It's Time to Slow Down and Go Deep
It's Time to Slow Down and Go Deep
Music Composed by Yuval Ron
This is musical medicine for the soul and body that evokes the qualities of the root chakra and sacral chakra. It will take you on a soothing journey of transforming, rejuvenating and cleansing the mind, and will entrain your brain to its natural state of inner peace as your energy shifts out of your head and deep into your body. This musical track will also help slow you down, shift your mood and bring you a sense of calm and well-being.
Contains a 20-minute music track
DOWNLOAD INSTRUCTIONS
DOWNLOAD INSTRUCTIONS
Downloading to an iPhone:
- iPhones download into a Downloads folder. This folder can easily be found by searching your phone for it. During downloading you will see a download icon in the url bar of Safari. If you click on the icon while it is downloading (or afterward) it will take you to the Downloads folder. There may be multiple files from previous downloads.
- The file is a ZIP file that is "compressed" to save space. Double-click on it to "open" the compressed file and it will de-compress to a folder containing all the audio files. You can then open that folder, select a file, and listen. The ZIP file can be deleted.
- If you want to listen to it within the Music app on your iPhone, you need to download the file onto your desktop computer and add it to your Music (formerly iTunes) app, and transfer it to your phone.
Downloading to a Mac:
- Macs download into a Downloads folder. This folder can easily be found by searching your Mac for it.
- The file is a ZIP file that is "compressed" to save space. Double-click on it to "open" the compressed file and it will de-compress to a folder containing all the audio files. You can then open that folder, select a file, and listen. The ZIP file can be deleted.
- If you want to listen to it within the Music app on your iPhone, you need to add it to your Music (formerly iTunes) app and transfer it to your phone.
Downloading to a PC:
- PCs download into a Downloads folder. This folder can easily be found by searching your computer for it.
- The file is a ZIP file that is "compressed" to save space. Double-click on it to "open" the compressed file and it will de-compress to a folder containing all the audio files. You can then open that folder, select a file, and listen. The ZIP file can be deleted.
- If you want to listen to it within the Music app on your iPhone, you need to download the file onto your desktop computer, add it to your Music (formerly iTunes) app, and transfer it to your phone.
Adding music and creating a playlist in VLC media player:
- Launch VLC media player
- Click “View” on the top tools bar
- Choose “Playlist” from the list. A new window will open
- Select “Playlist” from the left side list
- Right-click on the right side of the window
- Choose “Add Folder” from the list
- A new window will open
- Select the folder that you want to add and click on open
- Now select the list of files and right-click on it then choose Save the playlist to a file
- A new window will open allowing you to choose the destination folder and name the playlist
- Click on save and you can play your playlist in VLC player
Adding music to the Apple Music app:
- Launch the Music app
- Go to File>Import and select the music from your hard drive where it was downloaded.
- High-resolution files (WAV files) do not contain metadata like MP3s, so it does not automatically populate artwork, album name, or artist name. They will appear as individual songs (sometimes as "Unknown Album").
- Select all the songs that you imported and right-click in order to "Get Info”
- Within this dialog box, you can add relevant Album Titles, Artist names, etc. for all the songs at once.
- From there, it should appear like any other album in your Music library and you can sync it to an iPhone.
Which file format (MP3 or WAV) is best for healing music?
Collapsible content
USAGE AND INSTRUCTIONS
LINER NOTES
REVIEWS
Our recommendation for the best listening experience
We recommend wired headphones for the optimal experience. Some albums contain low frequencies, so a set with full-range frequency response is recommended. Wired speakers can also provide a good experience when headphones are inconvenient. We do not recommend bluetooth headphones or speakers because they use data compression during their transmission (like streaming audio) which can dilute the original sound vibration of the music.
Our Binaural beats albums benefit most from using wired headphones as there are tones which differ between the left and right side. Your ears will be able hear those tones isolated in order to create the binaural effect.