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Ad·ver·sary: We Demand Better

  • Posted on May 19, 2012 at 10:31 am

From I Die You Die:

We were contacted a few days before leaving for Kinetik by Jairus Khan from Ad·ver·sary. He told us that he was planning a visual presentation for his set at the festival which he anticipated would attract a lot of attention, and wanted to speak to us about it. The presentation related to themes and imagery in the work of two other artists on the opening night Kinetik bill, specifically Combichrist and Nachtmahr. The presentation, which can be viewed here, or at the bottom of this post, openly critiques what Jairus perceives as the use of misogynist and racist tropes in those band’s music and publicity materials. We spoke to Jairus after seeing an early version of the video.

Full Story: Interview with Jairus Khan from Ad·ver·sary

See also:

Straight White Male: The Lowest Difficulty Setting There Is

From http://technoccult.net/archives/2012/05/19/ad%C2%B7ver%C2%B7sary-we-demand-better/

Video: Psychetect Live at Rotture April 29, 2012

  • Posted on May 11, 2012 at 6:00 am

Sound: Psychetect
Video: Gadgetto
Art: Ian MacEwan

Last month I performed at Rotture in Portland, OR opening for The Steven Lasombras, along with Cult of Zir and Meta-Pinnacle. I had some technical difficulties in the beginning, so you might want to jump forward to about 3:00 minutes in. It’s hard to tell from the video, but what I’m doing is bowing a broken drum cymbal with a cello bow. I have a contact mic on the cymbal, and the signal is being routed into Ableton Live, where its’ be processed through multiple effects. I have some other noise sources running in Ableton as well.

You can download my most recent single here and my album here.

See also:

My interview with The Steven Lasombras

My interview with Cult of Zir and Ogo Eion

Cult of Zir Live at X-Day

From http://technoccult.net/archives/2012/05/11/video-psychetect-live-at-rotture-april-29-2012/

Posters Explaining How Classic 808 Drum Sequences Were Programmed

  • Posted on March 28, 2012 at 2:58 pm

Planet Rock 808 programming poster

A series of informative posters detailing how some of the most notable drum sequences were programmed using the Roland TR-808 Drum Machine. Each sequence has been analyzed and represented as to allow users to re-programme each sequence, key for key.

If you would like an A3 print please send a mail to shop@robricketts.co.uk and I will email you as soon as some become available.

Rob Bricketts: Program Your 808

(via Iso50 via f mass)

From http://technoccult.net/archives/2012/03/28/808-programming-posters/

Cyberculture History: Electronic Music Pioneer/Soviet Spy Leon Theremin

  • Posted on March 13, 2012 at 6:43 pm

leon theremin

Theremin saw little of the $100,000 he was paid, Glinsky says, which most likely went straight into Soviet coffers. But he stayed in the US for a while working on other projects, and engaging in industrial espionage.

“His very reason for being sent over was his espionage mission,” says Glinsky. Demonstrating the theremin instrument was just a distraction, a Trojan Horse, as it were.

“He had special access to firms like RCA, GE, Westinghouse, aviation companies and so on, and shared his latest technical know how with representatives from these companies to get them to open up to him about their latest discoveries. [...]

Later that year he returned suddenly to the Soviet Union, leaving his wife behind. Some people suggested he’d been kidnapped by Soviet officials, but Glinsky says a combination of debt and homesickness led to Theremin returning voluntarily.

He returned to a Soviet Union in the grip of Stalin’s purges. He was arrested and falsely accused of being a counter-revolutionary, for which he received an eight year sentence in 1939.

BBC: Leon Theremin: The man and the music machine

From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/heq_oZc7k3w/

New Psychetect Single: Rosin3

  • Posted on January 31, 2012 at 10:47 am

This was recorded by playing a broken to shit cymbal with a cello bow and processing the output from a contact microphone. The signal was split into three bands, each band with its own effects chain. This produced a layered, full spectrum piece from a single input.

Special thanks to Trevor Blake and Justin Landers.

You can download it from SoundCloud or BandCamp.

