It’s hard to understand a kirtan concert if you haven’t experienced it firsthand. But if anyone is equipped to describe the experience, it’s Asheville-based, nationally known musician and chant artist Kristin Luna Ray. “Everyone is singing,” she explains. “Everyone becomes the band. There is full participation, and then magic happens in a different way.”
Ray will be performing most of the songs from her forthcoming, as-yet-untitled album at a prerelease party hosted by Asheville Community Yoga on Saturday, Dec. 14. In many ways, the yoga studio is the perfect venue for a kirtan concert, which features the call-and-response chanting of Sanskrit mantras.
If Ray is a favorite kirtan leader in the local yoga community, the feeling is mutual: She says she needs Asheville yogis and fans to “bring this album to life.” Ray invites the audience to be part of her music, saying, “Come to help lift these songs up so we can send them out into the world. We’re all doing this together.”
Field of vision
The Visionary Arts Fair, an annual event in Atlanta, makes its way to Asheville for the first time this year. On Saturday, Dec. 14, the event takes over the Metrosphere with spiritual workshops and performances. Doors at 7 p.m., $35 in advance/$50 at the door. Info at avl.mx/039.
Visionary artists Alex Grey and Allyson Grey headline the fair. Together they’ll hold a book signing and meet-and-greet, give a lecture and live-paint on stage. “For us, it is a way of engaging with a global community, the Love Tribe all over the world,” the couple say in an email. “Asheville is a spiritual magnet, a creative center in the Southern U.S.” They add that Alex once took a sacred geometry intensive in Asheville, and the city is the home of their good friends, the band Papadosio.
Mountain Xpress: What are the unique characteristics of visionary art?
Alex Grey and Allyson Grey: Cave paintings of human/animal hybrids or theriomorphs of a shaman or an anthropic figure with stag antlers and tail shows the ancient lineage of visionary art. … Another feature of visionary art: ornate geometric patterns of interconnectedness, and you will find unique expressions of these interweaving latticework in many temples throughout the world. … Some [outsider artists] made art in prisons or mental institutions or worked as a janitor by day and created a silver foil throne room in their garage at night. All artists must practice and are ultimately self-taught, although some are influenced by their personal history and environment more than the history of art. [Alex's work is currently on exhibit at the American Visionary Art Museum in Baltimore and at Halle de St. Pierre, the Paris home of Outsider Art.]
Since you will be painting onstage to live music, can you talk about the connection between art and music? Music becomes part of the creative energy field enveloping the artists, the audience, the dancers. It can occasionally condition the strokes. Music we like can help the flow.
In your performance and in your art, what do you hope to impart to those who view it? Everyone is connected and we are living in a sacred reality. Love is the transcendental source and foundation of all that exists.
How important is the relationship between the artist and the audience? That is a great question that is answered anew every time we perform before an audience. Alex imagines a collective light body, a temporary group soul woven of the subtle energy fields of those in attendance. This creative energy field is activated by the music and by the emotions coming from the audience and by the vision and will of the artists.
We come onstage with our paintings that were planned in our studio, but a lot can happen spontaneously in the process. Music and audio-talk is constant in our studio, which we’ve shared and made art together for 38 years. Onstage we are in an uninterruptable bubble where we are bathed in great music and engaged in our favorite activity: painting! It is a peak experience.
With pop, Eastern and world-music influences — as well as an exciting lineup including Chris Rosser, Taylor Johnson and Noah Wilson — the show is sure to be a good time for Asheville yogis and chanting enthusiasts. But Ray believes the act of chanting has a deeper intention and effect: “Singing together, coming together, opening our voices in a safe space using the prayers, the mantras, the vibrational language of the soul, and becoming one through all that — it just has a really powerful, blissful effect where you get out of yourself. It’s like you remember something bigger.”
The concert marks the end of Ray’s fall tour, which included shows at spiritually inclined festivals like The LEAF, the Floyd Yoga Jam and Bhakti Fest in Joshua Tree, Calif. It’s also Ray’s last Asheville show before traveling to Costa Rica for the winter, where she’ll lead kirtan and yoga retreats in conjunction with Asheville Community Yoga.
And while her music might take her across the globe, there’s a reason Ray calls this city home. “Asheville is such a fertile ground and a support system from where this music roots out of,” she explains. “When I chant in Asheville, for the most part, it’s almost like a reboot for me. The ability of people to really, fully show up for the kirtan and really participate gives me so much inspiration. It gives me a reminder that this is my work, that I am to keep going out and sharing it. It’s like a blanket.”
The new album’s songs will incorporate more English verses than her previous offering, 2012’s One Shared Heart, though the focus is still on the Sanskrit mantras. Perhaps most notably, the latest recording reflects a monumental shift in Ray’s personal life. One Shared Heart was created during her pregnancy; the new album is the first she’s recorded as a mother.
“A lot of this album is around such a big transformational time in my life,” she reveals. “You can hear about the experience [of becoming a mother] and you can philosophize about it and imagine it, but really, it has been one of the most challenging, most expansive, most incredible things I’ve ever done … and so that fullness is in the album.”
But when it comes to kirtan music, that fullness of experience isn’t something Ray feels she can create completely on her own. “Every time someone comes to it, and sings it with me, and shares it with intention and consciousness, the song gets a little more of its wings, and its ability to hold itself and touch more people.”
— Lea McLellan can be reached at lmclellan@mountainx.com.
who: Kristin Luna Ray
where: Asheville Community Yoga
ashevillecommunityyoga.com
when: Saturday, Dec. 17, 7:30 p.m.
Suggested donation $15-$20