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Tuesday 29 October 2013

Brainwashed: There is wonderful music out there: look find and be inspired



Brainwashed Radio (brainwashed.com) is an online resource of reviews, podcasts, interviews, free music and links to some of the most exciting music ever made.






 What is music?

What is the difference between music and just sound?

I am sure there are quite a few convincing answers to that question worth arguing with and I don’t wish to tarnish anyone’s point of view with my own opinions.

I know that I have eclectic tastes and like many with such tastes I am little interested in the cliché sounds of much of the mainstream music out there.
I love sound and music and the way they can work together, flowing in and out of each other.

John Cage’s 4’33’’, also know as 4 minutes and 33 seconds of silence, is not silent: silence does not exist. John Cage’s piece asks us to listen. We must listen and make sound.




“There’s no new music out there”, I hear people say sometimes. Well that’s just not true. We just have to look and we can find amazing things. Musicians and listeners alike need inspiration from new experiences. The number of musicians out there playing with sound in new ways, most probably, outnumbers, to a large degree, the anodyne commercial bands that we are regularly fed through mainstream radio.

New music comes from experimentation and improvisation. Improvisation is much more than just noisy Jazz going all over the place, however wonderful that can be. Improvisation is often where truly new ideas can be discovered and played with.

The wonderful world wide web and its generous openings for sharing is a treasure trove of sources for new music. In looking to discover new inspiring music there is Spotify, Last FM and Grooveshark, which are all great resources, but one can find themselves circling around the periphery of the music they are already accustomed to. 

Subconscious Communications


I wanted to look further. In my search for more experimental music I came across Subconscious Communications. Cevin Key, who works with Skinny puppy, Download and The Tear Garden, as well as others, is one of the main forces behind Subconscious communications. The Tear Garden, I discovered, is a collaboration between members of Skinny Puppy and The Legendary Pink Dots, particularly Cevin Key and Edward Ka Spel. Of course I went back and tried these out on Last FM and Grooveshark, which gave me some interesting results but it didn’t go too far. I continued my search trying to find more from TheLegendary Pink Dots and their cohorts and discovered some great stuff: More than fifty albums of experimental music. But also through my search for more by The Legendary Pink Dots I discovered my greatest source for new, inspiring music: Brainwashed Radio.


Brainwashed Radio (brainwashed.com) is an online resource of reviews, podcasts, interviews, free music and links to some of the most exciting music ever made; this is just my opinion but I feel strongly about it. The list of musicians covered by Brainwashed is long and varied so I won’t even begin it here. Jon Whitney, who is behind Brainwashed radio along with a network of dedicated artists, is clearly very passionate about music and has given us all a great, inspiring gift: Highly recommended for everyone, go with open ears.

Monday 28 October 2013

In the passing of Lou Reed, a few words from his long time partner Laurie Anderson




Laurie Anderson, Lou Reed's Long time Partner. I saw this live in London a few years ago. In her performance, Dirt Day, Laurie Anderson, talks about the death of her dog Lolabelle and beautifully explains the connection between love and death "The purpose of death is the release of love..."
What do we do with that love we shared with someone who has passed away? 

Friday 11 October 2013

The shape and taste of sound: the phenomena of synaesthesia

The Man who tasted shapes by Mark Lazenby

Imagine the taste of the letter R, the smell of the colour indigo or the shape of a sound. Maybe you don’t have to imagine it. Perhaps these ideas are perfectly normal for you. The shape of sounds, well yes, of course, I say. I love the shape of bass notes. They are like big, shiny, round beach stones. When bass sounds oscillate and vibrate those rounded stones spin and sometimes break apart into smaller shapes.

My friend James Wannerton tastes sounds. When his dog barks he tastes caramel and the sound of the name “Derek” tastes of Earwax.

I used to assume that everyone had a visual/tactile experienced of sound. Later I learned that this is not the case. I was shocked. I realise that sometimes people are shocked that I experience the shape of sounds. I can’t imagine how a dog bark can taste for James.

There are a lot of things that don’t have names. The names of things come about by people experiencing them and telling each other about them; occasionally something official happens and new words get published in dictionaries.

