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Music that resonates with your soul

There are a lot of songs that are 'speaking' to me now that I'm allowing the past in, which were released between my past life and this one. A lot that seem to speak to the side of me that adored Harry, as well as his spirit [he seems to accompany me here and there in spirit, in this life] and some that speak to the side that yearns for my PL husband's arms once more.

"Run to his arms, the moment he comes home to you..." - Wives and Lovers (1963) [That line causes my heart to ache for Etienne, my PL husband.]

"Perhaps, the glow of love will grow with every passing day, or we may never meet again. But then it's not for me to say..." - It's Not for Me to Say (1957) [Harry, who apparently loved my past self quite deeply, seemed hopeful of a relationship post-war, but it was not to be.]

"And from the dark secluded valleys, I heard the ancient songs of sadness. But, every step I thought of you. Every footstep, only you..." - Mad About You (1991) [This is actually from this lifetime, but it's only recently become consciously poignant. I've always been partial to it, but never known the reason until I unlocked the door to the past. It almost reads as though it was written for Harry, post-incarceration. I get the sense he's calling for me, when I get the urge to listen to this song.]

"Where the blue of the night meets the gold of the day, someone waits for me..." - Where the Blue of the Night (1931) [One that comes from my past life this time. This one seems to be for Etienne. Maybe, we danced to it, in our time together in that life. I get the sense that we did, in a sweet tender moment.]
 
EDIT: This was one of my favorite tunes when I was a child (9 or 10 years old). Took me ages, literally, to find it back. Had no idea that it would be listed as a Christmas song. Neither did I realize back then that it is an anti-war song.
That song is one of the many things that makes me want to be able to travel back in time, at least to the French revolution and before every war since with enough proof of what we now know, and to convince all people in their relevant languages to not fight each other, that all wars are bankers wars, and that removing power and wealth from a comparively very few people is what must be done - and never again allow their ilk to gain power and wealth. Put them on a remote island where they can be self sufficient but cannot do more harm to everyone else, to nature or to Earth. If only.
When I think of war, it hangs heavily on my heart. No doubt it is the same for others here.
 
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When I came across this song, at first I didn’t realise fully the meaning of it. It came as a synchronicity. I love her music and shared some videos with my friend (F). This song that was unknown to me, came up with Youtube. I listened but didn’t pay much attention. Somehow in the background.
Then I almost felt sick and wanted to cry from deep inside. I told my friend I didn’t feel well, and perhaps it was better to delay our conversation to another time.
Then suddenly I realised the meaning of the song that was playing. My subconscious mind had been quicker and more alert than my conscious mind.
It’s about the longing for a long lost love and finding them back.
Actually, I was talking to my own long lost love at that moment.
Believe me, understanding this synchronicity was another blow that left me speechless :):)
 
I love the way Sumerian and Sanskrit sound when I hear/feel the vibration...i also started a book on my own personal pastlives. I also pickup other languages like Spanish and older languages like old French very easily.....I'm in love with Italian....i was a nun during the apparitions in Fatima.....i died of the Spanish flu in a convent, which is still open to this day.
 
A few of my favorites ~
  • I’ve heard that song before - by Harry James
  • Sleepy Lagoon - by Harry James
  • Moonlight serenade - by Glenn Miller
  • I love you - by Kenny Gardner
 

I do not really believe at this time that I was ever a samurai, but I identify strongly with and really like medieval/early modern Japan. Absolutely amazing.
 
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Currently it's things like this, as well as medieval and Native American music.

Throat singing is awesome. Have you heard this?


Mongols were once terrifying enemies. It strangely pains me to see how they have become weak in power, where once they ruled a vast empire. For their own sake, I hope they do what the song encourages. They would need Genghis Khan to come back and unite all their peoples again. Having an enemy like that is good for us. Keeps us strong. It is the enemies who are not so obvious and who makes us weak by subversion that I truly dislike. The Mongols gave a tremendously good fight. I admire them deeply, hands down. Absolutely not a people anyone sane would wish to fight, should they awake from their long slumber.
 
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Throat singing is awesome. Have you heard this?


No joke, I was actually listening to that this morning on Spotify. That blew me away the first time I heard it. It was a interesting modern take on traditional music.

The Mongols were truly terrifying, I absolutely agree. In my past life in Mongolia, I honestly felt scared of myself. If we somehow got locked in a room together and I crossed him, he'd just kill me without hesitation. That was the vibe I got anyway.
 
I think music that would is your own original music, from voice or intrument, I hope to make a invention for audio or find one in the future to be able to make any audio sound output from speakers using brain
 
One song that catches my mood quite precisely, last days of my PL, as I was planning to go and meet an old love of mine and my son who I had not seen for almost a decade, is Bruce Springsteens "Thunderroad".
At the time of the accident that caused my death I was listening to 60ies songs though. And while Thunderroad still has a lot of hope and eagerness to me, these 1960s songs like HaHa said the clown, Ruby Tuesday, The Letter, and such hold a great despair but also a great attraction.
 
I listen to all sorts of present-day music, though I veer a lot in the direction of traditional folk melodies from across multiple countries.

I do tend to like my music with the rough edges left on, rather than refined and polished. Sometimes I hear stuff say on the radio or on a compilation CD and it just stops me in my tracks. Example of this:
and

I find those surprising, I'm not religious and these are very unlike anything I might hear in a church, it is both unknown yet disturbingly familiar.

Then there's the Mediaeval stuff, I really lose myself listening to this:
I like the percussion starting from about 11 minutes in that last recording.
 
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Ah, I don't concentrate much at all on my former time as a troubadour/trouvere in early Medieval France, but those first two extracts take me back to something close, particularly their unrefined roughness. I sang like that. It got me into all kinds of trouble.
 
To be honest now i rarely listen to ANY present day music i only majority of the time listen to medieval/renaissance music because it calls out to me so much, puts me in a trance and takes me place. these ones put me into a state of home, a state of comfort, a state of "Me".
i had this odd strong emotional connection to the middle ages and renaissance times of Ol' Henry VIII and Lizzie I and never new why. i had the connection for almost two years (sine sep or oct 2017) and it hasn't went away no matter HOW many times i try to get rid of the connection by trying to "ease" myself, settle into present day i just can't its like my subconscious got lost in the middle ages and renaissance age...
 
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Drift Away, by Dobie Gray has always touched me deeply. The emotion wells up and I can't suppress it. I am always in tears by the end and I don't know why.


Waylon Jennings did a good version of it also.


God bless you all.
 
Thanks, here is one that is more appropiate to this forum, Hard to believe the number of available of videos about him!
 
I played music backwards and discovered I wasn't the first one to post The Hu band. Oh well. Mongolian throat singing is cool.

On another note I love Aramaic
 
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I do not really believe at this time that I was ever a samurai, but I identify strongly with and really like medieval/early modern Japan. Absolutely amazing.
I remember this song. Not from a last life. From this life as a child.
 
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