20121207

Helter Skelter Vol. 6: The Delicate Sound of Thunder



2001 Timing
July 25-28, 2011

LeClair

To do it right with DSOTM, you should listen to Also Sprach at the beginning and end of the movie. The rest is all Floyd

Don't forget to all play repeat. I am working on this match-up right now, DSOTM with all three movies. Should have some cool data in 3-4 days. I hope sooner, but it is exhausting--fun, scary and exhausting.

Klaus

True.  After a few days of playthroughs, my mind goes to jello.

This project has become so normal to me, that I almost forget how abnormal it all seemed the first time I played DSOTM to the Wizard of Oz.  I am, however, reminded of it's novelty aspect any time I find an urge to discuss it with someone.

I hope you have the opportunity to do a live Harry Potter synch in the theater.  It's truly an amazing experience.

I have tried to find a good resource concerning Gauss tensor, but I feel as though I need more info/time to truly grok it.  At this point, this is what I can conceive of it: Gauss needed a mathematical equation to measure a seemingly immesurable object (Ceres).  The tensor equation required three points of observation with which to document consistent statistical points. This trio was beyond the normal singular human perspective.  Through the trio and math, Gauss was able to accurately predict the orbit of Ceres.  The extrapolation of this system hints at larger notions about reality.  

LeClair

If you find the time to do my recommended match up DSOTM/2001 you mind may solidify again.  It is fucking amazing.

Here is a final bit of instruction.  When the fourth play of "On the Run" comes around, just before the ancient Dave enters the Monolith, turn up the movie volume to 100%, with the DSOTM sound at about 60%.  The resulting experience is beyond description.

Regarding grokking the tensor, it is only a metaphorical usage I'm applying. Basically, because of the special way I personally stumbled into these three "mother matches" of 2001/DSOTM, TS/Meddle and EWS/The Wall, I have decided to use each album against all three films as a "metaphorical" version of the tensor. The goal is to co-relate the data to within an inch of its life. To measure three events with three different yardsticks. To "cut it up into little pieces" and put it back together again.

In a few days, when I relay my data for DSOTM, I will also relate just how I got into this mess, and discovered the 4:22 2001/DSOTM match-up. It is interesting.

Klaus

Started the final run up of Dark Side/2001 at 1:30:22 (Not sure if this completely accurate).

  Just might be the most sublime of them all.  Seamless.  I'm always amazed at how I'm repeatedly blown away at the beauty and magic within, and how it's like I've never seen it before with a new combination.  How deep is the rabbit hole???

I can't wait to restart from the beginning and take the entire Dark 2001 in.

Bravo, Mark.

LeClair

You must see from the beginning.  It will amaze.  You are eight seconds to the heavy side for this final run up, an effect produced by the slight inaccuracy of song times in aggregate, I suspect. It can be tricky lining up the time from other than the starting point, so I have made a key list for timings which I will send to you when it is completed.  Nevertheless, for this part of "2001" the effect would be extremely similar.

Here seems like a good place to tell you how all of this started for me.  I will be brief.

In the summer of 2001 I worked in isolation in a town on the border of Alaska/Yukon called Beaver Creek.  At this time, I had no knowledge of the kind that we currently discuss, except some trivial detail in he old noggin.  I was, however, a serious movie fan with a penchant for Kubrick.  One afternoon a fellow employee suggested the DSOTM/Oz synch-up.  I had never heard of such a thing, but I was duly intrigued.  The difficulty was that we were in the middle of nowhere and the availability of movies was scarce.  There was a lady in town who collected videos, and we were off to see if she had The Wiz to loan.  I was amazed to learn she did not.

At this exact moment, something incredible happened.  Without thinking or even having time to form a thought I bespoke the following sentence: "Well, we could do it with "2001", because they are basically the same movie".

I have no idea from where this thought emerged.  It was a kind of automatic speaking, like speaking in tongues or something.  To add to the weirdness of it all, the lady did have a copy of "2001" and we borrowed it.  My co-worker wondered how we would set up the timing.  Because I had devoted my life to classical music, I decided that Strauss's Also Sprach should be heard before the album started... mostly because I wanted to hear it myself.  I hit the play button on the attack of the last note of the piece.

Up to this time, I had never heard any Pink Floyd outside of radio play and random occurrence.

Now, I was hearing this amazing album next to my favorite movie, a movie I would have bet my life that I knew something about, and my world was shattered.  It is fair to say that my study of the occult, media, and related material began exactly when that event took place in June of 2001.  Thing is, I barely survived the resulting psychological injury.  My social and professional life was destroyed.  I withdrew into a cone of silence.  It took me about five years to get to where I could make myself understood to others.

Really Bill, you need to see this from the beginning, straight through the intermission to the end, asap.  How deep is the rabbit hole?  Deep.

In a few days I will have completed my correspondence table for the DSOTM part of the tensor.  Another day to write it up and I hope to have it for you to peruse for the weekend.  

Klaus

Gonna spin it today.

What did your co-worker think?  Were you smoking/drinking?
Did you have subtitles?
Did you watch DSOTM and Wizard of Oz soon after?

LeClair

No subtitles.  It was done on a boom box and a TV.  We blended the sound.  My co-worker was astonished.  He may have wondered if I was on the up-and-up... if I had done it before.  We repeated the experiment several times and as I remember it, there were more than a few people who got the gist of it all.  I have not seen or spoken to any of these people since 2001.  It was more than a year later that I finally watched The Wiz/DSOTM.  The result was an article, my first at metaphilm. 

I had started smoking weed some months earlier (at age 34 no less).  I went quickly from a joint or two weekly to an ounce or so monthly.  By Beaver Creek I was kronik, yo.  I had brought about four ounces with me to last the 4 1/2 moth contract, but had burned completely though it in 6 weeks.  I was drinking about 20 oz. of straight whiskey--all day long, just sipping.  Needless to say, I was seriously fucked-up.  It was, without a doubt the highest, wildest and weirdest experience of my life.  I have tried to recreate it, but have yet to touch again so close to the void.

The great part about it is that as unhinged as I was, I doesn't matter in the least to the profundity of what I discovered and have continued to discover.  I have paid a high price, but so far it is worth it--big time. 

