Indie Rock Clubs Explained
Posted: Sat Dec 27, 2003 5:33 pm
from http://paranoiamagazine.com/mk1stavenue.html
"The warm up band Oneida, wannabe Industrial hacks hardly able to bring their thrashings into coherency, succeeded in keeping the vibe low enough for mind control. On the dance floor, where no one was dancing, I saw uneasy glances being exchanged. Most of the guys just stood in the back near the bar, petrified, white knuckling their beer bottles, twitching, shooting glances at the attractive young females then looking away before eye contact could be made. A miasma of sexual frustration was in the air. The guys drained their beers in response and headed back to the bar to replenish. The sultry chicks, whose chakras (energy centers in the subtle body) were blast open, made them open to a wide range of vampiric, electromagnetically controlled entities attracted to the so-called music.
Demons from the lower astral plane, attached mostly to their sexual chakras just below the navel, feeded off the energy of these unknowing hosts and those around them via psychic cords. A feeling of paranoia, disconnection from the immediate environment, unexplainable mood changes and anxiety blended together, created a most unpleasant and fear-ridden ambience. A perfect psychological recipe for generating more booze sales, no doubt; not much different than the subliminal tricks used in drive-in movies during the 1950s to get more people to drink Coke.
During the much welcomed band change, I could see a grey haired guy plugging in his guitar and realized that it was Daevid Allen who founded Gong over 30 yrs. ago. My spirits instantly picked up. When the rest of the band appeared and they struck the first note, the negative vibes were neutralized with high vibrational, spiritually charged music. It was fun watching everyone relax as Gong played and their wizened front man strutted about singing songs like "You Can't Kill Me." Daevid certainly has the seniority to conquer MK vibes having in participated in the Paris Student rebellions in 1968 with his wife Gilli Smyth, who also was on stage. He had so much positive energy that it blew the MK vampires completely out of the club. No wonder guys like him are such a threat to the establishment and get little to no press coverage. For a couple of hours, people forgot about their fear and started dancing to Gong's intricate, psychedelic groove. "
"The warm up band Oneida, wannabe Industrial hacks hardly able to bring their thrashings into coherency, succeeded in keeping the vibe low enough for mind control. On the dance floor, where no one was dancing, I saw uneasy glances being exchanged. Most of the guys just stood in the back near the bar, petrified, white knuckling their beer bottles, twitching, shooting glances at the attractive young females then looking away before eye contact could be made. A miasma of sexual frustration was in the air. The guys drained their beers in response and headed back to the bar to replenish. The sultry chicks, whose chakras (energy centers in the subtle body) were blast open, made them open to a wide range of vampiric, electromagnetically controlled entities attracted to the so-called music.
Demons from the lower astral plane, attached mostly to their sexual chakras just below the navel, feeded off the energy of these unknowing hosts and those around them via psychic cords. A feeling of paranoia, disconnection from the immediate environment, unexplainable mood changes and anxiety blended together, created a most unpleasant and fear-ridden ambience. A perfect psychological recipe for generating more booze sales, no doubt; not much different than the subliminal tricks used in drive-in movies during the 1950s to get more people to drink Coke.
During the much welcomed band change, I could see a grey haired guy plugging in his guitar and realized that it was Daevid Allen who founded Gong over 30 yrs. ago. My spirits instantly picked up. When the rest of the band appeared and they struck the first note, the negative vibes were neutralized with high vibrational, spiritually charged music. It was fun watching everyone relax as Gong played and their wizened front man strutted about singing songs like "You Can't Kill Me." Daevid certainly has the seniority to conquer MK vibes having in participated in the Paris Student rebellions in 1968 with his wife Gilli Smyth, who also was on stage. He had so much positive energy that it blew the MK vampires completely out of the club. No wonder guys like him are such a threat to the establishment and get little to no press coverage. For a couple of hours, people forgot about their fear and started dancing to Gong's intricate, psychedelic groove. "