Culture

PT436 – The Power of Sound: The Magic in Live Performances, Imperfections, and Music Curated Specifically for Journeys

August 29, 2023
Featuring: East Forest

In this episode, David interviews East Forest: Portland, OR-based producer, podcaster, ceremony guide, and musician, specializing in ambient, electronic, contemporary classical, and indie pop music largely to guide listeners through deep journeys.  

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In this episode, David interviews East Forest: Portland, OR-based producer, podcaster, ceremony guide, and musician, specializing in ambient, electronic, contemporary classical, and indie pop music largely to guide listeners through deep journeys.  

Forest discusses his live performances and influences; how his music pairs with journeys and specific psychedelics; the difference in the connection and vibe from a live performance vs. a recording; the difference between single-artist music created specifically for sessions vs. Spotify playlists; the inhumanity of generative music; his Journey Space online music and journey platform; and the challenges of making money in a time when music is more prevalent than ever, but also more in-the-background and diluted. 

He talks a lot about sound itself: the role of rhythm and sound in communication and personal transformation; how richer overtones and increased layers of sound increase effects; research into very low pulsating tones, and how more synthesized sound and the growth of AI has created a yearning for more authentic, imperfect sounds.  

His newest album was just released August 18: “Music For The Deck of The Titanic,” an homage to the musicians who spent their last few hours playing songs for passengers amidst the chaos and tragedy – an album Forest sees as an offering to the chaotic moment we’re all in.

Notable Quotes

“I’m trying to make music that is intended to come directly into the foreground and pass the foreground into the place where you merge with the music, and the music becomes the sonic architecture by which you are having an experience inside, and perhaps become it, synesthetically. So I want to go way beyond it being in the background. I actually want it to be even more than a guide. It’s almost like you synthesize with it as one: like who’s guiding who? There can be a magic to those experiences that’s far beyond anything I’ve ever experienced in anything else in life, and that’s really the North Star that I want to be in service to. I don’t think, even, that that’s something that I can concoct or conceive totally. It’s more opening myself up to some kind of magic that’s way beyond anything I could decide.”

“What I love about humans’ creativity is the fact that we can be creative and we can celebrate that by making things like art. When I’m surprised by art is the best feeling. And so giving people support to create: as of now, we can’t beat that. You’re just asking yourself: how far can we go in this celebration and in this experience? I have never experienced a generative experience that’s even anywhere close to where we can go with one person sharing their humanity in a way that’s beautiful. If it’s innovative, even better.”

Links

Eastforest.org

YouTube: Who is East Forest?

East Forest discography

Ten Laws with East Forest podcast

Soundcloud

YouTube

Spotify

Patreon

Ten Laws with east Forest podcast: Ivy Ross & Susan Magsamen – Your Brain on Art! (#253)

Journeyspace.com

Love Service Wisdom podcast, with Marisa Radha Weppner

Hajbotanics.com (Receive 10% off your order with code Honeydrip10)

Join us in the Netherlands for the Kiyumí Psilocybin Retreat & Vital Training: September 6-11, 2023. Click here to learn more and apply!
East Forest performing
East Forest- George Evan photo

In this Episode

East Forest

East Forest is a musician, producer, and ceremony guide who uses the power of music to guide listeners through deep journeys of introspection. Since his 2008 debut, East Forest has used the power of music to guide listeners through contemporary journeys of deep introspection. The electro-acoustic project has remained primarily a solo effort (of Krishna-Trevor Oswalt), straddling the worlds of ambient, neoclassical, electronic and indie-pop to help fans explore the vast reaches of inner space. Whether via his “Music For Mushrooms: A Soundtrack For The Psychedelic Practitioner” album series, his collaborative spoken word album with Ram Dass, or one of his live communal “Ceremony Concerts,” East Forest’s goal has always been “building bridges and creating an approach that’s grounded, embodied, inclusive, and unarguable.”

His music uses art as a means for a message, but with his latest album “Music For The Deck of The Titanic,” the art itself becomes the message. The album name is an homage to the infamous ship’s musicians who spent their last few hours playing songs for passengers facing the tragedy before them. Beautiful, poignant and extremely human, “Music For The Deck of The Titanic” is East Forest’s offering to the chaotic moment we’re all in. “We just went through something where we thought as a people, ‘Is this the end? Will I die?’ I think that sometimes we gloss over that a bit, but it was traumatic and intense for all of us. In what ways can we midwife this process with beauty and honor, as opposed to just protecting ourselves? What can you do that meaningfully serves other people and is beautiful?” It’s a reprieve in a fast-moving world; a musical mantra made between friends that invites contemplation and release, whether you’re soaking up every layer of sound or simply letting the music soundtrack your life.

Socials: Instagram / Facebook

Main art photo credit: Mark Tom
About me section photo credit: George Evan