When the GRAMMY nominations were announced earlier this month, Chandrika Krishnamurthy Tandon‘s album, Om Namo Narayanaya: Soul call (on Soul Chants Music), was nominated for a GRAMMY in the Best Contemporary World Music Album category, alongside musical greats like Béla Fleck, Bebel Gilberto, Angelique Kidjo, and Sergio Mendes.
The eight songs on Soul Call were composed around a single eight-syllable chant that is over six thousand years old. Chandrika composed each song to follow a different Indian raga. She recruited maestro Tejendra Narayan Majumdar to create arrangements using over 30 acoustic Indian classical, folk, and Western instruments including the vibraphone, acoustic guitar, and bass. It features renowned, master Indian musicians recorded in Kolkata (Calcutta) and New York.
The eight syllables of this chant-Om Na Mo Na Ra Ya Na Ya-are believed to form a protective armor around the body. “These syllables are literally vibrations from the ancient Vedic tradition handed down from generation to generation,” explains Chandrika. “Many traditions have incredible healing mantras whether in Africa, Brazil or Tibet . I can’t tell you in detail how they work; some things are beyond explanation. You have to experience it yourself.”
“The beauty of Chandrika’s music comes from her focus on excellence in everything she does,” says Soul Call’sengineer John Kiehl, co-founder of New York City’s Soundtrack Recording Studios, who has worked with Roberta Flack, LL Cool J, and Mariah Carey. “Soul Call is barrier-breaking. Of course, this album is rising to the top.”
For years, music was in Chandrika’s soul, but not in her cards. “As a child, I sang in school music choirs and won awards, but it was not ‘proper’ in my family to pursue a career in music. In business school in India, I would finish my coursework and go into a music room stocked with just a few albums,” Chandrika remembers. “My yearbook says ‘She killed us softly with her song,’ because I would listen to Roberta Flack, Neil Young, or Sergio Mendes albums ten times in a night, until three in the morning.”
Chandrika has come a long way since her arrival in New York 30 years ago. She showed up with only 24 dollars in her pocket, hired by McKinsey, one of the United State’s most prestigious management consulting firm. With her first paycheck, she went out and bought a Martin Guitar and a great hi-fi, so she could finally hear her favorite music in stereo, sleeping on the floor for six months till she could finally afford furniture.
But all that changed. Her career flourished, she was elected a company partner (the second woman to do so), and she formed her own company winning many accolades. She traveled the world constantly, from Australia to Amsterdam; from Brazil to Beirut. In each culture, Chandrika would seek out local musicians, learning the local language through music.
In Salvador, Bahia, she followed Carnaval bands on the streets. In Beirut, she traveled miles to attend the Baalbeck International Festival, held among Roman ruins. In London and Paris , she pored over record stores’ bins. Back home in New York, she attended her favorite concerts two or three days in a row. She worked in numbers and strategies; she dreamt in music.
The intense yearning for music was bursting to get to center stage in Chandrika’s life. “I woke up one day when my daughter was starting high school and realized that, though I had reached many measures of business success, I had not connected with my deepest self, my life’s purpose,” says Chandrika. “I went on a journey going back to who I am. I asked myself what makes me happy. And it struck me that all of my happiest moments in life go back to music! I needed to pursue my passion for music and share it with everyone.”
Chandrika began seeking out extraordinary music teachers and performers; anyone that resonated that could give her a rigorous grounding in classical Indian music. She’d travel to India for a week at a time to learn with a great maestro. One year she’d wake up at 4 am every weekend to drive from New York to Wesleyan for master classes with a Carnatic music professor, and be back by 10 am when her young daughter awoke. “I was a music seeker. I found ways to learn from the greats, whenever and wherever they would teach me.”
Even while she was getting a rigorous grounding in classical Indian music, Chandrika’s heart was always drawn to simple songs based on classical Indian scales; songs that made the joy of music reachable to more people. When she could not find what she wanted to sing, she started composing; hundreds of joyous compositions in classical scales, but with all the global music that was part of her spirit. “My soul is uplifted when I can sing with others.” Now she gets many calls to lead participatory singing events at yoga, meditation, and community service gatherings, and conducts musical choirs; all efforts to share music with love.
Chandrika has taken this mission of sharing one step further with her non-profit, deciding that all of the proceeds from her album are being donated to benefit organizations in the fields of community building, arts, and spirituality.
“This CD is about creating a circle of love,” says Chandrika “We are reaching out to each other; we are reaching each other’s hearts and souls through the beautiful sounds that the universe has given us a chance to create. Music breaks boundaries easier than words.”
Being a newcomer to the music industry, Chandrika extends this philosophy to her GRAMMY nomination. “This is about a shared celebration of music among musicians; I have met so many musicians that I now admire, they are such mind-blowing talents. I feel utter gratitude to those that took the time to listen, to share feedback, and to support an unknown like me.”
But it is not only musicians in the GRAMMY community listening to Chandrika’s voice. The Soul Chants Music fan page on Facebook which started with a trickle six weeks ago, is teeming with spontaneous testimonials from new fans worldwide-now over 12,000-each with their own story of listening to the album or how they integrate this music into their life.
“I live by a two-line quotation from a Sufi mystic: ‘When I was there, the divine was missing; When I left, the divine took over.’ My quest is to lose myself,” chandrika says.
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Author: World Music Central News Room
World music news from the editors at World Music Central
Chandrika’s music is enchanting one and all with so much intensity, love & laughter. God bless you!
Namo Narayana is magnificient. It touches me in new places each time I hear it. Thank you for your music and for sharing it.
Jai Jagannath
Mala
Chandrika’s music has such a quiet peace about it. Her voice and music feels uplifting to my soul in ways that are hard for me to verbalize. It takes me back to my Jamaican/Indian roots. Truly beautiful sounds that are layered together to create a sense of healing, rejuvenation, and well-being. This is honestly one of my favorite albums to listen to when I need to feel grounded or relax. And it’s great that all profits go to support good causes! 🙂
I have not heard Chandrik’s music since i’m a lover of indian music and chanting So i for sure gonna love her music…..Indian music is so divine… tht once u listened to it u get fascinated by it’s incredibility…..Love my india ,,,love my indian music…….
Dear Chandrika,
I had a musical discussion with the renowned flautist Shashank from Chennai India on a project MusiYoga which Iam doing which is aimed at eradicating Stress,Depression and enhancing Joy Thru the power of Hindusthani Music by simple lyrics and slokas aimed at our Biophotons by ingestion of sound energy on our Panchaboothams.Shashank asked me to check your YouTube videos and I was pleasantly surprised to see your thoughts are quite close to mine.I would love to have a FaceTime discussion on what I do on MusiYoga