KOMUSO - the healing art of zen shakuhachi.
I purchased this CD a month ago and just can not recommend this enough. It’s great for relaxation, meditation or as they suggest a form of healing. The sound of the wood shakuhachi flute is simply amazing.
For under $16 you can not beat this CD
The Komuso were priests of the Fuke-Shu sect of Zen Buddhism who wandered Japan during the Edo period (1600-1868). These priests would take the problems and illnesses of people upon themselves, attempting to help them by playing a particular style of shakuhachi flute music called Sui-Zen. They sought to have their “patients” become completely embraced by their music, allowing them to let go of all distractions, worries, problems, and stresses. The “ko” in komuso means “emptiness” or “nothingness”; this concept of quieting the mind was the aim of these healing priests. Government reforms lead to abolishing the Fuke sect and abandoning all of its temples. It was only by good fortune that the healing repertoire of the Zen shakuhachi survived. In many ways, Ronnie Nyogetsu Seldin is a modern-day komuso.
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