Now that I think of it, it wasn't a year between the two synchs... it may have been merely a few weeks.  It was a heady time for me.

Klaus

Is your article about Wiz/DSOTM still up at metaphilm?

LeClair

Yeah, it's up there. And I was right the first time. It was a little more than a year later than the 2001/DSOTM cataclysm of June/Jule 2001.

BTW. When you do get around to the complete 2001/DSOTM, I hope you do it to the end. I am watching it right now and the timings are a gobsmack. Most delightfully, the melody of Ont The Run and Time mixs fin a mindbending way with the closing Also Sprach and Blue Danube. The melodies are so close that I regard this as potentially purposeful.

Here's a link to the article

http://metaphilm.com/index.php/detail/the-wizard-of-ads/

Klaus

I thought that that was the article.
I could tell from the style, sense of humor.

Quick note:  a pink Floyd site references the words on the intercom of On The Run to be " "Get your tickets and your passports at the ready, we make a brief stop at customs and then we begin. Now boarding flight 215 to Rome from Colorado Fields.". Any thoughts to the accuracy?  If so, ridiculous.

I hesitate to bring up this question right now:  the official running time of DSOTM seems to be documented at 42:59.  This does not balance with the time I have calculated on my iPod, which is 42:51.  For the third run through, I advanced according to 42:59, allowing for 1 second of pure silence in between, leaving 2 X 43:00, arriving at 4:22 + 86:00 = 1:30:22.  In my viewing, many transitions were seemingly perfect.  I am going to start from the beginning and go throughout, but was wondering if you have noticed these timing discrepancies.  Thoughts?

LeClair

Yes, I have noticed these discrepancies. I discovered them last week when I tried to cut up EWS with The Wall Timings. There are two main problems. The first is that the individual track titles do not represent a "to the instant" timing, but rather a rounded off amount that is sometimes nearly a complete second off-time. Second is that the replay function does not overlap "to the instant" either. The aggregate of mis-timing can create a pretty big discrepancy when looking at sections of the mash-up. For this reason, the only accurate timing must be considered the "uninterrupted all-play-repeat with the correct start time". In regard to all three films, I am comfortable, even firm, that the start-timings I have "discovered" are accurate to within one-half second. You have seen the wonders of Meddle and The Wall. When you see the DSOTM/2001 mash you oughtta know fer sher about the timing issues.

As I mention, I have developed a master timing key to allow the movies/music to be broken into smaller sections for study. I have finished the list for DSOTM with all three movies. I'll send it to you when I compile the DSOTM part of the tensor.

Yeah, those words from "On the Run" are accurate. I think we can agree this hole is deep as deep can be. The question is, can we hold our breath long enough to get to the bottom.

Klaus

Quick check:  I find that Us and Them ends just as the light show ends, and Any Color You Like starts just as Bowmans eyeball hits the screen.  This cut destroyed me.  Does this jive with your experience?

"Yeah, those words from "On the Run" are accurate. I think we can agree this hole is deep as deep can be. The question is, can we hold our breath long enough to get to the bottom."

This made me laugh out loud.  Great stuff.

In the Wizard of Oz, Professor Marvel's horse is named Sylvester.  The name of the actor who played Heywood Floyd in 2001?  William Sylvester.

LeClair

I find this cut very pleasing... so pleasing that it is troubling, because it is quite a bit off of my timing. I am a little pissed actually, because this cut is so frickin' awesome that I need to go back now and reconsider my timing after two days of work. FUCK!

Oh well, it is all in the game and I want to get it right. It would be alot harder if it wasn't so fun. I must say that as strongly as I feel about 4:22, this particular cut of yours, with the "white flash" preceding, seems a perfect fit for the moment as you see it.

It's not fair that you should get devastated and not me!!

I will now watch the whole damned thing again. Give me a couple few hours.

I just did your eyeball/Any Color match up.  For a second I was nigh on to convinced you had me, but as interesting as one or two synchs are, I think it falls short of the wonders of the 4:22 timing.  The movie is a good 20 sec. behind where it fits best.  When you have reached the end you will hear '...live for today, gone tomorrow..." just as ancient Dave enters the Monolith for the last time--you will know.

I don't want you to think that I don't appreciate your contribution here.  I desire to be challenged on every and any detail you consider worthy.

Do the 4:22 match from start to finito... you won't be disappointed, but you'll probably be pretty tired.

Klaus

Absolutely bro.  Excited to view it in it's entirety.  I'll report back.

LeClair

OK.  At last we have communication.  I think you have made a mistake in identifying the track-name.  The eyeball cut to multi-cubes begins exactly as "Brain Damage" begins.  This is to the lyric "the lunatic is on the grass".  If this is the timing you have found then we are on the same page.

Klaus

Sorry, i got confused.

Here is what I've been working with:

By the exact numbers of my iPod: start at 4:22, plus two complete plays at 42:59, plus 25:45 for Speak>>Money.   This leaves Us and Them starting at 1:56:05, Any Color starting at 2:03:55, and Brain Damage starting at 2:07:20.

LeClair

And therein lies the problem. For some reason, by the numbers, you come in seven or eight secs on the heavy side of the movie. I noticed these discrepancies and corrected them by carefully watching the movie and recording the exact DVD timecode when certain tracks started. It was time consuming, with many errors on my part. However I have checked and re-checked and somehow it comes out according to the following DVD Key. When you do the full version you can check for this yourself... or just trust me. Here is the 2001/DSOTM Time key for start times on the whole album. I'll send you the trachk spacing later, with my data. You'll find these time lines up with the Brain Damage cut just exactly as you describe it.

Play One Starts at 4:22
Play Two Starts at 47:18
Play Three Starts at Just a split second before 1:30:13
Play Four Starts at just a split sec. before 2:13:08

This gives the final play of Any Color at just a split before 2:03:48, which is seven seconds on the light side of your current timing.

Don't forget to turn up the movie for the final play of Also Sprach. A good spot to turn it up is while Dave has his dinner.

Happy Hunting.

Klaus

Awesome, thanks for the input.  Gonna do this in the morning tomorrow.