From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/i8q6be5gdWg/

Justin Boland Interviewed by Rev. R4D4

  • Posted on December 29, 2011 at 11:34 am

Hump Jones Interview by Rev.R4D4

Justin Boland, aka Hump Jones and about a bazillion other aliases, was recently interviewed by Rev. R4D4 for The Thermonuclear Bar on KZSU Stanford. You might know Justin from his sites Brainsturbator and Skilluminati, his contributions here at Technoccult or from his various hip hop projects on World Around Records.

From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/Vv9anACvYfU/

Coil Retrospective

  • Posted on November 28, 2011 at 6:01 pm

coil Coil Retrospective

The Quietus ran a retrospective on Coil‘s career for the one year anniversary of Peter “Sleazy” Christopherson’s death:

Through a potent trinity of chemically-altered states, occult arcana and technological transmutation, Coil was, perhaps, the strangest and occasionally the most frightening of bands. While their twenty year history saw much in the way of personal turmoil and tragedies as they moved through the extreme hedonism and post-AIDS fallout of London’s gay clubland to a more hermetic but no less intoxicated existence on England’s South West coast, John Balance (née Geff Rushton) and Peter ‘Sleazy’ Christopherson remained true to their original intentions to explore, as the cover of their debut release puts it: “How sound can affect the physical and mental state of the serious listener”. Such explorations produced a unique and incomparable body of work that not only charts a most unconventional route through emergent musical technologies, but also signposts a hellishly complex set of references to occult theories and deviant figures throughout history (from Aleister Crowley to William S Burroughs) along the way. But the high physical and mental cost of their creative processes often lead to long gaps in their output. Indeed, the most elusive album in their back catalogue eluded the band themselves: Backwards, originally intended as a follow-up to 1991’s Love’s Secret Domain, was mentioned in the band’s semi-regular updates describing sessions with mainstream players such as Tim Simenon and Trent Reznor, yet the album was never released (although some of the recordings were later re-arranged posthumously for The Ape of Naples and its companion piece, The New Backwards).

The Quietus: Serious Listeners: The Strange And Frightening World Of Coil

From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/geBXn036ixY/

Fixing A Scene: Examine Your Assumptions

  • Posted on November 22, 2011 at 7:13 pm

This is about underground hip hop, but much of it could apply to almost any scene:

Bars are, for the most part, terrible places to be. Obnoxiously crowded and stupid expensive. The sound system has never been set up right and it’s always too loud. So why do artists keep presenting their blood and guts in these fast food environments? I’ve played shows in beauty salons, backyards and basements and had a great time doing it—there’s not a “tour circuit” for this yet, but there will be soon.

How many shows can you play for a room full of dudes before it’s time to kill yourself in a hotel room? Why don’t more women come to rap shows? That one is easy: because they don’t want to be there. They don’t enjoy themselves, they don’t feel safe and they don’t have fun.

We need more than “Alternative Hip Hop,” and definitely more than another coffee shop for spoken word navel-gazing. We need an alternate Universe, a great & secret show, a Truth & Beauty circuit full of fresh fruit, fine foods and exotic tea from fictional continents. We need daytime shows, midnight gigs on anonymous rooftops, costume concerts and a nationwide revival of Acid Tests from coast to burning coast. We need all four alleged “Elements of Hip Hop” in the same building again—most of all, we need parties worth going to, parties worth putting down your fucking phones for and actually living.

Hump Jones: Fixing Underground Hip Hop

From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/OU-w8n14OEU/

Mutant Music Blog: Intonarumoron

  • Posted on November 2, 2011 at 12:34 pm

Intonarumoron is a music blog founded by Trevor Blake with contributions from Walter Alter, Waldo Ham, SKot Kirkwood, Jack Winslow and myself.

Here are a couple videos I’ve embedded there recently:

Be sure to wait through/skip past the intro on this one:

From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/Ka0_usDVlos/

littlegothicgirl: I find this a sensitive issue because I DO…

  • Posted on September 24, 2011 at 12:16 pm


littlegothicgirl:

I find this a sensitive issue because I DO say that goths should have SOME interest in the fashion, SOME interest in the music and SOME interest in the lifestyle. The problem with that is, not everyone is into the music. I am a goth and I do like goth music, but it isn’t my favorite nor it is what I always listen to.

