Dr. Schluss' Garage Of Psychedelic Obscurities
22 December 2016
Andwella's Dream - 1969 - Love and Poetry
Quality: 3.75 out of 5
Trip-O-Meter: 3.75 out of 5
Something in the vibrational energy of psychedelic rock shifted somewhere around New Year's 1968. Or maybe it's a more prosaic deluge of influences flowing in. Anyway, in 1967 it seemed perfectly acceptable to put all your vim and vigor into a startling slab of psychedelic pop - big league hitters like "See Emily Play" and "Strawberry Fields Forever" typify this. Then 1968 rolled around and suddenly you couldn't just be poppy without being relegated to the world of bubblegum. You had to let in that early heavy metal/electric blooze crunch or get more country (folk was admittedly a key feature of prime psychedelic pop). I guess it worked out ok for the Grateful Dead, but it counter-intuitively painted a bland streak over other acts. Of course, I like "Who's Next," "L.A. Woman," and "Abbey Road," but I'll never dig them as much as "The Who Sell Out," "Strange Days," and "Sgt. Pepper." That 1967 never really seemed to reemerge as far as I can tell until the late 90's, when Elephant Six made its mark. While it was very groovy stuff, it was also far more low budget and indie.
We've got Andwella's Dream creeping out in 1969, with a foot planted in both dynamics. Much of the songwriting does harken back to psychedelic pop, but they have the makings of a hard rock backbone (even when they are often mellow) and the vocal bombast of a Traffic-era Steve Winwood or post-"Tommy" Roger Daltrey. If you are looking for that pop groove, "Sunday" and "High on a Mountain" do a pretty spiffy job of honing on that. On the other side of the coin, opener "The Days Grew Longer for Love" could get tossed onto side B of Traffic's self-titled album without anyone batting much of an eye and the ballad "Andwella" actual works up a pretty heavy metal head of steam for a few moments. "Midday Sun" gets into the softer side of Dylan. I feel like people usually go for the nasally invasive, ranting vibe when they get Dylan-esque. Meanwhile "Lost a Number, Found a Kite" looks like a psychedelic epic if you look at the track time, but really it's just a tune with half the time a rambling intro.
So, middle of the road? Pretty much. But it's got some very nice craft with groovy production and sticks its head up above the sun enough times to take notice. Let me throw in one caveat. If you absolutely love the first couple Traffic album and prime Procol Harem, this is directly up your alley and you will like this much more than my rating suggests. I can see where someone would really dig all of this stuff. I've made concerted efforts to get into that bubble understanding that there is a worthwhile headspace to work your way into, but I've found that Traffic, Procol Harem, and now Andwella's Dream only hit about half of my pleasure buttons for whatever reason.
Trip-O-Meter: 3.75 out of 5
Something in the vibrational energy of psychedelic rock shifted somewhere around New Year's 1968. Or maybe it's a more prosaic deluge of influences flowing in. Anyway, in 1967 it seemed perfectly acceptable to put all your vim and vigor into a startling slab of psychedelic pop - big league hitters like "See Emily Play" and "Strawberry Fields Forever" typify this. Then 1968 rolled around and suddenly you couldn't just be poppy without being relegated to the world of bubblegum. You had to let in that early heavy metal/electric blooze crunch or get more country (folk was admittedly a key feature of prime psychedelic pop). I guess it worked out ok for the Grateful Dead, but it counter-intuitively painted a bland streak over other acts. Of course, I like "Who's Next," "L.A. Woman," and "Abbey Road," but I'll never dig them as much as "The Who Sell Out," "Strange Days," and "Sgt. Pepper." That 1967 never really seemed to reemerge as far as I can tell until the late 90's, when Elephant Six made its mark. While it was very groovy stuff, it was also far more low budget and indie.