Talk to you then.

I'm thirty minutes in.  And, well, I mean, it's just...well, you know.  A skull cracker.

The most amazing thing about this is, I was convinced that I had it, that my calculation and mix was THE mix, and after watching it through, according to your guidelines, it is clear that your mix is absolutely precise.  It provides my mind a lot more confidence in the arena of objectivity.

In Finnegans Wake, the thunderclap that recurs throughout the book is the word of God, the changing of aeons.  In 2001/DSOTM, the thunder is clearly heard as the Monolith lands, the astronauts (specifically Floyd) on the Moon(and one of the most haunting moments), as Dave captures Franks dead body, as well as a fourth and final time as man is reborn.

The first time you experienced this back in, not so oddly enough, 2001,  the thunderclap roared long and loud, and I can understand and appreciate the confluence of variables that ushered in a very long and dark night of the soul for you.

Funny, after watching it completely through, all I want to do now is start it up from the beginning.

  Thank you for your patience on this one, a lesser person could have gotten quite agitated concerning my occlusion.

LeClair

Wow... I am more than pleased that you have enjoyed this as much, it would seem, as I do.  There is no need for your apology (as brilliantly written as the whole mail is).  I am certain about my timings and some of my conclusions too, but not married to them.  Your insight is valuable, in spite of a bump or two along the road.  I have sought a partnership of this quality for a long time.

I am glad you noted the "thunderclap" and am more than tickled that it also appears in Joyce as you describe.  I am of the opinion, given my marginal knowledge of Joyce, that Kubrick intended 2001 to pair with Ulysses; EWS with Finnegan and The Shining with The Dead.  I admit that this is mere intuition on my part, although there are a few clues in EWS (Apt. #5A: Harford's Address).

Klaus

"Delicate Sound of Thunder became the first rock album to be played in space, as Soviet cosmonauts took it aboard Soyuz TM-7. They left the cassette box on Earth to save weight. The members of Pink Floyd were present at the launch. The double LP was also the band's only album to be officially released in the Soviet Union by the state-owned label Melodiya."   from Wikipedia

LeClair

I am impressed.  What is the date of this event?  To my sensibility, this is not plain coincidence, nor is it brilliant creative programming.  I am of a mind that it has an occult nature that Kubrick either knew of or programmed himself.  I have so much I want to say right now, but I am holding back until I can present the complete data on my first pass of the DSOTM tensor.  I will finish watching EWS today.  Tomorrow, I will go through "The Shining", which should be easy, as I have done it before with DSOTM.  It is my ardent goal to get my data to you no later than Saturday... I am shooting for Friday night.

As an amuse bouche, here is some deductive reasoning.  I admit this is very thin, and doesn't really have any meaningful bearing on the research at hand, although I suppose it could do.  Rather, it is just a speculation I entertain as to one small part of how this might have gone down.  I have developed this "theory" thanks to the direction given by our partnership thus far.

Young Roger Waters admires Kubrick and maybe even thinks he "gets" it.  Pink Floyd gets alot of early chops writing music for the movies, and score several films by the late 60's.  Waters wants to score a Kubrick film.  According to the Floyd/Kubrick site, Waters's one regret is that he did not score "2001".  There is an implication that he petitions Kubrick for the opportunity to score the movie, and is denied.

I speculate that when Waters finally sees "2001", his regret is amplified.  Not to be completely foiled, Waters decides to score "2001" anyway and the result is '71's "Meddle".  The trouble is that "Meddle" fails to draw the attention and perhaps praise Waters desires, namely, from Kubrick.  It is a matter of subtlety.  "Meddle" simply fails to attract Kubrick's slightest attention.  Waters decides to turn up the heat and DSOTM is the result.  DSOTM contains direct, even explicit reference to the values expressed in "2001".  Polymath Kubrick catches the hint this time, and checks it out.  He may be either pissed or delighted, but he is certainly curious enough to investigate that "Meddle" is a profound soundscape to his film and that DSOTM, perhaps accidentally, gives away many of his carefully encoded secrets.

For myself, I have decided that mastermind Stan is amused by Waters fascinations and decides to recapitulate with "The Shining"/Meddle mash-up.  Meanwhile, Waters is run down.  Drugs, Fame and Booze have weakened him just enough to receive the final download and he at last identifies Kubrick as not just a Great Artist, but as Adversary, Dungeon Master, and Cruel Cosmic Social Programmer.  Waters creates "The Wall" with its Brick pattern cover, as a declaration of the complete realization of Stan's persona as programmer and of his own failure to rise to the Draconian standard of Kubrick's vision.

Stan responds with EWS, in his persona as "bricklayer" Victor Ziegler.  The message is clear.

I am back to work on EWS just now and promise wonders.   



Bored Games 2: Game On!

Skrabbalah


Madonna's favorite!
Not for beginners, this challenging game requires a deep, spiritual focus.  Ages 40 and up.


Bacon Boggle



A fun twist on Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon, this cubehouse stars the most famous faces of Hollywood.  Connect as many as you can in three minutes.  Hours of fun!


PKD&D



When Philip K. Dick and Dungeons and Dragons collide, you and your friends can finally try your hand at building a universe that doesn't fall apart two days later.  Travel through space and time, explore alternate identities and histories, and wrestle through endless transmigrations of spirit and flesh.  Reality is what you make it.  

20121206

Bored Games

Board games.  People play board games.  Some by choice, and some only as a last resort.  Some will play anything as long as alcohol is involved.


Great party game isn't it?

You can tell a lot about a person just by asking them what their favorite board game is.

For example, if they say Monopoly, they are boring.
Connect Four?  Mentally ill.
Scattergories?  Alcoholic.
Risk?  Nerd.
Trivial Pursuit?  Blowhard.

Scrabble?  This is a tough one, because no one actually follows the official rules when they play Scrabble.  It is very, very "Catholic" in this way (I think up to 99% of the people that play Scrabble cheat the game in some overt or subtle way).  If everyone actually played Scrabble according to the official rules, no one would actually play Scrabble.  So when someone says Scrabble ask the follow up question, "Do you follow the official rules?" and see how they respond.