From http://morbidfashion.tumblr.com/post/10605539773

The Interactive Electronic Sculptures of Stanley Lunetta

  • Posted on September 9, 2011 at 4:02 pm

more The Interactive Electronic Sculptures of Stanley Lunetta

In the 1960s, Stanley Lunetta created a number of interactive scultures using electronic audio generators. Some of them were still running as of 2008. Some responded to elements such as heat and light to change the sounds, others had more explicit human interactive elements.

You can find more information at Lunetta’s site, including the Moosack Machines section.

(Thanks Zir)

From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/5WqDKl5nyJA/

Wired Interviews Vegan Black Metal Chef

  • Posted on September 4, 2011 at 11:44 am

Wired did an interview with the famous Vegan Black Metal Chef. I posted his first video here:

Wired.com: Are you also in a band?

Vegan Black Metal Chef: Yes, my main project is called Forever Dawn. You can hear some old, shit recordings on the MySpace.

I would describe it as industrial symphonic black metal. I play all of the instruments in this and have a live keyboardist and bassist to play shows. I like the songs a lot, but the recordings were done when I had no idea what I was doing.

I am currently recording a new album for this project and putting together a new stage show. I also play keys in an eclectic metal band called Fields of Glass. I was not on the first album, though.

Wired.com: Do you perform in makeup and outfits similar to what you wear as Vegan Black Metal Chef?

Vegan Black Metal Chef: Yes, that is my Fields of Glass band attire.

Wired: Vegan Black Metal Chef Is Still Cooking With Hellfire

Here’s the most recent two episodes, one on quick and easy meals and the other on vegan sushi:

From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/UKR8_jHvUPY/

Haven’t heard this song in for-fucking-ever! We used to…

  • Posted on August 30, 2011 at 7:28 pm


Haven’t heard this song in for-fucking-ever! We used to blast this in my high school photography class (and “Work It” by Missy Elliot). Loved that class. 

From http://morbidfashion.tumblr.com/post/9609888268

Cult of Zir Live at X-Day 2011

  • Posted on August 9, 2011 at 2:18 pm

Cult of Zir live at Wisteria Campground in Pomeroy, OH July 4, 2011. Video taken by reverend SCUM!

There’s a new Cult of Zir album up at Bandcamp.

My interviews with Cult of Zir can be found here and here.

From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/x78j3SOF9Tw/

Are We On the Verge of the Next Psychedelic Explosion?

  • Posted on August 3, 2011 at 8:29 pm

BC dmt spirit molecule 0 Are We On the Verge of the Next Psychedelic Explosion?
The cover of DMT: The Spirit Molecule

I’m reading Grant Morrison’s Supergods right now, and I’ll probably have more to say on it in the future. But I’ve just passed a part in the book where he talks about the Sekhmet Hypothesis, and wanted to get some thoughts down right now.

The gist of the Sekhmet Hypothesis, as explained by Morrison, is that every 11 years culture shifts as sunspot activity waxes and wains. At one pole is “hippie” culture characterized by longer pop songs, longer hair baggy clothes, psychedelics and an emphasis on peace and love. At the other pole is punk culture, which is characterized by shorter pop songs, short hair, tight clothes, stimulants and an emphasis on anger and rebellion.

Update: Iain Spence, the originator of the Sekhmet Hypothesis and author of a book on the subject left a long comment that’s worth reading. It appears, first of all, that Morrison’s punk/hippie description of the hypothesis is much oversimplified (or perhaps I misunderstood his interpretation of it, this is like a game of telephone – if you want the real scoop on the hypothesis, go to the source). Second, Spence has updated the hypothesis having admitted that he was wrong about the solar cycle aspect of it, among other things.

