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Re: (313) Drugs and Music

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1995-01-24 17:03Sasha Kipervarg Re: (313) Drugs and Music
└─ 1995-01-24 18:13Cullen Re: (313) Drugs and Music
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1995-01-24 17:03Sasha Kipervarg>From: "Kent Williams" <cadsi.com!kent@elvis.cadsi.com> >Date: Tue, 24 Jan 1995 09:38:40 -
From:
Sasha Kipervarg
To:
Date:
Tue, 24 Jan 1995 12:03:57 -0500
Subject:
Re: (313) Drugs and Music
permalink · <199501241703.MAA02781@zork.tiac.net>
quoted 29 lines From: "Kent Williams" <cadsi.com!kent@elvis.cadsi.com>>From: "Kent Williams" <cadsi.com!kent@elvis.cadsi.com> >Date: Tue, 24 Jan 1995 09:38:40 -0600 >References: <199501232313.SAA16565@zork.tiac.net> >To: sasha@tiac.com (Sasha Kipervarg) >Subject: Re: (313) Drugs and Music >X-UIDL: 790966898.000 > >How is taking E at a dance any worse (or any better) than drinking a pitcher >at the Red Stallion and going line dancing? > >Drugs go with music like cinnamon sugar goes with toast. You can learn to >eat it plain, and even enjoy it, but deep down, don't you want a little spice? > >I stopped taking drugs when I started programming computers. I needed those >brain cells I was sending on vacation. I don't do anything now except the >odd three-beer buzz. But all those acid trips listening to "Phaedra" taught me >where the music can take you, and now I feel just as tripped listening to >good music as I ever did, without the hangover. > >Note Well, my young colleagues, that taking drugs is a young person's game. If >you're still doing it when you're thirty, people look at you funny. If you're >still doing it when you're forty, people look at you with pity. If you're >still doing it when you're fifty, you turn into Terrance McKennna. If you're >still doing it at 60, you turn into Timothy Leary. So do yourself a favor, and >quit while you still have some function in the frontal lobes. > > > >
1995-01-24 18:13Cullen> >From: "Kent Williams" <cadsi.com!kent@elvis.cadsi.com> > >Subject: Re: (313) Drugs and
From:
Cullen
To:
Date:
Tue, 24 Jan 1995 11:13:15 -0700 (MST)
Subject:
Re: (313) Drugs and Music
Reply to:
Re: (313) Drugs and Music
permalink · <Pine.SUN.3.90.950124110623.20265B@xmission>
quoted 6 lines From: "Kent Williams" <cadsi.com!kent@elvis.cadsi.com>> >From: "Kent Williams" <cadsi.com!kent@elvis.cadsi.com> > >Subject: Re: (313) Drugs and Music > >X-UIDL: 790966898.000 > > > >How is taking E at a dance any worse (or any better) than drinking a pitcher > >at the Red Stallion and going line dancing?
Tough call here. The neurotoxicity of E is still a hotly debated issue. Anyone taking the stuff ought to realize that they're rolling the dice every time.
quoted 5 lines I stopped taking drugs when I started programming computers. I needed those> >I stopped taking drugs when I started programming computers. I needed those > >brain cells I was sending on vacation. I don't do anything now except the > >odd three-beer buzz. But all those acid trips listening to "Phaedra" taught me > >where the music can take you, and now I feel just as tripped listening to > >good music as I ever did, without the hangover.
Sigh... That three beer buzz is sending a lot more brain cells packing than all your acid trips combined. I can guarantee you that. I'm also not familiar with the hangover you refer to. I can at least agree with you that after a point the drug isn't really necessary. Anybody interested in IDM has to recognize what an important role drugs have played in its evolution. I won't criticize any one for their own abstinence, but it's important to understand the TREMENDOUS impact of LSD on popular music of the last 30 years.