Boggle?  Delusional, meaning, this person thinks they are smarter than they really are.  Whenever I play Boggle someone always feels the need to warn everyone just how good they are.  Usually someone else quietly warns the others just how good their quiet friend is:

"Watch out everyone, Jane is really, really good."  

In my experience, no one needs a warning, and Jane is never "really, really good."  Jane is just better than her stupid friend.

It should be no surprise then that Boggle is in fact my favorite board game.  I love Boggle because I like to think I am smart, and I always, ALWAYS destroy Jane.  But am I truly as good at the game as I think I am?

What I know is that I can't remember the last time I ever lost a Boggle session, and for years this was the only criteria I had to base my skill level on.  Honestly, I am not basing this on killing time with the niece and the nephew.  I'm basing this on competition with people I consider to be quite intelligent, and many who claimed to be very good at the game.  And they have never had a higher score than me.  Not even close.

Here's the thing: my opinion is based on traditional Boggle.  Wooden cubes, plastic dome, pencil and paper, and that dinky little timer filled with sand (love that).  In traditional Boggle, the best player in the room may write down 33 words, and the group may collectively write down 50 distinct words, but no one knows exactly how many words were actually on the board, words that EVERYONE failed to see.  

Last year I downloaded the Boggle App for the iPhone.  It is just like traditional Boggle (4x4 square, three minute timer), except it provides something the traditional game does not.

And this something destroyed me.

For the first time in my life I got to see every possible word that was possible.  I was not prepared for this.  It was at that moment that I realized that I was terrible at Boggle.  Terrible.




Very Revealing


Take three minutes right now to study the above Boggle board and see how many words you can find.


Time's up.
Go ahead and take another three minutes.

How'd you do?  10 words?  Terrible.  20 words?  Terrible.  30 words?  Terrible.
If you had to guess, how many possible words do you think are in there?
Would you believe me if I said that there are 75 words in there?  Don't, because I would be lying.

Would you believe me if I said 100 words?  Still lying.

There are 149 words in that 4x4 square.  

ONE HUNDRED AND FORTY NINE.

abele, abet, abets, able, ables, ablest, ably, abs, ace, bas, base, basely, bast, baste, beast, bee, beet, beetle, beetles, bel, belt, bes, best, bet, betel, bets, bey, blest, blet, blets, blue, blues, bluest, bluet, bluets, bluey, blype, cab, cable, cables, cablet, cablets, cabs, case, cast, cast, cease, cee, ease, easel, east, elm, elute, elutes, eme, emes, emeu, emeus, etwee, eye, eyes, lea, leas, least, les, lest, let, lets, leu, ley, lies, lust, lute, lute, lutes, lye, lyes, meet, meetly, mel, melt, mesa, met, mete, mew, pele, peles, pelmet, pelmets, pelt, pet, plea, pleas, pleb, plebe, plebs, plus, ply, pye, pyes, sab, sabe, sable, sac, sae, sea, sel, seme, set, stele, stem, stey, sue, suet, tea, teas, tee, teem, tel, tele, teles, tew, tule, tules, twee, usable, usably, use, useable, useably, ute, utes, uts, web, webcast, webs, wee, wet, wetly, yea, yeas, yeast, yelp, yep, yes, yet, ylem, yule, yules.


It's Tricky
(Right now you are probably thinking, "What the fuck is a 'pelmet'?")

Can you imagine if you sat down to play Boggle with someone who consistently wrote down 50 more words than the rest of the players combined?  After getting out the dictionary to look up the words no one had ever heard of, I think it would be clear to most that they would have to reconsider what it meant to be "good at Boggle."  I think it would also be very disorienting, to realize that Boggle could be played at such a high level, that someone could see so much more.  

"That Boggle guy?  Too much time on his hands…"

Maybe, I don't know.  What I do know is that you certainly would never want to play Boggle for 10 cents a point with that guy, which might be the only reason that guy would ever want to play Boggle with you. 

"Play for fun? Nah."

  Could it possibly be any fun for that guy when no element of competition exists whatsoever?
It reminds me of a short conversation I had about film with someone recently.

 "I LOVE Stanley Kubrick.  He's my favorite director."
"Oh yeah?  What's your favorite film?  2001?"
"Oh, I haven't seen 2001 yet….."

Hmm….she probably didn't have enough time on her hands.

20121205

Helter Skelter Vol. 5: The Damn Bug Is Still In The Jar






Quick Note
July 1, 2011

Klaus:

Obviously I am watching The Shining Wall.  "Mommy, there's an airplane in the sky", the "Twin Towers".   Damn.

LeClair:
There are a few interesting 9/11 references in The Shining.  When Jack first bounces the tennis ball.  There are 4 pencils on the writing table, aimed at the fours "Missile" looking figures on the wall over the fire place.   Jack throws the ball 12 times but the sound of the last throw is muted as the scene cuts.  This leaves 11 audible bounces.  The first nine throws are seen and heard as the camera widens from the typewriter out to the whole room.  There is then a cut to a shot from behind Jack as he makes two more throws before the fade out to exterior.  This gives Nine bounces, and then two more make Eleven.

The Bar Back of the Gold Room also has a 9/11 code.  There are 9 interior "white light" panels and 11 interior panels.  A cash register sits in the two outer sconces.  You are aware of the 9/11 vs 2001:ASO clues--The Millennium Hilton, etc.?  Well IBM made cash registers before they got into computers.  I take the two "registers" as similes for WTC 1 and 2.


TWO THOUSAND WALL
July 1, 2011

Klaus:

I'd like to hear your opinion on the starting of the Wall at 3:32 in 2001.

LeClair:
I'm gonna sit down and do the 3:32 timing in a few minutes, when my roomie leaves for work.  I will also look at The Shining vs. The Wall.  Quite frankly, I could listen to The Wall doing just about anything.  I can't believe it took me this long to get around to hearing it.

I am sorry for my lack of response these last couple of days.  Major anxiety attack.  Spent two whole days undercover--avoiding shadows.

Klaus:

Dude, I completely understand going undercover.  My brain has been rattled quite a bit too.

Looking forward to continued dialogue.