I remember the first time I heard the word synaesthesia.  I was at a party telling a friend of mine about the shapes and textures of the sounds of the music we were listening to. “That’s synaesthesia,” My friend said.

“Synae what?” I responded.

Then he explained to me that synaesthesia was when the senses combine, “If you can see music,” he told me “you are experiencing synaesthesia.”

My friend told me he had found the word in a medical dictionary.  I took his word for it but didn’t think much about it. “OK,” I thought, “synaesthesia sounds pretty normal to me then.”  I figured there were all sort of fanciful medical terms for things we think and do.

There are many different points of view regarding the causes and reasons for synaesthesia.  One of the best accounts of research into synaesthesia is a book called The Man Who Tasted Shapes by Richard E Cytowic. First published in 1993, this was perhaps the first popular account of synaesthesia making many people with synaesthesia more aware of their own experiences. One synesthete (a person with synaesthesia), who has beautifully described her own experience, is Patircia Duffy in her book entitled Blue Cats and Chartreuse Kittens. Organisations now exist dedicated to the further understanding of synaesthesia: e. g.  The Artecitta Foundation, The American SynesthesiaAssociation and The UK Synaesthesia Association.


Synaesthesia can tell us about the brain, the mind and consciousness. There are phenomenal people whose brains function in unique ways in combination with synaesthesia: e.g. Jason Padgett sees mathematical patterns everywhere he goes and the shapes Daniel Tammet sees for numbers, letters and concepts have helped him break the bank in a Las Vegas casino and learn Icelandic in a day.  As our science and humanity develop we may have an opportunity to self evolve and begin making decisions about what kind of animals we really want to be.

It is possible that some of the knowledge we are gaining through research into conditions such as synaesthesia will help us tap into some of the most amazing possibilities of the human brain. May we also not forget to appreciate the unexpected and inexplicable oddities of conscious awareness.  




Friday 4 October 2013

Lifetime: What is a lifetime; how long could it be?


In a documentary called Lifetime,  Michio Kaku asks us, if given the chance,  whether we would drink of the elixir of eternal youth and live forever, or not? Kaku explores memory and the always-present awareness of each of our inevitable deaths.  Time defines the way we live and how we live defines how we experience time. “What would it mean to be immortal?” Kaku asks us.

Time is incessantly changing us. When we are young many of us feel immortal but as we get older we become more and more aware of how time is leading us towards the exit door; time will run out for us. “But why does time have to run out, why can’t we just go on forever?” enquires Kaku. The great gods who have been envisioned in our form by almost every culture are immortal; we have always dreamed of acquiring immortality for ourselves.  A fundamental aspect of the way that we exist today, however, is that we will only exist for a short time. We know that others have existed before us and hope still more will follow. We live much longer than many other creatures and most animals seem to have a set, programmed lifespans.  But, it appears, that not even our species is immortal. We have not been around for that long in the greater scheme of things and we have witnessed the extinctions of many great  species.  We suspect that the human race itself will one day cease to exist, as will our beloved Earth.  The longest living organism known to man is the great basin bristlcone pine tree, over 5000 years old; about the age of written human history. The oldest humans alive barely make it over 100. Humans have always looked up at the stars with aspirations to explore beyond. But we now know that anything we could get to within our current human lifespan would be inhospitable. It seems quite clear that our solar system has no other hospitable environments for human life beyond Earth, unless we can figure out how to terraform Mars. The nearest stars that may have hospitable environments for our kind of life are more than a thousand light years away.  One solution to this problem is that generation after generation of people live, procreate and die in space whilst pioneering towards where we might discover something. Another is to live longer.


At the Buck Institute for Aging in San Francisco  California, Gordon Lithgo has extended the lives of worms that normally only live around twenty days to over 100 days by manipulating their genes. At Cambridge, theoretical scientist Aubrey de Grey, at the Sens Research Foundation,   believes that we could beat the aging process even reversing it, making old age a much less common cause of death, possibly allowing humans to live for thousands of years.  Obviously there is more than living for a very long time to exploring the universe beyond Earth but having more time could definitely help. I imagine that Parliament Funkadelic’s Starchild, who travelled the universe delivery holy funk, must have had to live for thousands of years to get from place to place.