So it would go:

  • 1966: LSD, psychedelic rock, hippies, happenings, peace and love.
  • 1977: Punk, new wave, shaved heads, cocaine, rock shows, nihilism.
  • 1988: Rave, long electronic dance tracks, shoegaze, Brit pop, MDMA, “Peace, Love, Unity, Respect.”
  • 1999: The Matrix, nu-metal, emo, screamo, cutting going mainstream, Red Bull, Starbucks, cocaine and meth making a come back, 9/11, Law & Order.
  • 2010: Avatar, Alice in Wonderland and the “dandyishness” of the vampires of Twilight and True Blood (not sure I swallow that last part).

I could add the surge of mind fuck movies in the 90s, and their come back in the 10s, but as some readers pointed out in my earlier post on the subject, those types of movies didn’t entirely die out in the 00s. Also:

  • The 60s were also marked by outrage and protest, some of quite violent. A lot of hippies and mods wore tight clothes.
  • The late 70s and early 80s also had disco (and later house), psychedelic post-punk, butt rock, epic metal etc.
  • The 90s had the Rodney King riots, gangsta rap, Nine Inch Nails, Marilyn Manson, plenty of metal, the militia movement, hyperviolent video games and movies.
  • Rave didn’t completely die out in the 90s, instead it turned into teknival with a strong emphasis on the hippie-ish psytrance wing. Burning Man grew larger than ever. Not to mention Massively multiplayer online role playing games and Second Life. Tool put Alex Grey’s art on their album cover and his career exploded. Daniel Pinchbeck sold a bazillion books. And what about the popularity of bands like Radiohead, Coldplay and Muse? A bit more underground, but what to make of doom metal, dubstep and BPitchControl, or the hipster cred of Arthur Magazine?

It’s really hard for me to accept that “punk” is the opposite of “hippie.” The 60s counterculture wasn’t always peaceful and non-violent, and the punks, with their love of Jamaican music, antiwar songs and their vegan and vegetarianism were a lot more hippie-ish than many gave them credit for.

And yet…

It’s hard, given the number of exceptions to the formula, to swallow the idea that there’s a real, society-wide pull between punk and hippie every 11 years. Others have critiqued historicity before, and I don’t need to go there.

But there may be pattern of rising and falling tides of psychedelia, perhaps accompanied by a sense of optimism and energy that eventually dissipates. The 60s had acid, the 90s had ecstasy. And I’m hearing that DMT is becoming a common strong street drugs these days, and the new cool thing to listen to is apparently the sound of a modem slowed way down. We could be in for some weird times indeed.

From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/MoqpcEkl-BI/

Whatever Happened to Prussian Blue?

  • Posted on July 17, 2011 at 3:38 pm

prussian blue 300x153 Whatever Happened to Prussian Blue?

Prussian Blue was a pop duo consisting of 13 year old twins Lamb and Lynx Gaede. Their lyrics contained racist and white nationalist themes, which attracted international media attention. I feel bad about piling on to the media spectacle, but this this an interesting story. I always felt bad for these two, who were clearly being used by adults to push certain messages. I’m glad they’re moving on with their lives.

Now 19, they both still speak in a disarmingly girlish singsong. Their message, however, was not always so sweet. In 2006, the sisters, who formed the band at the suggestion of White Nationalist leader William Pierce, drew international notoriety with songs like “Hate for Hate: Lamb Near the Lane,” a dreamy folksong cowritten by Lamb and the late David Lane, a member of the violent terrorist splinter cell The Order, who was then serving 190 years in prison for his involvement in the murder of Jewish talk show host Alan Berg in 1984 (he and Lamb were pen pals).

Prussian Blue was never a presence on the pop charts and only played small venues. But for a brief time in the mid-2000s, Lamb and Lynx were seemingly everywhere — “the new face of hate,” as one news program put it. They appeared on “Primetime Live” and in a number of other media oulets, including GQ (where I profiled them in 2006).

The Daily: Former Nazi teeny boppers are singing a new tune

Here’s Gell’s above mentioned 2006 profile of the sisters for GQ.

From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/tMhyJ8ASjYM/

Happy X-Day: My First Album is Now Free

  • Posted on July 5, 2011 at 11:31 am

wasteland Happy X Day: My First Album is Now Free

DOWNLOAD NOW

<a href="http://psychetect.bandcamp.com/album/return-to-the-wasteland">Awakening by Psychetect</a>

You can now download Return to the Wasteland for free, or just pay whatever you want. Before there was a $5 minimum.

