What are you listening to?

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Catoptric
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Re: What are you listening to?

Post by Catoptric » Sat Jan 03, 2026 12:54 am

Florence Price symphonies were rotting in an attic and the roof had a tree fall on it, and only by rare chance did anyone preserve them and have them performed.



An excerpt from a FB post:
Spoiler
Show
Her symphonies were rotting in a pile of trash. Sixty-nine years after her death, they won a Grammy.
In 2009, a couple bought a dilapidated house in St. Anne, Illinois, planning to renovate it. The roof had a hole. A tree had crashed through the porch. Rain had been seeping into the second floor for years.
In the attic, buried under decades of dust and debris, they found stacks of paper bound with old string. The pages were damp, fragile, covered in grime.
They almost threw them out.
Then someone looked closer. The pages were filled with musical notation. Complex orchestral scores. And a name written on the title pages: Florence Price.
They had no idea they were holding American genius in their hands.
Florence Price was born in Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1887. She was a prodigy. By the time she graduated from the New England Conservatory of Music in 1906, she had mastered both organ and piano at an age when most students were just beginning serious study. She composed sweeping symphonies that wove European classical tradition with the deep spiritual roots of Black American music.
She had the training. She had the brilliance. She had everything except the one thing that mattered most in early twentieth-century America: the right to be heard.
In 1933, Florence Price made history. The Chicago Symphony Orchestra performed her Symphony No. 1 in E minor, making her the first African American woman to have a symphony performed by a major American orchestra.
It should have been the beginning of everything.
Instead, it was nearly the end.
The doors that should have opened stayed shut. Major orchestras that championed white male composers ignored her submissions. Critics who celebrated lesser talents overlooked her work. The institutions that controlled classical music in America had no place for a Black woman, no matter how undeniable her genius.
By the 1940s, Price was living in Chicago as a divorced mother of two. She taught piano lessons to survive. She played organ for silent films and church services. She composed in the margins of exhausting days, writing symphonies in boarding houses while the world pretended she did not exist.
She understood the brutal mathematics of her situation. A symphony does not exist on paper. It only lives when an orchestra breathes life into it. Without performance, her music was just ink. And her ink was collecting dust.
So she decided to reach the top.
On July 5, 1943, Florence Price wrote a letter to Serge Koussevitzky, the legendary conductor of the Boston Symphony Orchestra. Koussevitzky was known for championing American composers. If he lifted his baton for your work, you were immortal.
Price did not beg. She did not apologize for her music. But she knew exactly how the world saw her. So she named what was killing her career.
She wrote words that should have shamed the entire industry:
"My dear Dr. Koussevitzky, to begin with I have two handicaps—those of sex and race. I am a woman; and I have some Negro blood in my veins."
She was not asking for a favor. She was asking for her work to be judged on merit alone.
She sent the letter. She sent the scores. She waited.
Koussevitzky did not write back a rejection. He did something worse.
He did nothing.
Price wrote again. And again. Letter after letter over the years, polite but increasingly desperate. The silence was absolute. The establishment did not need to insult her. They simply ignored her. To them, she did not matter enough to even reject.
Florence Price did not stop composing. That was her quiet rebellion.
When major orchestras went silent, she wrote for smaller groups. She arranged spirituals for the legendary contralto Marian Anderson. She wrote for radio programs. She kept working despite high blood pressure, financial stress, and the constant grind of invisibility.
She composed until the very end.
In 1953, Florence Price checked into a hospital for a minor foot issue and died suddenly of a stroke. She was sixty-six years old.
The funeral was held. Friends mourned. And then the world moved on.
Music historians wrote books about American composers. They mentioned Copland. Gershwin. Bernstein. Florence Price remained in the footnotes, when she appeared at all.
Her manuscripts were boxed up, passed around, and eventually abandoned in that summer house in St. Anne, Illinois. For more than fifty years, rain leaked through the roof. Moisture crept into the paper. The ink blurred. Her life's work was literally rotting in a pile of trash, hours away from a bulldozer.
Then came 2009.
That couple found the papers. They contacted the University of Arkansas. Archivists rushed to the scene.
What they discovered was staggering. Dozens of works the world thought were lost forever. Her Fourth Symphony. Violin concertos. Piano pieces. Songs. An entire catalog of American genius, preserved by accident.
The silence finally broke.
Since that discovery, major orchestras around the world have rushed to perform the music they ignored for eighty years. The works that gatekeepers dismissed have been recorded, celebrated, and studied.
In 2021, the Philadelphia Orchestra, conducted by Yannick Nézet-Séguin, recorded Florence Price's First and Third Symphonies.
In 2023, that recording won the Grammy Award for Best Orchestral Performance.
Sixty-nine years after her death. Eighty years after she first made history with the Chicago Symphony. The music had not changed. The notes were always there. The genius was always there.
The only thing that changed was someone finally decided to listen.
Florence Price died believing she had failed to break through. She never heard her greatest works played by the orchestras she admired. She never knew her name would one day appear on Grammy-winning albums.
But she left the paper. She did the work anyway.
Because here is the truth: you cannot silence genius forever. You can hide it in an attic. You can ignore the letters. You can let the roof cave in.
But eventually, someone opens the door.
And the music, patient and powerful and undeniable, walks back into the world like it never left.
Florence Price composed four symphonies, four piano concertos, a violin concerto, and over three hundred other works. Most of America has never heard her name.
But every note she wrote was an act of defiance. Every symphony was proof that the gatekeepers were wrong.
She was a genius.
The establishment just did not want to admit it.
Now they have no choice.
#FlorencePrice #BlackComposers
~Old Photo Club



