Episode 5: Howard Levy & Victor Wooten
Interested in learning to play the harmonica? Try some FREE lessons from Howard Levy here: https://bit.ly/3webztx
Explore "victorwooten" with insightful episodes like "Episode 5: Howard Levy & Victor Wooten", "Dream D&D Table", "#122 Billy Presnell, eclectic musician", "The Two Onions Podcast with Dani Daniels - Featuring Joseph Wooten" and "#115 Biko Casini, percussionist with Rising Appalachia" from podcasts like ""ArtistWorks Music Roundtable", "Dads Doing Nerd Shit", "Planetary Gig Talk", "The Two Onions podcast with Dani Daniels" and "Planetary Gig Talk"" and more!
Billy Presnell started playing music when he was really young, about five years old. Piano was his first instrument, and he got a guitar when he was eight. Billy says, “Music has always been a part of my life,” and he was still learning to talk practically when he first started.
He has played many different styles and instruments, though he says, “when I read The Music Lesson by Victor Wooten, it changed the way I approached accompanying people; kinda changed my priorities in making the entire musical piece the goal, as opposed to me playing well with somebody.” He also began attending and volunteering at Wooten Woods music camps, and made so many connections. He learned that being a good person leads to good musicianship, and that will change your life in a positive way. He understood that he didn’t have to impress people, but that it is more about serving the music.
Billy says that, when you play, if you put the intention of healing and providing positivity and peace into your music, it can change the world. He hopes after the pandemic that people will really going back to seeing live music.
Dani Daniels and her husband Vic sit down with their good friend Joseph Wooten. Joseph is the current keyboardist for the Steve Miller Band. They talk about growing up in music, family values, inspiration, and life with his equally famous brothers, Roy (Future Man), Reggie, Victor, and Rudy. Joseph's views on life, family, politics, race relations, and music are inspirational. He has even given a Ted Talk about "Nothing is Everything"...you will have to watch to find out what that means! This one is seriously not to be missed. It is a heartening experience!
Biko Casini is the percussionist with my favorite music group, Rising Appalachia. Biko turned me on to The Music Lesson book by Victor Wooten and that changed my life and led to the founding of the Planetary Gigs Society. Biko is a profound player and spiritual thinker.
Biko grew up in an intentional community outside Nashville, where he lives now, and he says it gives him the space to dream about what is possible when humans come together, sharing responsibility of stewarding the land. Biko’s father played guitar – all the time, many different songs, from many different countries and in many languages, like a troubadour. When Biko was 15, his brother carved him drumsticks and that started his lifelong craft as a drummer and percussionist. Through several interactions and his travels, he realized that for him music was a way to be of service rather than strive simply for personal success, and his quest has been to find a place or situation where music could be a key to unlocking healing energy.
He has found that with Rising Appalachia, which is like a spiritual community because they are all working on similar goals. So many musicians have been funneled and co-opted by the music industry to serve the profit motive. Rising Appalachia focuses on the experience and the wild magic of music. “Music has given me more than anything else in my life, but it has also taken more than anything else,” he says.
Biko is focused on an intention to create cultural and ecological learning and rejuvenation centers, with music being a huge part of that. He says concerts and festivals can provide energy for restoring ecology. Arts and creativity, he says, should feed the ecological restoration of the world and cultural renewal, which is the great work of our time. Biko says we all carry cultural trauma and music’s job is to connect us to what’s real inside of ourselves and then to help us be able to restore the external ecology. This also seems to me to be very much consistent with the music and message of Rising Appalachia, led by sisters Leah Song and Chloe Smith, and they have all meant so much to so many people.
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