Colin Power

Colin Power

Musician, traveller, and systems architect — redefining the future of science, technology, and AI.

About

Born in the UK, I’ve spent most of my life as a traveling musician, living in India, Nepal, and Southeast Asia while chasing the universe’s hidden harmonics. Between the thrum of sitars and the hush of monsoon nights, I sketched thousands of drawings, meditated on geometry, and started piecing together a new theory that re‑imagines atoms, dimensions and even the forgotten Aether. As a natural educator and systems thinker, I now weave geometry, art and whole‑systems design into AI and tech, hoping to build a world that hums with harmony, coherence, and unlocked human potential.

About

Music

I grew up listening to the hiss of tape decks and the click of a mic, which later turned into a full‑time obsession with sound. In Bristol I ran my own studio, coaxing raw riffs from bands like Baby Head Canteena into polished tracks. After that, I stepped into the spotlight as the lead singer of Mofunk, a 12‑piece Latin‑funk outfit that turned festival stages—Glastonbury’s Jazz Stage included—into high‑energy playgrounds. When I hit the road across India and Southeast Asia, my guitar became a rhythmic metronome and my voice a soulful storyteller, feeding the spark that birthed Infinite Grooves on a Goa beach. Now, under DJ Colman, I spin ecstatic dance journeys that let the world’s rhythms flow through me.

Colin Power - Infinite Grooves - Catch the Light - Live at Art Resort

Colin Power - Infinite Grooves - Catch the Light - Live at Art Resort

Author

When I first traced the spiral of a seashell, I felt the universe whisper in circles. In Geometric Universe, I stitch that whisper into a new theory, turning the Flower of Life into a living conversation between math and the cosmos. Through stories, sketches, and a splash of fresh insight, I invite you to read geometry not as symbols, but as a portal that bends space, time, and consciousness into something wonderfully familiar.

Author

Education

When I first dropped into a UK classroom, the music room was a playground for disabled kids and a lab for digital sounds. I learned that rhythm can be a bridge to empowerment. From there, I chased the idea that learning itself can be a song: faster beats, richer harmonies, deeper chords. Alongside Dr. Heike Bk, we mapped these ideas onto compass geometry, turning abstract math into living, breathing patterns that echo in every mind we touch.

Education