Richard Shulman
Coming Home to Spiritual Awareness
through Music
I don't know exactly when it was that I first became aware of the music of Richard Shulman, but I do remember where. I was up from my home in St. Petersburg, Florida visiting my family in New Jersey. It was sometime in the mid 1990's and I was in one of my favorite spiritual bookstores, on South Street in Philadelphia, just across the river. I saw a commotion near a tape deck in the store as this woman was waving a cassette through the air telling everyone "You've got to hear this!" It was something called "Ascension Harmonics" from a guy named Richard Shulman. After listening to about 20 seconds of music, I was convinced enough to buy the tape, my first in years, because they were sold out of CDs. So that you know, I played that tape until it stuck to my tape deck's heads and rollers so bad that I just threw the whole deck into a dumpster and drove straight to Crystal Connection in Indian Rocks Beach, Florida, to order the CD-and a few of his other ones. And I have been listening ever since
How did you get started in music?
Well, I started out with the usual piano lessons when I was seven.
I joined a rock band in high school. One of the rock bands I was
in became an experimental jazz band. I got to the University of
Rochester in the fall of '69 and started discovering jazz. The
reason that I went there is because they owned the Eastman School
of Music and Chuck Mangione was there. He was teaching there for
a couple of years. I got to be in a big band conducted by him
and I got to be in a small group with him. It was a very intense
but good experience. He was very insistent on certain qualities
that are necessary in a good jazz player and for a long time he
never took out his horn. But at a certain point, the rehearsal
band that we were in was so lame that he finally took out his
flugel horn and said "No, play it like this!"
When he started to play, he was right next to the piano and what
I recognized was that he had a tremendous presence when he played.
It was that presence that showed me something. So, one of the
things that I have learned in life is that when you see something,
you can create it for yourself.
One of the other things that he was very insistent on was the
groove. When I wasn't playing in the groove, he let me know! It's
not that I got so much better then, but I really learned what
was necessary. I learned "Okay, what is the standard here?"
And I didn't meet the standard for quite some time but I learned
what it is. I guess you'd call it a standard of excellence. At
that time, Marian McPartland would come twice a year to Rochester
and play for six weeks at the Downtowner. During the day, she
would come in and teach these jazz piano master classes, so I
had the privilege of being in those classes. So those were major
influences.
As a jazz player, after I graduated from the University of Rochester
with my music courses taken at Eastman, I moved to Buffalo and
started a Masters, first in piano and then it became a Masters
in composition. Frank Foster, the great saxophone player who played
with Count Basie, was flying in once a week to teach a jazz class.
I had a great arranging teacher at Eastman named Rayburn Wright.
He was a great teacher in that he didn't judge what the students
wrote, but what he did was, he could tell you if it was gonna
work or not. So he didn't put his value judgments on it, it was
just, the music either works or it doesn't. So he taught us technically
how to write better arrangements and how to be better musicians.
I had other teachers who were more judgmental about what music
was appropriate to write. For a time I was quite intimidated by
some of those other teachers and it took me some time to find
my own voice. That is an ongoing process which continues to this
day, to find and to listen to my voice and express the Divine
which comes through me, which is of course my greatest joy. Now
it doesn't really matter if somebody who purports to be an authority
likes it or doesn't like it. But it's nice that people do like
my music!
How did you become such a bright light
in the New Age and spiritual music genre?
Well, in 1981, I moved to New York City, having left Buffalo,
to make it in the jazz business and to make it as a jazz piano
player in New York. I had a girlfriend in New York at the time
and I had a realization that what we were doing wasn't love, and
I wanted to know what love was. It wasn't long after that that
we ended up breaking up, and that same week I found a spiritual
teacher named Hilda Charlton. Hilda really embodied a tremendous
love. Through her and other teachers, I learned about meditation
and I started meditating and started a much more serious spiritual
practice. At that time, whereas my music had been about emotional
expression, now it became about expressing the Divine. So, as
I gradually learned meditation, I learned how to play music for
meditation.
What can you tell me about your musical
soul portraits?
There was another important healer
that I worked with, a man named Ron Young, and he showed me that
I could create "musical
soul portraits" for people. The history of that is that
we were trading healing sessions for piano lessons. Well, he stopped
practicing the piano, so the trade seemingly had to end! But I
didn't want it to end, so I said "How can we continue to
trade?" Ron said "Come play for my clients", so
I did.
It was shown to me that I had this ability to tune in to a person
and ask for music for the highest good for them, and hear music
that was for them and play it, and that has developed. That was
back in 1986 and I've done hundreds of them. Now I can tune into
either an individual, a couple, a family or a group. At almost
all of my concerts, I go through that process of asking "What
is the music that would best serve the highest good for this particular
group?" I will usually tell the group that that's what
I am doing, and I tune in.
Those are some of the most magical places
in your shows!
It's really my higher self and
the person's or groups higher self working together.
Do you still do the individual, couples
and family soul portraits?
Yes. I actually just did one two days ago!
