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Singing The Unseen


Four residential weeks 4-9 November ‘24, 18-23 February ‘25, 8-13 April ‘25, 8-13 June ‘25

At Sharpham House and Bala Brook in South Devon, UK.

With Vocal Improvisation, we can sing our inner lives, heal and grow. We can sing what is alive in a group, a room, an event/ceremony, or even a society - that needs to be expressed. We can to some extent sing the inner lives of others, for their self-awareness and wellbeing. We can relate with nature, ancestors, Mystery. Vocal Improvisation has a potent place in ritual, ceremony, community and healing.  

For the third time, Briony Greenhill will lead a group of students through an extended program (8 months) that focuses in-depth on these aspects of vocal improvisation. 

The first 3 weeks focus on:

Finding my voice and its relation with my inner life

Living my voice and connecting with the Natural World

Opening my voice, and connection with the Unseen

The last week focuses on:

Giving my voice, and stepping into Leadership.

Context

What do we mean by ‘re-wilding the voice’ or ‘wild singing’, the title of much of my teaching?

Wildness has got some bad connotations. Raaaa! Wildness is brash, ugly, uncontrollable, loud, wild.

Yet look at the first thing you can perceive that is wild. It may be the air upon your skin; the movement of the clouds above, the wind in the trees.

Wildness can be very still; very delicate.

Wildness is ecological genius.

Wildness is life living, evolving and being shaped by something more than human intelligence.

So when I talk about wild singing, I am talking about stepping out of music that is shaped by human intelligence, and into music that is shaped by more-than-human intelligence.

(This is why some of my students say this is inherently a spiritual practice, and some of my collaborators call it a ‘Jedi training’.)

Entering this state - where were are receptive to the more-than-human intelligence and let it have our voice - we enter, and become more and more able to know and access, a state of deep quiet, listening, and attunement.

In that state, we can hear more.

And this is where people who, honestly, are blocked from the state of deep listening, can reject this as “woo woo”.

I shall continue.

In this state of deep quiet, listening and attunement; 

We can connect with the consciousness, perhaps the wisdom, of trees and rocks.

We can relate with ancestors and perhaps, for some, future generations.

We can feel and sing the inner lives of others

We can feel and sing our own deep inner truths, and through that, come to know them better.

Then we can use this work for healing, ritual, prayer, and ‘therapeutic purposes’

I put that in ‘’ because, really, why did we ever separate singing and dancing from therapy? They’re inherently woven.

In between us as we (probably) are today and the state of deep quiet, can be things that we don’t want to feel.

So using the voice and the body, we have beautiful ways to feel and sing and move into those hard places; the voice and movement become like a river, like a water, that dislodges stuck rocks and carries them out to sea.

Rivers are inherently self-healing, self-cleansing.

There is a healing force in the universe and, among all else, we can choose to align ourselves with it.

And in this some choose meditation, some choose shamanism;

I choose voice, and body.

I choose dance, and song.

Some say or feel that it’s dangerous.

Historically, witches and shamans have been persecuted and killed for these capacities.

But, it’s a Thing. It just is, a Thing.

Voice is one of the main ways that led me to this; which is perhaps why some people want to or have been trained to keep their voices quiet; because they fear the depth of the power contained in there.

But it’s safe. Ethics guide us. It’s beautiful. It’s very beautiful indeed.

Here we go.



Cost

The course costs £4000.

2 Assistant places are available for people who have worked with me before, for £2000.

2 Bursary Fund places are available for £2500: these are reserved for people of colour, non-binary / LGBTQ folks, and regenerative world makers.

If you wish to have a Heritage Room at Sharpham, the course fee rises to £4500. The £4000 fee comes with a Premium Room. If you chose a Standard Room, the full course fee can be £3500.

The fee includes

  • All teaching

  • Monthly group support calls with Briony on Zoom

  • Student buddy pairs providing support and continuity throughout the course

  • Lodging at Sharpham House and Bala Brook

  • 3 healthy and delicious meals a day + tea and snacks

  • Access to Briony’s app, Your Song, for the duration of the course

Payment plans are available.

Up to 18 students.

To participate, you need:

To be able to sing in tune, keep a beat, and want an adventure. To make available time and space for practice; a minimum of 30 mins 3 times per week is advised; with more time, you will go deeper. To be in moderate to good mental health. To be able to meet the attendance and financial course requirements.

To Apply

Please complete the application form below, and

Please send us 2 recordings of 1 minute each: 1 minute of you improvising alone, and 1 minute of you singing a song you know well. Both unaccompanied, the voice memos app on your phone is quite fine. Please send these to us at info@brionygreenhill.com, and email us there if you have any technical difficulties with this.

Singing the Unseen has happened in 2019 and in 2023-4.

Past Students Say:

This course was a pivotal event in my life, and there’s definitely a before and an after STU.

It’s difficult to describe what STU has specifically changed, because it’s a long-lived experience that deepens one’s understanding of every possible aspect of life, self awareness, spirituality, healing, nature, human consciousness.

I met and sang with powerful, like-minded people that I feel I will be linked with all my life (even if we don’t talk or meet often), and this special, invisible bond between us is the result of the journey we took together. This has given me a sense of community and strengthened my own sense of belonging.