Most all Composers had a similar reputation to that of writing being considered impossible to make a profession out of (that rarely did anyone actually make much from it.) Vivaldi was known to have sold his violin strings he was so broke, and people like Mozart was chasing debt and writing performances for what was considered comedy, but also despite making a large sum would always be on the brink of debt to the point he was buried as a pauper.



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2814 - 新しい日の誕生 Birth Of A New Day vinyl rip




Wolken EP vinyl (instrumental and German vocals)



French Cassettes ‎- Rolodex vinyl (Indie vocal band, not French)



Brainclub Volume II




slowerpace 音楽 – Quintessence


slowerpace 音楽 – Lost In Space 宇​宙​の​冒​険



ダウンウィズザキング (Down with the King)
by Macroblank



Playlist is worth checking out:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aXNL1NI ... bREX7ix1-m





CMD094 - Kagami Tears vinyl rip



Remember - The City Is My Friend vinyl rip
Societal egress and ennui
Hello / Goodbye / Just a moment / Nothing / Cosmic / Man / Dream / Civilization / Open / Contact / Tremble / Gas / Memory / Transcend / ^2

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Catoptric
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Re: What are you listening to?

Post by Catoptric » Sun Jan 11, 2026 1:10 am

Techno/Trance music called Astral Projection

Just when you thought, "The future is going to be great!" (". . . . You must have been really high.")

People Can Fly (video By Astral Projection)


Astral Projection - Trust In Trance - 1996


Future Shock (CGI MTV 1993)

Lower resolution version (incorrectly titled as Future Shock 3, though incidentally their was also a movie with Bill Paxton that came out around this time with the same title?) https://archive.org/details/futureshock3vhs




That last one is what I was really looking for, where it repeats the name Mahadeva (specifically the opening song, which is the name of the song title.) I started to study up on what it was referring to, and it apparently alluded to an early figure within Buddhism (and was not a Hindu reference to Shiva, as I had to rediscover.) The repeat of the name was in reference to his various deeds, where he committed various sins, and then later ordained (or perhaps "enlightened.") https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahadeva_(Buddhism)



Entire segments of MTV Chillout Zone that will never be broadcast again since MTV no longer exists
https://archive.org/details/@mvseum?query=chillout+zone

The longest episode is 5 hours (they are usually under 1 hour?)





I was listening to some classical Sitar music and thought of it.

Found here with similar stuff
https://archive.org/details/@mann-borden
https://archive.org/details/@joygen_odiongan
https://archive.org/details/@associate- ... rchive_org


I had a bunch of shellac records I decided to just give away rather than try to sell them individually, even if some of these kinds of records are now very much collectible. I had a list of them and I'm sure some of the records probably had very few copies in existence, since they were nearly impossible to find that exact version (mostly artists would be creating their own variation hoping that it catches on,) and their were some performers that are reminiscent of folk musicians that were featured on popular entertainment, when it seems the whole "exotic" look was popular, and reminiscent of how people saw entertainment as a way to explore the world (even if it was more like a tourist trap style of cultural enrichment, if not entirely contrived.) You can find examples of British people trying to pull off being Chinese, and doing magic tricks circa 1900, where their "catching a bullet" stunt failed for whatever reason. . .








A Sea Without A Port by Joseph Sannicandro




************

Aside from getting distracted with a bunch of ethnographic music (1950 era mostly) here are the sound of the hippies:

Environments 1-3 (1969-71) Ambient sound therapy
https://archive.org/details/lp_environm ... o-artist_3
https://archive.org/details/lp_environm ... +1969).mp3
https://archive.org/details/lp_environm ... ience).mp3


A good example of that generation acid tripping. . . Is the third track, 'Visage'

Electronic Music (1967)
by John Cage; Luciano Berio; Ilhan Mimaroglu
Turnabout (TV 34046S / TV 34046-S)


