

Healing Sound Retreat: Personal Transformation Through Sacred Drumming & Chant
Christine Stevens and Jonathan Crowder
August 23–25, 2019

Jonathan Crowder
Explore music and rhythm as gateways to spiritual consciousness. Learn specific tools for using sound in healing, spiritual practice, and ceremony. Learn the 4 elements on the frame drum, chanting to greet the day, and radiant poetry in group experience. Take a deep dive into the 4 elements of music medicine; rhythm for the body, silence for the mind, harmony for the soul, and melody for the heart.
Participate in a multicultural musical peace ceremony inside the Great Stupa of Dharmakaya on Saturday evening after dinner. We will join in a processional carrying the heartbeat of human kindness into the Stupa, dressed in white. Co-facilitated with Jonathan Crowder, founder of Peak Rhythms and member of African chant Boulder.
No prior musical experience necessary. Drums and instruments provided or bring your own. We welcome flutes, ukuleles, drums, rattles, singing bowls, etc.
Music for Peace Ceremony at the Great Stupa
Date: August 24
Concert Time: 7 pm
Learn More and Register
Watch this video invitation from Christine Stevens:
Chant for the Great Stupa
Please enjoy this Chant for the Great Stupa by Christine Stevens. She was inspired to create a song to The Stupa as an offering and blessing. It was recorded live in The Stupa!
The Science of Creativity – Mind & Body
“Life can become boring when the spark of creative fire is not lit in the soul of our spirit.”- Music Medicine, the science and spirit of healing yourself with sound.
In a study using functional magnetic resonance imagining (fMRI) to look at brain activity, surgeon and jazz pianist CJ Limb compared improvised piano playing to a rendition of a rehearsed piece of music.
The results showed that when musicians used their own creativity, a very specific small area of the brain’s frontal cortex — the medial pre-frontal cortex — became activated.
This part of the brain functions in self-reflection, introspection, personal sharing, and self-expression; it is often thought to be the seat of consciousness. The medial prefrontal cortex area is also activated when we talk about ourselves, telling our personal story.
Simultaneously, a deactivation occurred. The two larger areas of the frontal cortex — the lateral prefrontal cortex and the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex — were deactivated. These areas deal with self-monitoring, judgment, and self-criticism.
It’s a paradox; the larger parts of the brain inhibit our self-expression, while the smaller part reveals the greater self. No wonder it’s a challenge to express ourselves creatively in music.
Are you ready to begin to be a creator; not just a consumer? Try the guided practices below and awaken your Creative Spirit through rhythm.
Exercise 1: Dance to the Beat of Your Own Drum
Drumming is an immediate portal into musical expression. Everyone can be successful immediately. Whether you are more comfortable drumming or dancing, both are great tools for awakening your musical creativity.
1. Follow the link below to a collection of free play along tracks.
2. Select Rhythm (Chapter 3).
3. Select last two tracks from Chapter 3 (Rhythm): Reviving Rhythms and Beauty Groove play-along tracks.
4. Get out a drum, rattle, or homemade percussion sound and play-a-long, improvising the beat that only you can play.
5. Each track is more than seven minutes, giving you time to get out of your head and into your drum. Remember, there is no right or wrong here; simply the joyful feeling of self-expression.
~~Click here to listen to the free play along tracks!~~
Exercise 2: Tone your note
Toning comes from “tone,” a single note that is an inner sounding. Give yourself permission to sing your note, whatever it may be, and let it resonate your whole being. Trust yourself. Don’t think about it. Just take a deep belly breath and exhale a note. Now, sing the same note only louder! Repeat. When you complete the toning of your note, allow yourself time to sit with the vibration. Feel the resonance of creativity, of musical freedom reverberating through your body, mind, and spirit.
Creativity & Collaboration
This video demonstrates creativity. Done in collaboration with a friend, this shows a nice balance of masculine and feminine. This is improvisational and multi-cultural. Our prayer is for the beauty of dialogue of cultures, in this case of middle east and Native American. Music is the dancing ground in the center that unites people.
Related posts on the SMC Blog:
- Interview with Christine Stevens (video/audio): Healing Sound: A Conversation with Christine Stevens
- A guided exercise from Christine Stevens: Finding Your Rhythm
Jonathan Crowder
Jonathan M. Crowder, JD, is the founder of Peak Rhythms. A multi-instrumentalist, he facilitates programs and keynotes for spiritual growth and group development. He has worked with Fortune 500 companies such as Toyota and Fidelity Investments, the University of Texas football team, the University of Colorado hospital and Boulder area recovery groups, conferences, and park programs. He is a trained Health Rhythms facilitator and an endorsed facilitator for Remo drum company. He is also an avid skier, hiker, and practitioner of tai chi.