On Ken Kesey, in Ch. I : Black Shiny FBI Shoes
The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test (1968)
Context: He talks in a soft voice with a country accent, almost a pure country accent, only crackling and rasping and cheese-grated over the two-foot hookup, talking about —
"—there's been no creativity," he is saying, "and I think my value has been to help create the next step. I don't think there will be any movement off the drug scene until there is something else to move to —"
— all in a plain country accent about something — well, to be frank, I didn't know what in the hell it was all about. Sometimes he spoke cryptically, in aphorisms. I told him I had heard he didn't intend to do any more writing. Why? I said.
"I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismograph," he said.
He talked about something called the Acid Test and forms of expression in which there would be no separation between himself and the audience. It would be all one experience, with all the senses opened wide, words, music, lights, sounds, touch —
lightning.
“Letting yourself be carried away by music cancels the border between the listener and the work itself, transforming the sound experience into an extension of one's emotions, allowing memories, joys or melancholies to be processed in a way that words alone would not be able to do.”
Original: Lasciarsi trasportare dalla musica annulla il confine tra l'ascoltatore e l'opera stessa, trasformando l'esperienza sonora in un'estensione delle proprie emozioni, permettendo di elaborare ricordi, gioie o malinconie in un modo che le sole parole non sarebbero in grado di fare.
Source: prevale.net
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Prevale 1241
Italian DJ and producer 1983Related quotes
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