AO Means Light

AOMusic went to Nepal with five young people in August.  We recorded children who are singing on our new album to be released in 2013.  This is our fundraising trailer for a documentary that we hope you will all support.

 

AO is Rock and Rolling in Kathmandu

“Robin Tamang is arguably the biggest rock star in Nepal. Initially, he started out with Robin and Looza. Later, he formed a new band, The New Revolution, by  handpicking each member. Five albums already under his belt, he is coming out with his sixth studio album Hamro Desh.”  Robin has a passion for music and children and invited the AO Team to leave Chitwan and return to Kathmandu to work with children in an Orphanage  that he works with there.  Here is the story from one of the team:  Rob Lenfesty

“We arrived back in Kathmandu after the long and bumpy bus ride.  The road to Kathmandu winds perilously along the side of steep, jungled mountainsides with a cold blue river raging far below.  The road is narrow and often has no protection from the thousand feet of drop.  Following the somewhat morbid but expected thought of how often a vehicle goes off the side, I caught a glimpse of a tangled, twisted metal chunk of bygone bus on the rocks below.  Ok, better to enjoy the stunning beauty and leave that thought behind!!

We arrived at the guesthouse that I inhabited not even two years ago on my last visit.  Coming back here has felt like a true full circle.  Especially when my friend and Nepali rock hero Robin Tamang came roaring in on his Royal Enfield Motorbike to meet with us.  Robin had agreed to be our host to an orphanage he has been working with closely for the last 9 years.   Two years ago I played an inspirational show with Robin and his band The New Revolution for the kids at this very place.

Robin has the uncanny presence of a rock star wherever he goes; he is passionately dedicated to the Nepali people and to the hearts and minds of the children.  Thus this man has made children the target of his work.  He believes that the key to changing the failing infrastructure of this nation is to touch the minds and hearts of the kids now.  And he is doing it as well as it could be done.  You can see the love and starstruck awe in the eyes of every Nepali we see as we make our way to the orphanage.

We arrive through the gate and are immediately swarmed with kids.  The older ones remember me quite well, and all are enthusiastic to see Robin; not as a rockstar, as he has been a frequent uncle-like figure since many of them were in diapers.  They love him with the complete child-like adoration for a beloved relative.  Where the kids in Chitwan were not as touchy-feely,  we quickly found the opposite here in Kathmandu.  The loping game I played in Chitwan very quickly became eight or nine kids vying for real estate on my arms, shoulders and back.  Thus wearing a full, squirming suit of children I would try to move in any way possible.  Needless to say I got my exercise!

This orphanage, NAG, has been run by a Swiss woman named Nicole for 20 years.  Her work has been remarkable; the grounds of the school are beautiful and some of her first children are now the teachers and managers of the school.  She finds children with either no parents or incapacitated parents and gives them more than just a second chance, she gives them access to one of the most diverse and best educations they could hope for.  With the help of Robin they even have an entire music room with keyboard, drums, guitars and more!  These children are truly blessed, and have seen the darker side of what life can offer as well.  This balanced experience augments the delight that shines from their eyes so that they radiate a zest and vigor that inspires.

We gathered a group of the younger kids together to teach them the two songs we were to record.  Robin stepped into the performers role beautifully and guided them through the syllables that he himself had just learned.  The kids took to both songs written by Richard Gannaway enthusiastically and in no time we were recording them in chorus.  We recorded individuals as long as their attention spans could handle and then played with them some more.  We left and promised to return the next day.

The Next day found more of the same.  While I was not recording I can honestly say I had at least two kids strapped to my arms or back, minimum, at all times.  I found a game that proved to be more restful with a group of around 12 boys.  I would simply fall in any direction and they would push me back up to standing.  I got to a point where I could trust them well and would fall rapidly in any direction, at which they would (usually) catch me before hitting the ground.  Even as we loaded up into our taxi to leave I had kids clinging on to me.  It was sad to leave!

