Saturday, November 17, 2018

Yoga Church Rises Up



11/17/18 - Our beloved Veterans Hall needs some love! The Veterans Memorial Building in downtown Santa Cruz, built in 1932, is a registered historical landmark. It’s been the hub of not only Veterans' services and affairs, but countless classes, meetings, workshops, receptions, concerts and special events, including our blessed Monday night weekly YOGA CHURCH! Recently, numerous repairs and improvements were identified as critical for this beautiful space, and we want to do all we can to help. They’ve been so generous to us, and we just want to show some love in return. So, the YOGA CHURCH tribe, along with the Veterans Memorial Building Board of Trustees will have this GoFundMe campaign open from 11/2/18 to 11/13/18, and we’ll be having a *special* Yoga Church fundraising class on Monday 11/12/18 (5:30 – 7:00pm) with special-guest musicians and more! Your generosity is not only a contribution towards the dignity and beauty of this proud building, it helps to ensure that we, and countless other groups will have this sacred space to meet for years and years to come. Thank you!

 And then this happened… amidst the volatility in our state, in our country in the last couple of weeks, this group of generous souls heeded the call to “Rise Up.” What started as a GoFundMe campaign and fundraising Yoga Church class to benefit the proud, 85-year-old Veteran’s Memorial Building ($1,377), turned into an outpouring of love for the Wounded Veterans (almost $400), and a drop off location for tents, sleeping bags, food, etc for the CA wildfire victims. What I want to share with you now, though, is the power of love when we come together, and Hannah Muse weaves her magic, with music by Rare Faction, Paul Damon, Jazz Sarab Meher Kaur, and Michael J Downey. Enjoy the video…



Sunday, September 16, 2018

Playing at Bhaktifest 2018

You know, a couple of years ago, when I went to my first Bhaktifest, I had no idea what to expect, and knew maybe 6 people out of the thousands there. Two years later, I’m amazed, humbled, and honored to have gotten to know so many in this community, and to offer up the musical goodness with Johanna Beekman, and Gershone, Rachael, Eric, Kim, and Gayan. What a blessing to get to see and meet friends from far and wide ~
"Bhakti Fest celebrates the devotional paths of yoga, Kirtan (sacred music), and meditation. Our festival is a drug and alcohol free vehicle for evolution of human consciousness through a heart-centered revolution. Bring your yoga mats this September to the idyllic Joshua Tree Retreat Center, located in the beautiful region east of Los Angeles. Practice with the best yoga teachers in the world, dance to sacred music by world-renown Kirtan artists, and take workshops with leaders in the field of personal growth. Camp out beneath the stars or stay at one of our many accommodations on and offsite; enjoy the swimming pool and free filtered drinking water; stop in at The Bhakti Family Village and expose your children to other enlightened youth and families; enjoy the best vegetarian food at any festival. We offer Student, Senior, Military and Local Resident discounts. We are building community—please join us!"
BHAKTIFEST!

Friday, July 13, 2018

I Love Playing Yoga Classes...


Yoga For All Movent class w/ Hannah Muse, Terre Lee

7/13/18 - I love playing yoga classes. I remember as a kid thinking if I’m not a rock star (ha!) by the time I’m 30, I’ll be relegated to a life of playing county and western in honky tonk bars… Just glad I’m not the sole script-writer for my life.
 
About 5 years ago, my yoga teacher, Daniela Kosmalski, asked me to learn a David Newman mantra “Jai Radhe,” and play it with her at the end of a class. I didn’t much understand it all at the time, but the seed had been planted.
With Daniela Kosmalski, Jennifer Holt at Toadal Fitness


 And as time went by, and life happened, I grew to embrace the singing/playing of devotional songs and mantras at Kirtan gatherings and concerts, in my writing and releasing albums, and in yoga classes.
One of the blessings about playing for these classes is that *it’s not about me*… It’s the underflow for the magic that happens collectively, individually, and between the teacher and the yogis in the class. Sometimes instrumental, sometimes with vocals. It’s like a dance, like a waltz and the teacher takes the lead and I try and follow step by step. Sometimes pushing when she creates space, laying back when she pushes… just co-creating the flow.
With Johanna Beekman, Hannah Muse at Yoga Church
And one of the greatest joys is being able to lead a mantra at the end of these classes, to share a little about the practice of mantra and Kirtan, and invite everyone to join in with their voices and spirit as we weave our way through a call-and-response mantra, just adding to the buzz they already feel from a great yoga class. And truth be told, it’s a wonderful opportunity to invite those that haven’t experienced a Kirtan gathering, like a ‘gateway drug’, to join in and connect at one of the many monthly gatherings we have here on the Central Coast, and add to their practice. 



