Boulder
Where sound healing goes to get credentialed.
Boulder is small in population but disproportionate in practitioner seriousness. This is where people go to get trained, not just to attend. The StarHouse — a hillside venue west of town — hosts recurring gong-centric events under names like Sirius Sound Bath and Lunar Eclipse Meditation that attract practitioners from across the Front Range. Pavanjeet runs a prolific series of gong sound baths and lunar-themed meditations across multiple Boulder venues, which makes him one of the most visible practitioners in the metro.
Boulder Sound Therapy takes a clinical framing — complementary medicine rather than wellness-spiritual — which is unusual for this market and worth knowing about if the ceremonial framing doesn't appeal to you. The Sound & Energy Healing Center in nearby Louisville offers donation-based Himalayan singing bowl sessions, making it one of the most accessible entries in the entire Boulder-Denver corridor.
The scene is concentrated in two modes: the retreat-and-training mode (Eldorado Mountain Yoga Ashram, The StarHouse, certification programs) and the drop-in community mode (donation-based sessions, yoga studio add-ons). There's less middle ground than in Denver — fewer mid-length, mid-price, mid-ceremony offerings.
The places in Boulder worth showing up for — vetted, not aggregated.
Mountain venue west of Boulder. Hosts recurring gong sound baths and celestial-themed meditations. Setting is half the experience.
Clinical framing — complementary medicine, not wellness-spiritual. A different entry point if ceremony isn't your thing.
Louisville (8 miles south). Donation-based Himalayan singing bowl sessions. Most accessible price point in the metro.
Every vetted practitioner and session in Boulder — click a name to read more, book directly through their site.
If you want the Boulder experience people talk about, book a StarHouse gong event — the venue itself is worth the trip. If you want something quieter and cheaper, the Sound & Energy Healing Center in Louisville runs donation-based sessions in a suburban living-room setting that's as low-pressure as sound healing gets.