LeClair:
Thanks for saying so.  This is some heady stuff.  Ironically, since we have started this inquiry, I have felt somewhat elevated, as if I was walking a few inches above the ground.  Nevertheless, the overall awesomeness of it all can be a bit much sometimes.

I have just completed your 3:32 timing and I loved it.  Then ending is perfect and here are several points of interest throughout.  The "squeak" on Vera is shocking the first play through.   Do you have an organic justification for this timing or did you experiment to get it right?  My 4:22 is oriented to begin DSOTM just as Also Sprach ends.  I love that piece, and I like to hear it to start the movie.

I'm gonna try to mash Wall vs. The Shining in just a bit after I tuck away a little Soylent Green for lunch..  Any advice on timing?

Klaus:

The best part of the 3:32 timing is the absolute accidental timing caused by a smudge on the DVD that resulted in Thin Ice starting at the end of the Intermission.  It clicked so hard, that I wondered if it would pay dividends from the start.  Well, the "if you don't eat your meat..." kind of sealed it.

I was so high from watching that hit, the fact that the Shining was in tune to the Wall was almost just too much.  I'm not really sure just what is going on here, but I am alternately feeling like we are either cutting edge mystics, or the two guys collecting aphids at the beginning of A Scanner Darkly.  The problem/salvation is that when we wake up the next day, the damn bug is still in the jar.

I think the anxiety results from not knowing if this is the tip of the iceberg, or the end of the road.  Three cheers to finding out!


Timing
July 1-7, 2011


Klaus:

My timing is fucked up.  The key sound that locks in the Pre-Intermission is the screech in Vera by the Monolith, and the tires screeching as the pod turns.  Post Intermission requires starting Thin Ice right before the Spaceship is presented.  This manipulation seems to taint it a little, but it really works well.

LeClair:

The main purpose of the "tensor" is to use three different ruler sticks to measure three different events and thus find links not only in excellent musical synchro's but to come to know very well the timings of each movie and how they match thematically. As such, it is necessary to begin all plays at the same point in each film or conversely with each piece of music at a specific point.

But don't get me wrong here, the unique value of some accidental cut-ups is not to be dismissed. I am gonna do your skewed timing from the intermission tonight.

Klaus: 

Start Thin Ice at 1:29:41.  The year 1941 popped out, and it works really well.

LeClair:

I just completed your selective timing of 2001/Wall.  It clicks on so many levels it is hard to imagine that it is accidental.  It is actually pretty close to the play-out starting at 4:22.  Out about 10-15 secs.  I am beginning to doubt the strictness of my originally planned timings in favor of these more carefully applied results.  I have an idea re: The Shining I want to test out.

Pax for now.

Klaus:

I was rereading your essay on "A Serious Man", and  the connections between Danny, Harold Lloyd, and The Mentaculus (all work, no play) seemed to jump out.  Also, the Dybbuk dies outside in the cold due to a woman protecting her little man.

Klaus:

Rewatching ASM, and wondering at the connections between the Mentaculus of Arthur and The Anti-Mentaculus of Jack Torrance.

Hope all is well with you and yours.

LeClair:

A nice connection, William.  In a sense the two are identical.  Strike that, it more than merely a sense... they are the same work... because God = Saturn/Satan.  Jack and Arthur are each confronting God.  Maybe the difference is that, to my eye, it appears that God is just as interested in Jack as Jack is interested in God.  The same does not seem to be true for Arthur.  Another difference is that Jack's manuscript is like a mantra, and indicates the clearance of thought.  Arthur's work seems like the result of a more fruitful investigation of his creative talent.  I mean, "The Mentaculus" is beautiful.  The transitional scene, which finds Larry under the spell of "The Mentaculus" is my favorite shot in the whole Coen Ouvre.  They actually manage to create, in that quick cut, a sense of "out of body" contemplation.

Here is a quick clue to the hidden cruelty (barely hidden) of the Coen's.  "Mentaculus" is a spoonerized term for "A mental case".

It is interesting you reached out today, as I was gonna drop a line myself a little later.  I am going camping for a week, starting tomorrow and I didn't want to miss returning any mails.


I have a thought re: "The Shining" by way of PKD.  Remember from Valis and Exegesis that Dick reports a "pink" light?  Well, did you happen to notice that, unlike the "yellow/lime" tennis ball bounced by Jack in the Colorado Rm., the ball that rolls into Danny's play area is "pink".

I'll be back in touch when I return mid-month.

Glad to hear from you.

Klaus:

Slowed down, one can see "SGGIH-NOSOB" written in the middle of one of the pages of the Mentaculus, ala "REDRUM".  Both Arthur and Danny are in tune, but just need to tune in a bit clearer, as the messages are coming through backwards.

Why can I not place the pink ball scene offhand?

Enjoy your getaway into Nature, I'm a bit jealous.  Talk to you later Mark.

LeClair:
The scene is right before Danny goes into Rm. 237, as he plays with his dinky toys.

Peace



Deathly Hallowed Pt. 2
July 16-17, 2011


Klaus:

Try to experience this [Dark Side of the Moon + Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2] in the theater.  Start DSOTM with "Time" right as the movie opens.  You'll know right away if you've got it locked.

LeClair:
Just got back from the theater... the movie was sold out. It is Stampede Week here in Calgary. The city is swollen to its maximum capacity. Gonna try again with friends next Friday, when the town has cooled down. In the mean time, I have started to work on the "tensor". DSOTM is a lead pipe cinch as a sound track to The Shining, with especial emphasis on the lyrics. This is going to be a big project... I expect to have to complete all nine pairings several times to get the message.

Anyhoo... glad you are well.

Klaus:

The correct timing should have the alarm clock in Time going off as Valdemort's wand lights up the sky.  It's really good.



Obvious
July 21-25, 2011


Klaus:

Start The Wall at 00:28 on the DVD for The Wizard of Oz.  The screen shot says "A Victor Fleming Production".  It's kinda ridiculous.

LeClair:

Wow... I can't wait to try this. I am gonna do it right now.

