RELEASE: An Immersive Wellness Experience w/ Hotel Neon & The Om Collective
Event Details
- Date
- December 2, 2022
- Time
- 6:30 pm
Description
Let go of the stress and RELEASE with this unforgettable evening of wellness at The Queen. Our journey starts in the beautiful Olympia Room where we’ll settle in for a short meditation and light seated movement before finding our way to our resting position for a 40-min crystal and Tibetan singing bowl sound bath. The Om Collective’s unique approach to sound healing incorporates multiple instruments, elements and techniques that assist in your (nearly instantaneous) escape from the stress of day to day, creating a fully immersive experience.
After we return to our awareness, we’ll pack up and head to The Crown Room to finish the evening with an incredible lineup of atmospheric, ambient music (and lights) designed to get lost in from Slow Meadow, Lowercase Noises and the evening’s headliner Hotel Neon, offering yet another fully immersive audio/visual experience!
You’ve probably never experienced an evening quite like this, but we know once you do, you’ll be craving more.
All Hotel Neon ticket purchasers are invited to join in the full RELEASE experience, we just ask that you please RSVP in addition to your ticket purchase.
https://www.ticketmaster.com/hotel…/event/02005CD79348203F
START: 6:30PM
Presented by Ascend Allies and The Om Collective in partnership with The Queen.
HOTEL NEON – 8PM w/ opening performances by Slow Meadow & Lowercase Noises
Hotel Neon is the Philadelphia-based trio of Michael Tasselmyer, Andrew Tasselmyer, and Steven Kemner. Together they create music to get lost in: cavernous, reverberating guitars and synthesizers, matched with visual projections in an immersive audio/visual experience.
Since forming in early 2013, the group has released 9 full-length albums and several EPs. Hotel Neon has toured and collaborated with the likes of Benoit Pîoulard, The Sight Below, Simon Scott, and Marcus Fischer, filling everything from living rooms to cathedrals with their densely layered walls of sound.