Archive for February, 2012

Compound Eye, “Origin of Silence”

Musick | Posted by jmoore
Feb 13 2012

compound-eyeThe ringing of the bells and the long carrier tone that eventually emerges beneath it signals the beginning of a descent into the underworld. Two tracks on each side carry me down an icy river of song. The ingredients are minimal, but a good cook can do a lot with just a few things, and I never felt heavy or gross from a cluttered presentation or an over-saturation of fatty content. This sonic fuel burns clean. And like any good meal the nourishment derived from the listening experience strengthened my nervous system, while none-the-less tuning it to alien frequencies. Here is an example of automatic music, and the methodology produces similar unconscious material as that evoked in automatic writing. It all makes for a fascinating foray into electronica as prepared by such experienced exemplars of the craft as Drew McDowall and Tres Warren.

I’m sure there are psychic messages contained in the coiling grooves of this clear vinyl LP. Being of a transparent nature they seep into my brain in slow trickle of melting tones a little over a half hour long. Yet that time stretches out and dilates in strange ways. The clock keeps ticking but my subjective experience of it is wobbly. I find myself looking for landmarks in “A Terrain of Constant-Low Intensity” and it is in this piece that I find most of them. The steady rhythm of bells starts out fast. Then, as the warm fuzz of an over-driven tube amp drone comes along, sound events slow down, moving into the supreme moment of kairos. And to me, this is what all excellent music will do: take me out of myself and the concerns of my daily trivial mind and into a moment of emergence where the deeper strains of true thought live. Again, this is akin to automatic writing in the way a steady stream is brought forth from deep chthonic currents.

…Read the Rest On Brainwashed.com…

The Stainless Steel Book

Poetry | Posted by jmoore
Feb 10 2012

My book is made of stainless steel.
It is impervious to the weather, to other peoples moods,
my own
to anything but resolve.

To write in this book
I must become a blacksmith
hammering out the pages
carving letters with my acetylene torch.

I am a welder
and the black smoke
curling up from the flames
is nothing more than impurities
being burned away.

The Dreamreader at the Library

Dream, Textuality | Posted by jmoore
Feb 05 2012

My wife Audrey and I are in our house. She wants to read a book I have. It is volume IX from a X volume set and she hasn’t read the other books. It’s a translation of a Japanese novel, by one Musakami, close to Murakami, but the “S” was prominent. I look into the book. The words are highly decorated. This text was printed beautifully. At the top of each page are interesting decorative pictures …a spider, a sword, a scroll… and other symbols. The book mentions “God” a lot, and I find this to be strange, coming from an Eastern source, especially as the God in question seems to be a Biblical one. The story is about a Ninja and as I read the book (together with my wife?), we watch a Ninja, fully covered and wrapped in black cloth, lightly treading through soft snow up a small mountain. The Ninja seemed to be a kind of monk.

Feelings: Surprise

Reality Check: I was having a slew of Japanese related literary dreams in 2010 to early 2011 (about Yukio Mishima among others), but this theme hasn’t come up for awhile. I guess it is saying, “Hey Justin, don’t forget about this thread of your inner life. It’s not over yet!” As a young boy I of course had a fondness for Ninjas… remember those Teenage Mutant Turtles?

The name in the dream, Musakami, is similar to Haruki Murakami whom I definitely want to read (and am reading now). Murakami’s novel’s A Wild Sheep Chase and Dance Dance Dance both have a lot of dream related stuff in them from what I hear.

~

So, the Haruki Murakami novel I wanted to read is checked out by another patron at the Public Library where I work. But now that I am a member of the Mercantile Library I look up Murakami in their catalog. Well, they don’t have A Wild Sheep Chase but they do have Hard Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World also on my reading list. I go get it on my lunch break and start reading it over a bowl of spicy white bean chili and rice. It’s very humorous. Each paragraph is like a stanza in a poem. The translator has obviously done an excellent job.

hardboiled1

The book contains two narrative threads, one the “Hard Boiled Wonderland” is about a data launderer, who washes information for clients by processing it from his right to left brain. He gets hired by a mysterious scientist who lives in a lab far beneath an office building. You take the elevator all the way down, go through a maze of bureaucratic hallways, then take a ladder down several stories, pass through some caves, go underneath a waterfall from the underground river into the scientists lair, where he is working on “listening to skulls”. He has learned how to resonate the skulls of humans and animals via some kind of acoustic measurements…and now he has a plan to erase sound from the world. He says this will aid our evolution, implying that it will perhaps help us get full blown telepathy. And evolution is never easy he says.