With Hannah Muse at Yoga Church
Grateful for the many teachers that hold space for musicians and singers to be a part of these classes. Grateful for the opportunity to just be a clear conduit for the goodness to flow through. And grateful that life hasn’t become an endless succession of playing music in honky-tonk bars. 


Thursday, May 24, 2018

Michael J Downey: Authenticity and Awakening~by Julie Berreth


“Creating this album, Awakening, has rooted and strengthened my trust in a power greater than myself, and in my own abilities.
-Michael J. Downey

 
It’s been difficult for me to write this story about my friend Michael J. Downey. After trying three different angles for the last eight months, I finally stopped fighting the process and began looking for the cause. The answer was right there in Michael’s interview; let go, trust the process and be in service to the work, not to my own ego. I will be writing more on this topic in my next blog post.

In the meantime, only Michael’s words can convey his story with the authenticity in which he lives. He is a musician, philanthropist and entrepreneur, (a cool person, doing cool, creative things) and he will make you want to do more, and be more.


Q: Who is Michael J. Downey, in your words? Please share some back story.

A: Wow, great question! Throw in ‘why am I here?’ and ‘what makes me do the things I do?’ and we will both have PhDs in psychology and the tools to achieve world peace. In a nutshell, I’m just a work in progress. I started playing guitar and piano at around 13 years old, and grew up in a family that attended church every Sunday. That proved to be a recipe for gravitating towards music with big vocal harmonies and a message, like the Eagles, CSN&Y, etc. So these questions have always been central to my path. And in that self-seeking and realization, on that long and winding road that we walk, the recurring themes of love and service keep coming up, and hopefully as time goes on, we get better at it. For me, right now, that has meant a new direction in music, reaching out internationally with my non-profit hashi.org’ and maybe most importantly, working on having compassion for the person standing right in front of me.


Q: You are educated in psychology and in 1994, using the carpentry and general maintenance skills you learned from your father, you started Cypress Construction Services in Santa Cruz. You were also the lead guitarist for Femme Fatale and The Sharks. How and where did performing music come about?

A: In my 20s, making a living playing music meant going on the road with a Top 40s band, playing in hotel lounges and road houses. What a great education! Later came the big-hair days in LA with Femme Fatale, record labels, and I learned the all-important ‘inversely proportional rule’ of music – “The more you like the music, the less money you make at it!” Since then, there have been various incarnations in between the previous extremes of playing Neil Young covers in a coffee house, and making a living playing 6 nights a week. In the mid-2000’s, after earning the psychology degree, I established my construction company here in Central California (“Don’t quit your day job” as they say) and saw an opportunity to extend the hand of friendship internationally with my music, at a time when our country had hit an all-time low in the eyes of the international community. So, in 2004 and 2007, I released two solo albums, and toured Japan and Korea regularly for 4 or 5 years. What a blessing that was, and continues to be, with friends made on those tours, and through the scholarships and opportunities available through hashi.org. Again, at a time when I believe we need to do all we can to put something good out into the world amidst the volatility here and abroad.

                  Photo courtesy of Michael J. Downey

Q: Kirtan and mantra is a very different style of music than your past work. How were you introduced to it?

The kirtan and mantra art form as explained by kirtan artist and bhakti yoga educator, David Newman: “Kirtan is Sanskrit and means “to praise that which is exalted”— or, the divine. The word “kirtan,” also from a Sanskrit root, is a practice for “cutting through the idea of separation, for connecting to our hearts and connecting to the moment through sound.”

A: So often, it seems that the seeds are planted before the time is right for them to grow. I started doing yoga about 6 years ago, and after a while, my yoga teacher asked me to learn a song/mantra that we could do in class. I didn’t totally ‘get it’ at the time, but it felt good to sing and play guitar with everyone joining in with their own spirits and voices. It wasn’t until much later that it really started speaking to me, and unfolding as it is now. When the student is ready.


Q: I gave basic definitions of kirtan and mantra, but what do they embody or mean to you, specifically?