In my professional life as a musician, singer and healer, I use all the tools I learned in the course. The knowledge we gathered is like a toolbox that I can open when needed (when composing music, when performing a ritual, when helping a friend, when leading a choir, when connecting with nature, when singing, when doing self healing etc...).
This has been a fantastic journey led by Briony, and I definitely recommend it to anyone that feels ready to deepen their connection to the vastness of life and their understanding of who they truly are through voice.
— Katia May
Singing the Unseen was a truly liberating course for me. Finding my voice, the words and sounds that await to be sung through me, from the elements, from the seasons, from the earth, from beyond. I learnt to get out of my own way and practice this art of being with the unknown, over and over. To strengthen and flex that muscle, while letting go deeper and deeper with every step. Widening the aperture for joyous magic to emerge. I was held by a group of what are now lifelong friends, Briony’s loving and skilful presence and the abundance of practices and tools she brings with her in her uniqueness. This course is indeed a life blessing.
— Neal Shail
 
I’ve been singing all my life, in choirs, at weddings, at funerals. It was something I loved but never pursued further because i felt limited and bored with learning a part and regurgitating it. I had formal music training when I was younger but felt stifled and intimidated by the rigid ways of learning. As it did not resonate with me, I dropped it and didn’t continue it further. After this I had a long gap of not singing much at all.

4 years ago I did a year-long intensive ‘Singing the Unseen’. It was a year of learning the exciting craft of collaborative vocal improvisation, creating music with multiple voices from thin air, inspiration and whatever our souls wanted to communicate. It was woven with ceremony, nature connection and community and I came to know myself as a ritual singer and improviser. For the first time in a long time i felt connected with my voice and excited to be singing again. I was inspired by what can emerge from the unseen, by how healing it is to sing and to sing in community and to explore what might want to express itself. I am super grateful to Briony for this offering.

I have since continued my training in collaborative vocal improvisation including facilitator training. Wanting to delve further into the healing aspect of voice use, I completed my Diploma in Group Voice Arts Therapy this year.

I am excited to continue the journey of offering wellbeing focused voice work and improvised group singing in future.
— Pia Hansen
 
It really was a special experience. I learnt so much about myself and my voice, how valuable singing is to my own health and wellbeing, how woven into life singing can be, how essential, how supportive, how rapturous! Being with a group of singers over a year around the Celtic earth festivals, less focused on the musicality yet often making beautiful music together, being in our bodies, on the land, tuning in, singing with the trees, the stones, the fire, finding voice in ritual leadership and ceremony, singing as we tended our grief and being held in a bath of vocal sound, all such deep experiences that have left their imprint, forging new pathways of connection and community. All of the people I met on Singing the Unseen have a special place in my heart and some of them continue to be a vital part of my life today. I’m more confident collaborating with other singers, I use the practices I learnt regularly for my own self care and I support others to discover their voice (and many of the things i’ve mentioned above) through my own work as a holistic therapist. This course changed my life - truly!
— Sarah-Jane Heath
 
My experiences throughout Singing the Unseen have stayed with me and I often reflect on them. Many have had a profound long lasting effect and allowed me to understand my life from a different perspective. The work we did which included the natural world was particularly special for me and I continue to draw strength from the connections I made. I have always been interested in how our voice reflects the relationship we have with our self and I can say without a shadow of a doubt that my own personal development has been hugely fast tracked by the deepening of this relationship. Briony has a very special talent with this work and I recommend it to anyone who is curious.
— Teresa Verney
 

About Briony Greenhill

At core, I am a ritual singer. I’m a qualified SomaSource practitioner - “adept at tracking the relationship between the body and the Spirit, creating culturally sensitive experiences that inspire individuals to feel at home within themselves along with feeling a part of the Cosmos, the Mystical.” For three years with the Stepping Stones Project working on youth initiation, I brought voice to the organisation’s ceremonies. I lead and bring voice to grief rituals, integrate aspects of ritual onto the retreats I lead, and was a regular ritual singer at Soulful Sundays in California - a non-denominational community church. I have sung at many weddings.

I spent many years under the leadership of female ceremonialists. Nunutsi Tenipe (Cherokee) led my Vision Quest and was my mentor for 18 months; Melissa Michaels led me in dance rituals and deep healing through improvised movement; Rhiannon taught me a deeply spiritual approach to voice; I have practiced sound healing for years with Shay Nichols and other graduates of the CIIS sound healing program; and I took and later assisted many grief rituals with Sobonfu Some, and have been leading Dagara-style grief rituals since 2016.

So my themes are voice and ritual, in the context of my own Earth-based spirituality.

I hold a first class degree in Political Science and have been studying and playing - and will continue to study and play - music my whole life.

I believe we need ceremony and ritual; for our seasons, our communities, our celebrations, transitions through life stages. We need people to lead and co-lead those ceremonies, and those leaders need our voices - to be at home in our voices, and able to make good use of the inter-connective and transformative power of the voice in a context of ceremony and weaving people, community and nature back together with love.

Vocal Improvisation is good for this.

Here we go.

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28 October

The Dance: Where Contact Improvisation meets CVI

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30 November

A Beginner - Intermediate Intro to CVI Winter 2024