Contact us
Telegram
Messenger
Skype
Mail
Phone
WhatsApp
JANESTARK

Music

Explore my sound universe — mantras, kirtan, and songs from the heart.

Books

Poetry and lullabies for the soul — reflections, stories, and inner songs.

Events & Practices

Spaces for self-exploration and connection. Join one of my sessions or retreats.

My directions
  • Music
    We can estimate your company's opportunities, explore your economic status, analyze your vehicle access and foot traffic.
  • Lilo Games
    Join me for a Lilo session — part game, part self-exploration, part chaos. It’s strange, fun, and you’ll leave with more than you expected.
  • Books
    These are my written worlds — stories, reflections, and thoughts that shaped me. If you read between the lines, you’ll probably find yourself there too.

The Beginning
Jane Stark — the sound of the inner worldJane Stark grew up with music in her heart. From childhood — while other kids were playing outside — she listened to the wind moving through palm leaves, to the rhythm of rain on rooftops, and thought: “If only I could capture that sound.”

Her journey didn’t start on a stage but by the ocean, among waves and tropical air, where she first felt that music isn’t just notes — it’s the map of one’s inner world.
As she grew older, Jane explored different instruments — guitar, ukulele, voice, percussion. Her way of working was simple yet deep: to take what we usually call background noise and turn it into melody. She recorded the sounds of nature — rustling leaves, footsteps, breathing — and wove them into mantras and kirtan streams, creating invisible temples made of sound.


THE VISION ARRIVES


There were pauses, travels, transformations — but she always came back to one thing: the wish to unite sound and space, the inner and the outer. Her albums sound like an invitation: “Join the flow, open what’s already inside.”

Later, Jane began publishing books — lullabies and poems — and leading self-discovery practices that help people “find their own inner voice.” Music and words became bridges between worlds. Through her links, you can move from a Spotify track to a retreat or a Lila game — all of it part of the same path.



Now, Jane Stark invites not only to listen, but also to be heard.
If you find yourself within one of her mantras, if you read her verses, if you take part in one of her practices — you might suddenly hear your own sound, the one that was always there, waiting for a moment of silence to come out.


— Noel Gallagher, Oasis
Sarah Lucas' Self Portrait and "I'm Desperate" by Gillian Wearing

COMMON PEOPLE

Other Articles
Film
Live Forever - The Rise and Fall of Brit Pop
Hilarious documentary about the Britpop music scene in the Nineties, featuring all the main brands of the scene exposing the truth behind the myths.
Interview
Oasis from the Archives: Noel in 1994
Just before the release of Definitely Maybe, Caspar Llewellyn Smith caught up with Noel Gallagher to find out about scraps with Liam, spats with Suede, and why people would still be listening to his band's debut album in 20 years' time.
Website
Britpop on the BBC: Class of '94
BBC celebrates the 20th anniversary of Britpop with series of special programs and features.