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For thousands of years, humans have been listening to the wind through trees, to waves, to heartbeats, and to thunder. Music began as an act of attention—an attempt to translate the living rhythm of the world; a joyful joining into nature’s rhythms and teachings.
Nature has always been the greatest teacher.
You can study sheet music and notes; you can master scales; you can analyze harmony until your brain glows like a laboratory experiment.
But the essence of music remains untouchable.
You cannot hold it.
You cannot smell it.
You cannot see it.
You can only feel it.
This invisible force somehow travels through centuries… shaping cultures, defining eras, and carrying emotion across time.
Because music, at its deepest level, is not merely a human invention. It is a direct conversation with the pulse of the universe.
Humans often believe we invent culture, but much of culture is, in many ways, an imitation of nature. Rhythm mirrors the heartbeat; scales echo the physics of vibrating strings and air columns. Even harmony follows mathematical relationships already embedded within the structure of sound itself. The Greeks recognized this and called it the “music of the spheres” — the idea that the universe itself is ordered like a vast harmonic system.
In that sense, great musicians are less like engineers and more like translators of the cosmos. Quincy Jones understood that instinctively.
Speaker: Quincy Jones
Join us at @bhardwajmusicacademy for thoughtful reflections, musical insight, and deeper explorations into the art, science, culture, and timeless language of music.
#music #nature #wisdom #art #human
I Can
Young artist activists in Washington DC create hip-hop cypher bringing awareness to the cobalt mining crisis in Congo 🇨🇩
Follow @freedomfuturescollective and @congofriends to learn more about the #BlackFuturesonEarth project and the young artists who are fighting for a FREEDOM future in Congo, in the US and beyond 🌎
Black Futures on Earth available NOW on ALL music streaming platforms!
This project was made possible through the Earth Seed Grant Fund from @mvmnt4blklives Black Hive and supported by @ccesolves and @projectcreatedc
Justin Chancellor and Danny Carey playing ‘Ænema’ at Berklee 🏊♀️ Credit: WalBassCollective
Why Choose Upright Bass Lessons in Singapore
Embark on a musical journey with personalized upright bass lessons. Learn techniques across genres and achieve musical mastery. 🔗 Read the Full Article
Being a music major is so weird bro what do you MEAN I don’t have half of my classes because our director is out of state taking an exam for his doctorate and my clarinet professor might have Covid.
WHAT DO YOU MEAN I have Friday off but I have to stay here because the marching band festival is this weekend.
I have nothing to do I’m going insane.
My addiction to clarinet is getting stronger by the hour and I fear I may join orchestra just because I love playing my instrument so much… but my health issues may make another ensemble difficult… but more clarinet time sounds appealing…
My therapist says I cannot date right now because of my trauma… but maybe that’s a good thing seeing as the true love of my life will always be clarinet…
I’m normally so busy not having many classes this week is legit driving me crazy. I fear I may get lost in the sauce if this goes on much longer.
Band Nerds: The Game is now available for sale! Designed to play with fellow nerds in your band, it's the perfect gift to show how much you care about someone. No other gift will show you care. None. Not even a new car. So lame. I mean who wants a car when they can have a card game about band?
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