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The Baul
is virtually unknown in the West. A 700-year history in the
Bengal region of India is documented only by a few books and
a scattered collection of songs and poems. The picture which
emerges from a study of these works is of a group of mad
beggars and poets, a fierce and devotional
people—iconoclastic, individualistic, visionary, lusty,
loving and free. All their practices—the use of breath and
sex and song—are aimed at the awakening of the Heart, and to
the relationship with the “man of the Heart”— their
description of the Divine Beloved who indwells in each
being.
During the Spring of 1991, Baul Sanatan Das and his sons,
Bishwanath and Basudev, of the Bankura district of Bengal,
toured the western United States. Audiences from San Diego
to Seattle delighted to their passionate performances of
original song and dance accompanied by their use of the
traditional Baul musical instruments, the ektara, the dotara, and the kol. This tape is a
compilation of live recordings made during their tour. It
features both the songs of longing as well as encoded
esoteric teaching about love and sexual expression.
Translated lyrics, in English.
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