Most of the significant events in our time can be traced back to very specific
archetypes. These archetypes have existed as far back as we can see and seem to
come into view via Greek Myth. The significant event we call Rock-n-Roll began
in the 1950s and gained momentum in the 60s. In this episode we will show that
the soundtrack of our lives was launched and engineered using the
Dionysian/Bacchanalian architype, which is based in hedonism and animalistic
tendencies, inherent in human beings. One might note that the Satyr and Centaur
are related characters for this archetype and represent the half animal half
human idea. Hedonism, of course, pushes toward base (bass = low frequency)
animalistic abandon. The effects of popular music in our time are staggering,
and in the 60 years that have passed since the Beatles (dung beetle), the
engineering of music has increased. The constant lowering of vibration and
intention has now brought us Rap music with its aggressive attitude, low
subwoofer delivery, and absence of musical elements found in pre-Rock-n-Roll
eras, when music was of a much higher-minded reality. Slowly what passes for
music has reached new lows via social engineering and the iron fisted control
of the modern media machine. The following quote is the voice of a musical
genius who may well have played a key role during the onset of Rock-n-Roll.
“Popular music could be solely characterized by ‘standardization’.” In his
famous paper ‘On Popular Music’, Theodore W. Adorno wanted to emphasize the
dull nature of the verse-bridge-chorus structure of songs. This meant that
nothing novel could be produced from popular music. Who was Theodore W. Adorno?
It is likely he was the man who wrote the music for the Tavistock creation we
know as the Beatles. It cannot be overstated how successful the social
engineering implemented in the early 1960s was, nor its devastating effects on
world-wide culture, the family unit and how it normalized drug culture for
generations to follow. In closing, consider the following musical facts from a
higher-minded era. A chamber orchestra is small with around fifty or fewer
musicians, while a symphony or philharmonic orchestra could have more than 100.
Simply assessed: Complexity and diversity are the enemy of control and
manipulation. Unfortunately, in knowing this it does not erase the fact that
Led Zeppelin (among others) is the soundtrack of my youth, and that nostalgia
seems to never diminish. In the days of my youth…
Original post on Crrow777 Radio