I have been working very hard on "the tensor" and the results are astonishing. Just to explain, the basic idea is to use the three albums as fixed measurements against each film. The term "tensor" is metaphorical, from Gauss and the "physical tensor", which is a way of triangulating a point in space.

I have alot I want to share with you but the data is voluminous to say the least. I am a slow writer, and I don't want to stop the research just yet. I am at it day and night and I think the first complete pass ought to take me about another two weeks. At that time I will compile what I have and send it to you alone. There may be some kind of writing project in this--I dunno--but for now, I really appreciate your thoughts and the education that informs them, and I would like to continue our partnership into these matters..

I am doing The Wiz on the Wall right fukkin' now.

Klaus:

I do consider myself lucky to be in communication as you tackle this monster.  Let me know if there are any specific viewings that I can offer feedback on.

As I wrote before, I just completed Joe Campbells book Skeleton Key to Finnegans Wake, as well as another reread of Robert Anton Wilsons James Joyce essays, and, my mind is just completely afire.  It's really starting to absorb itself to a new level.  Kubrick has to have been well versed in Joyce, and I am concentrating on this angle right now.

My mind is always open to bounce ideas off of.

LeClair:

Just finished up the Wall on the Wiz.

Many marvelous moments. Funny and profoundly insightful. I am interested in knowing how you settled on this particular time coding.

Here is a corker for you in the field of non-local punnery--and I would have missed it if I had not watched the Wizzing on the Wall.

The Three albums of The Wall, Dsotm and Meddle are natural pairs for the Scarecrow, the Tin man, and the Lion by way of EWS, 2001 and The Shining.

1. The Wall's most famous track is themed around the concept of education. Scarecrow gets a Diploma (kept on The Wall. The connections to EWS are also present in this character, as the film is an education for Bill. There are many themes in EWS that relate to "paper". Money, Wrapping, Newspaper, Rolling Paper, the note from Somerton. Paper, like Scarecrow, is vulnerable to Fire.

2. The main theme of DSOTM and of 2001 is "Time". Many, many lyrics about the passing of Time. Dave gets lost in a Time Warp. HAL is an electronic life from and vulnerable to Water. Like Tin Man, HAL is also a Machine. The alchemical metal associated with Jupiter is exclusively Tin. The rain-rusty Tin Man is given a Watch.

3. Meddle is acknowledged as a play on Medal and Metal. "Fearless" is a key track. The fearless Lion gets a Medal. Metal oxidizes into rust (vulnerable to moist Air). The costumed man/bear/pig from The Shining is remarkably similar in costume to the Coward Lion. There is a Lion on a prominent painting in Danny's room. Wendy (windy?) mentions Air by way of the high altitude.

The use of The Axe by Tin Man somewhat blurs the matter. The Tin Man appears in EWS too, as Szavost. Both he and the Tin Man discuss the Art of Love. I suspect there is much more to this vein of thought.

I am interested in your research. Please don't hesitate to drop some knowledge my way, especially as it pertains to our mutual fascination with Kubrick iHuasca.

Peace Owt for Now.

Klaus:

As to the timing,
I chose the "there's an airplane up in the sky" to coincide with Glenda's bubble.
Everything seemed to fall in place after that.

Klaus:

The dog's name is Toto.  Can be pronounced TwoTwo.  I think 00:22 provides a better starting time for Dark Side of The Oz.  Just in the first ten minutes it has revealed a much tighter fit.

Klaus:

Holy fuckin shit!  There's no denying it. Everyone has been wrong with the timing.  I'm guessing the wrong time was initially given out on purpose.

LeClair:

Looking forward to trying this tonite. The number 22 has specific connotations for me which also directly relate to my experience of DSOTM/2001. I have also decoded Toto as 2-2. We are on a likewise wavelength, I think.

Klaus:

I might have gotten a little overexcited about the new start time for Dark Wizard, but I really believe it's a better fit.

I can't seem to find a fit for Meddle.

LeClair:

Honestly, I think the 22 timing is boss.  I have only watched through the second play of Time (was interrupted by my roomie), but I liked it alot.  In a strictly musical sense it is very strong, and many good lyrical connections

I have a discovery that I think is worth consideration.  I do not know what it means, but it mos def validates matching The Wall to all three Kubrick's of our recent interest, with timings as I have suggested.  Furthermore, it is a strong indicator that there is a Floyd specific code in Kubrick and particularly in these movies.

On four distinct plays of  "Goodbye Blue Sky?" a character or characters are seen emerging from "elevators".

1.  Dr. Bill into his office.  First play.
2.  Dr. Bill stands in front of a single elevator in the Lobby of the Hotel Jason.  Second play.
3.  With 4:22 timing: Floyd emerges from elevator into Space Station customs (seated next to pink flight attendant).  First play.
4.  With 00:13 timing: Ullman, Watson and the Torrances step out of elevator into the Colorado Rm.  First play.

I have found another correspondence in Wall/2001.  Mother plays at roughly the same time as Money from the DSOTM mash-up.  What it interesting is that Mother oscillates between the time sig.  3/4 and 4/4.  Money is mostly 7/4.  In the DSOTM/2001 synch the "cash register" from Money cha-chings just as we see the IBM logo on the ship console.  During The Wall/2001 mash, the IBM logo appears to the lyric "check out".  IBM-Business Machine-Cash Register-Check Out.

BTW, have you watched DSOTM with the 4:22 Timing for 2001?  You will dig it.



20121204

High Definition Plate Tectonics


"It’s all SYNC, we just go right out and say it.  Whereas like, it’s completely implied when we say ‘sync,' but when you look at it, what are the prime tools that are being used to extrapolate the information with these different systems?  The O.T.O. is obviously one of them.  Mysticism across the board plays with correspondences, so “this corresponds to this”.  But then you’re basically, you’re getting information because of how these two things connect, or three things, or whatever.  So, you’re like “how does this relate to this?”  There’s information inherent in the relationship that you wouldn’t get with the thing alone.  You watch the Wizard of Oz, a really good movie with lots of symbolism, then you put it on mute and you watch it with Dark Side of the Moon and you get a whole other message.  Whereas, if you listen to Dark Side of the Moon all by itself, it’s a really great album all on its own, with its own set of symbolism.  But the two together produce something that you wouldn’t have otherwise.  So 777, Crowley’s book of correspondences, I mean, all that is is ‘sync’. That whole book is ‘sync’.  A ‘sync’ handbook.  That’s foundational, in terms of the work.

