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Showing posts from April, 2016

Playing Saint Ditch available on Amazon.com

    My novel, Playing Saint Ditch, is now available on Amazon.com in paperback and kindle version. Buy your copy today! http://www.amazon.com/Playing-Saint-Ditch-David-Isaiah/dp/1530838142/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1459958618&sr=8-2&keywords=playing+saint+ditch http://www.amazon.com/Playing-Saint-Ditch-David-Black-ebook/dp/B01DV39WHE/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1459958618&sr=8-1&keywords=playing+saint+ditch

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By the way, I was not wrong, either

     Pertaining to the previous post which is pertaining to my 2014 book The Semantolkino'hara and Its Applications: The Eschaton, Musicology, and the Name of God , I was never actually wrong in the first place. When it comes to the analysis in the book, I am not in error in what I said. Actually, come to think of it, there was MORE discovered since then, in regards to the analysis in the book's contents, which has not been written about yet- and that material blows my mind as to how not wrong I am.  As I said in the book, the basic tone rows in question are like a "production drive" where most of what people try with it, if their efforts are from intuition, is going to actually work, and will not actually fail. I only touched the tip of the iceberg in the book as to all the possible applications.      So if people were hoping that after a long time off, through prayer and meditation, that I would come to my senses and realize that I was making some kind of big mista

Smashing Pumpkins Reunion Show

   Wow, the Smashing Pumpkins (rather Billy Corgan and James Iha) played together recently for the first time on stage in 16 years, after I wrote about them and their song "Mayonaise" in my book The Semantolkino'hara and It's Applications: The Eschaton, Musicology, and the Name of God.   I didn't know the recent performance was acoustic only, though, as "Mayonaise" was originally heavy rock.     Basically, I used "Mayonaise" in my book as a song example which explains or expresses a concept that's difficult to convey, having to do with the cycles of civilization and the musical template I was working from which was a musical depiction of said cycles. The words, music, affect, and everything about the original recording conveys the concept well.