The Conversari Series

Audio experiences that start a conversation.

The music opens the heart.

The heart opens the body.

The body stirs the courage…

…to raise our voice!

Each Conversari creation takes listeners deep into themselves to explore their ideas on critical subjects, like climate change, and find their voice for new conversations.

“When we listen to music that moves us, the dopaminergic circuitry of the brain is activated, which opens the mind to wonder and exploration.”

Dacher Keltner, from his book Awe

Choose Your Format


Format 1:
An Otherworldly Guided Reflection

Participants first hear a voice offering an idea and a reflection question, then a corresponding musical composition. And so it continues—a series of questions and compositions carries listeners deeper into the subject matter and deeper into a state of inward listening and discovery. The experience culminates by lifting participants out of the music and back into the world to integrate and share new insights that have come to light.

Format 2:
An Immersive Musical Experience

Want only the composition with no guiding reflection? For some Conversari creations, they can stand on their own as purely music listening experiences. The effect of internal reflection still occurs naturally, and the overall impact can be deepened by the event or interactive installation location, context, featured speakers, and more.

LENGTH

Approx. 30 minutes of immersive audio + add-ons

DIVERSE APPLICATIONS

Innovative Public Event

Feature Conference Event

Stand-Out Retreat Activity

Interactive Installation

SAMPLE FOLLOW-UP ACTIVITIES

Strategic Mapping

Vision Boarding

Creative Brainstorming


Currently Featuring

Song
of the Earth

A musical reckoning of our relationship with Earth and the climate crisis.

Song of the Earth is an audio journey in words and music that takes us inward to explore our relationship with Earth and the climate crisis, and then outward to share new insights with others. Telling a story that begins 14 billion years ago and ends in the present—it opens us to the anguish and disorientation of disintegration, while giving us hope that life-threatening dangers will be a catalyst for evolution.