Sound has been used for centuries in various ways by indigenous cultures around the world. Since the beginning of time, healing ceremonies, drumming, hand-clapping, singing, dancing, chanting, to name but a few, have weaved frequencies and vibrations around cultures, keeping them vibrant, healthy and thriving.
The Ancient Egyptians used their knowledge of sound in many ways. It has even been suggested that the great pyramid at Giza was a sound generating chamber used for initiation ceremonies. In Ancient Greece, Pythagoras developed the use of music and discovered how different musical intervals heal...
and so through the ages, whether it be the rattles, drumming and chanting of native American and African tribes, instruments like the deep resonance of the didgeridoo of the Australian Aborigines, singing bowls from Tibetan Buddhist monks since the 12th Century, the harmonious voices of Gregorian chants transporting minds to higher plains,
and so many more, sound has enriched life and health around the globe.