We decided to go directly to Durban Square, the historic and ancient center of the city.  There we were greeted by statues and pagoda like temples with intricate wooden carvings, and the white stone Royal Palace.  We explored the ancient city for a while as normal people would, though I was itching to play with this place on a more creative level..  I found some lion statues and began to find ways to do yoga poses on and with them; developing quite a crowd in the process!  I played with a few of the kids in the square too, some were imitating my yoga, others showing off their break dancing skills.  We played at this and other games until the sun set and it was time to go.

Unconventional interactions with my environment always seem to lighten up any place I find myself.  I was able to interact with an entire group of people who would have been normal passerby’s if I hadn’t stopped to turn the world on its head for a moment.  I hold sacred the opportunities to imbue the creative essence of this life with the environment and people around me.  If one person smiles as a result then it is a success.  My hope is that others may be inspired to look at the world they live in with the imagination we were born with, sidestepping the conventions we have learned to take for granted.

We found our rest back at Tibet Guest house, another beautiful and active day in Kathmandu for AOMUSIC.”

Nepal: The Soul of the World

 

In my hope to write every day about the trip five young people are on in Nepal, life broke in and tapped me on the shoulder and said, “Remember about making God Laugh?  Throw your plans out the window and go to NYC”.  So, two days later I did and I am now in NYC with my daughter Sasha.  Hot. Loud. Crazy New York City.  There is no other place like it…except maybe Kathmandu.

Each day I surf the moment and the time zones and field so many details of producing, from more ATM machines that are down or changes of plans, budget problems or little details that at the end of the day don’t amount to a hill of beans next to the depth of the journey for all of the Team in Nepal, representing AOMUSIC.

So, I will try to catch up and the only way to do that is to make this entry be all about the day in the life of our AO Ambassador, Rob Lenfestey who has shared a story with me.   I will write more tomorrow about the last person on the Team.  Our own Yoda.  By now your curiosity is peeked, so look for new blog entry and a story you will not believe.  It is all about navigating life by intuition and instinct, a skill we could all cultivate.

Enjoy Rob’s words:

“My dreams thus far have been potent down here in the humid Nepali Jungle: I asked in my dream “So what does happiness look like? And was shown some flashing scenes and images in my head.  “What does clarity look like then?” and another image. “love?” “Friendship?” And on it went.

Then I asked “What does God look like?” and the door slammed open to my Guest House Room.  “Rob”, came Josh’s voice through the glass pane, “Rhino!” And so it was; gracing the river bank below. The first wild example of its kind to grace our team with its presence.  It even had the requisite black birds gracing its massive armor-like back and horn.

By 7am we had eaten our breakfast and loaded up into our transport with Raj and headed to two different impoverished villages full of kids to catch of glimpse of how they lived.

Before we even arrived in the first village, comprised of two long buildings that faced each other with a muddy courtyard in between, we were already being chased down by laughing barefooted children.  The locals were amiable and smiled, clasping their hands in “namaste” to greet us.  The kids, however, simply piled up on top of each other to get in front of us.  Once Karan brought out the big film camera, the ensuing kid pile was hilarious to watch.  Karan flipped the view-screen around and this delighted them the most; now they were watching themselves on the screen.  The gestures and experiments that ensued as each kid eagerly pushed themselves within the field of the camera and watched themselves live was adorable and thoroughly entertaining.

We went to look into their living quarters, which were small rooms split from one long building that comprised an entire half of the small village.  In these small 12×12 ft. rooms some 12 person families lived, cooked and slept.  Each room was impeccably clean and the space outside in the courtyard, while muddy, was free of trash and filth typical to urban impoverished areas.

We went to their well where one of the mothers was cleaning cookware.  This is where the ice broke between the myself and the Children.  I was walking behind the well’s concrete platform and began to slip on the slick algae that grows there.  I caught myself and didn’t fall, but instead turned it into a kind of gliding dance.  The children laughed and so I kept dancing some more.  Eventually this dance erupted from the well and culminated in me loping around chasing them through the village.  As this play continued I was struck by a certain beautiful truth that brought a deeper gravity to this project and its importance.

