Remembering Singh Kaur

This article was originally published in a 2005 issue of Aquarian Times and was written by Sat Kartar Kaur Khalsa. It is a tribute to Singh Kaur, who passed away in 1998. 

Before Enya, before Deva Premal, and before today’s burgeoning chant music movement, there was Singh Kaur.

In the 1970s and 1980s Singh Kaur was the best-selling vocalist in the New Age music scene. She was the first American Sikh musician whose music reached beyond 3HO and impacted the worldwide spiritual community.

During that time, I traveled to many 3HO ashrams as a chant vocalist and kirtan teacher. Everywhere I went, two things were always a given:

1) you would always smell the warm cinnamon aroma of Yogi Tea cooking, and

2) you would always hear Singh Kaur’s voice emanating from the stereo, bringing a heavenly frequency into the spaces where we were growing a spiritual life.

These sense memories, along with the music legacy she left, remain today as cornerstones of 3HO historical culture and tradition.

Amar Singh, a multi-instrumental musician who worked extensively with her, recalls: “We were sitting in the St. Louis airport with Yogi Bhajan, who was waiting for a connecting flight to New York. He asked Singh Kaur to put Rakhe Rakhan Har to music. I was sitting next to her as Yogi Bhajan tapped out the heartbeat rhythm on an empty styrofoam cup. I wrote the rhythm down, and when we got home, we put the rhythm into Singh Kaur’s drum machine. This is the beat heard on the final recording. The next day, I went off to work. When I came home that evening, I asked Singh Kaur about it, and she played a rough recording – basically the finished piece. She had sat down in the morning and the music just flowed through her. I was always amazed and awed by her ability to put the perfect music to any words that came her way – English or Gurmukhi.”

Sat Jivan Kaur, her close friend, recalls, “One night at Winter Solstice celebration in Florida, around 3 a.m., I was stirred awake by this beautiful sound. I arose and went through the camp, to see where it was coming from. Finally, I came upon the gurdwara. Singh Kaur was literally singing the Siri Guru Granth Sahib. I sat and listened in near-tearful awe, then went and asked security to broadcast it through the camp. She had no ego, and she’d let anyone chant with her. I loved singing with her.”

My own approach to composing and singing was expanded in one of our mutual hold-each-other-up conversations. One day I told her, “I just can’t get the tune or words on this song to come out right. I feel so blocked.”

“Silly girl,” she said, “don’t you know that the song has its own spirit? If it wants to visit you, it will come and play you.” Play me? “You’re the instrument that the song is playing upon. Works much easier that way, you know,” she explained. My perception of the musical process has never been the same since.

Toward the end of Singh Kaur’s life, violist Sahib Amar Kaur played on two of her ethereal recordings, Fairy Night Songs and This Universe, released on Sequoia Records.

Sahib Amar recalls: “She told me that she wanted This Universe to be her gift to the 3H0 family. I think it was her way of saying thank you, and of making peaceful closure with everyone. Up to the very end of her life, she was always creating music for all the rest of us to enjoy.”

 

The Music of Singh Kaur

Enjoy Singh Kaur’s music, streaming available courtesy of the SikhNet Gurbani Media Center:

Rakhe Rakhan Har 

Fly Away

Mender of Hearts

Guru Guru Wahe Guru

Waheguru Simran  

Aap Sahai Hoaa

Azure Salver

 

View this article as it originally appeared in Aquarian Times in the Winter of 2005


Sat Kartar Kaur has performed and facilitated sacred music experiences worldwide for over 40 years. She has made several recordings and CDs. An original member of the Khalsa String Band, she has sung on many other chant artists’ recordings, including Krishna Das and WHA! Sat Kartar Kaur’s music is available at SikhNet, Sat Nam Versand, and Invincible Music.


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  1. Sat Nam ~ Thank you for sharing the beautiful memory of Singh Kaur and her beloved global legacy. I am deeply moved here in 2022 listening to her recording of Rakhe Rakanhar on repeat for pure delight and elevation.
    I am blessed leading Aquarian Sadhana’s these days live in the Amrit Vela on Facebook on Raj Yoga Center’s page.
    I feel moved to find possibility of a possible Album that Singh Kaur recorded specifically for serving the Sadh Sangat for morning Sadhana.
    From the heart center and echo of the Soul ~ much thanks and appreciation for your kind response <3

  2. KartaPurkh S Khalsa says:

    Of course, Singh Kaur’s voice is so pure and unforgettable. Yogiji once said it “could enlighten the dullest of souls!” But I will always remember who she introduced me to over 40 years ago when she “matched” me up with Sat Inder Kaur. Neither of us really wanted to get married, I had been wed twice before and she once, both before we were blessed to be found by the Dharma. I was working on a crew at the kitchen in Espanola, unloading a potatoe truck before Summer Solstice. Singh Kaur pulled me out of the unloading line. I was dressed for work and not for meeting a prospective partner. I resisted but Singh Kaur was not one to tolerate resistance. She dragged me in, dressed in dusty overalls and a ragged head covering, to the office where Sat Inder was taking care of ashram business. We were two Leos, both unsure of our prospects, even in such a great situation as 3HO/Sikh Dharma. But Singh Kaur had her way and six months later we both shivered in a wedding ceremony at Winter Solstice at Lake Wenona. It is some 40 years later now and on each anniversary I thank the spirit of Singh Kaur for introducing me to the second most inspiring person I have ever met. Her Crimson series is still a part of our yoga classes and she is still an integral part of our marriage.

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