“Samaya,” a multimedia Buddhist performance piece, premieres in New York next week

Samaya, a multimedia music and performance piece inspired by the images and energy of Buddhist Tantra, will be performed at the La Sala Experimental Music Space in Brooklyn from June 28 to July 1.

Blending contemporary music with movement, live vocal performances in English and Tibetan, and projected imagery and animation, Samaya is inspired by writer and director Harry Einhorn's visits to Tibetan monasteries in India, where he was struck by how performing arts are integrated into religious practice.

"My goal is to bring this type of embodied and celebratory performance to the wider western culture, and inject some pure dharma into the experimental theater scene in New York City and the West in general; not just for practitioners in a center, but for general audiences as well," Einhorn said.

The music in Samaya was written by Einhorn and Philippe Treuille. This is their third collaboration — their most recent production, Heart Sutra, was performed at venues around New York City, including the Rubin Museum. This time, Einhorn and Treuille are joined by motion-graphics artist Peyton Skyler.

Samaya will be performed three nights only — Thursday, June 28 at 8PM; Friday, June 29 at 8PM; and Sunday, July 1 at 2PM at La Sala, at 53 N 3rd St. in Brooklyn. Tickets are available here; admission is $ 10 for students and artists and $ 12 for general admission. For more information about Samaya, visit the production's website and blog.

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mahakala prayer

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