We've got Andwella's Dream creeping out in 1969, with a foot planted in both dynamics. Much of the songwriting does harken back to psychedelic pop, but they have the makings of a hard rock backbone (even when they are often mellow) and the vocal bombast of a Traffic-era Steve Winwood or post-"Tommy" Roger Daltrey. If you are looking for that pop groove, "Sunday" and "High on a Mountain" do a pretty spiffy job of honing on that. On the other side of the coin, opener "The Days Grew Longer for Love" could get tossed onto side B of Traffic's self-titled album without anyone batting much of an eye and the ballad "Andwella" actual works up a pretty heavy metal head of steam for a few moments. "Midday Sun" gets into the softer side of Dylan. I feel like people usually go for the nasally invasive, ranting vibe when they get Dylan-esque. Meanwhile "Lost a Number, Found a Kite" looks like a psychedelic epic if you look at the track time, but really it's just a tune with half the time a rambling intro.
So, middle of the road? Pretty much. But it's got some very nice craft with groovy production and sticks its head up above the sun enough times to take notice. Let me throw in one caveat. If you absolutely love the first couple Traffic album and prime Procol Harem, this is directly up your alley and you will like this much more than my rating suggests. I can see where someone would really dig all of this stuff. I've made concerted efforts to get into that bubble understanding that there is a worthwhile headspace to work your way into, but I've found that Traffic, Procol Harem, and now Andwella's Dream only hit about half of my pleasure buttons for whatever reason.
02 December 2016
Electrick Sages
Let me set it down straight for you. We are not looking for wealth, although a bit of coin would obviously be nice. We are certainly not looking for fame. That doesn't look like a nice paradigm. We are looking for your ears, though. We are trying to speak to your soul, that etheric energy that you can feel when you pay attention to those breaths in and out.
These are the sounds of the Electrick Sages. The sound is electronically-infused art rock with echoes of plastic soul Bowie, post-punk Joy Division, and Berlin School drones. The purpose is to assist You in your conscious evolution. Maybe you are starting on your way to seeing the true fabric of reality. Maybe you have already awakened. This is music to engroovy your spirit.
Who are we? An American and an Australian – we are both living in Japan. We have taken up a position outside the bubble and are bringing back insights. Who were we? We were Glaze of Cathexis, and brought you visionary psychedelic rock. We were Damaged Tape - warping electronic sound to enlightening vibrations. And now, we want to vibrate higher and bring you along with us. We are the Electrick Sages. We are going to take you higher.
We are not priests or cult leaders – we extol no religion. We are not psychics – we know not what the future brings, only the present. We are not philosophers – we have moved past that, into pure feeling. This is the satori experience of "one hand clapping." And, we are not charlatans – we are abstract but bring to you truth as we feel it. We are sages – we are musical seers, peering into the prismatic abyss and reporting back to you exactly what you need to know.
This is not religion. This is not a cult. This is a pure expression of Spirit, taking you past the coarse physical plane and launching you off into the refined astral. Trip with us. Spread the word on the Electrick Sages.
Here are the sounds to take in. The most obvious move is a move to out Bandcamp site:
Or maybe you wanna get a little more direct with the download. You can do that here:
27 November 2016
The Ceyleib People - 1967 - Tanyet
Quality: 3.75 out of 5
Trip-O-Meter: 4.5 out of 5
First off - this is not a good headphones album. It tosses entire tracks from left to right in the stereo spectrum. I am listening on headphones and the effect is pissing me off. Just make it true mono and end my day, please. Maybe you've got some software to collapse it own your own. Do it. This absolutely needs to be a mono album as opposed to immaculately stoned, yet idiotic stereo.
On to the good news. This is a full out trippy stumble though inspired raga rock, inflected by the vibrations of a professional studio. Professionals do appear. Ry Cooder is blasting his guitar through several of the sections and Larry Knetchel is on keyboards. I'm going to be honest - I don't really know who Knetchel is, but I do recall seeing his name in a lot of places. I have, like, ten Cooder albums on CD and I'm pretty sure a listened to a few of them at least one time. But that doesn't matter. When you listen to Ceyleib People, you are listening to fantastic raga rock instrumentals inscrutably thrown out into either stereo channel - one at a time for 90% of the time. Allmusic Guide suggests that there are tracks here, but I've got it all lumped into four sections that will engroovy you one at a time.
