Psychedelic Sangha Bardo Bath: Late Show (7pm)

Schedule

Sat Jul 13 2024 at 07:00 pm to 09:00 pm

Location

The Alembic | Berkeley, CA

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FEATURING
SPECIAL GUEST
Zaneta
WITH
Chris Dingman
Doc Kelley
ARTWORK
Yosuh Jones
Aubrey Nehring
Find a comfortable position, relax, and prepare to experience the Bardo as described in the Tibetan Book of Dead and later adapted for psychedelic trip sessions by Drs. Timothy Leary, Ralph Metzner, and Richard Alpert.
Take an immersive trip into the Luminous Bardo of Dharmata with live vibraphone soundscapes performed by Sonic Shaman CHRIS DINGMAN with special guest ZANETA and original light art projections by YOSUH JONES and AUBREY NEHRING. DOC KELLEY will be your meditation guide through the Bardo of dying and back again—renewed, refreshed, and rebirthed. Within this last Bardo, one typically has powerful visions but also the chance to experience the nature of the mind.
After the show, we'll hold space for an integration circle to support a safe and open conversation about death and dying.
This event is sound bath style. Meditation pillows and pads will be available, but you can bring blankets, pillows, etc. We also invite attendees to bring offerings of flowers for the Psychedelic Buddhist altar installation.
"Trust your divinity trust your brain trust your companions. Whenever in doubt turn off your mind relax float downstream.”
— The Psychedelic Experience: A Manual Based on the Tibetan Book of the Dead
Doors: 6:30
Show: 7pm sharp!

Zaneta draws upon a deep connection to the body, memory, spirit, and the land, Zaneta's (they/them) art is a process of remembering our interconnectedness or the Filipinx term, kapwa. In a society of fragmentation, we are taught to forget our connection to the land and our inherent sacredness that comes with our existence in an interconnected world. It is towards this remembrance, that Zaneta directs their work, weaving field recording, ritual, channeling, and listening practice, to create performance experiences that are equal parts prayer, journey, and healing.
Living with PTSD, Zaneta’s work with sound is deeply informed by their research and personal journey with sound triggers. Specifically exploring the connection between sound and memory, and how the body orients itself in time and space through listening.
Reflecting on their own sound triggers led Zaneta to explore field recording as a process of healing. Ultimately discovering how field recording offers agency to those with PTSD and how listening to back to recordings can be a process of titration in a controlled environment, so that over time, sound triggers can change and a constructive relationship between body and memory can be nurtured.as an intuitive interdisciplinary artist living in the Diaspora, Zaneta works not only with sound art, but also utilizes ritual as a creative process.
Zaneta currently lives and creates on Lenni Lenape territory (Brooklyn), offering community listening rituals, as well as listening and sound workshops in spaces such as the Brooklyn Museum and online. In 2020, their project, Sacred Seasons, won the Brooklyn Arts Fund grant and was co-presented with the New Women Space. As a community spiritual worker and host of the Art Witch podcast, Zaneta is connected to a vibrant community of queer, multiracial creatixes and healers, and their podcast empowers listeners around the world to make their art and find their authentic expression.
Chris Dingman is known for his distinctive approach to the instrument, at once sonically rich and conceptually expansive. In his captivating solo performances, he casts an enveloping atmosphere, creating layers of simultaneous sound that take listeners on a journey to a transcendent place. Chris has worked with the legendary artists Herbie Hancock and Wayne Shorter, as well as many other of today’s jazz and world music luminaries. Based in NYC since 2002, Chris had been documenting his solo improvisations privately for many years. When his father entered hospice care in 2018, he created the 5-hour extended album Peace. This led to an ongoing evolution of his solo music and his critically acclaimed albums Journeys Vol. 1 and Vol. 2. Chris actively tours and has performed around the world. He has been profiled by NPR, the New York Times, AMNY, and many other publications, and has received fellowships and grants from Chamber Music America, New Music USA, South Arts, and the Thelonious Monk Institute.
Yosuh Jones is a multimedia artist from St. Petersburg, Florida, based currently in the Midwest. He works in acrylic painting but also explores collage, mixed media, and more recently animation and video art. His works emphasize color, fluidity, and space. Some recurring themes include nature, Buddhist or Eastern religious imagery and concepts, and an array of symbols and psychedelic imagery with a folk art feel or simplicity. He employs styles ranging from abstract to classical, surrealistic to representational.
Aubrey Nehring is an artist, animator, and designer based in Seattle, Washington. He has created work for advertising, educational and informational videos, posters, cards, t-shirts, and album cover art. He has enjoyed collaborating with many great folks on animation, motion design, music video projects, and providing visual projections for live music events.
Christopher “Doc” Kelley received a PhD in Religion from Columbia University where he studied Indo-Tibetan Buddhism with Robert A. F. Thurman. He is a scholar of Buddhism and a part-time professor in religious studies at Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts, The New School University, and Pacifica Graduate Institute in Santa Barbara. He is also the co-founder of Psychedelic Sangha.
The Jewel Marimba from Marimba One was designed by Ron Samuels, Owner and Founder of Marimba One, manufacturer of the world’s finest percussion keyboards and mallets, located in Arcata, California.
“I conceived the idea for what would become the Jewel Marimba after I had a dream of how to tune the bars to ‘Just Tuning’ to match the harmonics being generated in their respective resonators. Meaning, the harmonic structure of the resonators defines how we are tuning the overtones in the bars”. - Ron Samuels.
Marimba One’s marimbas, vibraphones, and xylophones are owned and cherished by world-class symphony orchestras and music institutions including: San Francisco Symphony, LA Philharmonic, Chicago Symphony, Berlin Philharmonic, Juilliard School of Music, Colburn School of Music, Boston Conservatory, Berklee School of Music, UCLA, Oberlin Conservatory and many more worldwide.
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Where is it happening?

The Alembic, Plat Studio, 809 Heinz Ave, Berkeley, CA 94710, United States,Berkeley, California

Event Location & Nearby Stays:

The Berkeley Alembic Foundation

Host or Publisher The Berkeley Alembic Foundation

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