(logo)
(navigation image)
Home Audio Books & Poetry | Computers & Technology | Grateful Dead | Live Music Archive | Music & Arts | Netlabels | News & Public Affairs | Non-English Audio | Open Source Audio | Podcasts | Radio Programs | Spirituality & Religion

Search: Advanced Search

Anonymous User (login or join us)Upload

Listen to audio

[item image]

Stream (help[help])

VBR M3U (Hi-Fi)

Play / Download (help[help])

(37 MB)VBR ZIP


All Files: HTTP
[Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0]

Resources

Bookmark

JaffeThe Turtleneck Anomoly

by Jaffé

This strange song is really more of an often improvised long form theme. Essentially, Jaffé is interested in telling you that a man named Dr. Peace is unable to meet with you right now because he is in a business meeting. Over the years, Jaffé would play this piece (Dr. Peace) for anywhere between a few minutes and several hours. From behind a closed door of whatever bedroom Jaffé was using as a studio, one would hear a strange collection of prerecorded and performed music and vocals informing accidental listeners of the fact that Dr. Peace was unable to meet with them. Though he likely recorded it each and every time, this is the only tape of it he was able to find. For now, it must act as the representational recording of this song.

Cornslaw Industries release: CS0905

More information at: cornslaw.net/the-turtleneck-anomoly


This audio is part of the collection: Cornslaw Industries [netlabel]

Artist/Composer: Jaffe
Keywords: improvisational; story; experimental; pop; casio; four track; lo-fi; mid-fi

Creative Commons license: Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0


Individual Files

Whole ItemFormatSize
TheTurtleneckAnomoly_vbr.m3uVBR M3UStream
TheTurtleneckAnomoly_vbr_mp3.zipVBR ZIP37 MB
Audio FilesVBR MP3Ogg Vorbis
01 The Turtleneck Anomaly37 MB20 MB
InformationFormatSize
TheTurtleneckAnomoly_files.xmlMetadata1.72 KB
TheTurtleneckAnomoly_meta.xmlMetadata1.53 KB
Other FilesAnimated GIF
200-jaffe-turtle1.82 KB

Be the first to write a review
Downloaded 22 times
Reviews


Terms of Use (10 Mar 2001)