Showing posts with label Dr. Quandary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dr. Quandary. Show all posts

1.10.14

"Magician in the Mountain" - Louis Mackey



World Around Wednesdays is back.



strangle game changers with cable cords
watch their face blanken straight from beige to orange
with commercial tracks, subversive raps, work my magic in
on dirty mattresses, Merlin’s manuscripts and burnt cadaver’s skin

16.7.14

"Photosynthesis" - Premrock

Perpetually perambulating performance artist Premrock has dropped another video, this time opting for that live vibe. We love that shit here. Shouts to Tony from Deep Thinka Records, an operation that is pretty much always Doing It Right and this release is no exception. The final product before you was polished by DTR fam Tim Cielinski & Madeleine Ezell.

We love to credit people because holy shit, quality audio and video content is a lot of work. Anyone putting time in for us creative shaman types who just vomit incantations all over your equipment deserves a shout out. And a pat on the f'ing back and also money.

It should be noted, albeit rude to discuss tradecraft before marks and swine, that PremRock has made a very artful move here. This dude was in Denmark getting paid for shows and shooting a video. He's got a great album and he's touring on it. It's hard to criticize too much without risking...well, the urine-tang smell of Hate. Not saying you have it in your heart, of course, just that it might sound that way.

And look that way and also smell that way.

7.7.14

Aretha: The Beat Tape



Project management is a huge, vast, tremendous pain in the ass. Even assembling a modestly mediocre piece of work is still a piece of work, especially when you're coordinating a collaboration involving more than ten people. So doing all that and doing it well is a rare feat. Kinda like this beat tape here.

Only a few of the names here are new to the jaded, unspeakably sophisticated team here at Real Yeti Rap, but I've gotta say: I never would have thought to assemble this roster, especially for this particular project. It takes rare vision to see something like this before it even existed. Aretha: The Beat Tape is a diverse portfolio of approaches to the artform, and all of them work cohesively.



TL;DR - Fuck, this was good..

1.7.14

"The Eighth Tower" - Algorhythms



When I was fresh out of High School, rare books were still hard to find. Jacques Vallee's Passport to Magonia was prohibitively expensive, and his Invisible College was just plain vanished. Now they're both back in mundane paperback print, just in time for a new generation of utterly illiterate iPad mouthbreathers to ignore them.

Even more rare, though, were the Occult tomes that were barely 'in print' to begin with -- one of which was "War in Heaven" by Kyle Griffiths. Thanks to the tireless archival work of the Biblioteca Pleyades, the whole thing is archived online. I tracked down "War in Heaven" at around the same time I finally got ahold of James Shelby Downard's "King Kill 33," which was simply a photocopy of his original typed manuscript, and Kerry Thornley's rambling "Confessions." The Downard turned out to be a disappointment, more poetry than anything else. I'm still thinking over Thornley's book years later. Kyle Griffiths, however, did lasting damage to my psyche.

I could ramble for days, but let's inject some meat solution into the mix:

Chapter Six: In The Eighth Tower (1975), Keel concluded that UFO contact reports had a common origin with certain very intense religious and occult experiences, such as visitations from gods, angels, or demons. He postulated that the cause of all these events is a natural phenomenon, which he names the “Superspectrum.”

Keel’s Superspectrum seems to be based loosely on Jung’s concept that the human race possesses a “collective unconscious,” but he carries the idea much further than Jung did. Jung had conceived of the collective unconscious only as a body of information stored in the subconscious minds of many different individuals that causes all of them to think or behave in similar ways.

Keel carries this concept much further, and postulates that the Superspectrum involves specialized forms of matter and energy unknown to present-day science. He borrows concepts from occultism and coins scientific-sounding new terms to describe them. His Superspectrum simply seems to be another way of saying “influence by spiritual beings and psychic powers.”

However, he doesn’t conclude that the Superspectrum is a being or group of beings, as the occultists usually do with their concepts of gods, demons, and spirits. Instead, it is simply a kind of natural phenomenon with a “computer-like intelligence.”



EELRIJUE is being finalized this month, and all of the themes we baked into that cosmic casserole are coming back to haunt us. I mean that in a perfectly literal sense: our lives are haunted by a cast of characters that is barely even humanoid. Be careful what you make songs about, kids...



12.6.14

"Night Owls" - FDR prod. Dr. Quandary



This gorgeous Dr. Quandary production has been a big hit, especially with the European rap heads. This is the closing cut from FDR's debut EP, "Fear of Death and the Need for Reproduction," which I have already bloviated about at some length. Gird yourself for more, beginning immediately.

This week the EP got an excellent and insightful review from Alex at The Underground Vault, who cited a certain lack of cohesiveness & thematic consistency to the project. He's hardly the first person to make that point, and yet we find ourselves in a very...Crowleyesque position, as the authors. Bottom line, FDR is not an accessible project, and we are surely guilty of being Willfully Obscure.

Still, making beautifully doomed cult projects -- "cult" is being invoked here in a literal & legal sense -- is the entire reason we started World Around Records in the first place. I am happy to report the next FDR project will do nothing to illuminate our methods and motives. Stay woke.

29.3.12

Algorhythms - "Open Ended"

Algorhythms | Open Ended



A track that should have been released ages ago finally sees the light of day: "Open Ended," the first track off a long lost Algorhythms album. Dr. Quandary on the beats.

4.2.12

Oneiric Field Mandala - Dr. Quandary

Raw, dark, psychedelic boom bap that draws from African deserts and Indian cities in equal measure. I fucking loved this track.



Dr. Quandary is, of course, a founder of World Around Records and an instrumental artist with serious bona fides for 2012. If you're digging this, his debut album is highly recommended: Beyond All Spheres of Force and Matter.

11.12.11

Algorhythms - "Ram Nam Satya Hai" - s. maharba Remix



"Ram Nam Satya Hai" - The name of Ram is truth. When you're naming songs after Hindu funeral chants, you know it's going to be dark & heavy stuff...and this s. maharba remix delivers the goods. Cosmic, cold, but still boom bap.

Recommended: The original Algorhythms EP.

Big Thanks: The Tairy Hesticles channel.