The Oscillator

Welcome, dear listeners, to another journey into the timeless wisdom of the Bauls.
Today, we explore a song that is not just music—it is a philosophy, a call to awaken the human spirit.

Take a moment. Imagine a wandering mystic, barefoot, carrying only an ektara, singing under the open sky. His voice rises above the noise of society, asking: If you wish to be human, then learn humanity first.

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Episodes

Tuesday Jan 13, 2026

This episode of The Oscillator explores the life and songs of Fakir Lalon, centering on his mystic composition "Tin Pagol Holomela" and the gathering of three spiritual figures that reshaped devotion in Bengal.We trace Lalon's biography, the Baal tradition, and his timeless message beyond caste and religion, inviting listeners to slow down, listen deeply, and feel the inner vibration of humanity.

Tuesday Jan 13, 2026

Welcome, fellow travelers. You have joined us for another journey into the heart of the "Sahaj" — the simple, the innate, the true. Today, we are stepping away from the noise of the modern world, away from our titles, our degrees, and our bank accounts. We are traveling back to the 19th-century riverbanks of Bengal, to a place where a man sat under a canopy of trees and challenged the very foundation of how we define ourselves.

Tuesday Jan 13, 2026

In the 19th century, in the riverine landscapes of Bengal, there lived a man who saw the entire universe within a single drop of water. His name was Fakir Lalon Shah. To the world, he was a simple man in a white robe, a wanderer with an Ektara. But to those who listened, he was a cartographer of the soul. Lalon was a mystic, a philosopher, and a radical social reformer who lived a life that was itself a bridge between worlds. He didn't just sing songs; he provided a manual for human existence.

Tuesday Jan 13, 2026

Lalon: The Mystic Soul." I am your host, and today, we are embarking on a journey to find someone very special. We aren't looking for a celebrity, a king, or a distant deity hidden behind golden curtains. We are looking for the Shohoj Manush—the Simple Man, the Innate Human.
In the 19th century, amidst the lush, green delta of Bengal, a man named Lalon Shah walked the earth. He didn't carry books, he didn't build temples, and he didn't ask anyone to pray in a specific language. Instead, he carried an Ektara and a question that shook the foundations of society. Lalon was a mystic who saw through the illusions of caste and religion. He was a philosopher of the "here and now." To him, the human body wasn't just flesh and bone; it was the ultimate cathedral.

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