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Paranormal Forum
Psychic Ability & Powers of the Mind
I-Doser
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<blockquote data-quote="shane" data-source="post: 35365" data-attributes="member: 593"><p><strong>Re: I-Doser</strong></p><p></p><p>I've been composing and mixing music to achieve psychological effects for years. To put it simply, this may not be a scam, but it does seem to be a grand oversimplification. Putting a Doppler filter on your drum machine and applying some basic stereo pans is not going to get you high. The best thing you'll accomplish there is making yourself nauseous, and then only if the pans are fast enough and you're wearing headphones.</p><p></p><p>A few years ago, I mixed a track that was capable of inducing anxiety attacks in those predisposed. It was sixteen tracks deep and functioned on what I refer to as the mall-noise threshold principle. The most surprising effect I ever achieved was an electronic oscillator that made two out of five listeners feel like they had to pee.</p><p></p><p>What I'm getting at here is that sound can make you feel a lot of things if you're open to it. However, if you're looking for a track to make you feel high, you'll have much better luck picking up The Mars Volta's Amputechture, Black Dice's Broken Ear Record, or if you're feeling especially brave, The Flaming Lips' quadraphonic masterpeice - Zaireeka. You'll feel a lot better, you'll save money, you won't get any spyware on your computer and you just may expand your musical taste.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="shane, post: 35365, member: 593"] [b]Re: I-Doser[/b] I've been composing and mixing music to achieve psychological effects for years. To put it simply, this may not be a scam, but it does seem to be a grand oversimplification. Putting a Doppler filter on your drum machine and applying some basic stereo pans is not going to get you high. The best thing you'll accomplish there is making yourself nauseous, and then only if the pans are fast enough and you're wearing headphones. A few years ago, I mixed a track that was capable of inducing anxiety attacks in those predisposed. It was sixteen tracks deep and functioned on what I refer to as the mall-noise threshold principle. The most surprising effect I ever achieved was an electronic oscillator that made two out of five listeners feel like they had to pee. What I'm getting at here is that sound can make you feel a lot of things if you're open to it. However, if you're looking for a track to make you feel high, you'll have much better luck picking up The Mars Volta's Amputechture, Black Dice's Broken Ear Record, or if you're feeling especially brave, The Flaming Lips' quadraphonic masterpeice - Zaireeka. You'll feel a lot better, you'll save money, you won't get any spyware on your computer and you just may expand your musical taste. [/QUOTE]
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I-Doser
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