Musical Audition

From The SpiritWiki
Revision as of 14:08, 1 September 2024 by Michael (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<blockquote class="definition">'''Musical Audition''' (listening to music) is a Sufi Connection Technique.<ref>Rumi. ''The Masnavi: Book One.'' Translated by Jawid Mojadde...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Musical Audition (listening to music) is a Sufi Connection Technique.[1]

List of Connection Techniques

Connection Technique > Affirmation, Affirmation of Connection, Autogenic Training, Biofeedback, Bornless Ritual, Breathing, Caloric Reduction, Cocooning, Connection Visualization, Dance, Deprivation, Detachment, Dhikr, Drumming, Fasting, Flow Control, Flow Purification, Graduation Invocation, Holotropic Breathwork, Hypnotism, Hypoventilation, Intent, Intent to Connect, Japam, Mantra, Meditation, Mindfulness, Musical Audition, Mysticism of the Historical Event, Poetry, Power Quest, Receptive Seeking, Relaxation, Sensory Deprivation, Spirit Canoe, The Method of the Lamp, The Way of the Hollow Bone, Thought Control, Vajra Breath, Vision Quest, Visualization, Writing, Zazen

Notes

"The Sufi practice that is discussed the most in the early manuals of Sufism is listening to music, commonly referred to as ‘musical audition’ (sama e). Listening to music, which often accompanied the love poetry and mystical poetry that Sufis themselves had begun to write, while immersed in the remembrance of God and unaware of oneself induced ecstasy in worshippers. The discussions in Sufi manuals of spontaneous movements by Sufis in ecstasy while listening to music and the efforts made to distinguish this from ordinary dance, suggest that already this practice had started to cause a great deal of controversy."[2]

Footnotes

  1. Rumi. The Masnavi: Book One. Translated by Jawid Mojaddedi. Oxford University Press, 2004.
  2. Rumi. The Masnavi: Book One. Translated by Jawid Mojaddedi. Oxford University Press, 2004. p. xii