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On Saturday night in Sanders Theatre, the soloist sang harmony—with
himself. For just a few hours, the Harvard crest was covered by
thungkas, or Tibetan wall hangings, as the audience welcomed monks from
the esoteric and venerable Tibetan Tantric Choir.
Clad in traditional ochre robes, the group was comprised of
thirteen singing monks and accompanied by one attendant monk who acted
as a shrine master and a silent performer of offerings, serving the
vice abbot of their own Gyuto Tantric University. The monks came to
Harvard under the aegis of WorldMusic/CRASHarts, an organization for
the advancement of international arts funded in part by the
Massachusetts Cultural Council.
The Gyuto monks, who went into exile with the Dalai Lama in
1959 upon China’s annexation of Tibet, currently reside in India.
Although their numbers have dwindled from the standard 900 who had
originally resided in Tibet’s capital city, Lhasa, the comparatively
large group of young monks who have joined in exile have helped their
membership to increase. They are among the most elite of all Tibetan
monks, and their liturgical traditions some of the most esoteric. The
monks’ multiphonic technique, in which individuals have the ability to
produce up to three notes simultaneously, is incredibly rare and
thought to be a sign of extremely high spiritual advancement—a feeling
which was palpable in the auditorium. As the monks adjusted their
cone-shaped hats and large tassels before beginning to chant, an
announcer encouraged audience members to meditate if they wished.
Sitting in a “V” formation so that they faced each other
rather than the audience, the monks began their performance by silently
unwrapping the unassuming white bundles already laid out in front of
them, revealing brilliant blue embroidered silks. The silks displayed
the crown of the five Buddha families and the other accoutrements of
the deity in preparation for The Vajra Master Initiation from the
Yamantaka Tantra, the first piece of the evening. They quietly donned
the silks and hats, each flank of the “V” formation waiting until all
its members were ready to flip the petalled capes over their shoulders.
The sound produced by the Gyuto monks’ throat singing
technique was guttural as well as sonorous beyond belief. The
impossibly low-pitched reverberations swelled up from deep within the
monks’ throats, creating an enveloping resonant hum louder and stronger
than many in the audience had ever heard–or may ever hear again.
In a brief question-and-answer session following the
performance, the vice abbot of the monks explained that the practice of
throat singing was actually developed to intentionally and necessarily
obfuscate the words of the liturgical texts performed.
The stage, adorned with relatively few decorations and
objects, was ultimately quite successful in evoking richly ornate
Tibetan monasteries. A white table upstage bore the image of the Dalai
Lama and a three-dimensional mandala and torma, ritual offerings
usually made of yak butter or ground barley. One graduate student in
the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, a specialist in Tibetan Buddhism,
speculated that the table served as a throne, with the Dalai Lama’s
image acting as a manifestation of His presence.
After intermission, the monks, who had previously been
accompanied by nothing more than a small hand bell, brought out several
native instruments. Especially noteworthy were two types of trumpets.
One was several feet long and reminiscent of an elephant’s bray in
sound, while the other was a far smaller, higher-pitched thighbone
horn.
The monks also played large drums held vertically by red
handles, their mallets curved in the manner of bows. The use of
instruments, beautiful in its own right, served to highlight the monks’
richly developed vocal ability, while the occasional chanting of
mantras quickened the pace from that of the dominant seven-beat
liturgical texts.
The monks’ attire was noteworthy for its many changes during
the performance: A variety of shawls were put on and taken off, and the
crested yellow hats of the special Galug-pa sect were donned, then
doffed with the changing of the chants. These transitions were an
expression of the deeply ritualistic nature of the rites, and a
constant reminder of the fact that the performance was not a concert so
much as the active practice of an extremely sacred and increasingly
esoteric religious tradition.
Closing with a wish for peace that elicited repeated applause
from the audience, the charismatic vice abbot emphasized compassion in
his remarks. He said that he had never before seen such kindness and
love between animals and humans as he had witnessed here in the U.S.
between doting pet owners and the creatures with whom they share their
homes.
“So you love animals,” said his translator. “I would like you
to love human beings, each other, as well. As sentient beings we all
want happiness.”
--Staff writer Anna K. Barnet can be reached at abarnet@fas.harvard.edu.
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