Where to Start with Jared May: A Beginner's Guide
**Start Here: Right Here Now (2014)**
Begin with Right Here Now, Jared May's 2014 album. It's the clearest distillation of his spiritual music practice—13 tracks that function both as meditation aids and as an introduction to sound healing principles without requiring any prior knowledge. The album title signals May's central teaching: presence as the foundation of spiritual practice. Unlike his later work, which assumes some familiarity with satsang and devotional music traditions, Right Here Now meets you exactly where you are. Play it while doing nothing else. The vibrational healing approach works through repetition and surrender, not analysis.
After That: These Three, In Order
Move to Teach, Inspire, Be Real (2016). This eleven-track album shows May's evolution as a teacher, not just a musician. The title reveals his philosophy: spiritual work stripped of performance and pretense. You'll notice more complexity in the arrangements and more explicit guidance in the vocal delivery. This bridges the gap between pure sound healing and instructional content.
Then try Stories from Highway 36 (2013), the six-track single that predates Right Here Now. It's more narrative, more personal, more rooted in American landscape and experience than his other work. Understanding where May came from—geographically and spiritually—clarifies where his practice is going.
Finally, explore Jila Ji (2024), his most recent album. By now you'll recognize his sonic signature and can appreciate how ten years of teaching has refined his approach. This is where devotion becomes most explicit. If Right Here Now is an introduction and Teach, Inspire, Be Real is an invitation, Jila Ji is full immersion.
What to Expect on First Encounter
Don't expect songs in the conventional sense. May works in extended sound spaces, often built around drone, repetition, and minimal melodic variation. The first listen may feel uneventful—that's intentional. This music resists grabbing your attention; it asks you to offer attention freely. Expect to feel restless, then bored, then (if you stay with it) something that resembles peace but isn't quite that either. It's more like recognition.
The vocals, when present, often function as additional instruments rather than meaning-delivery systems. You're not meant to extract wisdom from lyrics. The wisdom is in the listening itself.
Common Misunderstandings
Beginners often treat this as background music for productivity or sleep. That's not wrong, but it misses the point. May's work is foreground music that asks you to become background—to let your self-preoccupation recede while sound takes center stage.
Others approach it as entertainment and find it lacking. This isn't performance art. It's participatory practice disguised as passive listening. You're not the audience; you're the instrument being tuned.
Some expect explicit instruction or guided meditation. May teaches through vibration and space, not through telling you what to do. If you need steps, his method is: listen, notice, allow, repeat.
When This Work Lands Hardest
This music finds people during transitions: between relationships, careers, identities. When the old story stops working but the new one hasn't started yet. When you're tired of seeking but can't stop seeking. When silence feels threatening but noise feels intolerable.
It also lands during daily exhaustion—not dramatic crisis, just the accumulated weight of being a person who has to keep being a person. May's work offers permission to stop trying so hard.
One-Week Starter Plan
Days 1-3: Listen to Right Here Now once daily, same time each day. Twenty minutes minimum. Headphones. Sit still or move slowly. No multitasking.
Day 4: Rest. Notice if you miss it.
Day 5: Listen to Teach, Inspire, Be Real all the way through. Journal afterward if that's natural. Don't force insight.
Day 6: Return to your favorite track from Right Here Now. Loop it for as long as feels right.
Day 7: Listen to any May album while doing something simple with your hands—washing dishes, folding clothes, walking. Notice how the music changes the activity, or doesn't.
After seven days, you'll know if this practice serves you. The music itself will tell you whether to continue.