"Visage is essentially a radio programme: almost a sound track for a play that has never been written. So it can be played not only in the concert hall but in any place where recorded sounds can be reproduced. It is based on the symbolic and representative charge that is carried by vocal gestures and inflections, with the “shadows of meanings” and the mental associations accompanying them. Visage can also be regarded as a transformation of real examples of vocal behaviour that go from unarticulated sound to syllable, from laughing to weeping and singing, from aphasia to types of inflections derived from specific languages: English and Italian as spoken on the radio, Hebrew, Neapolitan dialect, etc. Thus, Visage does not offer a meaningful text or a meaningful language: it only develops the resemblance of them. A single word is pronounced twice: “parole” (“words” in Italian). The vocal dimension of the work is constantly amplified and commented upon by a very close relationship, almost an organic exchange, with the electronic sounds. The voice is Cathy Berberian’s.
I composed Visage in 1961, before I left the Studio di Fonologia Musicale of the Italian Radio in Milan. It was also intended as a tribute to the radio as the most widely used means of spreading useless words." Luciano Berio


Another electronic:

Touch (1969)
by Morton Subotnick
Columbia Masterworks (MS 7316)




An example of acid tripping?

Bill Plummer And The Cosmic Brotherhood (1968) Impulse (A-9164)



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This holds up very well today (though Jazz is considered slightly old fashioned) and yet I can't but help think this compares easily to Miles Davis.

Journey Thru An Electric Tube (1968) Mike Mainieri Solid State Records (SS 18049)




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The In-Kraut Vol. 1-3 Germany 1966 - 1974 - VA 2024
https://archive.org/details/@blinkky_fr ... e+In-Kraut+



Fallout soundtrack (1997) by Mark Morgan (with hyperlinks to the rest of the series)



Rice & Beans Orchestra – Dante's Inferno (1979, 2006) previously unreleased (they were holding on for an EXPLOSION!)



Unreleased music by a young rapper (that had started to be published professionally) that died of an OD in 2019
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juice_Wrld

Alt songs (some questionable sources and possible AI generated) https://archive.org/details/9994L1F3/5+ ... arats).mp3


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I was reminded of this when I noticed a clothing that said, "I'd fuck me!"





The USA is currently Buffalo Bill in Silence of the Lambs, putting lipstick on a pig who says, I'd fuck me, I'd fuck me so hard!" and than saying, "hold my beer!" as it pushes everyone out of the way as it proceeds to crash a plane carrying nuclear bombs and causing them to detonate, creating nuclear winter.

They are going to wish the Emperor actually was wearing clothes.





"Don't worry. Boys are hard to find." Part 1 o2
https://lisevoldeng.substack.com/p/dont ... rd-to-find

“What does this mean?”: President Trump’s ominous “soon” post spawns wild theories online
https://www.dailydot.com/viral-politics ... 0001615bf4

Image
Societal egress and ennui
Hello / Goodbye / Just a moment / Nothing / Cosmic / Man / Dream / Civilization / Open / Contact / Tremble / Gas / Memory / Transcend / ^2

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Catoptric
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Re: What are you listening to?

Post by Catoptric » Tue Jan 20, 2026 12:12 am

Looking over MTV Chillout Zone (and Party Zone)
https://archive.org/details/@mvseum?query=chillout+zone

Whenever the videos are not optimized from 4 gig videos, or the sound quality is just not that good, I look for alternatives:

*** MTV Party Zone playlist ****

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=P ... 58ddHy9VGy

The first song is a somewhat neat approach to a music video (basically saying he wasted too much time in the party scene, while making a club music video)



**** MTV Chillout Zone ***********





Supposedly Madonna signed this guy up as her Producer after watching it:


Some of the videos have WTF songs, such as this one ending in Teletubbies - Teletubbies Say "Eh-Oh!"


And now you know why MTV was cancelled.

Incidentally it seems that most of the actual songs come from pre 2000, though it does seem like they were reprising the episodes (though how much they differ from earlier playlists, I'm not sure, as many will also just reuse old songs like The Avalanche Frontier Psychiatry showing up on several days.)
Societal egress and ennui
Hello / Goodbye / Just a moment / Nothing / Cosmic / Man / Dream / Civilization / Open / Contact / Tremble / Gas / Memory / Transcend / ^2

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Catoptric
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Re: What are you listening to?

Post by Catoptric » Tue Jan 20, 2026 5:21 pm

Nicholas Rodney Drake (1948-1974) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nick_Drake


Playlist (starting with Pink Moon which I assumed was an alt contemporary circa 1990s)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqe6TF2 ... rt_radio=1

Discography with more musicians uploaded:
https://archive.org/details/nick-drake- ... -1967-2025



And the bass player Danny Thompson (1939-2025) was well known
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danny_Thompson




Tim Buckley (1947-1975) is another one to look at with a similar age and time period (I guess they were wanting to be members of the “27 club?”)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tim_Buckley

Discography
https://archive.org/details/tim-buckley ... -1966-2023

I’ve heard cover songs of this




About 600 GB of music albums.
https://archive.org/download/redtopia-f ... FLAC%2003/
Societal egress and ennui
Hello / Goodbye / Just a moment / Nothing / Cosmic / Man / Dream / Civilization / Open / Contact / Tremble / Gas / Memory / Transcend / ^2

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