openness and acceptance. The songs range from supplications to praise; from requests to questions; from statements to apologies. Many feature prominent figures from Indian and Tibetan Buddhism, including Yeshe Tsogyal, Machig Labdrön, Guru Rinpoche (Padmasambhava), Marpa Lotsawa, Milarepa, Arya Tara and Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche. With these albums Ravenna very much hopes to jumpstart the American Buddhist music movement. American Buddhist-inspired music will have to walk the line between unabashed content and accessible music very carefully. But it is Ravenna ’s hope that anyone would listen to and enjoy her music, whatever their spiritual or religious views, whatever their particular musical tastes. Both Bloom and Dharmasong were carefully crafted in English (with the exception of the songs “Dölma” and “Om Tare”) in a musical style that is neither West nor East, but simply Ravenna ’s own. Dharma Music? The idea of combining dharma and music is very ancient. Some of the earliest female and male disciples of the Buddha wrote songs and poems about their experiences as new renunciates. As in the Homeric tradition (Homer lived about 100 years before the historical Buddha; the poet Sappho lived about 40 years before and 20 years before the Buddha was born Homer's poems began to be sung at the All-Athenian Festival), these songs and poems were sung or recited, memorized and passed down to succeeding generations of renunciates. Two collections of such songs and poems, the Theri- and Theragatha (divided by author gender), were composed by direct students of the historical Buddha. They were collected and included in the Pali Cannon around 80 BCE; Dhammapala, working in the 400s CE, added biographical information about the Therigathas' many authors. Both the Theri- and Theragathas continue to be read and re-translated to this day because of their accessibility, beauty and proximity to the very beginnings of Buddhism. Songs also figure prominently in the Tantric tradition as spontaneous outpourings of realization and devotion called dohas. The Tibetan Buddhist master Milarepa, (11th century), is probably the most well-known composer of dohas; it is said he wrote over 100,000 of them. Padmasambhava (Guru Rinpoche), Nangsa Obum, Machig Labdron and Yeshe Tsogyal all also used song to teach and express their practice motivations, devotion and realization. Explication of the songs “Ki Ki So So”, “Marpa” and “A~Drön” from the new album Dharmasong! The song "Marpa" is not really about Marpa Lotsawa, the great 10th century translator and Kagyu lineage holder. It is about the dearth of female lineage holders within all major Tibetan Buddhist lineages. Both refrains: "Marpa: Where is your wife Dagmema?" and "Marpa: Where are my lineage mothers?" refers to this glaring imbalance. As a female practitioner it can be quite difficult to believe that women played as small a role in the development, evolution and practice of Tibetan Buddhism as common perception dictates. In fact, Trungpa Rinpoche, founder of the Shambhala Buddhist community directly confronts this exact misperception in the foreward to Tsultrim Allione's groundbreaking work Women of Wisdom. He writes: "Contrary to popular opinion which holds that the Vajrayana tradition of Buddhism has been practiced primarily by men, many of the great contemplative teachers and practitioners have been women". "A~Dron" is song about one of the very few female lineage holders in Tibetan Buddhism: Machig Labdron. Machig lived in the 11th and 12th centuries and was a contemporary of Jetsun Milarepa, although it does not seem as if they ever met. There has been a fair amount written about Machig Labdron, including a few hagiographies whose portraits of this real historical figure vacillate between earthy stories and wildly allegorical experiences. Her birth is surrounded by such wildness - she was born with a third eye radiating rainbow light, a blazing red HRI on her tongue and immediately after birth took the dancing posture of Vajra Varahi. For all these signs, her father named her "A-Dron", the torch of primordial sound. She was later called many different names - those names make up the verse of the song: Sherpa Dronme, Rinchen Drontsema, Jomo Shachung and Machig Labdron. Machig lived to be ninety-nine years old and just before she died she gathered her close disciples and asked them for their final questions. They were surprised and couldn't think of any and so she sang them a very long song called her Final Instruction Song. Towards the end appear the two verses that I have modified into a chorus: "Supreme view is beyond duality of subject/object; Email Ravenna if your community would be interested in a concert of dharma music. Please help to support Ravenna, and other independent musicians, by buying their albums and not burning copies. Thank you! Sarva Mangalam! |
|||||||||||