And you want it to be instantaneous, that’s the goal.  

So as soon as you say “geburah” you want to be able to visualize the corresponding color,  you want to be visualizing:  “Boom, RED, ok…”.  Then everything that comes with that.  Then you’re like “Mars”, and what does Mars mean?


You don’t want a conceptual understanding of Mars, 
you want an energetic understanding of Mars.  

You want to be in touch with what we’re talking about when we say “Mars”, beyond any image of the planet.  What are we getting at here?  What are we looking at?  Ok, so you’re like, "Mars has to do with tobacco or cocaine" which would be signifiers of Mars energy.  What do those things have in common?  Severity.  But that’s just one example, and how does this relate to this?"

David Plate, from Episode 29 of Always Record


Read more from David Plate, and 25 other voices in The Sync Book 2 out now.

20120625

The Rubix Cube Part 4: I Never Remember It

What if you simply CAN'T solve the Rubix Cube?  What if no matter how hard you try, no matter how many hours you put into the study and practice of the thing, solving the Rubix Cube remains IMPOSSIBLE.

Are you this person?  Or can you solve the Rubix Cube?

I can't.

Even with the directions right in front of you?  

I can't.                                                                                                

Even with thirteen different videos explaining it step by step? 

I can't.                                                                                                         

Even with a personal tutor who actually shows you each individual move?  

I can't.                                                                                                          

What if I give you a million dollars?

Gimme that fuckin' Cube.                                            

                                                                                                                                                                                                       

HELP!


FUCK.  I still can't solve the Cube.  I just can't, I don't know what's wrong with me.  What does this mean?  Should I keep trying?  I've been working on it for a month now and it seems like I'll never figure it out.  

TIME.  MONEY.  WILL POWER.  NOTHING WORKS I TELL YOU.  NOTHING.  THIS IS COMPLETELY STUPID, I'M A GOOD PERSON, AND THIS CUBE MAKES ME FEEL BAD.  I HATE THIS CUBE.  I HATE IT.  FUCK YOU, FUCK THE RUBIX CUBE.  FUCK YOU FOR MAKING ME FEEL INFERIOR.  FUCK YOU FOR EVEN CREATING IT.  I WILL NOT ALLOW YOU TO MAKE ME FEEL THIS WAY.  I WILL NEVER LET ANYONE MAKE ME FEEL THIS WAY EVER AGAIN, AND I WILL NEVER LET ANYONE MAKE MY CHILDREN FEEL THIS WAY.  

I BET THERE NEVER WAS A MILLION DOLLARS TO BEGIN WITH.  YOU'RE A LIAR. 
 I KNOW YOU'RE A LIAR.


If you don't solve the Rubix Cube by the end of the year, I'm going to kill everyone you love, and then I'm going to throw you in Prison.  Do you understand?  DO YOU THINK I'M LYING NOW?
Get back to work.

Where is that Voice coming from?  Hey, who are you?  And who are you to threaten ME?    


The clock is ticking…..




20120617

The Rubix Cube Part 3: Always Engrave


Image courtesy of MK Ultrasound


"Let the meme fight for its life in the jungle of competing models of reality...


When I pull back from the specificity and the fact that I invented it that's my biggest problem.  If I hadn't invented this, if I had just heard that somebody invented it, and this is what it was, I think I would find it very interesting.  But since I know the inventor very well, I'm very prone to doubt the thing.  I mean, this is not a guy you would want to put a lot of pressure on so….

I - I don't know.  

I'm puzzled.




And I offer it as an unsolved puzzle."


Terence McKenna





"Chaos is a state where information can exist, but where it does not exist."
Aryeh Kaplan


Our physical body is the extension of a billion year system of order called DNA.  DNA is a communication system intent on impregnating the future with the past through a novelty conserving game of elemental telephone.  One of the most complex products of this game is an organ of matter called brain, a physical computer capable of executing billions of actions every second, each decision intimately related to the scope of an entire physical body.

The human brain, along with that of the dolphin, are two of the most prominent examples of this.  

A specific and recent extension of the human brain is the human neocortex (Latin for "new bark"), a six-layered membrane responsible for language, conscious thought, unconscious thought, dreaming, spatial reasoning, sensory perception, and the generation of motor commands.  Not only is it capable of perception and projection, it is capable of simultaneous perception and projection.  It is the observer as well as the observed, the engraver and the engraved.  It creates as it destroys.

I believe that it is the neocortex that is the sole/soul biological membrane that is in direct contact with Mind/God/TAO/non-locality.  It is through this connection that the silent, seamless, and ordered system of DNA is finally questioned and brought into doubt.

Is the complex reality of physical existence radically dis-ordered?  Or is it ordered by the divine?

Are we drowning in blind chaos?  Or are we swimming amidst perfection?

"From above to below we know.  But from below to above we do not know"

I nominate the six-layered Rubix Cube as an externalized representation of the human neocortex independently removed from its bio-physical firmament.  An externalized model, the Rubix Cube gives us a chance to visualize and interact with the Bridge between brain and Mind, and a chance to understand why some brains seem to be more in contact with Mind than others.  Why some brains remain in contact with Mind.

If the standard brain has a knowledge of the permutations of the Cube, it can gradually develop an understanding of how to arrive at certain specific permutations.   Brain can then begin to develop a stronger connection to Mind.   A deeper connection to Mind.  A connection capable of handling a flood of wisdom, if that flood should happen to occur.




"I preached here earlier that you mustn't seek closure
 and so I don't with this.

If it's a communication, it's a very curious communication.  If it is non-communication, it's even more curious.  If it's a delusion, why is it so mathematically formal?  If I'm pathological, why aren't there attendant sequelae?  Why just this very defined thing?

