Discourses on an Alien Sky #22 | Twin Worlds -- Above and Below
The subject of this video series by Dave Talbott is the ancient experience of towering celestial forms that are no longer present. From a single snapshot of the configuration, we can work backwards to the first appearance of these bodies out of an undifferentiated cloud or sea of dusty plasma. We can then follow the configuration’s evolution through phases that range from quasi-stability to earth shaking catastrophe. Important Note: As this series continues, it will become increasingly important to start with the Preface and work forward sequentially. These were not intended to be stand-alone videos.
Airdate: October 22, 1977 TV Asahi
Dr. Gou was rescued by Voltes team after they infiltrated Zuuru's undersea base and then brought to Big Falcon, but Gou was suspicious. Soon he realized that all the Big Falcon, Voltes team, and even Sakunji were just fake dummies planned by Zuuru to get Voltes secret from him.
"Good remixes of four tracks from Con's "commercial" period. Makes a nice companion piece to the Paragon Outtakes." - Phallus_Dei
Tracklist
00:00 Conrad Schnitzler– Auf Dem Schwarzen Kanal
04:50 Berlin Express– The 408 To Paris
08:31 Conrad Schnitzler– Tanze Im Regen
14:34 Conrad Schnitzler– Elektroklang
[Verse 1]
Did you ever hear
The one about last year?
It was all a lie
Ain't it funny how the time flies?
What we gonna do, baby
What's left for us to prove
I've never stolen nothing
No not a thing
I always tried
To stay away from this year's big thing
Ain't as easy as it seems
To find a mutual dream
[Pre-Chorus]
Can you tell me wrong from right?
Do you know when to freeze or take flight?
Can you tell me more or less?
I got to know, confess
[Chorus]
Don't neglect me, no no
Come on and be, be my conspiracy
No no, don't neglect me, baby
Come on and be, be my conspiracy
[Verse 2]
Now you got a question about your answer, yeah yeah yeah
Say try your Adam's apple
You talk it try it like it right
So now you want to fight? Well alright
Let's step outside
I got tradition
It's an addition
My definition, it don't hold me back
What you think about that
What you don't understand
This is a very old land
[Pre-Chorus]
Can you tell me wrong from right
Do you know when to freeze or take flight
Can you tell me more or less
I got to know, confess
[Chorus]
Don't neglect me, no no
Come on and be, be my conspiracy
No no, don't neglect me, baby
Come on and be, be my conspiracy
Episode aired Apr 17, 1971
The Doctor discovers an Interplanetary Mining Corporation ship has landed on the planet in order to mine its duralinium, while Norton begins causing trouble at the colony.
Zeit (English: Time) is the third studio album by German electronic music group Tangerine Dream. A double LP, it was released in August 1972, being the first release featuring Peter Baumann, who joined then-current members Christopher Franke and Edgar Froese. Zeit is subtitled Largo in Four Movements.
Tracks
0:00:00 Birth of Liquid Plejades
0:19:54 Nebulous Dawn
0:37:50 Origin of Supernatural Probabilities
0:57:24 Zeit
Here's an album of Conrad Schnitzler with old live 70s materials. "Electronegativity" expresses super, hypersonic electronic sounds with somnambulant abstract melodies. The mysterious transmissions and reverberations provide some incredible psych-acoustic moments. The two longest tracks represent the pinnacle of Schnitzler's musical innovation. "Solar Cells" starts with crystalline and orbital sounds, after eight minutes of fascinating sounds, an electronic obsessional pattern raises from the dark, sculpting a sumptuous dronescape. The track ends with a blend of feedback, long and creepy monotonous vibrations. "Solar Collectors" is an other amazing composition which generates an incredible neurotic charge. All electronic noises are mixed in a rather abstract orchestration, including some cloudy loops. A unique ecstatic journey of sounds.
Tracklist
00:00 Solar Cells
20:54 Solar Collectors
42:52 Boiler's Heart
46:00 Hard Soldering
50:29 Electron Beam Welding
54:24 Welding Heat
57:20 Shot Blasting
1:01:44 Fused Zone
It’s not surprising that we’ve been asked to comment on the YouTube presence of Canadian psychologist Jordan Peterson. It seems his star rose spectacularly after a record-setting interview with Britain’s “Channel 4” host Cathy Newman. Posted on YouTube in January, the interview attracted over 11 million views in about six months, with an overwhelmingly positive rating,
So we’ve asked ourselves how to respond to our own supporters urging us to take up Peterson and his work. The answer has come from looking more closely at how he acquired his current perspective. His academic training placed an emphasis on the mythic archetypes, the deepest structures of human thought in ancient times.