The Caretaker project began in late 1996 in Stockport, England by Leyland K… Read Full Bio ↴The Caretaker project began in late 1996 in Stockport, England by Leyland Kirby, undoubtedly inspired from the ballroom scene in Stanley Kubrick's "Shining". The first release played and extended this theme of altering 1920s and 1930s ballroom music creating an eerie and haunted soundworld. Subsequently the sound has become darker and often more abstract over time, moving away from the initial idea of a haunted ballroom into territories involving the mind and its abilities to recall memories.
The Caretaker's last few projects are heavily inspired by the phenomenon of amnesia, Alzheimer's, and dementia, the brain's adversities to recall situations from the distant and immediate past. This work is best recalled in the monumental "Theoretically pure anterograde amnesia" release, a release which accurately echoes and recreates aurally the disease itself which is no mean achievement.
The Caretaker is building an ever-expanding following for his audio memories. Fans of the darker isolationist ambient work of modern composers such as William Basinski, Nurse With Wound, Aphex Twin, Fennesz and Brian Eno would find elements to admire and enjoy and also parallels to The Caretaker's output. It can be a harsh world at times but ultimately exposure is always rewarding. Immerse yourself in the darkness and give into the spirits and tales recalled and retold in his unique way.
http://www.brainwashed.com/vvm
The Caretaker's last few projects are heavily inspired by the phenomenon of amnesia, Alzheimer's, and dementia, the brain's adversities to recall situations from the distant and immediate past. This work is best recalled in the monumental "Theoretically pure anterograde amnesia" release, a release which accurately echoes and recreates aurally the disease itself which is no mean achievement.
The Caretaker is building an ever-expanding following for his audio memories. Fans of the darker isolationist ambient work of modern composers such as William Basinski, Nurse With Wound, Aphex Twin, Fennesz and Brian Eno would find elements to admire and enjoy and also parallels to The Caretaker's output. It can be a harsh world at times but ultimately exposure is always rewarding. Immerse yourself in the darkness and give into the spirits and tales recalled and retold in his unique way.
http://www.brainwashed.com/vvm
Libet's delay
The Caretaker Lyrics
We have lyrics for these tracks by The Caretaker:
a handful of stars I recall the story, That night of love and glory A night…
Emptiness Oh, love of mine With a song and a wine You're harsh…
The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
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Zoé Le guillermic
Guys, let’s wish Grimace a happy birthday ! (Help i’m trapped in the basement)
@giannigiovful
Thepicausno
It’s even more than that, too.
The delay is used as an argument against the idea in philosophy that the “mind” (consciousness) is separate from the physical brain and to uphold physicalism instead.
According to physicalism, once a brain deteriorates, whichever part is destroyed is lost from the person’s consciousness. The destruction of the brain will destroy whatever information it held. Consciousness is inherently tied to your physical brain, and any damage given to it will affect consciousness. There’s no “soul” or otherworldly force of consciousness or “mind” separate from the brain (as dualism proposes).
Basically, Libet’s Delay can be used to “prove” that once you have alzheimer’s, you’re screwed. Any part of the brain that is lost is gone forever. Your consciousness is inherently tied to your brain, and there’s no going back. Not only that, but it’s probably all pre-determined, too.
It’s a bleak but widely-held outlook nowadays, due to many cases of people having brain damage and functioning differently (see: lobotomies, Phineas Gage).
@nosh62
@@MMaximmachinegun Ahem,
Dans mon esprit tout divague, je me perds dans tes yeux
Je me noie dans la vague de ton regard amoureux
Je ne veux que ton âme divaguant sur ma peau
Une fleur, une femme dans ton cœur Roméo
Je ne suis que ton nom, le souffle lancinant
De nos corps dans le sombre animés lentement
Et la nuit je pleure des larmes qui coulent le long de mes joues
Je ne pense à toi que quand le jour sombre, que s'abattent sur moi
Mes tristes démons, dans l'abîme sans fond
Aime-moi jusqu'à ce que les roses fanent
Que nos âmes sombrent dans les limbes profondes
Et la nuit, quand tout est sombre, je te regarde danser
Je résonne en baisers, le long de ta poitrine
Perdue dans l'avalanche de mon cœur égaré
Qui es-tu, où es-tu
Par les pleurs, par les rires de ton ombre effarée
Je résonne en baisers
Dans mon esprit tout divague, je me perds dans tes yeux
Je me noie dans la vague de ton regard amoureux
Je ne veux que ton âme divaguant sur ma peau
Une fleur, une femme dans ton cœur Roméo
Je ne suis que ton nom, le souffle lancinant
De nos corps dans le sombre animés lentement
Et la nuit quand tout est sombre je te regarde danser
@Its_Time_To_Drink_Water998
Sometimes, this song sounds Depressing,
Sometimes Sad,
Sometimes Hopefull,
Sometimes Calming,
And Somtimes Peaceful.
It all depends on what is going on around you, if your crying, its sad and depressing.
If your vibing, it's just peaceful.
Sometimes, you hear all of them at once.
How you hear the music depends on what's going on around you.
But, no matter what is happening, the song is always beautiful.
@thepicausno5561
Libet's delay is the scientific term for the delay between being touched and feeling touched.
@milesium-487
Libet is also the last name of Benjamin Libet. he was a pioneering scientist in the field of human consciousness.
@giannigiovful
Thepicausno
It’s even more than that, too.
The delay is used as an argument against the idea in philosophy that the “mind” (consciousness) is separate from the physical brain and to uphold physicalism instead.
According to physicalism, once a brain deteriorates, whichever part is destroyed is lost from the person’s consciousness. The destruction of the brain will destroy whatever information it held. Consciousness is inherently tied to your physical brain, and any damage given to it will affect consciousness. There’s no “soul” or otherworldly force of consciousness or “mind” separate from the brain (as dualism proposes).
Basically, Libet’s Delay can be used to “prove” that once you have alzheimer’s, you’re screwed. Any part of the brain that is lost is gone forever. Your consciousness is inherently tied to your brain, and there’s no going back. Not only that, but it’s probably all pre-determined, too.
It’s a bleak but widely-held outlook nowadays, due to many cases of people having brain damage and functioning differently (see: lobotomies, Phineas Gage).
@neonmajora8454
@@giannigiovful That's scary.
@newportbot7709
Not only that. Libet discovered that there was a delay between feeling like an action was taking place in the body, and said action taking place. The feeling came after the action, not before. It’s as if our consciousness is an illusionary backdrop to what actually goes on in the human nervous system.
@bodemolnar8195
Thought it was about if we had free will or not.
@NimbusDeluxe90125
When your birthday is over and everybody just left and you don’t have anything to do
@_Cato_
“Ah well, there’s always next year...”
@tomeydev9152
@@_Cato_ "Hey man , its me your friend, how about we just go to the bar and smoke it up and have some beer and stuff as well, what do you say bud?" - That one friend after your birthday party is over