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Music
from God
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A MUSIC CD FOR MEDITATION AND WORSHIP |
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Bible verses play
themselves!
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Hebrew psalms make heavenly
melodies of psalm music played by the Hebrew letters
themselves!
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Psalms translated to notes produce
heavenly music
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Click here to hear a sound sample
from
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Deuteronomy 6:4 (The Shema
Prayer).
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Click here to hear a sound sample of Psalm
1
The amazing graphic
representation of the soundtrack of Psalm
148:

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No doubt there are
more experiments needed to determine the scope and validity of this
research. More interesting and unexplained findings are being
discovered almost daily. One such phenomenon is what we found in the
graphic representation of the soundtrack of Psalm 148. To our
amazement a vivid imprint of a Star of David appeared in the visual
graph of the sound of the word "Hallelujah." The Six-pointed star
showed around the forth syllable, which sounds as "Yah," (God" in
Hebrew). These findings confirm the notion that the Bible consists of
many layers and has a vast amount of information encoded into the
original Hebrew text in variety of forms.
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(Aricle offered by
Uri Harel).
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See also Music
From God 2 - Days of Majesty. This new edition emphasizes the melodic qualities of
the hidden music. CLICK
HERE!
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ABOUT MUSIC FROM
GOD
For years, Uri, an Israeli Hebrew
teacher, was talking to everyone who's willing to listen about his idea
of music in the Bible. Uri knew of an old Hebrew tradition about the
creation of the world. According to the story, God used the Bible as a
blueprint for his work of creating the universe. The 22 Hebrew letters
in pre-determined combinations were used to accomplish this task. Those
letters therefore represent the physical forces used in the creation
process.
Today, new evidence confirms the idea that the original text of the
Hebrew Bible is multi-layered and goes much deeper than the surface
story. Mysterious codes embedded in the text contain information that
could have not been written or obtained by human beings. "Why," Uri has
asked himself, "would one of the layers of this complex text not be
music?" And if there is music in the text, how would one find it? The
answer Uri came up with was probably the simplest one: assign a musical
note to each Hebrew letter and let the Bible "play itself..."
Early in 1997 Uri and some of his
students collaborated on the production of this project and what they
found--after long and exciting months of experimentation--was simply
stunning!
YES, there is Divine music encoded in the
Hebrew text of the Bible! It is beautiful and meditative. Part of the
music sounds like ocean waves, other parts lift the spirit and fill the
listener with joy.
The first experiments concentrated on
certain chapters from Psalms. Tradition tells us that reading Psalms
aloud in Hebrew brings healing to the sick and helps individuals
overcome adversity. How does this happen? Could it be that sound--the
combination of Hebrew syllables--can produce some unknown effect? An old
Jewish legend tells us that "he who possesses the knowledge of how to
form the right combination of Hebrew sounds can create and destroy
worlds...." If that is so, then music is just another "delivery method"
of those powerful forces and actually has the same effect on people (or
matter) as the Hebrew text has when it is read aloud. Psalms that are
known for their healing properties were chosen. The assumption was that
healing will occur in any form of delivery of this unknown power. In an
amazing way, it seems to work just as predicted. People report an
immediate calming effect, a meditative healing quality that sounds
unlike anything you have heard before. The effect is amplified when you
close your eyes and the music seems to work best while resting, while
meditating or while praying.
(Aricle offered by Uri
Harel.)
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Enjoy the Biblical
music |
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Psalms for
meditation and worship |
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- The World of Mystery /
Column by Uri Geller
This article (translated from Hebrew) appeared in Ma'ariv, one
of Israel's leading newspapers, on March 31, 2000
The music in the
words:
Tunes of Psalms
are reverberating in my mind while I am writing. Without words,
melodies only. This music is older than any song I have ever heard,
but it is probable that it was not played for thousands of years.
Maybe never. Not even by King David, the author of these Psalms. I
am talking about the sounds of God's words that were translated to
music. Responsible for this creation are two people: Uri Harel,
an Israeli Hebrew & Bible teacher, and Kevin Zadai, a musician
from Phoenix, Arizona. The two developed a method to replace the
letters of the Hebrew Alef-Bet by musical notes. They used
synthesizers to create hymns of praise made of actual Psalms. The
result is 11 Psalms that were recorded onto a CD and published under
the name "Music from God". What catches the ear is the melodic
harmony. The notes express the Alef-Bet and supposedly are not
connected, but in some magical way they create melodies that sound
like the wind, full of powerful vibrant echoes.
At first it may
be hard to recognize the perfect wholeness of each Psalm, but after
listening to it repeatedly it becomes evident. Every "chapter" opens
with a soft sound that flowers and grows into a beautifully
orchestrated harmony. Trumpets, bells, strings and other traditional
instruments were used in order to achieve this melodic perfection. The
somewhat metallic sound of computerized synthesizers becomes a part of
this music. Until now I never cared much for computerized sounds, but
the digital perfection of this work gives birth to a plethora of
supernatural qualities.
Hymns of Psalms speak directly to God,
begging for love and justice. Anyone who listens to this music, even
without knowing what it symbolizes, will feel similar feelings of
prayer. I am not certain if King David was fully aware of the musical
quality that he wrote, even though he was known to be a very talented
musician.
What we could not know is what God hears when we
pray. We convey our prayers in Hebrew, English, Yiddish, German,
Spanish, French and more and more; a blend of languages, dialects,
accents, slang etc. It would be a bit childish to expect God to listen
to each prayer in its source language. Now we added a new language,
the language of the computer.
The two authors, it seems, have
succeeded in breaking a code that is maybe as old as the written
word. |
Also see Music From God 2, Days of Majesty the new melodic edition of Music From
God
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Click here to view it
now!
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