This is very cool stuff, mixed in the worst way possible. I would raise the quality half a point if you just collapsed it all into a single channel. Sometimes mono needs to be king and this is exhibit A. Otherwise, kudos to the Ceyleib People.
Trip-O-Meter: 4.5 out of 5
First off - this is not a good headphones album. It tosses entire tracks from left to right in the stereo spectrum. I am listening on headphones and the effect is pissing me off. Just make it true mono and end my day, please. Maybe you've got some software to collapse it own your own. Do it. This absolutely needs to be a mono album as opposed to immaculately stoned, yet idiotic stereo.
On to the good news. This is a full out trippy stumble though inspired raga rock, inflected by the vibrations of a professional studio. Professionals do appear. Ry Cooder is blasting his guitar through several of the sections and Larry Knetchel is on keyboards. I'm going to be honest - I don't really know who Knetchel is, but I do recall seeing his name in a lot of places. I have, like, ten Cooder albums on CD and I'm pretty sure a listened to a few of them at least one time. But that doesn't matter. When you listen to Ceyleib People, you are listening to fantastic raga rock instrumentals inscrutably thrown out into either stereo channel - one at a time for 90% of the time. Allmusic Guide suggests that there are tracks here, but I've got it all lumped into four sections that will engroovy you one at a time.
This is very cool stuff, mixed in the worst way possible. I would raise the quality half a point if you just collapsed it all into a single channel. Sometimes mono needs to be king and this is exhibit A. Otherwise, kudos to the Ceyleib People.
Children - 1968 - Rebirth
Quality: 4 out of 5
Trip-O-Meter: 4 out of 5
What do we get here? We get a very groovy sunshine pop disc and the story behind it. The Children is a cosmic collision between a couple of West Texas acid rock bands, The Stoics and The Argyles. This particular compilation bring you the garage stomping sound of both, an intermediary of The Mind's Eye, and the walking through the flowers, tripping out on Donovan and the Zombies vibrations of the titular band here.
Let's cut straight to the marrow. I dig the two tunes by The Stoics. They have a wildly spiraling, scream and guitar shout that compares to nothing else but fellow Texans, the 13th Floor Elevators. The Argyles comparatively suck, frat rocking like the Kingsmen and the Trashmen. It's not the worst pedigree, but Roky Erickson of the Elevators may not approve (or not!). So then there is the main event. After the psychedelically violent kick in that spot between your brows of the Stoics and somewhat of the Argyles and the Mind's Eye, you are now tripping in a meadow of fairies with Children. It's not bad, but it is a shock. Isolated on it's own, you are now looking at a Sgt. Pepper reflected surface that flows through California syrup and strings - the hybrid band had in fact relocated to that state. "I Got Involved" probably perverts the twee side of the Kinks a bit too much, but most of the other tracks give you a finger-picked pattern of laid back psychedelic grooviness. "Pictoral" ups the stakes a bit, but it is still dreamy and doesn't plow the icepick in your head the way those first couple Stoic tracks do.
You don't just get an album here, you get a little aural biopic. Children are pretty groovy on their own, and will appeal to those of you with sunshine ears and baroque thoughts. But dammit! Those first few tracks! It's a tease that I would love to fall deeper into. But y'know, we get what we get with this reality in the end. This may well appeal to your reality.
Trip-O-Meter: 4 out of 5
What do we get here? We get a very groovy sunshine pop disc and the story behind it. The Children is a cosmic collision between a couple of West Texas acid rock bands, The Stoics and The Argyles. This particular compilation bring you the garage stomping sound of both, an intermediary of The Mind's Eye, and the walking through the flowers, tripping out on Donovan and the Zombies vibrations of the titular band here.
