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Archive for February 21, 2023

David Rothenberg: The Joy & Mystery of Interspecies Music Making

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February 21, 2023

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David Rothenberg: The Joy & Mystery of Interspecies Music Making

Life is far more interesting than it needs to be, because the forces that guide it are not merely practical.

– David Rothenberg –

David Rothenberg: The Joy & Mystery of Interspecies Music Making

David Rothenberg is a writer, philosopher, ecologist, and musician, speaking out for nature in all aspects of his diverse work. He investigates the musicality of animals and the role of nature in philosophy, with a particular interest in understanding other species by making music with them. His book ‘Why Birds Sing: A Journey into the Mystery of Bird Song,’ was inspired by an impromptu duet in March 2000 with a laughingthrush.His next book, ‘Thousand Mile Song’, reflects similar curiosity about whale sounds considered as music, from which both scientific and artistic insights emerge. A reviewer in The London Telegraph said of the book, “while Rothenberg’s madcap mission to play jazz to the whales seems as crazy as Captain Ahab’s demented hunt for the great White Whale, it is sometimes such obsessions that reveal inner truths…” In the following excerpt, Rothenberg describes the nightingale colonies of Berlin, and the unique experience of improvising with a feathered collaborator. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, join an Awakin Call this Saturday with David Rothenberg. More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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Presence Of Things Beyond Flesh

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Feb 20, 2023

Presence Of Things Beyond Flesh

–Drew Lanham

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2597.jpgLecturing has always come easily to me. Backed by the technical, the theoretical, a few supporting slides, and a captive audience of college students or peers, I’ve given hundreds of presentations in classrooms and professional meetings. But after many years of stale introductions, methods, results, and conclusions, I began to wonder if anyone was listening — and if there was real reason for them to.

In lecture after lecture I regurgitated factoids and data that were readily available in the readings. And between the slides of animals on the verge of extinction and of tropical rainforests being slashed, burned, and mowed down by cattle, I sounded to my own ears like the apocalyptic preachers. I looked into my audience and saw drawn expressions of boredom and dread. Day after day, semester after semester, year after year, I droned on. Yes, I was presenting the facts. Yes, I was publishing the facts. But it seemed to me that the facts never created motivation to make things better. […]

A few years later, I spent several springs in northern Vermont, writing and thinking about nature in a different way. In that strange place my right brain flickered back on. The need to impress other professors, pile up peer-reviewed publications, and cache grant dollars began to give way to a desire for consciousness. Vermont was the greenest place I’d ever been. It was also a place where no one knew me. In that freedom my stress-tightened shoulders dropped and the tension in my jaw lessened. I slowed down and walked dirt roads — sometimes barefoot and empty minded, with not much more in my head than the present moment. Warbling vireos and least flycatchers were the only audiences I entertained.

Within the past couple of years I’ve given fewer and fewer (statistics-driven) presentations. More and more I find myself taking the hard data and wrapping it in genuine caring. The words are flocks of inspiration that I want to migrate from my mouth into the heads and hearts of others. I shake hands less now and give hugs more. I exchange more heartbeats than business cards. The energy is palpable.

In my moments of confession in front of strangers, talking about my love of something much greater than any one of us, I become a freer me. Each time I am reborn. For all those years of running from anything resembling religion and all the scientific training that tells me to doubt anything outside of the prescribed (statistical) limits, I find myself defined these days more by what I cannot see than by what I can. As I wander into the predawn dark of an autumn wood, I feel the presence of things beyond flesh, bone, and blood. My being expands to fit the limitlessness of the wild world. My senses flush to full and my heartbeat quickens with the knowledge that I am not alone.

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How do you relate to the notion of finding one’s voice in a space where no one knows you? Can you share a personal story of a time you shifted from intellectual knowing to genuine caring? What helps you expand to fit the limitlessness of the wild world?

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