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(Added speculation about John Cage's famous view on 'silent tracks,' that may contribute to the understanding of this song.) |
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* It is of interest that the [[Music70|music70 website]] lists the track as "magic window fnord". Those familiar with "The Illuminatus! Trilogy" will recognize the reference. [Nick Potter] submitted the following observation: in the novel, "fnord" is a word that people in general have been trained not to see - instead, it merely induces a vague feeling of anxiety in the reader. The [[Music70|music70]] listing may therefore have a slightly deeper meaning than being a simple reference to the novel; it may be a jokey suggestion that the track is indeed present, but that we have simply been programmed not to hear it. | * It is of interest that the [[Music70|music70 website]] lists the track as "magic window fnord". Those familiar with "The Illuminatus! Trilogy" will recognize the reference. [Nick Potter] submitted the following observation: in the novel, "fnord" is a word that people in general have been trained not to see - instead, it merely induces a vague feeling of anxiety in the reader. The [[Music70|music70]] listing may therefore have a slightly deeper meaning than being a simple reference to the novel; it may be a jokey suggestion that the track is indeed present, but that we have simply been programmed not to hear it. | ||
*It is also interesting to note the implications of people searching for signal in an empty track, that there can not, must not be a track without purpose- compare to House of Leaves, pp107-152. | *It is also interesting to note the implications of people searching for signal in an empty track, that there can not, must not be a track without purpose- compare to House of Leaves, pp107-152. | ||
+ | * John Cage, an extremely influential 20th century composer and the pioneer of the 'silent track' (4'33", 1952,) believed that 'pure silence' was fundamentally impossible - the constant sounds of the surrounding world would always form their own 'music.' The final track of this album could be considered a "Magic Window" into the sounds, nature, and reality of one's surroundings | ||
+ | ** Cage famously wrote that "the essential meaning of silence is the giving up of intention." Given the apocalyptic mood and themes of Geogaddi, this final track could represent letting go of intentional creation entirely, and could be a progression built up from the beginning of the album - "Ready Lets Go." (Note that it is 'lets,' rather than 'let's.') | ||
== Samples / Lyrics == | == Samples / Lyrics == | ||
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== Videos / Images == | == Videos / Images == | ||
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+ | {{#widget:YouTube|id=Em8O0jvuGRc}} | ||
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{{#widget:YouTube|id=Xv65jvhsmZY}} | {{#widget:YouTube|id=Xv65jvhsmZY}} | ||
{{#widget:YouTube|id=X7s7Nj-aIiw}} | {{#widget:YouTube|id=X7s7Nj-aIiw}} |
Magic Window | |
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Running time | 1:46 |
Appears on | Geogaddi |
"Magic Window" is track number 23 on the Geogaddi album. The song is one minute and forty-six seconds of pure silence.