The Shala Daily

YOGA • PHILOSOPHY • LIFE

January 24, 2026
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Lost to Wildfire: The Finest Wood That Made String Instruments Sing

A master luthier’s lifetime of rare woods is lost to wildfire, revealing the power of resilience, impermanence, and music’s enduring spirit.

Flames swept through Altadena, California, leaving behind more than charred homes—they erased a lifetime’s collection of rare tonewoods, the soul of Mario Miralles’s world-class string instruments.

For decades, Miralles, a renowned luthier, gathered spruce from the Dolomites and centuries-old maple from Bosnia, hand-picking each piece for its resonance and character. His instruments carried his DNA, echoing through the hands of artists like Yo-Yo Ma and Gustavo Dudamel. But the Eaton fire reduced his precious wood and home to ash, sparing only a nearly finished violin and a single guitar—symbols of both loss and survival.

Yet from the rubble emerges a story of resilience: the instruments saved, the community that rose in support, the memory of music that continues despite destruction. As Miralles’s violin now sings with even deeper resonance, it stands as a testament to impermanence, courage, and the renewal that follows letting go.

— MJH

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"It carries the memory of resilience, strength and hope in the face of destruction."

— Gustavo Dudamel, as quoted in The New York Times

🕉️ KEY CONCEPTS

Aparigraha
Non-possessiveness, letting go
Samsara
Cycle of birth, death, and renewal
Shraddha
Faith, perseverance in adversity
Anitya
Impermanence

True craft is tested by impermanence—what survives loss is music, memory, and the courage to begin again.

— MJH
Original Article: "Lost to Wildfire: The Finest Wood That Made String Instruments Sing" by Matt Stevens, The New York Times