The whole thing smacks of the impossible.  It's even pushed me towards the idea that maybe this is not actually a reality.   We're trapped, or I'm trapped.  I don't know if you're trapped, but we're in some kind of piece of fiction.  It's like a Philip K. Dick deal, you know, some kind of simulacrum, and the clue to the fact that it's a simulacrum is this impossible idea, and so the point of the idea is not to believe it, but to use it as a wedge to fight our way out of this labyrinth and back to whatever reality we were in before we fell in to this situation.  Something like that.

Anyway I have the feeling that I'm blathering and spinning my wheels…"

Terence McKenna


20120614

The Rubix Cube Part 2: Back to the Future


Ok, if we can't solve this thing on our own, what's the fucking point?




Time to cheat.  That's right, cheat.  If our ancestors are good for anything, they are good for a few hints and shortcuts.  We can learn from their wisdom.  We must follow the path. 

Using the written directions included, it took me around six hours to solve the Cube for the first time.  It was confusing and frustrating, and I didn't actually believe the directions would work until the final few turns of the cube.  It took me about 45 minutes the second time, and about 30 minutes the third.  

Go and do this.  See how long it takes you.  

What you will realize is that even with the written directions, solving the Cube is still an extremely difficult endeavor, SO difficult that most people can not or simply WILL NOT solve the Cube.  Try to imagine the excuses they make for giving up, even with the solution right in front of them:

"The directions are bullshit, this is stupid, what's the point, it's broken, I'm stupid, it's a waste of time, this is a joke, it's impossible, I'm too tired, only a moron would waste time on this, it's just too difficult, I'm no good at math, I'm not going to let this ruin my day, I give up, I've got more important things to do, the directions are wrong"

Don't judge them, rather, try to recognize situations in your own life where you may have used the same excuses.

After you have solved the Cube, try to solve the Cube again, but in half the time.  Then commit the process to memory, and solve it without the training wheels.  Then with the pressure of an audience.  Challenge yourself to become quicker, faster.

Congratulations!  You can now solve the Rubix Cube. 

When I say You, I mean Robot.  A Robot solved the Cube.

Please, do not kid yourself that you have done anything more than install the Rubix Cube Solution program in your brain.  Or did you forget?

We cheated.  We took the shortcut.  




The fall (bababadalgharaghtakamminarronnkonnbronntonnerronntuonnthunntrovarrhounawnskawntoohoohoor-denenthurnuk!) of a once wallstrait oldparr is retaled early in bed and later
on life down through all christian minstrelsy. The great fall of the
offwall entailed at such short notice the pftjschute of Finnegan, erse solid man, that the humptyhillhead of humself promptly sends an unquiring one well to the west 
in quest of his tumptytumtoes: and their upturnpikepointandplace is at the knock out in the park
where oranges have been laid to rust upon the green since devlinsfirst loved livvy.

James Joyce

Joyce recognized that this is what was happening with language and history.  McLuhan understood Joyce, and recognized that this was happening with literacy and media as well.  Kubrick understood them both, and recognized that this was no accident.








The Rubix Cube: Gone in Ninety Three Seconds



I just bought a Rubix Cube. When I opened up the box it came in,  I marveled at how elegant a simple piece of plastic could be.  Elegant, yet surprisingly loud, as all six colors shouted for individual attention.

And fragile.

The untouched Cube is a very Zen object.  It reflects all six senses, forever entangled, but never as pure as this.  A newborn, a child, a virgin.

I'm 36, and I had one of these Cubes when I was 5 years old.  As I examine this identical Cube three decades later, I try to consider the Cube from the perspective of a child who finds one sitting anonymously on a shelf surrounded by other toys, toys that shout and rattle and beckon for attention.  What could possibly attract the child to the Cube?

Boredom clears a path to this cube.  Boredom destroys this inertia.

"What does it do?  What is it for?  What just happened?"



In less than sixty seconds, the singularity of the Cube will dissolve at the hands of the child, its Zen-like purity hopelessly lost into one of the 43,252,003,274,489,856,000 different permutations.  That's "quintillion".

The child will never bring the Cube back to the way it was.  Decades later, the child may never believe that it was ever possible to begin with.

Buy a Rubix Cube today, and see how long it takes before you fuck it up.  Before you are completely and utterly LOST.  Without cheating, without reading a book of directions, and without watching a video on YouTube, try to bring all six sides back to that original star, that one in a quintillion singularity.  Siriusly, find your way back.  To your Home.

But at least you know this time.  You know for certain that somewhere in the endlessly mutating pattern is that solid state six colored cube, that singularity, that newborn that you started with at the beginning.  How could you forget?  You just fucking had it right there, just a god damn minute ago.  Where did it go?

Ask yourself, "Am I up to it?"

 Can you meet the challenge of restoring the Cube?  Because what you have here is a Sword in a Stone.  This, this is the challenge of Isis, and the wound of Amfortas.  This is the mystery of Resurrection.

If you let it, this $8.99 Cube can be a mirror for your mind, and for what the human mind is capable of.  It can be a mirror for the Robot mind, and for what the Robot mind is capable of.  It can be a canvas for the Artist, and an instrument of deception.


What do you see?  What can you see? Who do you see?

What are you going to do?




20120611

ADM Men 23: Who is this person writing about?


"Oh, totally. I find him very funny. A bizarre spectacle. Impossible to tell if and when he is serious. The perfect successor of (?) who also managed to maintain a decades long intellectual hoax. Amazing stuff! (If you want a real brilliant WTF, check out (?).
Would I recommend others to read his books? No, probably not. Or maybe, as a kinda mean joke to play on someone deserving. Because before you can find him funny you have to take him seriously for a while. And before you are used to his writing it is mostly unreadable. (Or, at least unreadable to those of us without a background in (?), or similar.)

I will now tell you my dirty secret of how to read his bullshit. (?). All his books should be sold with a small quantity of quality (?), anything else is unnecessarily cruel to the user. Only drug induced hyper-focus allows one to plough right through this stuff while not worrying too much about whether it actually means anything. And then do a repeat reading, this time after (?). Giggle copiously. Under no circumstance approach his work sober!"
by someone on Tue Mar 22nd, 2011 at 12:43:32 PM EST 


Is this person writing about:


 Seuss


 Jung


 Zizek


Crowley