Let's cut straight to the marrow. I dig the two tunes by The Stoics. They have a wildly spiraling, scream and guitar shout that compares to nothing else but fellow Texans, the 13th Floor Elevators. The Argyles comparatively suck, frat rocking like the Kingsmen and the Trashmen. It's not the worst pedigree, but Roky Erickson of the Elevators may not approve (or not!). So then there is the main event. After the psychedelically violent kick in that spot between your brows of the Stoics and somewhat of the Argyles and the Mind's Eye, you are now tripping in a meadow of fairies with Children. It's not bad, but it is a shock. Isolated on it's own, you are now looking at a Sgt. Pepper reflected surface that flows through California syrup and strings - the hybrid band had in fact relocated to that state. "I Got Involved" probably perverts the twee side of the Kinks a bit too much, but most of the other tracks give you a finger-picked pattern of laid back psychedelic grooviness. "Pictoral" ups the stakes a bit, but it is still dreamy and doesn't plow the icepick in your head the way those first couple Stoic tracks do.
You don't just get an album here, you get a little aural biopic. Children are pretty groovy on their own, and will appeal to those of you with sunshine ears and baroque thoughts. But dammit! Those first few tracks! It's a tease that I would love to fall deeper into. But y'know, we get what we get with this reality in the end. This may well appeal to your reality.
26 November 2016
Electrick Sages - Hemlock Butterfly (video)
The Electrick Sages have arrived to explore the labyrinth behind the door of reality. Our previous project, the Glaze of Cathexis, were simply looking at that door. You have been bamboozled and you can see it. We are speaking to your vibrations, and we try to dig it in the grooviest way possible. This is our mission, The album will show up on December 5th. For now - get into evolution - and dive into this video of Hemlock Butterfly. The video transmutes the vibes of Stan Brakhage and Kenneth Anger. The sound runs on through the line connecting David Bowie with Joy Division. The lyrics bounce off of some of those pesky conspiracy theories that drive you to wear a tinfoil hat. But that is just a vocabulary. The goal is to wake you up, and open your eyes to the fractal reality that surrounds you.
31 October 2016
Zanov - 1982 - In Course of Time / Moebius
Quality: 4.25 out of 5
Trip-O-Meter: 4.5 out of 5
Could I find any information about Zanov? No, I could not. Admittedly, I didn't look that hard. Y'know, by 1982 Tangerine Dream were skirting off to higher budget pastures where they were carting around the brand-spanking new digital synths. Zanov was not. Zanov was carting around analog weirdness to bring on full Berlin school flavor. And that is what you get with Zanov. Any questions?
Bloody 'ell. I usually rant about specific tracks right about now, but it seems kind of pointless. These are Berlin school sequences with Berlin school leads tacked on top of them. You maybe know the Berlin school, but if you don't it is trancey analog synths with heavy sequencing, You are getting a textbook definition with the Zanov recordings. Even more so than that which Kraftwerk or Tangerine Dream stumbled into.
Zanov would have been a perfectly welcome addition to the City of the Domes in Logan's Run. Assuming he wasn't too old. I just don't know what to expect with the personal history of Zanov. Maybe 'he' is a band. Just listen to it already.
Trip-O-Meter: 4.5 out of 5
Could I find any information about Zanov? No, I could not. Admittedly, I didn't look that hard. Y'know, by 1982 Tangerine Dream were skirting off to higher budget pastures where they were carting around the brand-spanking new digital synths. Zanov was not. Zanov was carting around analog weirdness to bring on full Berlin school flavor. And that is what you get with Zanov. Any questions?
Bloody 'ell. I usually rant about specific tracks right about now, but it seems kind of pointless. These are Berlin school sequences with Berlin school leads tacked on top of them. You maybe know the Berlin school, but if you don't it is trancey analog synths with heavy sequencing, You are getting a textbook definition with the Zanov recordings. Even more so than that which Kraftwerk or Tangerine Dream stumbled into.
Zanov would have been a perfectly welcome addition to the City of the Domes in Logan's Run. Assuming he wasn't too old. I just don't know what to expect with the personal history of Zanov. Maybe 'he' is a band. Just listen to it already.