A: There’s something in the sound, the repetition, the time-honored singing of the names and mantras of the divine that reaches a place in me that nothing ever has. It’s not in my head, and the Sanskrit, Hindu, Gurbani languages that these mantras are often in are not about intellectual understanding. And I know that can be a little off-putting at first. It wasn’t long ago that even simply making the sound of “Ohm” was not something I could wrap my head around. All I know is that when I’m singing and playing these songs and mantras, this feeling of connectedness – to those around me, to the world, and to a power greater than myself – just ripples through me, and it’s pretty awesome!

 Photo courtesy of Michael J. Downey

Q: What inspired you to explore and create in this spiritual style, and ultimately use it as the foundation to Awakening?

A: I had no choice! I was going through a time in my life, with divorce and other challenges, that left me in a place where I was just naturally a sponge waiting for something to fill in what was missing, and to rebuild, redefine myself in a better way. And as I learned more of this music, and the spirituality behind it, songs and ideas started to surface in my writing. It wasn’t as if I set out thinking, “I’m going to write and record a spiritual album.”

 Awakening album cover photo courtesy of Michael J. Downey

Q: When you were writing the songs for Awakening, did you find there was a significant difference in the creation process than that of other musical genres?

A: Absolutely, although I’ve always been skeptical of the idea that songwriters create songs from nothing, nowhere, and no one. But now, it’s so clear to me that I’m just the conduit, just trying to be a clear channel through which good things flow from that higher power, to the world around me. Part of the beauty of that for me is that these songs and mantras come so naturally when they come. Very different from how I used to force myself to sit down and say, “I’ve got to write a new song!” That may have been satisfying to the part of me that used to need to feel some degree of control over things, but it’s cold comfort compared to the freedom of surrendering that process to the powers that be.
 Ocean Carry Me video courtesy of Michael J. Downey

Q: Because Awakening was such a personal journey for you, what made you change your mind about releasing it to the world?

A: Well, despite the steady parade of doubts I had in the process (when I would forget the surrender and take back the idea of control), it was always in the service of sharing that which was being freely given to me. Much changed in the process – e.g., releasing an 8-song album instead of a 4-song EP, being OK with half the album being comprised of vocal-based songs and mantras and half instrumental, ambient, meditation-type pieces, not to mention getting over insecurities about my voice or my abilities to produce the album, etc.
 Hallelujah video courtesy of Michael J. Downey

Q: How has creating Awakening changed you?

A: The writing, recording, and releasing of Awakening has been the soundtrack to the personal journey I’ve been on these last couple of years. And somehow, for me, it’s as if it gives the pain, the growth a blessing, a credibility that reflects back at me and affirms that these changes are good and they’re universal – everyone goes through these things. Also, it’s rooted and strengthened my trust in a power greater than myself, and in my own abilities. And to trust in a process you believe in, because you don’t know what the outcome will be.
Govinda Hare Maha Mantra video courtesy of Michael J. Downey

Q: Please tell me about Hashi.org and the “why” behind it.

A: Hashi.org began after I took my first trip to Japan and South Korea in 2004. Having always had an interest in Asian culture, people, and history, this trip happened at a time in my life, or maybe a time in the world, that called for reaching out beyond my safe, little world in California, USA. It was a time where there was great unrest in the world, and it seemed that our country, in the eyes of the world, had hit an all-time low and sadly, that continues today. So I asked then, and now, what can I do? What started with the music tours, evolved into the non-profit I started – Hashi.org (‘hashi’ means ‘bridge’ in Japanese). We give three $1000 scholarships a year, one to an American, one to a Japanese student, and one to a Korean recipient. This is a way to promote cultural exchange between these countries, via student exchange, volunteer work, home stays, the arts, et al. And the website is a searchable database of over a hundred types of these opportunities for anyone to seek out and avail themselves to. Through Hashi.org, I’ve hoped that something in some small way could make it easier for anybody to reach out and extend a hand of friendship to the world.

Q: If you were give only one wish for this album, what would it be?

A: That’s an easy one – to reach the ears and the hearts of those that would receive it and maybe benefit from it, and find inspiration, meditation, or just peace and stillness at the beginning or end of long day.


I want to extend my deepest gratitude to Michael for taking the time to do this interview, and for allowing me to share his story. Even though we have never met in person, he never fails to inspire me from a thousand miles away.

Extend your hand in friendship to the world. Learn more about Michael J. Downey and his non-profit organization, Hashi.org.

Get Awakening now, and be blessed.