In 1899, Nikola Tesla founded the Colorado Springs Experimental Laboratory, containing high-voltage, radio transmission equipment. The lab had a 200 ft. tower for transmission and reception of radio waves and the best receiving equipment available at the time.
One night, when he was alone in the laboratory, Tesla observed what he cautiously referred to as electrical actions which definitely appeared to be intelligent signals. The changes were taking place periodically and with such a clear suggestion of number and order that they could not be traced to any cause then known to him.
lyrics
Tesla left on a Thursday.
At least he left the living,
we found him sprawled out on the hotel floor.
Stochastic writing patterns
drawn halfway through the notebook
made up a sequence that I had seen before.
It said we breathe in the static
and sleep through the noise.
Our lives automatic
and solitude destroys it.
Hear the universe calling, see the world as hostile
so I think that you should stay for a while.
Ada left on a Saturday and
just as she slipped away,
we found her motionless-- she died in her sleep.
Her token to the living,
relentless unforgiving.
A number sequence only halfway complete.
These are the days salvation,
a little hesitation.
These are the days where every person like electrons can flow.
These are the day's locations
of pure line computations.
Raise up your own antenna,
raise up antenna tonight.
We breathe in the static
and sleep through the noise.
Our lives automatic
and solitude destroys it.
Hear the universe calling, see the world as hostile
so I think that you should stay for a while.
Now there’s no finite number
of all the combinations
of letters I could write on back of this card.
And there’s no single pathway
to raise a real number
to yield a current and illuminate my yard.
Crank out the brass schematic
secured in central static.
Ada and Tesla and the now precomplete.
For purgatory is abating
for those communicating.
The little bit of liminal where the unfinished meet.
And so we breathe in the static
and sleep through the noise.
Our lives automatic
and solitude destroys it.
Hear the universe calling, see the world as hostile
so I think that you should stay.
credits
from Jekyll Electric Effect,
released August 30, 2014
Cole Blouin- Electric Guitars
Nick Dunston- Bass
Kate Gratson- Vocals
Julian Korzeniowsky- Synth
Caroline Kuhn- Vocals, Banjo
Kirk Pearson- Keyboards, Percussion, Strings, Programming
Julia Ofman- Vocals
Composed, lyricized and produced by Kirk Pearson
Orchestrated by Kirk Pearson and Caroline Kuhn
London multi-instrumentalist pairs sturdy drum machine samples with heady shoegaze guitars, resulting in deftly constructed dreamscapes. Bandcamp New & Notable Aug 10, 2022