The Yoga Sessions
by EarthRise SoundSystem
White Swan Records

When DJ Derek Beres and multi-instrumentalist and producer David “Duke Mushroom” Schommer, the duo who make up EarthRise SoundSystem, first came together, it was to remix a song by popular kirtan singer Deva Premal. The project, they say, became a mission to re-create what yoga music is. Here, in The Yoga Sessions, a 12-track CD designed to accompany an asana practice, it’s clear they know their subject – and their audience.

From the first notes of “Intention,” featuring singer Morley, you can feel your breath deepen. The tracks wend through a variety of rhythms and paces as you move into your practice.

Echoes of Africa, India, the Middle East, and other places where ancient ways still prevail lend depth and heart to the music’s electronic overtones. And deep, resonant bass is prominent. It weaves hypnotic patterns that gather and release energy like kundalini rising. But it’s Schommer’s earthy percussion that creates and inviting and indelible sense of place and atmosphere – the reverberating sound of human hands meeting organic materials.

Various guest singers and instrumentalists all add their color; the sonic spectrum keeps shifting. By the album’s last track, “Embrace,” again featuring Morley’s hypnotic vocals, you are well ready to fall into Savasana, deeply steeped in the yogic nectar. Alan Di Perna (Yoga Journal, October 2010)

Check out EarthRise SoundSystem’s first official video, featuring Carol C of Si*Se on vocals, and follow this link to download the song free!

EarthRise SoundSystem’s Derek Beres’s first compilation on Six Degrees Records, InnerVersions: A Six Degrees Yoga Collection, is coming out soon! The album, made for a Vinyasa style flow class, features EarthRise SoundSystem’s “Makyen Ghrir Allah,” as well as tracks by Karsh Kale, Bombay Dub Orchestra, Cheb i Sabbah, Eccodek, Jef Stott and many more. Check out the video here for more…

EarthRise SoundSystem – The Yoga Sessions

Contrary to any images the name may conjure, EarthRise SoundSystem’s The Yoga Sessions, aren’t slow, new-agey tunes designed to numb the corporate-mindset while they adopt strange positions and stretch their backs.  Mixing Eastern voices, instruments, and thoughts with some serious downtempo beats and chill bass, this is luscious yogic lounge music of the highest order.  Anyone who’s ever spent any time in a Hindi ashram knows how beautiful the bhajans can be.  What EarthRise does is take the pulse of those bhajans and marry them to Western beats and rhythms, creating a heavenly, pulsing, throbbing, intoxicating blend of Hindi-chill.

Again, there’s way too much pulse here to use it as background music while you wrangle your body out of “downward dog” pose into “cobra.”  But that’s not the intent.  Think of this as a sumptuous late night chill album, or an early Sunday morning coffee riser and you’ll get the feeling.

Exotic in flavor, spiritual in nature, the vocals float and dance above the lingering dancefloor beat.  Basses throb in sensual pulses, approaching a point of complete higher-self eroticism. “Intention” leads us off, with its prayer of a vocal chant, repetitive in nature, blessing us as we embark on this journey. Harmonies layer on, building softy over the heartbeat of bass.   Songs like “Dash Nayad,” could create a swirling throng of heated bodies on any late-night dance floor. Forget all thoughts of this being a “world beat” album, this is just addictive down-tempo chill.  Perfect for calming the night, settling the soul. “Daylight as Sunset” reminds me of some of the best of Si*Se, throbbing downbeat lounge.

I’m always on the lookout for a good chill album to calm the ears after all the metal, punk, and garage we get at the Ripple.  Previously, my favorite recommendation would’ve been to check out the Angel Beach 3-CD set.  Now, I got EarthRise SoundSystem and all is right in Ripple world.

–Racer

Originally posted here.

EarthRise SoundSystem
The Yoga Sessions
Summer 2010

New York studio musicians Derek Beres and Duke Mushroom seamlessly mix Thievery Corporation-style dub beats with original guitar, violin, and tabla recordings into something far beyond the syrupy mess that typically passes for “yoga music.” By deploying traditional Sanskrit chanting alongside Hebrew vocals, they call to mind pioneering world music groups like Dissidenten. Even if you believe that yoga should be done in monastic silence, this is still a great chill-out soundtrack for after practice ends.

Featured artist Lucy Woodward chants, “Here is something to believe in” in the chorus of The Yoga Sessions fifth track “Daylight at Sunset.” If you’re looking for an album to aid your Yoga practice, here is something to believe in. The Yoga Sessions, a compilation of tracks inspired on and for the mat, is the integration of Yoga and music in its finest form, especially when considering the track record of the minds behind the creation. Producers Derek Beres and David “Duke Mushroom” Schommer know what they are doing. Beres has taught Jivamukti

Yoga for five years in Manhattan and is a noted DJ, spinning alongside everyone from Karsh Kale to Jamiroquai. Schommer is a first-class percussionist and a platinum-selling producer.The results of their experience and creativity could be enjoyed in any lounge, home or Yoga studio alike.

