• Hi guest! As you can see, the new Wizard Forums has been revived, and we are glad to have you visiting our site! However, it would be really helpful, both to you and us, if you registered on our website! Registering allows you to see all posts, and make posts yourself, which would be great if you could share your knowledge and opinions with us! You could also make posts to ask questions!

[Music] Music suggestions for altered states of mind.

A post about music...
Joined
Oct 1, 2025
Messages
273
Reaction score
340
Awards
5
I guess it's not considered spam if I share these divine feminine artists here too...

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!



Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!



Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

Post automatically merged:

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
Post automatically merged:

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!




Oh yeah, David Lynch also made music

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
 
Last edited:
Joined
Oct 1, 2025
Messages
273
Reaction score
340
Awards
5
Last edited:

Friggasdottir

Apprentice
Joined
Jun 12, 2023
Messages
59
Reaction score
114
Awards
2
I don't know if this has been mentioned previously or not, but I am a fan of Sadram Ingerman shamanic drumming recordings. I have lately taken to practicing connected or circular breathing and using her tracks. I mist be very sensitive because I find myself going into trance very rapidly. Working on not totally being out of it in these states and remembering what occurred!
 

Amadeus

Acolyte
Joined
Aug 27, 2024
Messages
352
Reaction score
761
Awards
8
@ElectricEgregore That EDMR video sounds great. Simple and good. Interesting suggestions here, I will check the others too.

I remember posting didgeridoo music in another post somewhere here. :unsure: The classic didgeridoo.

Post automatically merged:

shamanic drumming recording
Shamanic drumming sounds are perfect, really good.
 

FraterFraxinus

Apprentice
Joined
Apr 4, 2026
Messages
62
Reaction score
59
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

Pan Daijing’s exhibition-performance Tissues premiered in the Tanks at the Tate Modern in autumn 2019. A five-part immersion in performance, sound, movement, space, and most of all emotion in its most distilled and conflicted states, Tissues engaged with the conventions of opera and tragedy to present a searing representation of the embattled human psyche in space and time. While the ambitious multi-sensory artwork made use of the range of Daijing’s artistic capabilities, music, particularly the voice, was at its formal and emotional core. The vinyl and digital release of Tissues on PAN serves as a record of that work, in the form of an hour-long, studio-recorded audio excerpt: an invaluable archival document from Daijing’s practice.

Tissues is both a solitary work and a formal study in relation. Composed, directed, designed, written, and performed by Daijing (alongside a cast of twelve dancers and opera singers), the work—its libretto written in a mixture of old and modern Chinese—lingers inside a single human perspective. Daijing conjures states that are by turns delicate and severe, the tension between opposing modes animating the work as it unfolds. And yet, for all its interiority, Tissues foregrounds an intimate relationship with its audience through details like its engulfing visual landscape and its rattling, confrontational narrative arcs. Daijing uses the opera form as a prism through which to question the boundaries of music itself: perhaps, she proposes, music is much more than simply what is heard. It is in the relationship between voice and electronics that this limit is most clearly breached. Across the four parts gathered in this documentation, a counter-tenor, a soprano, a mezzo-soprano, and the artist herself voice a mixture of stunning laments and cries over an instrumental landscape, built out from industrial texture. Meant to be heard in a single listen, rather than track by track, the work unfolds through tender hollows and agitated peaks. At its crescendo, the operatic vocals melt away and the synthesizers themselves seem to howl with grief.

Daijing uncovers an essential, sometimes painful, music in all that surrounds us, inviting something like catharsis but also a greater understanding of the thing she and her cast conjure and draw close. A tissue, after all, is both a disposable object one uses to wipe away a tear, and the building block of our fleshy human forms. Daijing reaches and excavates the roiling core of what it is to be alive and full of feeling.

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
 
Top