Saturday, March 23, 2024

the sunbeam (that burns through the shadows)

Dear listeners, I have yet another very important tale for you today, and one of absolute truth! This is above and beyond the tale that I laid upon your mind in the podcast Camping Under The Stars, Vol. 5 (Sanctuary), which was a mere 2 weeks of living off of the land and surviving on hot dogs, bananas, and peanut butter. Dear listeners, this tale stretches across 3 years. 3 long YEARS!! It is not one that was pleasant, but it had a(n eventual) happy ending. How does that tie into today's episode?? Well, let me tell you.......
In a time not long ago, during a weird and upside-down world of toilet paper shortages and no haircuts lived a content little dude whom we will call Poemhobbit. He lived in his happy village with his happy family and created musings of aural jewels for people all over the world which he delivered like an Easter egg. Well, for some odd reason, Poemhobbit and his family felt that they should travel to a land unknown, so he sold his tiny cottage quickly and with a prosperous outcome. Poemhobbit was so happy! But, before he and his family would decide on the perfect place, they would live in a less-than-desirable village that was infested by a sub-societal mob of unhappy zombies that smelled of burning skunk cigarettes. 'It is okay', thought Poemhobbit, 'it will not last for more than 3 months. I will take this negative experience and thrive, nonetheless. These 3 months will go by quickly and we will have departed before any misery sets in!' And so it was.....

However, those 3 months turned into 6 months. Then, into a year. And, yet another year. And another year after that. And anot........wait, how many years is that?!? So, Poemhobbit was stuck in this prison-like dystopian cubicle for 3 years. And, the misery did set in. In fact, it festered like a cancer. The family was unhappy, hope had abandoned them, their dreams turned into dusty cobwebs, and escaping was something that was never even talked about without malice and regret. Poemhobbit was miserable, and his joy for the arts became a chore and a cumbersome endeavor. It was difficult for Poemhobbit to weave sounds and spread joy when it had escaped him. 

But, Poemhobbit never gave up. He didn't always allow his family to know of his struggles, and instead fought to shine positive light on the negative situation. He fueled them with his (fake) optimism and assurance. Moreso, Poemhobbit had to really convince himself that his misery was perception, and that his ambitions would pull him out of the quicksand. He had to be the beacon of light, the sunbeam to those that depended upon him, and somehow find the strength to burn through the shadows and dust. 'Stay strong', Poemhobbit told himself, 'and let those that follow you tread upon a path of optimism and diligence.'

Well, as fate would have it, persistence finally did win. Poemhobbit held out and never stopped raining hope and optimism upon his family. They were eventually able to escape the inferno of stinky skunk cigarettes burned by sketchy circus clowns. This journey in time was very debilitating physically, emotionally, and spiritually. If Poemhobbit gave up hope (which nearly happened many, many times), then he would have let down his family. In the end, Poemhobbit found a nice cottage in a small village where he had laid his wishes. Fortune smiled down upon his family, and the fire inside him rekindled once again. The struggle for comfort had finally subsided.

Sometimes, to succeed you need the positive person around you to inspire you and light up your ambitions. Sometimes that person needs to be you. While the modern world wants us to let out everything and seek comfort from our hardships, your boy Poemhob........... I mean Tonepoet, believes that controlling this like a water spigot and knowing when, how much, and to who you water your hardships to is an exercise of optimal self-control. Seek a co-pilot that can give you guidance when you need it, so that you can ignite the light inside those that rely on you for assurance during tough times. And, in turn, be an inspirational sunbeam to others. Things will work out for you if you show persistence and patience. The staff at Spaceman's Transmissions has faith in our dear listeners, our power is with you.

Turn on, tune in, shine on...

[DOWNLOAD THE SUNBEAM {THAT BURNS THROUGH THE SHADOWS}] [ITUNES]

TRACK LISTING

  • “Station ID” by Tonepoet from Spaceman’s Transmissions (Start Time: 00:00)
  •  “Sunbeam” by Low Altitude from Boat (Start Time: 00:23)
  • “The Starry Night” by Tomo Nakaguchi from The Long Night In Winter Light (Start Time: 05:54)
  • “R Abacus Landr (Excerpt)” by Pulse Mandala & Distant Fires Burning from R Abacus Lndr (Start Time: 08:49)
  • “Unknownland” by Zero Ohms from Spotted Peccary Free Ambient Electronic Sampler #36 (Start Time: 10:31)
  • “Spaghetti Western” by Andrew Heath and Mi Cosa de Resistance from CafĂ© Tristesse (Start Time: 12:41)
  • “Peace (Excerpt)” by Clem Leek & Ian Hawgood from Places for Peace (Start Time: 17:04)
  • “White Noise IV” by The Fire & The Fog from Moments (Start Time: 21:23)
  • “Logic Is The Beginning Of Wisdom, Not The End” by Kosmorama from Kosmorama (Start Time: 22:45)
  • “it knows (Excerpt)” by just this morning, songbirds from it lives (Start Time: 28:21)
  • “Indeciso” by Quelche from Imaginary North Transmission 001 (Start Time: 32:30)
  • “Verde (Excerpt)” by Tewksbury from Floes- Volumes I-IV (Start Time: 35:20)
  • “Hum (w- Moonsign)” by Hidden Sky from Bliss etc (Start Time: 38:48)
  • “Day 81 (Eb Maj)” by Hidden Sky from I V VI IV (Start Time: 42:56)
  • “Coldwater II” by Nowherians from This Is Not An Acceptable Lullaby (Start Time: 45:46)
  • “Maggie Is Napping” by One Of Them from Sithaboo (Start Time: 48:55)
  • “Weightless Time” by Erothyme from Life Sidereal (Start Time: 53:57)
  • “Aerial” by Low Altitude from Boat (Start Time: 56:02)

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Beautiful story and beautiful music!! I REALLY love your mixes and download every one and have done for years!
-Kevin
USA

JC said...

Hey Tonepoet, thanks for all the mixes. Really appreciate ambient mixes I can trust to listen through with enough variety and reflective mood building. Love the space samples, synth tunes and haunting vocals. Discovered In the Branches and many more through you.Impressive volume of output too. Great stuff

Tonepoet said...

Thanks for the support, Kevin, glad that you are digging the vibe. Peace.

Tonepoet said...

I wish that I could at least have one podcast per month. It's a bit tough as a one-person operation. I have leftover guest podcasts that I can also start to trickle down for some continuity. Thanks for your support and keeping ambient music alive. Peace.