The songs flow together so fluently they could be one stream of consciousness – one with an inspirational soundtrack for practice. The compilation integrates traditional instrumentals with a 21st century electronically inspired essence. Sessions features performances from a diverse selection of vocalists and musicians. From recording artist Lucy Woodward, Pharaoh’s Daughter Basya Schechter, France’s Morley, Lital Gabai, Morocco’s Hamid Boudali, tabla player Dave Sharma, guitarist Shahar Mintz, Daniel Dworkin to Juno nominee Eccodek, the contributors are both reputable and infinite.

We’re not the only ones who are raving about the album. According to a piece in the Boston Globe, Yoga Sessions “resembles a Thievery Corporation album, but with the attention to the pace and sequencing of yoga practice.” And one of its tracks, “Rama”, was featured as one of Fitness Magazine’s top 100 songs for 2009. –– Reviewed by Vanessa Harris

Originally published on LA Yoga.

The Yoga Sessions
EarthRise SoundSystem
We say: Yoga music that even yoga-dissers will dig.

There’s a reliable trend that has continued through the decades, that of pairing music compilations with activities, whether it’s a romantic dinner, a retro cocktail party, or a road trip. I can’t say for sure that The Yoga Sessions is the perfect music for contorting yourself and then popping back into a Downward Dog, but EarthRise SoundSystem’s Derek Beres was a yoga teacher for five years, so he ought to know.

I expected this album to be a snoozer, frankly, a new age collection of sleepy tunes meant to promote relaxation and measured breathing. Instead it’s an engaging collection of downtempo worldbeat electronica that stands well on its own. Sure, it would work fine in a yoga studio, but it would also work well in the lounge of a Kimpton hotel. Beres and musical partner David Schommer both have a long list of production credits in their history and they have tapped a variety of interesting vocalists to bring some warmth and repeated listening allure to the project.

Some songs, like “Ajnabee,” feature vocals that are merely another instrument, with no lyrics. The Lucy Woodward vehicle “Daylight as Sunset,” on the other hand, would make Massive Attack proud. This is the clear hit single of the bunch, which is probably why it is featured in two different versions on the CD. “Marom” is another track that could stand well on its own as a chillout lounge staple, featuring Basya Schechter of Pharoah’s Daughter. “May All Beings” is percussive to the point of being danceable and “Rama” takes the overdone sitar music and chants one would normally associate with yoga and twists them into a six-minute Scorpion Pose.

The production is “light up your headphones” stunning, with a rich fullness that sounds even better on a cranked-up stereo system with real bass. There are real instruments throughout too, not just a bunch of bleeps and beats. This is not the kind of crap your massage therapist puts on to set the mood, or something your hack yoga teacher brings in to try to make you think you’re in Haridwar instead of Houston. This is good music that fits a mood, not mere mood music.

The original review ran here.

The Yoga Sessions
EarthRise SoundSystem
We say: Yoga music that even yoga-dissers will dig.

There’s a reliable trend that has continued through the decades, that of pairing music compilations with activities, whether it’s a romantic dinner, a retro cocktail party, or a road trip. I can’t say for sure that The Yoga Sessions is the perfect music for contorting yourself and then popping back into a Downward Dog, but EarthRise SoundSystem’s Derek Beres was a yoga teacher for five years, so he ought to know.

I expected this album to be a snoozer, frankly, a new age collection of sleepy tunes meant to promote relaxation and measured breathing. Instead it’s an engaging collection of downtempo worldbeat electronica that stands well on its own. Sure, it would work fine in a yoga studio, but it would also work well in the lounge of a Kimpton hotel. Beres and musical partner David Schommer both have a long list of production credits in their history and they have tapped a variety of interesting vocalists to bring some warmth and repeated listening allure to the project.

Some songs, like “Ajnabee,” feature vocals that are merely another instrument, with no lyrics. The Lucy Woodward vehicle “Daylight as Sunset,” on the other hand, would make Massive Attack proud. This is the clear hit single of the bunch, which is probably why it is featured in two different versions on the CD. “Marom” is another track that could stand well on its own as a chillout lounge staple, featuring Basya Schechter of Pharoah’s Daughter. “May All Beings” is percussive to the point of being danceable and “Rama” takes the overdone sitar music and chants one would normally associate with yoga and twists it into a six-minute Scorpion Pose.

The production is “light up your headphones” stunning, with a rich fullness that sounds even better on a cranked-up stereo system with real bass. There are real instruments throughout too, not just a bunch of bleeps and beats. This is not the kind of crap your massage therapist puts on to set the mood, or something your hack yoga teacher brings in to try to make you think you’re in Haridwar instead of Houston. This is good music that fits a mood, not mere mood music.

The original review by Tim Leffel is posted here.

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