At its roots, AOMusic is for the creation of world music.  World music crosses cultures and brings them together, celebrating both our diversity and the immutable humanity we all share.  And so it makes perfect sense that  we should build the foundation of such work on that which binds us.  And nothing exemplifies the unity of the human race than the faces, laughter and songs of the children.

It dawned on me that you can change the set and setting as drastically as you want; from Lower Manhattan to the rural jungles of Nepal and you will always find kids.  Kids smiling, kids playing and chasing each other around whatever environment they find themselves in.  And if you took any of those kids and transplanted them in the other place it would take barely seconds for new friendships to be forged and play to ensue.  It is upon the pure essence of a child’s spirit that our “sameness” can be celebrated; and from this thread of unity we may truly celebrate that which makes us unique and different.  I had known before that this was important work and for all these same reasons, yet now a deeper part of me understood.  My bones understood and very muscle in my body understood.  Understood and beamed in celebration of what was before me: Dozens of smiling faces and bright eyes beaming at us, still charged up and ready to flee if the loping beast decided to awaken once more.  And it did.

As we prepared to leave I pulled Josh aside and whispered in his ear.  We then broke out into a goofy, fun vocal improve performance for the kids, one last gesture of gratitude for the gift of their purity and the deepening awareness it had inspired inside of me.

On we ventured to the edge of Chitwan, over the river by canoe and into the government’s Elephant Breeding Center.  The day was hot and muggy by this time, so we moved quickly over the open land towards the relative cover of the Breeding Center’s information booth.  We read a little about elephants, the struggles of captive breeding and the economic importance to this region across generations.  None of this, however prepared us for the elephants themselves.  Under relatively small shade structures, tethered to a wooden post on a small mound of dirt stood each elephant.  The front two feet were chained together tightly like those of a convict to prevent any kind of long strides.  A brief look into these incredibly intelligent eyes was all I needed.  Chained up like a convict, yet what was your crime?  A dozen or so such elephants lined the center with perhaps six or seven babies in all.  I felt uneasy being among the free humans walking along the railing gawking at them in their captivity.  Just one look in the eyes of one of these elephants was all it took to see their depth of understanding and awareness. I turned to look at my team.  Each and every one of us felt the same way.  We did not linger in this place long.  We made our way back out and across the river towards home.

The joy and celebration of the children was mingled with the sobering sadness and even wisps of anger around the treatment of such wise and beautiful creatures as these elephants.  All of this, the full spectrum of our human experience, is beautiful.  Asia brings this lesson home for me quite often.  The best and the worst all mixed into one beautiful cacophony of human existence.”

 

 

 

Diary of a Dream: Day Two in Chitwan, Nepal.

     

So I dream all night about elephants and mountain tops eager to get up and see if there are emails in my inbox from the Team in Nepal.  Their late night musings, concerns or questions come in about 6am at my house and I am off and running.

And, as I promised, I am going to profile another member of the team who wrote a piece this morning that says it all.  I need not say another word except:

Rob Lenfesty is from Asheville, North Carolina and is the person standing in for Richard Gannaway and teaching the children music.  This is his first time working with AO and I am certain it will not be the last time.

 

Rob is part of an intentional community in Asheville, a yoga teacher, slackline teacher (get to know about this if you do not already know), a composer, musician and magic with children.  Here is what he shares with you from the heart of Nepal”

 

“Since arriving here we have set some cultural experiential goals. One for me has been to ride an elephant; and in the spirit of fun and creativity do some yoga asana on its back.  We had spoken of this often; and when an elephant came down the hill next to where Josh and I sat eating breakfast I commented;

I wish they didn’t all have those boxes on their backs (referring to

the wooden platform adorning all elephants we have thus far seen)

because it will make it difficult to do any yoga on one.

Half joking and yet, right in that moment, the elephant got to its knees and the owner dropped down and began removing the box off of its back.  I decided to get a closer look and walked down there. “Elephant shower?,” the mahout (elephant keeper) asked me, gesturing to the elephant’s back and the river.