I was going to release a new track today for X-Day, but I’m not happy with the material. I was also planning on making Wasteland free when the next Psychetect album is released – but that’s still at least a couple months away. So, to support your slack, I decided give away Wasteland a little early.

Of course, X-Day is all about profit, so feel free to pay money for it. You can also buy the album from iTunes, Amazon.com and a bunch of other places.

Cover art by Ian McEwan, color by Danny Chaoflux
Sound produced and mastered by Klint Finley

From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/NBL8laEFUPU/

How Tibetan Singing Bowls Work

  • Posted on July 1, 2011 at 6:40 pm

singing bowl How Tibetan Singing Bowls Work

Ceremonial Tibetan “singing bowls” are beginning to give up their secrets.

The water-filled bowls, when rubbed with a leather-wrapped mallet, exhibit a lively dance of water droplets as they emit a haunting sound.

Now slow-motion video has unveiled just what occurs in the bowls; droplets can actually bounce on the water’s surface.

A report in the journal Nonlinearity mathematically analyses the effect and could shed light on other fluid processes, such as fuel injection.

BBC: Tibetan singing bowls give up their chaotic secrets

(via Edward Borasky)

From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/n-VWqDAUcPU/

Mondo Vanilli, the Art Prank Band with R.U. Sirius and Others, Releases Album Online

  • Posted on May 16, 2011 at 11:49 am

Before the Gorillaz and Deathklok, there was Mondo Vanilli (and before Mondo Vanilli, there was Silicon Teens, but that’s another story). Now the band, consisting of Scrappi DuChamp, R.U. Sirius and Simone Third Arm has released its 1993 album for free online.

David Pescovitz writes at Boing Boing:

In 1993, cyberculture prankster/provocateur/publisher RU Sirius, founder of Mondo 2000 magazine, composer Scrappi DuChamp, and performance artist Simone Third Arm, recorded an album for Trent Reznor’s record label. They had met at Reznor’s Los Angeles rental home, the house where the Manson Family killed Sharon Tate and others. Tim Leary had brought RU along to a housewarming party there and RU gave Reznor a demo tape of his band, called Mondo Vanilli. Reznor quickly signed the band to his then-nascent Nothing Records. Unfortunately, this great work of curious and quirky synth-industrial-pop, titled “IOU Babe,” never made it to the record stores. Almost two decades later, Mondo Vanilli has officially released “IOU Babe” for free online. A CD with bonus material is coming shortly.

Some of this was streaming on Revolting.com in the 90s, and somewhere along the lines I downloaded a couple MP3s of the band’s music (I don’t recall where from), but I think this is the first time the full album has been made available.

From http://technoccult.net/archives/2011/05/16/mondo-vanilli-the-art-prank-band-with-r-u-sirius-and-others-releases-album-online/

New BBC Short Documentary on The Shaggs

  • Posted on May 13, 2011 at 6:49 pm

Mike Skrtic turned me on The Shaggs just last weekend – and today I happened to find this new BBC short documentary on them. It’s only 11:43 seconds, and well worth watching.

For more background, here’s Susan Orlean’s piece on the band from The New Yorker.

From http://technoccult.net/archives/2011/05/14/new-bbc-short-documentary-on-the-shaggs/

Video: Vegan Black Metal Chef

  • Posted on May 12, 2011 at 11:57 am

(Thanks Ian!)

From http://technoccult.net/archives/2011/05/12/video-vegan-black-metal-chef/

Trailer for Bassweight, a Documentary About Dubstep

  • Posted on May 11, 2011 at 12:28 pm

Bassweight from The SRK on Vimeo.

Bassweight

There was also this short documentary on dubstep, and several more on YouTube.

