

KITA RAM

LIVING FREQUENCY
Music as Ceremony.
Sound as Native Intelligence in Motion.
Music
Music is the most direct way I transmit my work.
When I play, I’m not performing.
I’m opening a field where sound, silence, and breath reawaken what your body has never forgotten.
These transmissions are not entertainment—they’re intelligence in motion.
They cut through the mind, reorganize the field, and bring you back into coherence with yourself.
At the center of all my offerings is this:
a living exchange between vibration and awareness,
where Native Intelligence rises
and presence becomes undeniable.
Kita:
Student of Living Ceremony
I do not teach from the mind.
I transmit it from presence, breath, frequency, and lived experience.
Kita is a ceremonial musician and social architect whose work bridges sound, presence and the mechanics of natural law. His concerts and sound journeys are not entertainment, they are fields of attunement, where improvised songs, mantras and breath open people into a deeper experience of themselves.
Drawing on decades of exploration with indigenous lineages, Human Design, Gene Keys and embodiment practices, Kita uses music as the frontline of his transmission. Each set is created in the moment, tuned to the people and the place, guiding audiences from the mind into a felt sense of their own native intelligence.

Music That Plays You
For years I tried to play music the way I thought it should sound, copying songs I loved, emulating the artists and ceremonial styles that moved me. It taught me technique, but something stayed constrained.
Everything changed when I stopped trying to play music and allowed music to play me.
Now, each sound arises from listening: to the land, to the people in the room, to the subtle intelligence moving through the body. These transmissions bypass the mind and speak directly to the cells, reorganizing the field into natural coherence.
This is the same intelligence we explore through Human Design and Gene Keys, the mechanics of how life wants to move through you. Music opens the field; the maps help you recognize and live what you feel.




