29 October 2016
The Doctor Trips Through Okinawa (Miyako-Jima)
There are a few new albums if you scroll down (and a few more coming), but first you deal with these images from my mandatory trip to Okinawa. This is a perk of my cash-paying job.
Chad & Jeremy - 1968 - The Ark
Quality: 4.25 out of 5
Trip-O-Meter: 4 out of 5
Oh, it's British, oh so British. For this slab of vinyl, Chad & Jeremy step their ambition, and this basically involves sounding like the psychedelic phase of the Hollies. I guess that is one approach to take - they sound pretty much on an even keel with those fellows. All in all you get a more cohesive listen, with the orchestration ever present, but more in vibe with the songs, and the raga rock making itself ever known.
On the last album, you got the single version of "Painted Dayglow Smile," but now you get the LP version, which actually does sound better. "Sunstroke" is absolutely fantastic raga rock and many of the other tracks present find a good balance between silken British folk and bombastic orchestration. Only "Transatlantic Trauma 1966" gets called into the dunce's corner for being pointlessly atonal. Maybe it is there to reprogram your mind?
Do you like the Hollies "Butterfly?" I do! Do you hate that album? Steer clear. "The Ark" is almost the same flavor. It's different enough that you are not listening to a xerox copy, but it is definitely flowing through the same slipstream. A twin shadow of an album you dig is not always a bad thing, jah?
Trip-O-Meter: 4 out of 5
Oh, it's British, oh so British. For this slab of vinyl, Chad & Jeremy step their ambition, and this basically involves sounding like the psychedelic phase of the Hollies. I guess that is one approach to take - they sound pretty much on an even keel with those fellows. All in all you get a more cohesive listen, with the orchestration ever present, but more in vibe with the songs, and the raga rock making itself ever known.
On the last album, you got the single version of "Painted Dayglow Smile," but now you get the LP version, which actually does sound better. "Sunstroke" is absolutely fantastic raga rock and many of the other tracks present find a good balance between silken British folk and bombastic orchestration. Only "Transatlantic Trauma 1966" gets called into the dunce's corner for being pointlessly atonal. Maybe it is there to reprogram your mind?
Do you like the Hollies "Butterfly?" I do! Do you hate that album? Steer clear. "The Ark" is almost the same flavor. It's different enough that you are not listening to a xerox copy, but it is definitely flowing through the same slipstream. A twin shadow of an album you dig is not always a bad thing, jah?
Chad & Jeremy - 1967 - Of Cabbages and Kings
Trip-O-Meter: 4 out of 5
If we are not looking at rock royalty, we are at least looking at its nobility. And the sounds here pretty much bear that out. I can't recall if he ended up as Chad or Jeremy, but Peter Asher was one of those fellows and his sister was Paul McCartney's main squeeze in the mid 60's, with the two dudes apparently chumming it out from time to time. Not that there is an obvious Beatles tilt to the sound other than a certain British big budget attempt at stiff upper lip psychedelia. I would rather suggest equal doses of Donovan and Simon and Garfunkel cross-pollinated with a wall smear of Moody Blues orchestration. Does that do it for ye? (Edit: comment points out that I am mixing up my Chad & Jeremys with my Peter & Gordons as a joke. Uh... yeah! It's a funny joke! --- Kids, don't drink and then write at midnight. Turns out Peter Asher is not the same name as Chad Stuart or Jeremy Clyde)
Side A rattles a slew of twee-leaning folk rock your way. Yes, this is absolutely white people music, You get your Lewis Carroll reference right at the start of "Rest in Peace," which then takes a six-minute morph through several psychedelic-lite tableaus that Parliament (the government system, not the band) would likely approve of. The next several tracks run through a more taut run of orchestrated folk rock that will occasionally lull you into thinking that you are listening to the aforementioned Donovan or Simon & Garfunkel. You'll dig it at a rate of 90% compared to the former and 75% compared to the latter. These statistics do not suck. Side B's Progress suite steps up the pretentious meter skyrocketing even past the Moody Blues' "Days of Future Past." But hey, not blow it halfway and the addition of Indian sitars and orchestration are always a plus in this doctor's book. They don't start singing until three tracks in, where they give you dietary suggestions, and then just start ranting in "Fall." Getting down to it, the Progress Suite is pretty much a failure, but it's that spectacular psychedelic failure where you will start looking for, and maybe discover, the sublime in the end. Sort of like Sagittarius. As long as your can break through the noticeable smattering of Vegas orchestrated cheese that you are going to hear. There are a few bonus tracks hanging aboot as well, with "Painted Dayglow Smile" standing tall as a notable single and "Manners Maketh Man" making a Kingsmen reference almost 50 years too early.