From http://technoccult.net/archives/2011/05/11/trailer-for-bassweight-a-documentary-about-dubstep/

Otomata – Flash-based Cellular Automata Music Sequencer

  • Posted on April 17, 2011 at 12:24 pm

Otomata

From http://technoccult.net/archives/2011/04/17/otomata-flash-based-cellular-automata-music-sequencer/

Video: 1991 Hard Copy Report on Suspected Nine Inch Nails Snuff Film

  • Posted on April 5, 2011 at 8:04 pm

NIN “Down In It” report on “Hard Copy,” March 3rd 1991 from Nine Inch Nails on Vimeo.

(Thanks Justin)

I read about this incident in the NIN FAQ years ago, but I’d never seen this gem.

From http://technoccult.net/archives/2011/04/06/video-1991-hard-copy-report-on-suspected-nine-inch-nails-snuff-film/

A Brain–Computer Interface Allows Paralyzed Patients to Play Music with Brainpower Alone

  • Posted on March 21, 2011 at 11:38 am

brain computer interface A Brain–Computer Interface Allows Paralyzed Patients to Play Music with Brainpower Alone

A pianist plays a series of notes, and the woman echoes them on a computerized music system. The woman then goes on to play a simple improvised melody over a looped backing track. It doesn’t sound like much of a musical challenge — except that the woman is paralysed after a stroke, and can make only eye, facial and slight head movements. She is making the music purely by thinking.

This is a trial of a computer-music system that interacts directly with the user’s brain, by picking up the tiny electrical impulses of neurons. The device, developed by composer and computer-music specialist Eduardo Miranda of the University of Plymouth, UK, working with computer scientists at the University of Essex, should eventually help people with severe physical disabilities, caused by brain or spinal-cord injuries, for example, to make music for recreational or therapeutic purposes. The findings are published online in the journal Music and Medicine.

Nature News: Music is all in the mind

(via Richard Yonck)

See also: Eyewriter, an inexpensive way for people to draw using only their eyes.

From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/JUccmkw7faE/

Damon Albarn Is Going Ahead with the John Dee Opera Without Alan Moore

  • Posted on March 18, 2011 at 11:53 am

damon albarn Damon Albarn Is Going Ahead with the John Dee Opera Without Alan Moore

Damon Albarn has written and will star in a stage show about 16th Century alchemist, astrologer and spy John Dee.

A musical work based on Elizabeth I’s medical and scientific adviser, Doctor Dee will have its premiere in July at the Manchester International Festival.

It will then be staged at the home of the English National Opera as part of London’s Cultural Olympiad programme.

BBC: Damon Albarn to star in new stage show

(via John Reppion)

Previously: Alan Moore explains why he canceled his involvement in the opera.

From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/SyIM9PdqKcY/

Spoek Mathambo Covers Joy Division’s “She’s Lost Control” (Video by Pieter Hugo & Michael Cleary)

  • Posted on March 9, 2011 at 3:36 pm

Spoek Mathambo’s official site.

Pieter Hugo’s official site (He’s best known for his photographs of the hyena handlers in the streets of Abuja)

Michael Cleary’s official site

(via Chris)

From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/HmSM_epbnfY/

Spoek Mathambo – “War on Words”

  • Posted on March 9, 2011 at 12:43 pm

Spoek Mathambo’s official site.

From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/ili7ruv8JgE/

Cyberculture History: Did Gary Numan Predict Facebook?

  • Posted on February 17, 2011 at 2:58 pm

 Cyberculture History: Did Gary Numan Predict Facebook?

With Numan’s first album, Tubeway Army (‘78), it was already clear that Numan’s songwriting was concerned with the relationship between man and machine and what we would now call the post-human condition. It includes lyrics like “Me I’ve just died / but some machine keeps on humming / I’m just an extra piece of dead meat to keep running,” from the track “Life Machine.” Anyone listening to a lot of Gary Numan will notice that the word “me” figures heavily in his lyrics. The song “My Love is a Liquid” from the same album features the lines “can’t meet you face-to-face / There are no corners to hide in my room / No doors, no windows, no fire place.” In our times, this is a blatant comment on the way the internet mediates social relations.