Can you describe your process of centering
and allowing this instantaneous creation of music to flow through
you?
It's a combination of setting intent and releasing anything else
and trusting and allowing that the energies and the music that
comes through, having set the intent for the highest good, is
the best thing. It's about trusting what comes and then doing
my best to play it. In my centering process, I ground, which means
that I send roots to the core of the earth and to the great central
sun and beyond so that I am connected beyond Creation, through
all Creation. I do this so that whatever needs to be available
is available. That's a brief thing that I do, which I call "making
my connections", and I got some of that from Ron Young. It's
not me healing anyone but it's this connection which resonates
with the connection that each person has also with their own Divine
self. By my tuning in to that Divinity within me, I've connected
to the inner-outer. Most people aren't aware of the connection
that they can make with the core of the earth and the entire cosmos.
That is an action to take to make that connection, but there's
also a connection within, in which I connect with my soul,
my higher self and what I call my mighty "I AM" presence,
which is the Divine presence within me. Making those connections,
like I've said, it's not me that is doing any healing work on
anybody, but the Divine within me resonating with the Divine in
another person or in a group. Of course the Divine knows exactly
what the person needs and can translate it into perfect music
for them. So my job is to be a good secretary!
What spiritual teachings or teachers
have resonated strongly with you?
Well the quick list would be Yogananda,
Hilda Charlton, Mary,
Jesus, Ron
Young, St. Francis, St. Claire, and an experience I had chanting
the Sh'ma
in the Jewish tradition, which is where my roots are. There was
also a man who was known as Daskalos-His actual name was Stylianos
Atteshlis. He was known as The Magus of Strovolos. He was
a miraculous healer who lived on Cypress. There have been many
others, there's A Course in Miracles
and all the teachers around that. I have received teachings through
words, through experience, through music, and through the process
of life.
Music itself has been a great path of learning for me and if I
could express what I've learned through music and through learning
what forgiveness is, those are two very important pieces of my
puzzle. I have had a lot of teaching through following inner vision,
and I've had a lot of spiritual adventures in that realm. Most
recently I've been enjoying Michael
Ryce and finding his teaching quite useful for me.
The expression of the Divine through music, the great masters
of music have expressed something to me that is helpful in my
life, helpful in my tuning in to the inspiration of my vision
of life. My soul had resonated with, and I have recognized, certain
teachings along the way as I have come across them synchronistically.
They have been what I needed and they have come from many people
and from many situations, sometimes challenges as well.
How do you feel about what's happening
right now with human consciousness?
I feel a time of tremendous opportunity. It's a time of taking
responsibility, for myself and each one of us, for the consciousness
within ourselves, which includes the overall consciousness of
the planet and the consciousness of humanity. Since each of us
is a focal point within the consciousness of humanity, each step
one of takes toward greater enlightenment, greater love, greater
expression of truth and of the Divine, it up-levels the consciousness
of humanity, and that's really how I work. I work through working
on myself, and through the music that comes forth as a result
of that.
What brought you to Asheville?
In 1998, having left Woodstock,
New York, I felt a strong pull towards Asheville and also to Mount
Shasta, California. Through various reasons, I ended up in Asheville.
I was working on a project called Camelot
Reawakened: A Vision Fulfilled. I didn't realize why I was
pulled here, but one of the reasons was because of the community
that is here and has been continuing to develop here. One of the
other reasons was that Robert
Hart Baker, who was conducting the Asheville Symphony, agreed
to perform the Camelot Reawakened orchestral piece. He agreed
to help me put it on and, of course Asheville has a pretty good
orchestra. Mount Shasta has about 5,000 people, so they don't
have an orchestra there. So, I'm glad I came to Asheville because
I was able to have the experience of putting on that concert and
creating the recording. It was recorded and filmed at Diana Wortham
Theater on January 12th, 2002.
What's in the near future? Do you have
any current projects?
I'm doing a project with a vibes
player named Paul Babelay. We're working on a recording. I also
have re-established my jazz group, the Richard Shulman Group.
We'll be playing April 1st at the Unity Church of Fletcher. I
also have a new healing recording that I will be releasing and
I am doing a lot of songwriting right now. I also have a choral
piece I am going to be working on. There are lots of little
things that haven't yet grown into big things. There are
lots of seeds being planted for performances, recordings and for
new compositions.
I am really excited about the community that is continuing to
gather here in Asheville and the Divine expression that is continuing
to emerge. I am really happy to be a part of that because I'm
in a place right now where I'm open to the next wonderful projects.
I totally encourage everyone to find their personal vision and
the dream of their hearts because to express it will be a benefit
to everyone as well as to themselves.
You can catch Richard Shulman online at www.richheartmusic.com, www.myspace.com/richardshulman and on www.cdbaby.com
BeingAsheville: January 2007
the movers, the shakers and the peacemakers
with Dale Allen Hoffman
www.daleallenhoffman.com
Published in the January 2007 edition of THE
INDIE