You may or may not dig this stuff again, but give it your attention and you will find yourself getting obsessed with the ever shifting grooves in either case. The germ of an idea that gave birth to this album was probably a bad one, possibly a stoned one. It is still something to behold.
13 September 2016
21 Century Seeker and the Doctor's Ramblings
The Doctor has been distracted - awakenings to the fabric of reality and such. My reading list has shifted from light history, science, and bios to metaphysics. I haven't really been listening to much new music - mostly droning music (much of which I've posted here in the past), 70 jazz and R&B (which may not be the best fit here, but maybe!), and the mid-life crisis resurrection of my junior high school playlist (and this means Pearl Jam, Jane's Addiction, et al; really not a good fit here). I don't think I'm getting too weird. My life situation, personal relations, and personal health seem to have actually kicked up a few notches since the start of this year. And we've still got plenty of our own creations coming to you. We've got a Glaze album, EP, and an album under a new project called Electrick Sages already in the can - we just want to make some video clips and space out the releases. I'm not trying to boast or to give you authoritative advice - your own path is up to you. Still, I can put a few signposts around town.
And here is today's. May I refer you to this fellow named Victor Oddo whom I first came across about two months ago. I thought that Glaze bandmate Scott had referred me, but it turns out that I had just stumbled on in, and ended up referring Scott - and now you. Oddo is a very direct speaker giving very direct reflections to those who get the nagging realization that life is but a dream. Of course he shouldn't be your only resource for that sort of thing, but he's a very entertaining one. I'm a little surprised myself that I have been devoting my breakfast viewing listening to a talking head who doesn't appear on the surface appear to be someone I would connect with (gym gear, serious tattoos, and high and tight haircuts are not norms in my own social circles). Some of the things he says seem very tripped out, but I've found more and more that when he says it, I've already had recent experiences or intimations that synchronize with what he's saying. Things with a new age whiff do prickle the skeptic in me, but Oddo seems to be lacking the veneer of BS that typically goes with that. If I've got your attention, check this out. If not, this is probably not your cup of tea right now. Anyway, let's connect with a blog:
http://21stcenturyseeker.com/
And a Youtube channel:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCjerQpCYV_kL-IbQZNVHVPQ
Let me follow that up with a few reflections on Glaze of Cathexis' Neon Buddha from a few years back. Maybe it's hard to completely trust and/or believe a speaker on Youtube, or someone who simply managed to get their ideas published in a book - but you've got to put stock in your own perception. That album was the last time that I did serious lyrics writing (the task is typically up to Scott). As I pursue the path, I find that the lyrics I wrote contain a lot of truth that I had absolutely no inkling of when I wrote them. I know what I was thinking at the time, and I was just trying to string together words that sounded cool into phrases, verses, and choruses that sounded cool. So, paradoxically, my unawakened past self is also serving as one of my guides. I don't know if that effect will work for anyone else, but it certainly is trippy in the deepest sense of the word. I think Scott's lyrics often have a similar effect, but I didn't write those, so I don't have the first hand experience to know exactly where they came from. I dunno, check out our old album if you haven't already? It's free and it may be this creator's personal favorite of the Glaze of Cathexis recordings:
I may have not been particularly present here, but let me restate that I am not abandoning this blog. These days I only post when I feel a real push to do so. Uploading tunes has become quite a multi-step chore for me unfortunately. While I've more or less been throwing format out the window, I do want to return some focus to the music. I'm planning to drop the quality scale - if I'm posting here I like it enough that I want you to listen, and you can judge the quality on your own. I may rely on some Youtube album links if that doesn't bother you too much. Of course the Trip-O-Meter will remain - that's far too groovy to drop. Anyone up for more funk, soul, and fusion?
