Annette Cantor’s recording, Songs to the Goddess,
contains musical meditations inspired by sacred deities from around the world,
but focusing on the universal Mother Earth.
These song prayers -- featuring both Cantor’s wordless vocalizing and
acclaimed new age music pioneer C.G. Deuter’s instrumentation -- praise the
planet, give thanks for birth and living, and also ask for guidance in creating
a good life.
“Two of the most common prayers in any religion are
thankfulness and asking for help,” says Cantor, “but that is just the
beginning. Goddess figures represent
archetypal energies that help us in leading better lives, in going deeper and
getting to know ourselves, and pushing beyond our norm. As individuals we should start with a
gratitude for life and our environment, and then explore our inherent
creativity, and finally reach out with compassion to others. I want my music to assist in this growth
process.”
Annette Cantor’s music can be purchased either as a CD or
as digital downloads at online sales sites such as CDbaby, Amazon, iTunes,
eMusic, Rhapsody and many others. For
more information about Cantor, visit her website at www.annettesings.com.
In addition to Songs to the Goddess, Cantor has an
impressive series of vocal albums: Songs to the Earth (Gregorian chants
and vocalese set to Native American flute, cello and percussion), Music for
Yoga (similar to Songs to the Earth but designed for any movement
practice), Adore Te (improvisations on Gregorian chants with classic new
age music performed by Deuter), Sacred Fusion (ancient Dhrupad singing
by Shanti Shivani mixed with Gregorian chants by Cantor), and Die Blaue
Blume (a collection of German folk songs with additional singing and
accompaniment by Deuter and others). Songs
to the Earth was widely acclaimed for mixing traditional European and
Native American musical elements, and the CD went to #7 on the international
monthly Top 100 Zone Music Reporter airplay chart, was the #30 album of the
year (out of 2,300 recordings) and was a Top 5 finalist for Best Native
American Album at the ZMR Awards.
Cantor and Deuter are both Germans who met while living in
Santa Fe, New Mexico. Deuter, long
known as a top new age instrumentalist, wanted to explore the addition of
vocals, so Cantor sang with him (and played violin) in concert and on several
of his recordings including Garden of the Gods, Earth Blue and Mystery
of Light. He returned the favor by
performing the music on three of Cantor’s recordings. On Songs to the Goddess, Cantor and Deuter co-wrote the
songs. Cantor did all the singing,
often layering her vocals to create several distinctive parts. Deuter played all of the instruments
including wood flute, acoustic guitar, koto, udu, tongue drum, bells, gongs,
shakers, additional percussion and synthesizer.
Although Cantor has always done some vocal improvising on
her recordings and in concert, with Songs to the Goddess she takes it a step further since all but
one small vocal part is wordless singing.
The exception is a background Buddhist drone chant on the song
“Tara.” On “Gaia,” for example, she
says, “I felt as if I had made up a new language.”
Cantor’s style of incredibly-lovely soaring and floating
vocals began its development when she was a child growing up in Germany (“I was
mesmerized when I heard Gregorian chants sung in the Catholic church”). In high school she studied Latin which
enabled her to interpret the words being sung.
In college in Vienna she trained as an opera singer. She was particularly drawn to the most
famous female composer of Gregorian chants, Hildegard von Bingen, the 12th
Century German religious leader, early human rights activist and
visionary. Even now Cantor tries to
sing von Bingen material daily.
Eventually Cantor’s studies revealed that the chants of the Gregorian
tradition have historically been open to improvisation by individual singers
which gave her the freedom to stretch the boundaries by not only improvising
but also bringing the chants into new musical contexts. In addition, Cantor’s wordless vocals are
specifically designed to capture the mood and feelings she is presenting. She has developed a unique style of soulful
emotive expression with her singing strengthened by technical expertise and
classical studies.
“The music on Songs to the Goddess was created
specifically for meditation and healing,” Cantor says, “but also creativity
exploration, personal growth, exercise, relaxation, massage therapy, sleep
assistance, birthing and childhood development, and creating a life-affirming
atmosphere conducive to positivity. The
music allows the listener to explore their own inner consciousness because
there are no words to activate the rational mind. Wordless vocals also transcend languages, cultures and
countries.”
The album begins with “Tara” representing a Buddhist
goddess from Hinduism in India. “She is
the great mother, but also the mother of compassion with an openness to all
possibilities.” The song “Spider Woman”
comes out of the Native American tradition -- “very earthy, the provider of good
harvests and nourishment.” The piece
features Cantor singing choir-like with eight-layered vocals plus the sounds of
wood flute, thunderdrums, rainstick and crickets. “Yemana” is a goddess from Latin American countries including the
Caribbean’s Cuba and Haiti. “She is the
patron of women, especially pregnant women, and she is associated with the
ocean. The music is like a lullaby with a single vocal and light percussion,
very dreamy.” “Isis” is from the
Egyptian culture -- “the giver of all life, the ideal mother, the patroness of
nature and magic, and the goddess of death and rebirth. We used my voice as a
drone sound followed by drums and a mandolin toward the end.”
“Gaia,” from the ancient Greeks, “is the universal earth
mother and personifies the earth. In
creating this music, I wanted to give back, to show it is our turn to care for
Mother Earth.” “Kuan Yin,” explains
Cantor, “has different spellings throughout Asia, but is a Bodhisattva, an
enlightened Buddhist goddess, the great mother of compassion who chooses to
come back to earth to help others. This
slow piece features the koto, a traditional instrument in Japan.” The “Demeter” goddess comes from Greek
mythology, “presiding over the harvest and the underworld, life and death,
sunny summer agriculture and the darkness of winter. We used low-note marimba bells.”
The album ends with “Venus,” the Roman version of the goddess of
passionate love. “The music tries to
capture a morning sunrise, a celebration of love and beauty, and the feeling of
growth in nature.”
Growing up in Germany, Annette studied singing and violin
performance, and was involved in school choirs and orchestras. Her early musical influences ranged from
classical (Bach) to jazz (Ella Fitzgerald, Oscar Peterson). Cantor studied voice at the Vienna Academie
of Music and earned a degree in voice teaching. She became involved with the healing arts, initially utilizing
dance and movement, and after moving to New York City she also incorporated
singing into her healing practices. In
New York she took an intense three-year training program studying the Alexander
Technique (an energy-healing practice with the patient developing awareness of
physical alignment as they move) and became a certified teacher. She is now training to also become a
practitioner of Reconnective Therapy.
To get closer to nature, Annette moved to Santa Fe, drawn
by the spiritual community she found there “and the good scent of the
air.” She began pursuing vocal
improvisations, both in healing situations and as a spiritual performer. She sang in front of the Dalai Lama at the
World Sacred Music Festival in Los Angeles, at the Resonant Wave Festival in
Berlin and at a concert celebrating World Water Day in Santa Fe. Her deep love of poetry has been expressed
in performances with distinguished poets Donna Thomson, Jane Hirshfield, Drew
Dellinger, Roger Housden and Rumi poetry presenter Coleman Barks. Cantor often sings the poems after they have
been recited. She also gives voice
lessons and workshops which combine her healing practice with patients
breathing and singing for therapeutic effect.
No comments:
Post a Comment