Psychedelics, Music, and Art go hand in hand. So many of us are moved to express our insights and visions through our creativity. Join Daniel of Tam Integration as he talks to a wide variety of masterful creatives about how their magical flights of fancy have inspired their art.
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Natalie Carol is the front woman of the Los Angeles based band Valley Queen. The band have drawn comparisons to Neil Young and My Morning Jacket and recently released their acclaimed Destroyer EP this year. It is the follow up to their 2016 singles In My Place and High Expectations, which were released via Canvasback Music & Atlantic Records. NPR Music’s Bob Boilen stated “At first it was simply the voice that shook me,” continuing, “Valley Queen’s music is rich with nuance and depth, rooted deep in California country.”
Psychedelic veteran Carolyn Garcia aka Mountain Girl joined the Merry Pranksters in 1964 and traveled on Ken Kesey’s bus “Furthur” presenting “Acid Tests” in California. She joined the Grateful Dead family in the Haight Ashbury in 1967. In this talk, Carolyn recounts tales from the height of the 1960s psychedelic culture.
She has been on the board of Rex Foundation among others, for many years, and keeps up with psychedelic and cannabis issues and developments as best she can. Currently she serves as President of the Women’s Visionary Council, which presents the annual Women’s Visionary Congress and other educational events investigating the marvelous. Jerry Garcia and Carolyn have two daughters.
This video is from the Psychedelic Science in the 21st Century, a conference in San Jose, California, April 15-18 2010, organized by MAPS – the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies in collaboration with: the Heffter Research Institute, The Council on Spiritual Practices, & the Beckley Foundation
To become a MAPS member visit www.maps.org
This video was produced by Teal Sievers with livingdreamfilms.com
Medical doctors, other medical professionals, psychologists, and social workers can earn continuing medical education/ continuing education credits by viewing these videos. Visit www.maps.org