Fascinating courtly intrigue and bloody power games set on a generation ship full of secrets―Medusa Uploaded is an imaginative, intense mystery about family dramas and ancient technologies whose influence reverberates across the stars. Disturbing, exciting, and frankly kind of mind-blowing.” ―Annalee Newitz, author of Autonomous

Friday, January 31, 2014

Yet Another Baffled, Middle-Aged Person Wonders, "WTF?"



Feelings of bafflement are not new to me. I spent most of my childhood in a state of bewilderment, mostly because I was weird, nerdy, and nearsighted. But the first time I can remember feeling blindsided by the tides of Culture was in high school, in the mid-70s, when the fabulous, experimental music I had been hearing since about 1968 gave way to the Disco Era. WTF? I wondered (or the 70s version of same). Suddenly a bunch of lunk-headed number-crunchers in the music industry had decided songs should be x minutes long and you should play the same 20 songs all day long. Since they were only x minutes long, that meant you heard them a bazillion times.

I tried to look on the bright side. I explored an interest in classical music and resigned myself to the idea that my country was peopled by don't-rock-the-boat, don't-make-me-think-too-hard folks who voted Republican 55 to 60 per cent of the time because they believed those folks would preserve the status quo – and that's the way it was going to be for the foreseeable future. Civil rights would be gained slowly (like a glacier inching across Antarctica) and popular culture would never embrace any kind of depth, beauty, or complexity.


This suspicion was confirmed by the 80s. The teenagers of the 80s seemed smugly confident that their president(s) had assumed office solely to assure them a prosperous future. They were upwardly-bound, the sky was the limit, and those old hippies of the 60s and 70s were a joke. Only the punks seemed to question the status quo. I had never felt so far from the mainstream. I struggled to build a career as a writer, and was so poor that I often had to borrow money to survive – this despite the fact that I had begun to work two, sometimes three jobs to make ends meet. I didn't even bother to ask WTF. I just kept my head down and kept slogging.

The last thing I expected, when the 90s rolled around, was another WTF moment. I opened my eyes and noticed that the teenagers and 20-somethings around me had turned into hippies. They loved poetry and folk music, their pop music was more imaginative, they were tree-huggers and vegans. I couldn't figure out where they had come from. I was working very hard to survive, still trying to make something of myself. I blamed myself for not succeeding, so I didn't look at the bigger picture. I told myself that those kids were hippies because the pendulum had swung in the opposite direction, and that the next generation would swing back again.


But it didn't do that after 2000 – not exactly, hence the next WTF. Older people swung right again, though not by the margins I had seen in the 70s and 80s. Bush barely squeaked into office in 2000 and 2004, and he was elected by older people. Younger people voted against him. I began to suspect that something was going on that I should have been aware of since the 90s. After all, it started in the 70s, when I was still trying to figure out what I was going to do with my life. It started when I realized I just didn't have that many options. I blamed myself for that. This is the thing we tend to do. This is what drives us to keep working, keep trying. If we dare to suspect that perhaps we're not being paid fairly, perhaps we're not imagining that there's a lack of real advancement opportunities, we scold ourselves and say we just need to work harder.

Young people have been hearing that BS for over 30 years now. We teach by example, and the example we've inadvertently given them is that we're gluttons for punishment, and we think they should be too. They've learned to shrug off the dogma we keep throwing at them. And that's what led to my next WTF moment. My notion that civil rights would inch along, like that glacier, was shot to hell in 2012. I found out that the current under-40 crowd has a much finer grasp of ethics than my peer group did. They support gay rights and women's rights, they don't see WASP culture as superior, they want to protect the environment, they think war is pointless and greed is destructive.


I hope these young people get out and vote in record numbers from now on. I hope they give me another happy WTF moment. I hope I can give them a good example of how to live instead of an example of what not to tolerate.

I'm working on it – but this time, I hope, with my eyes open.




Illustrations by Ernest Hogan, nanohuduista and teoguerrilla. If he ever catches up with me, I may get an unauthorized infotattoo . . .

Thursday, January 30, 2014

The Power and Might of Equal Temperament



Check out Michael Levy's remastered masterpiece – use the links below! And write reviews!

Re-release of my Masterfully Re-mastered 2009 Album!

