
Music & Sacred Chant
Practices for Conscious Living
Through Sound, Community & Collective Voice

There are moments when music becomes more than music. Moments when a room full of people singing together creates stillness, connection, healing, and joy.
Moments when sound becomes prayer, presence, and shared experience.
Sacred chant music has been an important part of my personal path since I attended my first Kundalini Yoga class in 1995.
Surprisingly, my favourite part of the class was savasana — resting deeply while spiritual music played softly in the background.
Something about that experience transported me beyond thought and into a profound sense of peace and connection.
That experience stayed with me.


In 2006, I had the opportunity to bring Snatam Kaur to Toronto for a concert for the very first time.
What began as a single event gradually became a long-standing commitment to supporting sacred chant and conscious music within the Toronto community.
Over the years, I’ve had the privilege of helping create concerts and gatherings featuring artists including Snatam Kaur, Deva Premal & Miten, Krishna Das, Ajeet, Simrit, Mirabai Ceiba, Jai-Jagdeesh, Nirinjan Kaur, Mata Mandir Singh, Gurunam Singh, and others.
What I’ve witnessed again and again is the remarkable ability of this music to bring people together.
"People love to chant with other souls"
These gatherings create spaces where strangers become community, where voices merge into something larger than ourselves, and where healing often happens naturally — through breath, rhythm, stillness, and collective voice.
This page exists as a home for those gatherings.
Featured Gathering
By Thy Grace: 25 Years of Mantra
with Snatam Kaur
- North American Tour -
Friday, October 9, 2026
Doors: 6:30 PM
Concert: 7:30 PM

After twenty-five years of sharing mantra music around the world, Snatam Kaur returns to Toronto with By Thy Grace: 25 Years of Mantra — an evening of sacred chant, reflection, celebration, and collective healing through sound.
These concerts begin gently and meditatively, build into joyful communal singing, and conclude in stillness and prayer. They are not simply performances, but shared experiences of presence, devotion, and connection.
As Snatam recently reflected while celebrating 25 years of sharing these mantras, “mantra is not performance. It is practice. It is prayer. It is something alive that we experience together.”
A Living Community
Over the past two decades, sacred chant gatherings in Toronto have grown into a vibrant and heartfelt community experience.
Many people arrive seeking peace, healing, inspiration, or simply a moment to breathe more deeply. What often surprises them is the sense of connection they feel by singing alongside others.
In a world that can feel increasingly fragmented and hurried, these evenings offer an opportunity to slow down, open the heart, and remember the healing power of shared human experience.
Whether you are completely new to mantra music or have been singing these chants for many years, you are warmly welcome.
Receive updates on trainings, classes, music events, and reflections that support conscious living — offered through The Wellness Path.