Sunday, November 11, 2012

Korean Neo-Shamanic Drumming Video

The Sonagi Project is a Korean percussion ensemble that has created modern, original music based on traditional shamanic rhythms and chants. The group brings traditional Korean percussion instruments into the twenty-first century by performing traditionally-based yet original repertoire for contemporary audiences. View the video on Vimeo.


Korean Rhythms and Shamanism in Contemporary Music from The Korea Society on Vimeo.

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

New Release: "Song for the Whales"

Listen to the soundtrack to my new video "Song for the Whales." "Song for the Whales" is a musical tribute to the whales. Listen to all of my albums on Spotify.

Monday, November 5, 2012

The Shamanic Drum Instructional

The Shamanic Drum Instructional is now available on iTunes and Amazon. On this companion recording to my book The Shamanic Drum, I instruct the listener in playing ten ceremonial drum rhythms, including those for invoking the seven directions. A 30 minute shamanic drumming is also performed, which listeners can use for shamanic journeying. This recording can be used independently or as an integral companion to my book. Listen to all of my albums on SoundCloud.

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Shamans of Siberia Video

The documentary Shamans of Siberia takes a behind-the-scenes look at contemporary shamanic practice, ritual and music. Long suppressed by the government, Siberian shamanism has experienced an unprecedented revival following the collapse of the Soviet Union, and the number of shamans continues to rise. They can cure illnesses, play a horse's fiddle and control the weather. Some of them can travel over long distances and even levitate by hovering over the birch trees. Meet the Shamans of Siberia.

Sunday, October 28, 2012

"How to Interpret Messages from the Invisible World"

Streaming live on the Co-Creator Radio Network on Tuesday, October 30, at 11 a.m. Pacific time/2 p.m. Eastern time, on her show "Why Shamanism Now?: A Practical Path to Authenticity," Christina Pratt tells listeners that the invisible world speaks to each of us through our own unique symbolic language. Learning to accurately interpret that language is essential to understanding your journeys, dreams, and inspirations. "The art of interpreting messages and visions is based entirely on how your see yourself in the Universe," explains Pratt, "and how you understand the true nature of your soul." Prior episodes from "Why Shamanism Now" can be downloaded for free on iTunes.

Friday, October 26, 2012

Free eBook: Shamanism in Siberia

Maria A. Czaplicka was a Polish anthropologist who is best known for her ethnography of Siberian shamanism. First published in 1914, Shamanism in Siberia is still relevant, because many of its Uralic, Altaic, and Paleosiberian peoples continue to practice shamanism even in modern times. This comprehensive study provides an in-depth analysis of the most important object in Siberian shamanism--the shamanic drum. It may be said that all over Siberia, where there is a shaman there is also a drum. Czaplicka establishes a universal framework describing how the drum as a symbol transmits symbolic meanings among shamans, people and the spirit world. Among the Neo-Siberians all their philosophy of life is represented symbolically in the drum. Download Shamanism in Siberia.

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Binaural Beats for the Shamanic Journey

This track is from the album Binaural Beats for the Shamanic Journey. Theta Kung consists of binaural brainwave entrainment tones for inducing a 4.5 Hz theta brainwave cycle. It has a base frequency of 172.06 Hz, which is associated with Kung, the fundamental tone in ancient China for attuning to Tao, the force that guides everything in the universe. This tone supports cheerfulness, clarity of spirit, and cosmic unity on the highest levels. Theta rhythms are associated with the deepest states of shamanic consciousness and increase creativity, enhance learning, reduce stress, and awaken intuition. All you need is a pair of stereo headphones. The recording does the rest. Listen on Spotify.

Saturday, October 20, 2012

Mongolian Shamanic Drumming Video

Lauren Knapp is an American videographer/photo journalist living in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. In partnership with the Vanishing Cultures Project, she is working on a video/photo project about music, urbanization and youth culture in this city of once-nomads. She recently produced a video profiling a female shaman named Enkhtoya.  Enkhtoya is considered to be one of the most powerful shamans in Mongolia and graciously allowed Lauren to film an entire ceremony. View the shamanic performance on Vimeo.

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

The Wisdom of Medicine Man Rolling Thunder

Containing never-before-released talks preserved by the Grateful Dead's drummer Mickey Hart, the new book The Voice of Rolling Thunder shares the teachings of the intertribal medicine man in his own words and through inspiring interviews with psychologist Alberto Villoldo and other famous personalities who knew him. Rolling Thunder (1916-1997) was a healer, teacher, visionary, and activist who rose to popularity in the 1960s and '70s through his friendship with artists such as Bob Dylan and as the inspiration for the Billy Jack films. Eyewitness accounts of his remarkable healings are legion, as are those of his ability to call forth the forces of nature, typically in the form of thunder clouds. Read a free preview or purchase the book

