Found 395 posts tagged ‘prof. oddfellow’ |
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Haunted Clockwork Music –
March 26, 2021 |
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DJing music from a parallel universe: the spirit radio connected to a haunted grandfather clock picked up an alternate version of " Cross Purposes" by Silly Pillows.
KlingonCaptain kindly asked, "So... When is the album coming out?" That brings up another question: what would such an album be titled? A band in England once asked me for weird words for album names, but they ended up not taking any of my suggestions. (Sad.) I suggested Eellogofusciouhipoppokunurious (meaning "very good," from a slang dictionary of the 1930s), Pentadecylparatolylketone (the chemical composition of limelight), Poluphlosboiothalasses (from Punch magazine, 1859 ... I don't recall what it means), and "Hysterico Vaporous Hypo Megrins" (a fictional diagnosis for a condition in which one is unstuck in time; the patient is lost to the present even as the future and the past loom up before his half-closed eyes. This phrase appears in a poem entitled "Heroic Treatment," by a certain G.A.K., printed in Harper's, Aug. 1887).
Lord Entourage wrote: "It was fun looking up the original song's lyrics and comparing them to this version from a parallel universe. As Ornam Rotem said, 'Different worlds can overlap and interact and they need not have well defined boundaries. Works of art can be considered as worlds, as can genres or whole media. Worlds can be imaginary or imagined.'"
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Go Out in a Blaze of Glory –
March 16, 2021 |
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought –
March 12, 2021 |
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It's an awful thing to know not where you are: Prof. Oddfellow's Penetralia.
Thanks to Bel the Blasphemer, who wrote: "Your content continues to be uncannily relatable. Thank you for the comforting non-place to reside."
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Haunted Clockwork Music –
February 19, 2021 |
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It's the cover version that left the band Vaylon utterly speechless: "Numb" by Neons Gone Mad:
A brief explanation of how we approached recording a cover of “Numb” by the Danish band Vaylon: we hear the line “As I walk along the shore” to be the key, because the songwriter is in a timeless moment as he reflects upon his past, his regrets, his addictions, his disgraces. His mind, as he walks, is outside of time — he’s in a sort of “eternity” of the soul. And that makes the shore, perhaps, like the River Styx, for the songwriter is at a threshold or liminal zone, trying to separate himself from the chains of the past. He is tied down by his habits, not really able to progress or to find a new freedom. He is so full of doubts bottled inside him that he can’t fully detach from his old life. And so we hear these lyrics as describing a state of existence described in the Tibetan Book of the Dead, in which a soul finds himself in the in-between existence of “the Bardo.” Because the songwriter keeps trudging forward against the wind, we made the chorus #2 and chorus #3 more and more far-away, more and more ghostly, as if a fading signal on Tesla's spirit radio. The songwriter ever walks along the shore and finally leaves the listener behind. The listener inevitably loses the songwriter, but the songwriter surely finds eventually himself. We created the rhythm out of clockwork sounds, to symbolize the relentlessness of time. Even in limbo, the seconds click away for the songwriter with each step he takes down the shore.
In the music video we created for the cover version, two paranormal investigators are trying to tune into a frequency to make contact with that distant shoreline. By the end of the song, when the singer has finally drifted into the mysterious ethers, the investigators realize that Vaylon was never there (meant to be something of a joke, in that this wasn’t Vaylon’s original recording but rather a cover version; plus, some folks will recognize it as a quotation from the David Lynch film Fire Walk With Me, when David Bowie makes a cameo appearance but doesn’t show up on the security cameras because “he was never here.”)
We should note that we changed only two words, “being social” to “hollow seashells” … the seashells being a hint at the shore mentioned in the chorus, as well as literally being Tibetan horns (further tying into the Tibetan Book of the Dead). Don't miss the original track: vaylon.bandcamp.com/track/numb
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought –
December 7, 2020 |
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Thanks to Jim G. who wrote, "All of the skits in Penetralia are especially unique with word definitions and terrific art sketches and original songs. No one anywhere else is doing anything even remotely close to it."
And George Parker said: "Oh, those laughtracks...is it peer pressure, or a magic spell, or a mirror neuron response, I can't help but start laughing. It could also be your ever charming personality of course."
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This May Surprise You –
November 6, 2020 |
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George Parker wrote: "Finally a DJ who understands true fusion through time, space and musical notes. Thank you!"
IndyScott wrote: "Making the macabre a happy thing."
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This May Surprise You –
October 31, 2020 |
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We drove 90 minutes to a ruined cemetery, inspired by this passage from the fantastic play The Tenth Man by Paddy Chayefsky. When we passed a hearse and drove behind a truck branded with the word “BEYOND,” we knew we were on the right road.
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought –
October 17, 2020 |
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought –
September 21, 2020 |
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought –
September 11, 2020 |
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Go Out in a Blaze of Glory –
June 17, 2020 |
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