I am pleased to announce the re-release on iTunes of my masterfully re-mastered 2009 album, "Lyre of the Levites"! The new release is now called"Lyre of the Levites: Klezmer Music For Biblical Lyre"... 

Produced by Dominik Johnson, this album features awe-inspiring reverb sampled from actual Middle Eastern caves, totally transforming the original 2009 recording of my lyre!

Clips of the original 2009 version were used as the theme music to the BBC Radio 4 "Book at Bedtime" series, "The Liars Gospel" by Naomi Alderman.

This is about the only one of my earlier recordings (before I had the means of tuning my lyre into just intonation), that the use of equal temperament is actually an improvement - in the new masterful mix, the subtle out of phase "shimmer" of equal temperament actually has the effect of making the sound of my lyre take on the power & might of a Cathderal Organ! 

Here are the main download links for the album:








NB!! Any new reviews of the album on iTunes or Amazon would be VERY greatly appreciated...thanks, everyone!

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Ringy-Dingy Lyre Thingees and the Wisdom of Minerva



BBC Radio has once again displayed its good taste by sampling Michael's Levy's music for a production about the history and science of music. And as if that weren't enough, now you can get that music for your Android phone! Follow the links below . . .

All my albums will soon be on Google Play!

In my ever-increasing efforts to get my lyre music "out there", I was delighted to discover that CD Baby has now partnered with Google Play - soon enabling the download of absolutely every one of my albums on any new-fangled android mobile phone on the planet!

Here is the link to my albums currently available on Google Play:


All the rest of my more recent releases (including "The Ancient Roman Lyre") will also be available from Google Play very soon - the best things in life are worth waiting for!

And!

My Lyre Music on BBC Radio 4!

After finally figuring out the monumental task of registering with the Performance Rights Society, each and every one of my tracks from each and every one of my 23 album/single releases since 2008, I was very pleased to discover, when viewing my first airplay statement, that music from my album "Ode To Ancient Rome" was recently featured on BBC Radio 4!

The track featured was "The Wisdom of Minerva", and it was used at the start of episode 12 of the 30 part series by Matt Thompson, "Noise: A Human History".

A free podcast of this broadcast can be heard here
Please feel free to share this link with the rest of the known UNIVERSE! Many thanks, everyone.

Great to finally be able to know when and where my music is "getting out there"...

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Raise the Minimum Wage for Sisyphus! (Set to Music)



If there's a guy the working class can relate to, it's Sisyphus, the original “Move that pile of cans/books/bricks over there and then move it back” guy. Now you can watch his story set to music by Michael Levy. Use the links below:

Use of my Lyre Music in a New Amateur Dramatics Video!

I was pleased to recently collaborate in a delightful new children's amateur dramatics video! The ancient Greek legend of Sisyphus featured in an amateur home video in which I gave permission to use clips from my album "The Ancient Greek Lyre". Sisyphus was doomed to push a rock up a hill for all eternity...enjoy!


NB! I always offer the licensing of my music in any non-profit making, non-commercial project for free - the only terms I usually include in the licensing agreement for such projects, is that a brief review of the album from which the track or tracks are selected, is posted on a prominent digital music store such as iTunes or Amazon.

If anyone out there wishes to use my lyre music for similar purposes, please don't hesitate to get in touch:


Wishing everyone a happy and prosperous 2014!

Sunday, December 22, 2013

Michael Levy and The Ancient Roman Lyre



Michael Levy has a brand new album out! You can buy it in various forms by clicking the links below.

Release of my album "The Ancient Roman Lyre"!

I am pleased to announce the release of my brand new album, "The Ancient Roman Lyre"...


The free PDF of the detailed album notes can be downloaded here 

I would be enormously grateful if everyone could please "spread the word"!!

Many thanks, everyone...any reviews of the abum on iTunes, Amazon or CD Baby would also be most greatly appreciated, in my relentless, Herculean efforts as an aspiring independent musican, to get my little-known lyre music heard by the rest of the unsuspecting world - cheers!!

Saturday, December 14, 2013

King David's Chanukah Wish List



Back in the dim, dusty days when I worked in the music department in Borders, I talked with a customer who was especially fond of harp music. “I love the harp more than King David!” he announced, happily. I was able to hook him up with several harp albums that day, but I wish we had stocked albums by Michael Levy. That customer would have gone into the stratosphere if he could have heard Michael's music.