The second narrative is “The End of the World” which takes place in small mysterious town -presumably so far in the future it looks like the past -or at the edge (End ?) of the world. The narrator of this section comes to the town. Everyone in the town is given a job by the Gatekeeper. The character is to become the towns Dreamreader. He must go to the Library every night at sundown and read the “old dreams” stored in the Library.

…and that is about as far as I’ve gotten. But it certainly seems like my dreams were leading me to the write reading material, for inspiration on my own stories and more. I can’t wait to learn more about the Dreamreader and the “old dreams” he reads.

To become a Dreamreader the narrator had to undergo a procedure from the Gatekeeper. An initiation. The Gatekeeper takes a knife and heats it up in a fire. After it cools he stabs the man in both eyes, but this doesn’t hurt him. This helps him to read the old dreams, kept inside of skulls. The Librarian tells him how to do this, “Before your eyes the skull will glow and give off heat. Trace that light with your fingertips. That is how old dreams are read.”

russianunicornskull1The Dreamreader narrates, “Dreamreading proves not as effortless as she has explained. The threads of light are so fine that despite how I concentrate the energies in my fingertips, I am incapable of unraveling the chaos of vision. Even so, I clearly sense the presence of dreams at my fingertips. It is a busy current, an endless stream of images. My fingers are as yet unable to grasp any distinct message, but I do apprehend an intensity there.”

I relish reading more and seeing where the right and left brain converge, into one skull-story.

Silver Star Radio Nine: Mayan Ruins live on Imbolc

On the Way to the Peak of Normal | Posted by jmoore
Feb 03 2012

Silver Star Radio is back with a quickness, bringing you another high voltage dose of Esoteric Radio Activity.

For this live celebration of Imbolc I was joined by the fiery spirits of Cincinnati’s finest fusion of world tribal psychedelia. That’s right, Mayan Ruins take us deep into Earth’s molten core before spitting us back out at the stars in a journey that can only be described as shamanic. And even though it is radio we were still joined by belly dancer Zahara, as a further source of muse-ic and inspiration.

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icon for podpress  Silver Star Radio 9: Imbolc with Mayan Ruins : Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Set list:
o. Behind the Scenes Preview … back stage with the band
1. I Hear A New World – Joe Meek
2. Mayan Ruins live studio performance

3. A traditional Irish Lullaby played on Glass Harmonica by Dennis James from Cristal: Glass Music Through the Ages.

4. track five from Tharmuncrape ‘an Goo by Nocturnal Emissions
5. Mayan Ruins live encore performance
6. Imagination by Sun Ra from Nothing Is…
7. The Rose Dusk Carresses the Sex of Women an
d of Birds by Bobby Previte from The 23 Constellations of Joan Miro on the Tzadik label.
8. I Roselund under Sagas Hall / La Folia by Nils Okland and Sigbjorn Apeland from Homage a Ole Bull on ECM.
9. A Black Dust Cloud, and Stars Embedded in Gaseous Nebulosities (for Carl Sagan) by Michel Godard from “Sous Les Voutes, Le Serpent…” from M A Recordings
10.  Oh Thou Coal Black Smith by Current 93 from Crooked Crosses for the Nodding God
11. Calling for Vanished Faces & The Cat is Dead by Current 93 from An Introduction to Suffering
12. A Daughter of Infidels by 156 from Ticks from Many Clocks
13. Music Is the Healing Force -Albert Ayler

http://mayanruinstribal.com/

Mayan Ruins on Facebook

http://www.zaharastangledweb.com/

This episode was orginally broadcast on February 2, 2012 between 10pm and Midnight EST on WAIF, Cincinnati, 88.3FM

The Silver Star Radio series of On the Way to the Peak of Normal is an audio companion to Silver Star Journal
If you have written works on magick (any tradition) or visual art to contribute please contact editor Robert Carey via email with Silver Star Submission in the subject heading: robertcarey12 at gmail dot com