

We don't create music. It has existed since the very beginning.
It is a subtle, elusive, and delicate essence, perceived by the heart.
ॐ
STOP AND HEAR THE MUSIC'S SOUNDS
To hear the music, we have to stop. One must stop the restless wandering and buzzing of the mind and become silent.
When we hear the silence within ourselves, then we can also hear what the music is filled with. Because there are gaps in everything. There are gaps between everything that exists. These are the spaces between words, between you and me, and between sounds in music. In music, these gaps are called pauses. In these pauses, we hear everything we need to hear. If we become very silent, then in these pauses we can even hear the Lord. And if one becomes totally silent, then these pauses will lead to Samadhi. Inscrutable Love is present in these pauses. Our being is present in these pauses. And this is a universal thing for everyone, and our meetings can actually happen only there. And only there we can meet the most important person – our Self.
So, Shakti Orchestra is one of many manifestations in the Universe. This is music. This is a word. And this is the Ineffable Word and Silence beyond all sounds. This is the glorification of the Unmanifest in the Manifest and this is the Transcendent Lord, and this is Love.
Every manifestation of sound in the universe is Shakti. Any manifestation of life in the universe is music. Everything that exists has a sound. And so, these live orchestras sound, filling the universe with themselves.
Path
One person's truth cannot become another person's truth unless it has come from the itself center, unless the Higher Truth has chosen the speaker as its own mouthpiece.
Word
All words that come from this center are universal, and don't belong to anyone. Such words simply happen – just as Meditation and Samadhi happen.
Music
Shakti Orchestra is a musical project that manifested through Yogi Isha. But it is not only music. It is something more. It is the unspeakable Word that stands behind all sounds and words.



