Sat Kartar

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Laya Mantra 11:02 Tools
Jaap Man Sat Nam 00:00 Tools
Laya Yoga Chant (Makyo's Tantric Dub) 00:00 Tools
Sat Gur Prasad 00:00 Tools
Sa Re Sa Sa 00:00 Tools
Jap Man 00:00 Tools
Aad Sach 00:00 Tools
Gobinday Mukanday 00:00 Tools
I Am, I Am 00:00 Tools
Guru Ram Das Chant 00:00 Tools
Har Har Har Amritsar 00:00 Tools
Ek Ong Kar Sat Gur Prasad 00:00 Tools
Laya Yoga Chant 00:00 Tools
Gobinday Mukunday 00:00 Tools
Ad Such 00:00 Tools
Arti/Long Time Sun 00:00 Tools
Ong Namo/Sat Kartar 00:00 Tools
Ung Sung Wahe Guru 00:00 Tools
Sa Ray Sa Sa 00:00 Tools
Basant Kee Vaar 05:02 Tools
Long Time Sun 00:00 Tools
Wah Yantee 00:00 Tools
Aad Such 00:00 Tools
Morning Call 02:26 Tools
Mool Mantra 00:00 Tools
Bahota Karam (25th Pauri of Japji) 00:00 Tools
Hari Har - We are the People of Love 00:00 Tools
Laya Yoga 00:00 Tools
Rakhay Rakhanhar 00:00 Tools
Wahe Guru Wahe Jio 00:00 Tools
Guru Ram Das 00:00 Tools
Sat Guru Prasad 00:00 Tools
Sat Narayan 00:00 Tools
Ung Sung Wahay Guru 00:00 Tools
Sat Siri Akal 00:00 Tools
Ahd Guray Nameh 00:00 Tools
Gobinday Mukhunday 00:00 Tools
  • 11,359
    plays
  • 2,027
    listners
  • 11359
    top track count

Sat Kartar has been chanting since the 1970's solo and in groups. She has recorded at least 6 albums including Flow, Listen, Daily Practice, Ethereal Journey, Domain of Shiva, and Spirit in Blossom. She strives to chant from a larger audience. Her childhood was full of music. Both parents played piano and her father frequently performed at parties and restaurants. There was music around of every kind--musicals, standards, and classical music. Sat Kartar played piano at 5, guitar at 14, and picked out everything on piano and guitar, from the Beatles to the Spanish classical Malaguena. She trained in ballet, and other dance forms. In college, she was gigging, doing covers of singer-songwriters and folk artists. One big influence was Joni Mitchell, whose open tunings and unusual melodies were a doorway and vicarious permission to explore uncharted territory, musically. Trying to find her lyric voice to express the rising spiritual revolution she felt, in this time, she tried a Kundalini yoga class, hoping for some kind of release from songwriter's block. Sat Kartar recalls, “My first experience of chanting was being mezmerized with the sound of this yoga teacher, named Livtar Singh, who was singing these words over and over to someone named Guru Ram Das (a spirit guide in the Sikh faith) while playing a drone instrument called a tamboura. I felt as though I had opened Pandora's Box on a mysterious unknown world of sound.” Sat Kartar went on to sing in 2 Sikh spiritual bands, Sat Nam East, one of the first American chant groups, and later the Khalsa String Band. In the mid-seventies, she began what would be a life study of Northern Indian classical kirtan, with numerous Sikh musicians, called Ragis (who sing devotionally in Eastern raga scales). “I wanted to bring the enchantment of this world of music to an American audience in a simpler, sensuous form, so Westerners could appreciate the haunting beauty of these ancient scales.” In 1984 and '85, collaborating with veteran New Age producer Liv Khalsa, they created 2 timelessly beautiful recordings, Spirit in Blossom and Domain of Shiva, a group of hymns from the sacred Sikh texts, containing 4 raga scales. Symphonically orchestrated and ahead of its time, this music found a new audience, in the early stages of the World and New Age Music movement. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.