On Friday, the day before yesterday, I read Alien Invasion: Reptilians, Cetaceans, and Frequency Wars on Planet Earth, a very short book of bargain-basement channeled material attributed to Wuono, a Cetacean alien currently occupying a human body on Earth.
The titular frequency wars have to do with the evil Reptilians and the good Cetaceans preferring different musical pitches. The Reptilians are reportedly "trying to lower the frequency of Earth" from its optimal range of "between 544 and 550 hertz" to "a level that suits them, namely to the 440 hertz range."
Another successful method to lower frequency was setting the standard tuning for musical instruments at 440 hertz, which was done in 1953. This refers to setting the musical note A above middle C to 440 hertz. This frequency was chosen by forces in the human population that had aligned themselves with demonic entities. By making all music resonate at the optimal frequency for demons, it was hoped that the average frequency of Earth could be lowered more quickly. Indeed, their idea has lowered the average frequency frequency noticeably.
Among its other supplies deleterious effects, we are told, "A=440 hertz music . . . can lead to mental and physical illness."
After finishing that book, I started Whale Music, Paul Quarrington's novel based on the life of Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys. Today I read the scene in which Des and Danny Howell (Brian and Dennis Wilson) play their first tape for a record company. Des is the narrator.
Every time my harmonies fell off pitch -- singing in the studio is a knack that takes time to acquire -- it stung and made me feel ill. [Record-company rep] Kenny Sexstone winced as though someone were banging him over the head with a ball-peen. I didn’t know then that Kenneth was saddled with perfect pitch, a sense of hearing so acute that he could tell an A 441 from an A 440.
Whale Music has been synchy in other ways, too. One of the main characters is named Claire. She comes from Toronto, which Des affects to believe is a distant planet. He mentally refers to her as "the alien Claire." When she unexpectedly loves the Whale Music Des has been composing and recording, he says:
I'm glad you liked the music, because you are the farthest thing from a whale I could imagine. I was a little worried that it would appeal only to whales.
So Claire, though appearing to be human, is an "alien" who apparently has something of a "cetacean" soul.
6 comments:
While I don't think that frequencies have this kind of effect, it made me think of the Wings of Pegasus channel -
https://www.youtube.com/@wingsofpegasus/videos -
which is nowadays documenting how essentially-all music being produced at present (including "live" music) is being "pitch corrected" (or else autotuned at source) to 440hz and equal temperament - and the back catalogue of recordings is being "remastered" in the same way.
Whether or not that frequency is especially congenial to demons, the enforcement of pitch correction on music is certainly a demonic project!
there is a strange book i read years ago by 19th Century occultist Fabre D'Olivet (The Secret Lore of Music) that argues this among other things. one thing i remember is him quoting Plato and Confucius and other ancient luminaries about the power of music to set right society and asking how come this is not the case anymore. how has music lost this power. and his answer is very tied to change in frequencies iirc.
I wanted to check what musical note corresponds to the supposedly "good" frequency preferred by the Cetaceans. My search led me to this page:
https://mixbutton.com/music-tools/frequency-and-pitch/music-note-to-frequency-chart
The page includes one and only one book recommendation: Richard Mainwaring's Everybody Hertz: The Amazing World of Frequency, From Bad Vibes to Good Vibrations.
That subtitle alludes to a Beach Boys song composed by Brian Wilson.
Laeth, the only Fabre d'Olivet I've read is The Golden Verses of Pythagoras, which wasn't particularly memorable. Do you recommend his music book?
In one scene of my dreams last night, I had a piece of sheet music that I was reading to another person. The sheet music had both the melody/ notes and the lyrics underneath those notes. I focused on reading the lyrics, but found that what came out of my mouth were the notes, and I understood the notes as meaning the accompanying words. As in, I was communicating the words through the language of the notes.
After waking up, this brought to mind the Close Encounters of the Third Kind scene, in which Men and the ETs were speaking to each other through a "tonal vocabulary".
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nkykqyMEarA
Speaking through tones and music takes me also to whales, and I thought specifically of Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, since it has come up a bit in my past writing and recently in your reference to Spock doing too much "LDS". Here is the clip in which Spock realizes that the sound they are hearing is a whale song.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=45Tt0P968lA
In another part of my dream, I was given a trophy or an award in the shape of the Buffalo Wild Wings mascot, whose name is apparently Hank. Given that Henry has been a name prominently featured in some of my symbolic thinking, this seemed interesting, as does the image of a flying bovine. I found myself wondering if there was a tie between the Buffalo and the Whale, for whatever reason. I first looked at the etymology, and didn't find much, other than Buffalo does connect to water (the original word is "water buffalo").
However, Buffalo, Bison, oxen, and other bovines are referred to as Bulls, Cows, and Calves. Whales are also referred to by these names, strangely, and I think this is the symbolic connection I was looking for. So if one did not have the accompanying imagery as they heard of references to bulls, cows, and calves in the ocean, they might picture a bunch of swimming bovines.
Or, conversely, if one hears of a Bull capable of flying, an image of a whale up in the sky would be a totally acceptable interpretation.
@Wmjas, it was a while ago but i liked it. probably would find it a little pointless now (as most occultism) but i think it was well written at least, and the topic interesting. very short too. so yes, recommended.
Post a Comment