Numan’s following album, Replicas (‘79), couldn’t be more drenched with prophetic visions of the internet and Facebook. The opening lines of “Me! I Disconnect from You” – in itself a charged title – are metaphors for botched Facebook relationships: “The alarm rang for days / you could tell from the conversations / I was waiting by the screen / I couldn’t recognize my photograph / Me, I disconnect from you” – the line about the screen doesn’t make a lot of sense in the context of the late ’70s, unless Numan was specifically talking about an imagined form of communication. It practically goes without saying that “disconnecting” from someone entails ending a Facebook relationship or, even worse, de-friending someone. It doesn’t even require analysis to see why the following track, “Are ‘Friends’ Electric?” is rich with Facebook meaning. The track “You Are in My Vision” anticipates critiques of television by theorists like Marshall Mcluhan, Jean Baudrillard, and though not a theorist, naturally Cronenberg in Scanners and Videodrome, with its lines “Fade to screens of violence / Like a TV screen but silent / Where the victims are all paid by the hour.”

Thought Catalog: Did Gary Numan Predict Facebook?

Someone in the comments points out that some of this isn’t as enigmatic as it seems:

most of his lyrical elements, especially in Replicas, were references to a dystopian science fiction novel he was writing but never finished. the ‘friends’ he talks are identical robots that could be hired and used for any purpose, and “the life machine” is about a comotose individual being sustained by a machine. it’s all quite directly inspired by numan’s favorite writers, and as such one could more perhaps more aptly say that william s. burroughs or phillip k. dick “predicted the future”. still interesting though. numan’s contributions to modern music and popular culture are woefully under-appreciated.

To be clear, Numan has distanced himself from his early sci-fi lyrics. He told Electronic Musician:

Science Fiction has no influence on the music, especially lyrically, and especially now. To be honest I only ever wrote a handful of songs that were remotely connected to Science Fiction and they were all nearly 20 years ago. The ‘Replicas’ album, or bits of it, one or two things on ‘The Pleasure Principle’ and one or two things on ‘Telekon’. I would say about 15 songs, maybe 20, out of a total of well over 300 to date have anything to do with Sci Fi. I think because I became successful with electronic music, a newish thing 20 years ago, and a song called ‘Are Friends Electric’ (it was that song that launched me in the UK anyway) I was given a Sci Fi label that stuck long after I’d moved on to other things.

For the curious, via Song Meanings, here’s a bit from William S. Burroughs’s story “Astronaut’s Return” that is clearly referenced in “Down in the Park”:

Ugly snarl behind the white lies and excuses. [...]
DEATH DEATH DEATH

So many you can’t remember
The boy who used to whistle?
Car accident or was it the war?
Which war?

The boy’s room is quite empty now. Do you begin to see there is no face there in the tarnished mirror?

From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/WDlQjR-n50A/

Study: Yes, Music Does Get You High

  • Posted on January 19, 2011 at 12:19 pm

What music listeners have known for centuries has been vindicated by science: music gets you high. Specifically, when we listen to music we like, our brains release dopamine. Dopamine is released even when anticipating listening to a song.

You can find the study here.

Flavorwire has a round-up of ten songs used in the study.

(via Socialphysicist)

I wonder if this might explain a bit about how binaurel beats actual work?

From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/mmw78Izs-nk/

Video: Captain Beefheart Documentary

  • Posted on December 22, 2010 at 2:11 pm

(via Dangerous Minds)

From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/pHXG-D0OzZI/

RIP Peter “Sleazy” Christopherson

  • Posted on December 2, 2010 at 1:33 am

Peter "Sleazy" Christopherson

Peter “Sleazey” Christopherson – of Throbbing Gristle, Coil and Soi Song, -died on November 24th:

The sad news has reached us that Peter ‘Sleazy’ Christopherson has died in his sleep last night at the age of 55. Chris Carter twittered “Our dearest beautiful Sleazy left this mortal coil as he slept in peace last night. Words cannot express our grief.” and the TG site simply displays the message “Peter ‘Sleazy’ Christopherson 1955 – 2010″.

Brainwashed: Coil

This live video of Throbbing Gristle from earlier this year is likely one of the last videos of him performing:

(Follow through to YouTube to view the rest)

From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/RIllPBYit1U/