The Fourth Floor

Moran Wiesel & Tim Devereaux

Moran and Tim share a warm embrace of sound with the luscious tones of yidaki (didgeridoo), harp and flute. They offer meditative sound journeys around nipaluna/Hobart. 

 

Moran Wiesel is a musician, facilitator, ecotherapist and wordsmith. Moran creates intentional space to enter into collective healing and connection, allowing whatever to be, to be. Their earth-evoked music takes you on a meditative journey deep into your being, emerging from the rich and ethereal resonances of the harp and flute.

 

As an ecotherapist and facilitator offers weekend and day long forest immersion workshops through Earth Enspiralled and the Deep Ecology and Active Hope, Network Tasmania. Previously, they co-founded EarthWalks: Walking Connections in Country, and partnered with Kickstart Arts to co-facilitate the workshop series Embodied Earth, Embodied Arts: Work that Reconnects. They are currently curating an innovative new program Listening with the Body: A Harp Journey – a collaboration with world-renowned harpist Alice Giles AM. 

 

Moran offers earth-inspired and outdoor therapeutic sound-baths, and has toured with Musica Viva in Schools’ “Adventures in Antarctica”, sharing the joy of the harp to primary schools around so-called Australia.

 

Moran believes in the power of words and ideas in entangling our earth relationships. They are a 2021 Tasmanian finalist in the Australian Poetry Slam, and their poems arise from an intimate immersion with the world’s soul. They are a geographer, writer, and editor of Friends of the Earth’s national magazine, Chain Reaction. Moran continues to learn from different lineages of earth-based connection. 

 

Tim Devereux is a Tasmanian-born didgeridoo player. He is known in some of Hobart’s yoga studios and venues with Kirtan (sacred music), multi-faith events, personal development workshops, meditation journeys, conscious dance, and sound baths. Spending time with traditional elders in the Northern Territory has given Tim an appreciation of the sacredness of the yidaki, or didgeridoo. Tim loves sharing his deep relationship with the land and yidaki that connects us with the Earth, ourselves, and something mystical that is bigger than ourselves.

loading...