Music of the Divine

This is a small collection of music that I return to for grounding, comfort, and connection. Each piece holds a quiet reverence for the Earth, the unseen, and the deeper rhythms of life. These songs are offered as gentle companions - invitations to slow down, soften the nervous system, and remember the wisdom that lives within mother earth. You’re welcome to listen in your own time, allowing the music to meet you wherever you are.

Mei-Ian and Ali Pervez

Desert Bloom

This was filmed in the Great Sand Dunes of Colorado. While filming, the artists came across something unexpected, a single, delicate flower growing straight out of the sand. There was no visible source of water, no protection from the elements, just a soft bloom rooted in stillness.

They paused in awe, wondering how something so beautiful could emerge in such harsh conditions.

For me, this moment captures the quiet truth of this music. It reminds us that growth, light, and beauty do not always arise from ease. Sometimes they come from resilience, presence, and an inner knowing that is deeper than circumstance.

These two artists create music that gently reconnects the listener with the divine. Together, their sound feels expansive and prayerful, and individually they each carry a depth that is both grounding and luminous. I’ve been fortunate to experience their music live, where the energy in the room felt deeply activating and quietly enlightening at the same time.

Their work embodies what it means to live in one’s pure light, creating not for performance, but to heal, to nurture, and to support souls in remembering their own quiet strength.

Yaima

Rebirth

This piece by Yaima feels like a gentle remembering of the living world beneath the noise of modern life.

When the pace of cities, systems, and expectations becomes overwhelming, this music offers a way back. It reconnects us to the beauty, wisdom, and quiet resilience of the planet itself. Listening feels like stepping out of the matrix of constant doing and returning to something older, wiser, and more natural.

Rebirth is a track I often turn to when self-doubt or fear begin to surface, especially when walking a new or unfamiliar spiritual path. Critical inner voices can make us hesitate, question ourselves, or step away from what feels true at a deeper level. This music offers a steady reassurance that it’s safe to move slowly, to listen inwardly, and to trust what’s unfolding.

Yaima’s music weaves rhythm, voice, and nature into something that feels both grounding and expansive. It reminds us that we belong to the Earth, and that by slowing down and reconnecting with the natural world, we create space to hear our own inner guidance and gently return to trusting the path we have chosen.

Janice Diederichs

Mother I feel you (Mutter Erde, ich spur Dich)

This piece by Janice feels like a musical offering of gratitude to Earth itself. Filmed on a windswept beach, the visuals are as natural and beautiful as the music itself - waves, sky, and sand in quiet harmony, inviting us to soften and breathe.

When the demands of life pull us into distraction or even dissociation from the body and the world around us, this song feels like a homecoming. Her voice carries a warmth and presence that opens the heart, like a whispered reminder that we are not separate from the world we live in, but a part of its breath, its rhythm, its resilience.

Windsong (Mother, I Feel You) is a song I often come back to when I want to feel grounded, centred, and connected to the deeper pulse of life. It is an expression of gratitude - for the Earth that holds us, for the forests and seas that nourish us, and for the simple beauty found in elemental places like this beautiful beach. There is a combination of strength and tenderness in Janice’s voice that feels nurturing and healing, as though the music itself is a kind guide encouraging us to soften into presence.

On the days when life gets too loud, or when doubt creeps in, this piece is a reminder that we are part of something much larger than ourselves, something steady and life-giving. It calls us back to gratitude, to the body, and to the living world beneath our feet.

Music for reflection and stillness

These playlists are shared as gentle companions for rest, reflection, or quiet moments.

You’re welcome to explore them in your own time, in whatever way feels supportive.