Reckon | The Whole World's a Stage

"Civilization is entirely the product of phonetic literacy. As it dissolves with the electronic revolution, we rediscover a tribal integral awareness that manifests itself in a complete shift in our sensory lives....This new electronic environment itself constitutes an inner trip, collectively, without benefit of drugs. The impulse to use hallucinogens is a kind of empathy with the electronic environment." - Marshall McLuhan

Chris

Reckon

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i12bent:


Eric Dolphy w. the bass clarinet (photo: Chuck Stewart)
Dolphy died too young, while touring in Europe in 1964, first with Mingus, then in other settings… He collapsed on stage in Berlin and was brought to a hospital. The attending hospital physicians had no idea that Dolphy was a diabetic and thought that he, like so many other jazz musicians, had overdosed on drugs, so he was left in a hospital bed until the drugs had run their course. Dolphy died on June 29, 1964 in a diabetic coma…
i12bent:


Eric Dolphy w. the bass clarinet (photo: Chuck Stewart)
Dolphy died too young, while touring in Europe in 1964, first with Mingus, then in other settings… He collapsed on stage in Berlin and was brought to a hospital. The attending hospital physicians had no idea that Dolphy was a diabetic and thought that he, like so many other jazz musicians, had overdosed on drugs, so he was left in a hospital bed until the drugs had run their course. Dolphy died on June 29, 1964 in a diabetic coma…

i12bent:

Eric Dolphy w. the bass clarinet (photo: Chuck Stewart)

Dolphy died too young, while touring in Europe in 1964, first with Mingus, then in other settings… He collapsed on stage in Berlin and was brought to a hospital. The attending hospital physicians had no idea that Dolphy was a diabetic and thought that he, like so many other jazz musicians, had overdosed on drugs, so he was left in a hospital bed until the drugs had run their course. Dolphy died on June 29, 1964 in a diabetic coma…

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