Judah Eskender Tafari & McPullish – Journey

McPullish outta Texas releases 2015 “Journey” recording of late and great Judah Eskender Tafari featuring steppers anthem cut and fitting “niyacoustic” mix meditation mix in limited color sleeve 300 7″ vinyl.

From press release:

Judah Eskender Tafari’s musical journey began at Studio One (Jamaica) in 1978, voicing now-classic songs such as “Danger in Your Eyes,” “Rastafari Tell You,” “Jah Light,” “Always Trying” and many others. He worked with many producers and musicians over the course of his impressive music career.

In 2015 Judah traveled to Austin, TX to perform and work with McPullish at his Dubhaus studio. “Journey” is a co-production between these two friends that has stood the test of time and become a favorite, beginning or ending almost every McPullish live dub set in recent years. Judah was not only a great singer but a genuine and caring person who mentored McPullish and many others, always willing to share his musical knowledge and kind spirit with whoever he met. Judah Eskender Tafari passed away in 2020 and is greatly missed, celebrated by his many friends, family and fans.

In 2022 McPullish reached out to Dan I Locks (musician, producer and operator of Deng Deng Hi Fi in Sweden) to record Niyabinghi drums and percussion for a more acoustic version of the song which is featured as the B side.

Egoless – The Last Solitude

Brand new in Egoless sound The Last Solitude starts with epic 6 and half minutes post-techno drive trough whirlwind of deep emotions.

This is second EP from meastro this year as ongoing experiments in meeting place of modular and acoustic, analog and digital, man and culture carry on, with All the Shit Left Behind released in January.

More pronounced direction of free explorations of sound is welcomed presence of vocal harmonies.

Sumac Dub – Jam Session #8

In recent years around the world in dub nuff sound with looping station start the song from scratch sometimes using beatboxing or instruments or sampling and go into the mix.
By definition, dub is a psycho-acoustic manipulation of source sound material. Material that is somewhat familiar to the listener, like many reggae riddim versions so that one is caught by surprise in change of the sound. This gave birth to remixing, sampling, and other styles of sound culture ecological recycling. But future dub warriors sometimes do not dub from master tape, cassette tape, DAT, or USB, but create sounds from the scratch and go into the mix.

Here Sumac Dub throws in turntable sounds to accompany ambience of birds and synths until full blown riddim mix emerges.
Follow trough as jam session goes from slow live playing, looping and scratching, to ruff and dub mixing.
Well Kids and Elders, is that DUB nuff?

ALEX DAVIES ON BIOEFFECTS OF SOUND

Audio in the region of 20Hz-20Khz can create psychological disturbance in individuals at levels substantially below those required for bodily discomfort or trauma.

From the thunderous hypnotic drumming of Zulu warriors to riot police beating their batons on shields whilst marching towards confrontation, the psychological effects of sound have been used extensively throughout history as a warfare device. Noise has always been experienced as ‘destruction, disorder, dirt, pollution, and aggression’. All cultures associate noise with the idea of the weapon, blasphemy and plague. “Behold, I will bring evil upon this place, the which whosoever heareth, his ears shall tingle” (Jeremiah 19.3)”. “When the drums of the resurrection sounded, they filled the ears with fear” (Al-Din Runir, Diavani, Shansi Tabriz).

Recently, psycho-acoustic warfare was allegedly used in the Waco siege at the Davidian compound in Texas, where it is said that the FBI used sounds of babies crying, dentist drills and a variety of other unpleasant sounds to mentally influence their opponents. The Waco compound was allegedly bombarded for long durations by these sounds via large public address systems.

Although this type of sonic assault can have a profound emotive effect on individuals, it relies heavily on the individuals particular experiences. This is where the actual physiological effects of sound are unique. Physiological changes in the body only start to occur at greater sound pressure levels. At about 120 dB discomfort begins in the ear and pain occurs when levels reach approximately 140dB.The eardrum subsequently ruptures at levels of about 160 dB. Pain becomes evident when the middle ear system is mechanically displaced beyond its normal operational limits

These acoustic effects are only apparent on the ear mechanism. The ear is a very easy structure to attack. Due to evolutionary processes the ear is particularly sensitive to midrange frequencies inherent in the human voice. Subsequently, all that is needed is an increased sound intensity at these frequencies for the threshold of pain to be readily reached. This is also related to the properties of the acoustic reflex in which a small muscle in the middle ear pulls the stirrup back from the oval window and subsequently reduces the amount of acoustic energy transmitted to the middle ear. This however only has a significant impact at frequencies lower than about 1000 Hz so that frequencies between 500 to 4000 Hz, the range at which the auditory center is most sensitive, are largely unaffected.

The acoustic effects on the body are more complex. Research has concluded that with low frequency sound in the region of 50 — 100Hz at levels of 150dB or more, intolerable sensations in the chest and thoracic region can be produced–even with the ears protected.

Acoustic Trauma : Bioeffects of Sound
by Alex Davies