
http://www.warrensenders.com/journal/?p ... ent-174340
some quotes which are priceless for me:
“All the sounds we hear are imperfect. For a sound to be totally free of onset distortion, it would have to have been initiated before our lifetime. If it were also continued after our death so that we knew no interruption in it, then we could comprehend it as being perfect. But a sound initiated before our birth, continued unabated and unchanging throughout our lifetime and extended beyond our death, would be perceived by us as — silence.”
the tamboura is in a way an instrument (perhaps the only such in world music) whose mandate is the creation and sustenance of a special kind of silence. Silence is essential for listening and concentration, and thus for memory, and the social function of the tamboura is to enforce the first two elements, thereby triggering the third for performer and listener alike...There is another aspect of the tamboura’s sonority that repays attention: a commonly recognized phenomenon known as the “phantom fundamental”...The absence of initial attack in the tamboura’s string-plucks renders its sound as close as we can get in the corporeal world to the ideal of anahata nada, the ‘unstruck sound’ so often cited as something to be heard “only by yogis and mystics”