Sunday, October 14, 2012

The Vital Evolutionary Role of Shamanism

Streaming live on the Co-Creator Radio Network on Tuesday, October 16, at 11 a.m. Pacific time/2 p.m. Eastern time, on her show "Why Shamanism Now?: A Practical Path to Authenticity," Christina Pratt talks to Don Oscar Miro-Quesada, originator of The Pachakuti Mesa Tradition (PMT), which is rooted in Peruvian shamanism. In this episode, Don Oscar tells listeners, "Any heartfelt practitioner of shamanism in the world today is deeply aware of the vital evolutionary role of this ancestral eco-spiritual tradition... Indigenous culture is based on the understanding that people are not moved through persuasion; rather, people are moved through being aligned in purpose. One's experience of communion and reconnection with the living earth always arouses the desire to act on its behalf...(and when) you act on behalf of something greater than yourself, you begin to feel it acting through you with a power that is greater than your own." Prior episodes from "Why Shamanism Now" can be downloaded for free from iTunes

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Vandana Shiva and the Seed Freedom Movement

Vandana Shiva, a renowned scientist, philosopher, feminist, author, environmentalist and activist, is currently leading a campaign to create a global citizens' response on the issue of seed freedom. In a recent interview, Shiva explains why the two week campaign on seed freedom against major corporations, which culminates on World Food Day later this month, is so important and the consequences of failure. In 1991, Shiva founded Navdanya, a movement which aims to protect nature and people's rights to knowledge, biodiversity, water and food. It does this by setting up community seed banks that generate livelihoods for local people and provide for basic needs. In a July 2012 interview with Bill Moyers, Shiva explains that seed is the source of life and that corporate control over seed means control over our lives, our food and our freedom.  

Monday, October 8, 2012

Black Sky, White Sky: A Shamanic Novel

Black Sky, White Sky is a novel by Ken Hyder, a Scottish percussionist and member of the British-Siberian experimental music ensemble K-Space. After making a series of trips to Siberia to perform and study with Tuvan shamans, Hyder has published a semi-fictional account of his shamanic experiences. In his ethnographic novel, Hyder recounts an American artist’s apprenticeship into Tuvan Shamanism as it rises from decades of Soviet repression. After years of working in secret, the shamans form group-practice clinics, but rivalry among “black” and “white” sects leads to in-fighting – with deadly consequences. The author is a fine storyteller, rendering all of his characters in order to provide his readers with the possibility of communing, as he has, with these contemporary shamans. 

Friday, October 5, 2012

Drumming in the Great Kiva of Chaco Canyon

I have made pilgrimages to sacred sites throughout North America, but the Great Kiva Casa Rinconada in Chaco Canyon, New Mexico is the most powerful place I have ever drummed. A Great Kiva is a large, circular, usually subterranean structure that was designed and used by Anasazi peoples for ceremonial and communal gatherings. The two masonry box-like vaults found on the floor of most Great Kivas are believed to have been covered with planks and served as foot drums. I first drummed here in 1991 when the NPS still allowed entry into the kiva. The sonic phenomena within a kiva transcend the usual range of auditory experience. The walls of the stone structure reflect, amplify, and transform the sounds of the drum, resulting in some extraordinary harmonics. Drum sounds become distorted and seem to expand and move around the chamber due to an acoustic phenomenon known as standing waves. As sound waves reverberate between the walls, they either cancel or combine, causing certain resonant frequencies to either completely disappear or intensify, change in pitch, and develop vibrato. Within a kiva, it is possible to compose an entirely new auditory universe from the architecture of sound itself. Click here for a guide to Anasazi sites of the Southwest.

Monday, October 1, 2012

Drumming with Intent

Our creative potential is far greater than we realize—we all possess the power to manifest our intentions. Shamanic drumming is a time-tested technique for transforming our intentions into reality. The drum serves as a concentration device for stilling the mind and focusing our attention. Shamans have understood for centuries that sustained focused attention on a specific intention, while in a state of inner silence, channels our creative energy into manifesting the physical equivalent of the focus. The key is to focus your energy to that point on the drumhead's surface that you are striking, not beyond it. Transfer your energy and intention into the drum, stroking it firmly, yet gently, until it sings and hums. With practice, you learn just how much energy to send out to achieve a desired result and how much to retain so that you don't tire. To learn more, read my guide to shamanic drumming.

Friday, September 28, 2012

Fire on the Mountain: A Gathering of Shamans

Fire on the Mountain: A Gathering of Shamans is a documentary about the connection between consciousness and nature, as embodied in the spiritual traditions of Indigenous Peoples, whose ecological metaphors of the sacred are so relevant to the modern world. The film chronicles an historic 10-day gathering of shamans from five continents, who travelled to Karma Ling, a Tibetan Buddhist retreat center in the Val Saint Hugon in Savoy, in the French Alps, to discuss their concerns with H.H. the Dalai Lama and high-level representatives of the world's religions. This documentary embodies the wish of these Indigenous People - all traditional wisdom-keepers, shamans and medicine-women - who requested us to communicate their message to the world. View the video.

