Festa della Musica – a little more info!

The Fête de la Musique, also known as World Music Day, is a music festival taking place on June 21. The idea was first broached in 1976 by American musician Joel Cohen, then employed by the national French radio station France Musique. Cohen proposed an all-night music celebration at the moment of the summer solstice. The idea was taken up by French Music and Dance director Maurice Fleuret for Minister of Culture Jack Lang in 1981 and first took place in 1982 in Paris.Its purpose is to promote music in two ways:
*    Amateur and professional musicians are encouraged to perform in the streets. The slogan Faites de la musique (Make music), a homophone of Fête de la Musique, is used to promote this goal.
*    Many free concerts are organized, making all genres of music accessible to the public. Two of the caveats to being sanctioned by the official Fête de la Musique organization in Paris are that all concerts must be free to the public, and all performers donate their time for free.
(source: wikipedia)In Italy, la Festa della Musica, will take place at Fornalini Park, June 21-22-23 but there won’t just be music this year! This year, there will also be an area devoted to health and wellbeing – yoga, massages, organic low-cal food, teas – a real chilled out area to enjoy the start of the summer sorrounded by nature! What more could one ask!

Stay tuned for the yoga schedule over the 3 days!

http://www.ct-yoga.com

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Happy Easter!

Happy Easter Everyone!
Hope you all had lots of chocolate, yummy food, surrounded by loved ones, plenty of sleep and possibly maybe got some yoga in there 😉
 
I taught a class on Friday, but after that i was on ‘holiday’ until today – tomorrow it’s back to teaching, but it doesn’t bother me as i love teaching yoga, so doesn’t feel as bad as having to go back to the office 🙂
 
What did i do w/ myself over the Easter Break? Well i went to Ashtanga Vinyasa classes @ Scuola di Ashtanga Yoga Milano, which is the Ashtanga Yoga school Lino Miele set up in Milan. Except for Thursday’s class (13:00), for every other one i had to get up at 8am! Even on a Sunday…
 
I know it’s a little late, with Easter being well & truly over, but i’m still going to post this – it’s too cute not too! 🙂
 
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Happy Birthday Winston!

Three years ago today, Winston was born!
 
HAPPY BIRTHDAY WINSTON!!!!
 
 
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Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga: The Primary Series

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Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga – Mysore & Led classes

Lino Miele is coming back to Milan at the end of March – March 28 to April 1st. Last time he was here i could only make it to his Mysore style classes, and if you will remember my experience back in November 2011, well it was pretty intense. I haven’t practiced Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga since then…so i need to get practicing if i am to go to his led classes this time! Also, with my trip to India around the corner (well not quite around the corner but still, coming up!) and Kino MacGregor workshops in Bologna…well i need to scrub up on my primary series! So i’ve decided to do just that.

I shall leave you with this i found from Ashtanga Yoga with Chris:

MYSORE STYLE ASHTANGA YOGA

Firstly, Mysore is not a ‘style’ of yoga but a city in Karnataka, South India, generally considered to be the home of Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga.

Mysore was the home of Sri Krishnamacharya – known to many as the grandfather of yoga – and more recently Sri K. Pattabhi Jois, the modern guru of Ashtanga Yoga who died in 2009 at the age of 93. Thousands of students each year still travel from all over the world to study Ashtanga Yoga at its source in Mysore.

Traditionally Ashtanga is taught in a Mysore Style environment, where each student practices the sequence according to their own individual capacity. Although ‘led’ yoga classes are the most common form of class offered by teachers and studios, these classes are actually a very modern invention conceived as a way to deal with the sheer quantity of yoga students wanting to learn the practice.

Led classes can feel like a perpetually moving train journey where poses are only held for a relatively short period time before the train begins to move away from the station on its way to the next pose. As such many students can feel like they are struggling to keep up with the train, whereas an other might feel the train is moving too slowly!

A Mysore class more closely mirrors the ancient one-to-one guru-student relationship through which yoga was traditionally passed down from generation to generation. Although there may be many students in a class, each student is treated like an individual. Each students practice is based upon their physical ability, so it accommodates all levels – from the complete beginner to more accomplished students. Beginner students will likely have a much shorter practice than more experienced ones, and then slowly, when the teacher sees that the student is ready, additional poses are added to the routine, building stamina, strength, flexibility and concentration but without overexertion or risk of injury.

The prospect of taking responsibility for their own yoga practice in a ‘self-practice’ environment (rather than being led) can seem like a scary proposition to many new yoga students. So it is no wonder that beginners often assume that Mysore classes must be for more advanced students that know the sequence, and so prefer to attend led classes where they can be guided by a teacher. The same students may also assume that they will learn more by attending led classes, where the teacher is guiding the class all the time, than from a Mysore class which is conducted in silence.”

So, are Mysore classes ‘better’ than Led classes?

“In truth you will learn more about your yoga practice in a month of attending a Mysore style class than a year spent attending only led classes. This is because the Mysore way of practicing empowers each practitioner by asking them to explore what they are taught rather than blindly follow instructions.

The self-practice method is essentially based around cultivating the dialogue between mind and body through the ‘mediator’ of the breath.

Mysore style Ashtanga Yoga is a personal journey for your own answers at your own pace. There are no perfect poses, nor are there definitive yoga experiences, there is only what can be found in the present moment from where you are right now. These classes nurture the seed of self-awareness in a way that led classes can’t. In many ways led classes satisfy the human effort of striving towards, achieving goals and escapism. Whereas Mysore style classes nurture the seed of self-awareness and presence. Consequently students wishing to learn yoga and experience the benefits of the practice are better supported by a qualified teacher in a Mysore style environment than attending weekly led classes.

Led classes are considered far more advanced than Mysore classes. They can be very useful for maintaining the discipline of the practice and cleaning up the vinyasa’s, but the real growth occurs outside of that environment, where there is space and time for your personal practice to blossom.”

& there you have it guys…i’m not a pro when it comes to Ashtanga Vinyasa, not one bit, but it is something i want to get into…the teacher training course i want to do in India, Rishikesh to be exact, is a 200hr Ashtanga Vinyasa teacher training certification…so primary series here i come!

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