

Hey Hey My My
Land of 1000 Dances Meets Death by 1000 Cuts
If you are seeking a bit of peace & tranquillity along the lines of Koan period Eno, then look no further than Jacob Newman’s ‘Buddha Machine’ available from www.archive.org.
He has taken the original Buddha machine sounds & bent & twisted then into a beautiful album of epic stillness.
When you feel it is time to float & dream in your own isolation tank, just put it on & drift out from the shore.
Death Is Not the End
Our door into that other dimension may not be like Imax, big screen, surround sound. It may not be that dramatic, multi car pile up or to be eaten by lions or struck by lightening.
It may be like Marlon Brando in the ‘Godfather’ just slipping away among the tomatoes, while playing games with the grandchildren.
Or it could be a ‘freak accident’ to a freak in another part of the garden.
The Sixties: a Primer
The recent ‘Wire’ Comus article has prompted me to give a very personal guide, to the mostly, forgotten bands of the 60s
John Peel would call these bands ‘progressive’, but they should not be lumped into what we now think of as ‘prog’. They were totally different. Many of them had a fair element of jazz on board and I think this is what made them timeless. See what you think:
· Affinity
· Titus Groan
· Comus
· Pete Brown & Piblokto
· Quintessence
· Soft Machine
· Third Ear Band
· Michael Chapman
· Roy Harper
· Warm Dust
· Traffic
· Delivery
· High Tide
· East of
· Edgar Broughton Band
· Tyrannosaurus Rex (pre-electric)
· Family
· Incredible String Band
·
· Jan Dukes De Grey
· Magna Carta
· Shirley & Dolly Collins
· Principal Edwards Magic Theatre
· Occasional Word
·
· Nirvana (
· Clouds
· Blossom Toes
· Bob Downs
· Colosseum
· Cressida
· Gracious
· Dr Strangely Strange
· Juicy Lucy
· May Blitz
· Groundhogs
· Nucleus
· Amazing Blondel
· Dando Shaft
Labels include: Harvest,
The Repeating Thoughts of Old Zinng Zanng
I came across the above album by Gillicuddy. He is in fact one Andi Rohden. It is one of the best things I have heard for a while.
In addition the album title must be in the long list of bizarre album titles alongside:
Peril Hill – Scream at the Jackdaw: Make Him Stop.
V – We Are Crossing Fences Through Rocky Fields
Firesign Theatre – How Can You Be in Two Places at Once & Nowhere at All
Lost in the post-holiday malaise...
Suggested Uses for the Buddha Machine 2.0
by Jesse Jarnow
FM3's Buddha Machine 2.0, an ugly plastic box that emits nine different ambient loops and which looks like a transistor radio, was practically designed for urban life. Inspired by the drone boxes at Buddhist temples in Asia, it is a chilled escape from Twittered-out internet devices, mp3 players, stray noise (cultural or literal), and even well-meaning friends.
The new edition of Christian Virant and Zhang Jian's Buddha Machine (first issued in 2005) is the post-holiday balm to end all balms. Because now it has pitch control. Armed with a headphone jack, a small tinny speaker, nine new loops, and a nearly infinite life from two AA batteries, the Buddha Machine--$23 + shipping from Forced Exposure--and its flexibility might be your new bff. (That or the $3.99 iPhone version, modeled on the original, which is also pretty rad, albeit too quiet.)
Suggested uses:
1. Put on before sleep. Place on pillow next to head.
2. Turn on in pocket while out and about, surruptiously adjusting as needed.
2a. With friends, keep volume low, free of detection. They will wonder why you are glowing.
2b. On subway, keep volume louder. The Buddha Machine is an interesting gauge of ambient noise.
3. For street use, try headphones. Though each track is a short loop, extended close listening creates illusions of developing pieces of music, replete with movements and sections.
3a. The Buddha Machine occasionally picks up interference from passing cell phones, like speakers at a club. But it also sometimes adds layers of localized static, like sonic dirt, which is kinda cool.
4. In noisy environment, such as a bar or party, crank Buddha Machine, press closely to ear, close eyes. Listen to the ocean in the seashell.
5. Different loops for different occasions. Each is named ("Mao," "Li," etc.), but better remembered by one's own mnemonic: the piano-bells, the downtempo one, the ice fields, etc..
6. Add new layer to whatever music is playing. Use pitch control to match key.
7. Go to LaMonte Young's Dream House. Upon exit, use pitch control to match drone, carry vibe home with you.
8. Float downstream. It is not dying, dude.
Inside the Technicolour Dream SynSyndicate
Sometimes you need that bump on the head to let you see things more clearly.
I finally got around to listening to Bobb Trimble’s ‘Life Beyond the Doghouse’ a psychedelic classic? It is just ok.