With a broad smile on my face I crawled up and there I was, riding bareback on an elephant mere seconds after musing about it.  We went into the water and the elephant began sucking water into its trunk and drenching me on its back.  The day was already hot and the water was refreshing.  Another blessing barely in disguise; by standing in a couple of feet of water the elephant afforded me the opportunity to safely try fun things like headstands on his back.  Elephant Yoga!

A few times I splashed down into the water but was able to get back up and try again.  Afterwards I was able to just connect to the beautiful and intelligent creature before he left the river.  One goal manifested, and beautifully!

I feel that the “child-like” compulsion to play and try new things is the key to refreshing and invigorating the human spirit.  Such play awakens the divine inside of us; we glow with the pure joy of living and the happiness that is derived from new experiences and magical opportunities realized.  It was with this playful and activated spirit that we piled up in the truck and drove to the school to meet the kids who are to be the heart of this journey.

We arrive at the school to find a group of well-behaved enthusiastic children sitting behind their tall wooden desks, eager to learn.  It did not take but a few moments for us to break the ice with some perfectly goofy vocal exercises and games to establish a playful vibe for this experience.

It was now in this moment that the true alchemy of this group of AOMusic ambassadors really became apparent.  While I prepared the materials to teach the kids the song we were going to record them singing, as well as confer with the principle and school officials to discuss logistics, Josh continued to engage the kids with fun games and exercises that served the multifaceted purposes of play, exercising musical awareness and exercising singing voices.  We wrote the song on the whiteboard and practiced each syllable and then the song.  The kids picked it up immediately.

I was astounded by how quickly they got it.  After a few more games we brought them outside and got a recording of them singing as a group underneath a mango tree in the schools courtyard.  I then proceeded to begin my individual recordings while Josh continued to pull engaging games out of thin air to keep the kids delighted and inspired.

When we finally stopped for lunch I decided to bring out my slackline to see how the kids enjoyed it.  Slackline is a piece of flat one inch wide webbing that you place between two trees and then practice balancing on.  I teach with the Yogaslackers, a group who are dedicated to bringing this wonderful practice to the world in an easy to learn format that celebrates the diversity of opportunities this simple tool provides.  In a class what we establish are the basic poses of an ever-growing list of yoga asana that we have applied to the slackline and the flows that move between them.

I set up the line and the kids all gathered ‘round.  I showed them the basic knee balance that we first teach and then each kid who wanted to (and some teachers too!) gave it a shot.  As each approached the line everyone would cheer their name and clap enthusiastically for even small victories from each person.  I did a quick demo of what is possible and then fluidly returned to recording the children individually.   Josh found even more games and musical adventures to take the kids on in the mean time.

The film and photo crew of Jessie, Karan and Baldev continued to find creative ways to shoot the recordings and orchestrate shots throughout the session.  The fact they have been doing so since we arrived in Kathmandu; capturing each inspired moment along the way with ease.  Thus we made sure the light was perfect and recorded the kids as they sung; eyes beaming at the fancy cameras, boom stand and recording equipment surrounding them.  Even for those of us familiar with all of this equipment it was surreal.

I can only imagine the wonder of it all for these kids out in the Nepalese countryside.  In all we were hoping to keep the kids captivated for an hour, at most an hour and a half.  After all, today was a special day of holiday and we knew they would want to get out and enjoy it.  Except we were underestimating ourselves as well as the kids.  For four hours we not only kept the kids captivated and entertained, but they were hungry for more.  They wanted us to stay and continue to play and record.  To reiterate with enthusiasm; Josh Massad stepped up in a beautiful way.  He had the kids singing tabla rhythms and had brought an arsenal of fun instruments for them to play.  Entertained, entrained and educated all at the same time.  And wanting more to boot.

Because of how musically engaged and fun-loving the experience was for the kids, by the time they reached me for their individual session they were fully loose, activated and vocally warmed up for the experience.  When we finally left the children were beaming.  I beamed at my crew.  I could not have been blessed with a more alchemically perfect combination of people to create this magical experience with.

Rob Lenfestey,        Celebrate Life.

Tomorrow is another day, and I will finally introduce you to a young man from Mumbai who is filming in Panasonic HD for our larger documentary:  Karan Sharma.  And does he have a wonderful story.