And here is today's. May I refer you to this fellow named Victor Oddo whom I first came across about two months ago. I thought that Glaze bandmate Scott had referred me, but it turns out that I had just stumbled on in, and ended up referring Scott - and now you. Oddo is a very direct speaker giving very direct reflections to those who get the nagging realization that life is but a dream. Of course he shouldn't be your only resource for that sort of thing, but he's a very entertaining one. I'm a little surprised myself that I have been devoting my breakfast viewing listening to a talking head who doesn't appear on the surface appear to be someone I would connect with (gym gear, serious tattoos, and high and tight haircuts are not norms in my own social circles). Some of the things he says seem very tripped out, but I've found more and more that when he says it, I've already had recent experiences or intimations that synchronize with what he's saying. Things with a new age whiff do prickle the skeptic in me, but Oddo seems to be lacking the veneer of BS that typically goes with that. If I've got your attention, check this out. If not, this is probably not your cup of tea right now. Anyway, let's connect with a blog:
http://21stcenturyseeker.com/
And a Youtube channel:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCjerQpCYV_kL-IbQZNVHVPQ
Let me follow that up with a few reflections on Glaze of Cathexis' Neon Buddha from a few years back. Maybe it's hard to completely trust and/or believe a speaker on Youtube, or someone who simply managed to get their ideas published in a book - but you've got to put stock in your own perception. That album was the last time that I did serious lyrics writing (the task is typically up to Scott). As I pursue the path, I find that the lyrics I wrote contain a lot of truth that I had absolutely no inkling of when I wrote them. I know what I was thinking at the time, and I was just trying to string together words that sounded cool into phrases, verses, and choruses that sounded cool. So, paradoxically, my unawakened past self is also serving as one of my guides. I don't know if that effect will work for anyone else, but it certainly is trippy in the deepest sense of the word. I think Scott's lyrics often have a similar effect, but I didn't write those, so I don't have the first hand experience to know exactly where they came from. I dunno, check out our old album if you haven't already? It's free and it may be this creator's personal favorite of the Glaze of Cathexis recordings:
I may have not been particularly present here, but let me restate that I am not abandoning this blog. These days I only post when I feel a real push to do so. Uploading tunes has become quite a multi-step chore for me unfortunately. While I've more or less been throwing format out the window, I do want to return some focus to the music. I'm planning to drop the quality scale - if I'm posting here I like it enough that I want you to listen, and you can judge the quality on your own. I may rely on some Youtube album links if that doesn't bother you too much. Of course the Trip-O-Meter will remain - that's far too groovy to drop. Anyone up for more funk, soul, and fusion?
22 August 2016
Glaze of Cathexis - 2016 - The High Desert Prophecies
It's just behind the veil of illusion that tickles your senses. You catch a glimpse of it through the substance that is around you. Your ancestors may seem ignorant in the bright lights of the technological world, but a few of them got it. Let's take a tryp toward the Center fueled by primordial vibrations and rock and roll. Glaze of Cathexis is a long running psychedelic rock concern that plays off the echoes of shoegaze, John Lennon, and the Doors. Dig it.
Sorry I haven't really been updating much recently. I've been out on my own trip (partially documented in this music) and just haven't felt the fire to crank up psychedelic obscurities and then rate them. And if you don't feel the fire, you probably shouldn't bother. Not to say I'm vanishing. I may tackle the music from another angle, ramble on the metaphysical, continue with the film fests or something else. You will find new music from us here if you want to hear it.