Sunday, September 23, 2012

The Andean Despacho Ceremony

The Despacho is a traditional Andean ceremony that brings balance and right relationship. Using various ingredients, the Shaman and participants create a three dimensional design that is similar to a mandala. As symbolic elements and prayers of gratitude are added, the Despacho comes alive with the energy of creation. There are several types of Despachos and ingredients vary, according to the intention or purpose.  To create your own Despacho in a way that is meaningful to you,  read more

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Drumming the Salmon to Spawn

The salmon is an amazing creature that can grow up to four feet in length and weigh over sixty pounds. Salmon are typically anadromous: they hatch in the shallow gravel beds of freshwater headstreams and spend their juvenile years in rivers, lakes and freshwater wetlands, migrate to the ocean as adults and live like sea fish, then return to their freshwater birthplace to reproduce. Salmon have remarkable navigation skills. Relying on olfactory memory, salmon find their way from the sea to the river of their birth and swim upstream overcoming great obstacles to reach their natal spawning grounds. To lay her roe, the female salmon uses her tail (caudal fin), to create a low-pressure zone, lifting gravel to be swept downstream, excavating a shallow depression, called a redd. One or more males approach the female in her redd, depositing sperm, or milt, over the roe. The female then covers the eggs by disturbing the gravel at the upstream edge of the depression before moving on to make another redd. The female may make as many as seven redds before her supply of eggs is exhausted.

The salmon has long been at the heart of the culture and livelihood of coastal dwellers, which can be traced as far back as 5,000 years. The Pacific Northwest once sprawled with native inhabitants who ensured little degradation was caused by their actions to salmon habitats. As animists, the Indigenous people relied not only for salmon for food, but spiritual guidance. The role of the salmon spirit guided the people to respect ecological systems such as the rivers and tributaries the salmon used for spawning.

The population of wild salmon has declined markedly in recent decades. Researchers have reported widespread declines in the sizes of four species of wild Pacific salmon: Chinook, chum, coho, and sockeye. These declines have been occurring for over 40 years, and are thought to be associated with overharvesting, construction of dams, habitat degradation, water quality and climate change. The federal government has listed 28 population groups of salmon and steelhead on the West Coast as threatened or endangered under the Endangered Species Act. In recent decades, hundreds of millions of dollars have been spent on estuary and salmon restoration.

Drumming Ceremony Invites Salmon to Spawn

In 1979, John Beal, a Vietnam veteran who suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder, dedicated his post-war life to restoring salmon habitat in the Duwamish River just south of Seattle, WA. It was a deal he made after doctors told him that his heart, damaged by a series of cardiac arrests, would hold out only for another few months. He thought he'd spend his last days doing something good and started hauling washing machines and trash out of the creek near his South Park home. Always stubborn, he surprised everyone by living another 27 years to age 56. John was responsible for bringing disparate agencies to the table to discuss cleanup strategies on the Duwamish River. With relentless tenacity, he single-handedly engineered the restoration of a trash-infested Duwamish Watershed.

In January of 1994, John enlisted the aid of a Choctaw elder to conduct a ceremony to call the salmon from the ocean to spawn in Hamm Creek, a tributary of the Duwamish River. Beal had spent twelve years restoring Hamm Creek, but few salmon had returned to the once-thriving spawning ground. Beginning at the mouth of the Duwamish River and moving upstream, the Choctaw elder used a drum to draw the salmon upriver to spawn. When asked why the fish come to the drum, the elder said that drum beats sound like the slap of the female salmon's tail as she scrapes out a shallow gravel nest. Read more.

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Khadak: An Epic Shamanic Film

This beautiful film contrasts the spiritual vitalities of shamanism with the dehumanizing rigors of industrial capitalism. Set in the frozen steppes of contemporary Mongolia, Khadak tells the epic story of Bagi, a young nomad confronted with his destiny to become a shaman. A plague strikes the animals and the nomads are forcibly relocated to desolate mining towns. Bagi saves the life of a beautiful coal thief, Zolzaya, and together they reveal the plague was a lie fabricated to eradicate nomadism. A sublime revolution ensues. View the trailer or the entire film.

Monday, September 3, 2012

Free Shamanic Music Download

This track is from the album Power Animal Drumming. Badger medicine includes courage, cunning, endurance, grounding, perseverance, root and herbal remedies, and the magic of storytelling. From her den below the ground, Badger connects us to the Earth mother, her stories, and the healing properties of medicinal roots. Badger helps us see below the surface of things and boldly express ourselves with the clarity of inner knowing. Flutes, like the one heard on "Badger Medicine," are instruments connecting the seen and unseen worlds. Click here to download Badger Medicine. Listen to all of my albums on SoundCloud.

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Shamanic Drumming Workshop in Silverton

Facilitated by Michael Drake, author of Shamanic Drumming 
Saturday September 22, 2012
1 to 4 pm at 6572 Scism Rd. NE, Silverton, OR 97381
Workshop Fee: Donation. 
In this three hour workshop we will learn the art and practice of shapeshifitng. Learning to shift your consciousness, to align with and adapt your energies to power animals, opens your heart and mind to the wisdom and strength of the animal world. Workshop learning objectives:
To learn basic shapeshifitng techniques
To learn drum rhythms for summoning power animals
To learn ways of developing a relationship with power animals