This guy has recently been in the news for exploiting and misrepresenting the Sámi:
http://www.edgemagazine.net/2014/12/winter-solstice-reindeer-goddess/Several people contacted him, leading to a disclaimer at the *end* of the article, but the article full of misrepresentation and self-promotion is still up, and the performance/fake ceremony/pay-to-pray is still scheduled:
http://www.drummingthesoulawake.com/12th-annual-winter-solstice-blessing.html The event also claims to have "Celtic" content, but no indication of what they intend to do for that. Maybe they're going to sing "Danny Boy" while they do their shameon dance. Or something by Enya. Yeah, more likely that, since that's even less traditional. It looks like he's removed mention of the Sámi from the page where you buy tickets, but it doesn't look like the content has been altered in anything but a superficial manner.
He sells ceremony via this site:
http://www.drummingthesoulawake.com/His story is pretty typical. He allegedly met a "Sámi Shaman," was maybe exposed to some brief, maybe ceremonial activity, then decided to go sell his version of it to other white people.
As is also typical, the man he claimed was the "shaman" is dead now, so cannot answer whether he even met this exploiter, let alone whether he taught him anything. Either way, it's no excuse for this kind of exploitation.
Elsewhere on the site, he talks about teaching/selling "medicine"
http://www.drummingthesoulawake.com/house-of-spirit-medicine.htmlThose from the cultures he's vulturing from will recognizing the ceremonies he's selling; he's just taken the fragments he probably learned from books, altered a few details (including safety protocols) and renamed them "urban shamanism."
The "steal what I can, change it a bit and rename it then sell it" attitude is the same we've seen with James Ray and others who've wound up seriously harming, or even killing people. Always thinking they can be "the better Indian..."