Now is wonderful and my creative energies are rumbling - just at a different frequency. Let's move onto the tunes, which live at Bandcamp and are free (contributions are very welcome, but not at all required). Here we go:
And a touch of the visual for you. The first one is new and the second you may have caught a few months back.
Of course we hope you enjoy, but our real goal is to spark you, wake you up, and maybe even prod you to open a few new doors of enlightenment. Shouldn't that be the goal of every musician?
Sorry I haven't really been updating much recently. I've been out on my own trip (partially documented in this music) and just haven't felt the fire to crank up psychedelic obscurities and then rate them. And if you don't feel the fire, you probably shouldn't bother. Not to say I'm vanishing. I may tackle the music from another angle, ramble on the metaphysical, continue with the film fests or something else. You will find new music from us here if you want to hear it.
Now is wonderful and my creative energies are rumbling - just at a different frequency. Let's move onto the tunes, which live at Bandcamp and are free (contributions are very welcome, but not at all required). Here we go:
And a touch of the visual for you. The first one is new and the second you may have caught a few months back.
Of course we hope you enjoy, but our real goal is to spark you, wake you up, and maybe even prod you to open a few new doors of enlightenment. Shouldn't that be the goal of every musician?
31 May 2016
Dr. Schluss' Psychedelic Film Fest May 2016
We're a bit on the back burner, but I'm busy creating lots of music and video and want to keep my lines of grooviness open to you. So let's freak out to a few films to pass the time and take another step towards transcendence.
Aleph (1966)
Strange images presented to you under a strange Kabbalah rhythm and Flash Gordon. Wallace Berman structured this film as a sort of collage, although he apparently didn't have the budget for sound. Fortunately, this makes a wonderful platform for your own synchronicities. I gave it another view with Radiohead's new album. Something like that works nicely, but may I propose to you that some Psychedelic Garage homegrown Damaged Tape or Glaze of Cathexis recordings may fit the bill as well.
MK-Ultra Programming Video
MK-Ultra was a thing where the CIA experimented with mind control using a variety of methods including LSD. Do I think this is a real programming video? Not really. But it is a hardcore psychedelic time and certainly with a view - provided you have not been subject to satanic ritual mind control. Anyway, as fair warning there is a sheep decapitation that I skipped right over - you may want to as well.
LSD-25 (1967)
Speaking of LSD, here is an educational short narrated by Mr. LSD himself. What wouldn't you want to watch that? They didn't really do their job - it sort of sells the experience, albeit with a hint of danger.
Aleph (1966)
Strange images presented to you under a strange Kabbalah rhythm and Flash Gordon. Wallace Berman structured this film as a sort of collage, although he apparently didn't have the budget for sound. Fortunately, this makes a wonderful platform for your own synchronicities. I gave it another view with Radiohead's new album. Something like that works nicely, but may I propose to you that some Psychedelic Garage homegrown Damaged Tape or Glaze of Cathexis recordings may fit the bill as well.
MK-Ultra Programming Video
MK-Ultra was a thing where the CIA experimented with mind control using a variety of methods including LSD. Do I think this is a real programming video? Not really. But it is a hardcore psychedelic time and certainly with a view - provided you have not been subject to satanic ritual mind control. Anyway, as fair warning there is a sheep decapitation that I skipped right over - you may want to as well.
LSD-25 (1967)
Speaking of LSD, here is an educational short narrated by Mr. LSD himself. What wouldn't you want to watch that? They didn't really do their job - it sort of sells the experience, albeit with a hint of danger.
24 April 2016
Burn Down the Golden Idol (2016)
Gonna serialize our next project a bit. The Glaze of Cathexis has peered beyond the curtain of reality and we are ready to report our findings. Are we enlightened enough to do this properly? Probably not. Are we talented enough to pull this off? We hope so, but you can been the judge of that. We have glimpsed at the magick that stands through the textured vail. We may not understand it, but wish to hold a musical communion with you to consider it. Burn down the Golden Idol.
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