Now you can hear it for free! Click the links! Write reviews! Get cracking!!!

A MASSIVE Christmas Present For All My Fans!

A MASSIVE CHRISTMAS PRESENT FOR ALL MY LYRE MUSIC FANS!!! For a limited time, absolutely EVERY one of my 23 releases since 2008 is available for FREE (or as much as anyone thinks my music is worth!) from Bandcamp! If the "free" option is selected, all I would kindly ask in return, is to post a review of the album or single on either iTunes or Amazon..and to spread the word about my little-known lyre music to the rest of the unsuspecting world...

Here is the link to my Bandcamp Page:


Seasons Greetings, Everyone!

Friday, December 13, 2013

Officer Bernadette Kicks Butt



I enjoyed Anne Hillerman's new book, Spider Woman's Daughter, set in her late father's Navajo Detective series. I confess, once I realized she was a writer who had published a book about her father's journies in Navajoland (Tony Hillerman's Landscape), I was hoping she might pick up the reins and write a book in his series. When Spider Woman's Daughter was released, I snatched it up and dove into it. I quickly discovered that Anne Hillerman has her father's knack for building suspense and character. Even more important, she knows how to allow the reader to work on the mystery along with the main characters. I loved being able to learn more about the characters of Officer Bernadette Manuelito and her mother, as well.

Not to sound like a Philistine, but I did not discover Tony Hillerman's detective series until two years ago, after I began to work at the Heard Museum's book store. My mother was devoted to the series for many years, waiting for each new book with bated breath, so I knew they wouldn't disappoint me once I picked them up. And yet I still didn't read them – not until I read Talking Mysteries byTony Hillerman and Ernie Bulow (Ernie Bulow also wrote Navajo Taboos). This slim volume contains an introduction by Ernie Bulow, a quick autobiography by Tony Hillerman, an interview in which Bulow and Hillerman discuss writing and writing methods, and a masterpiece of a short story by Hillerman. Be sure and turn all the way to the end of the book, where you'll find gorgeous illustrations by Ernest Franklin depicting Joe Leaphorn and Jim Chee on the trail of a mystery. Once I had seen those illustrations, I knew I had to start reading about the characters.

I have now read all but the last two books in Tony Hillerman's series, and I've been very spoiled by being able to pick them up without having to wait for them to be written. Alas, I'll be forced to wait with everyone else for Anne's new books in the series.

So – how much did I enjoy her book? So much, I'm looking forward to reading the next one. Considering the big shoes Anne had to step into, this is high praise. But one word of warning: things get hairy really quick. You'll be on the hook until the very end!

I decided not to try to use any of the cover graphics for these books from google - they would only be taken down, because they're proprietary.  The photo at the top of this post was taken in Petrified Forest/Painted Desert national park, which is also Navajo Country.

Friday, November 29, 2013

Yodeling Goats Drive Big Box Bookstore Into Bankruptcy


Years ago, my friend Eileen Rowan and I worked together at the same Borders, and somehow we got onto the topic of the yodeling goatherd song from The Sound of Music. We noodled together a goofy poem about yodeling goats. We didn't finish it, and I stuck it into a file and forgot it.

Then recently I was putting together a little display at the Heard Museum book store for a classic kid's book titled, The Goat in the Rug. I thought of our poem and dug it up. It only needed a couple of lines to be complete. So here it is, the yodeling goat song, written by two miscreants on a slow night at Borders:

The Yodeling Goat Song

This is the song of the yodeling goats
They never eat books but they eat lots of oats
They live in a castle surrounded by moats
Those dawdling, oat-eating, yodeling goats.

Sing yodely-ohdely-dohdely-doo
If you think they’re funny, then I think so too
Sing Yodely-ohdely-dohdely-day
They moved in last week and it looks like they’ll stay

The yodeling goats, the yodeling goats
They like to eat fish, so they have shiny coats
They read magazines and sport colorful totes
Those oft-toting, fish-eating, yodeling goats

Sing yodely-ohdely-dohdely-dorm
Don't buy them a jacket, 'cause they're always warm
Sing yodely-ohdely-dohdely-day
They ring all the doorbells and then run away

The yodeling goats, the yodeling goats
They don’t give a fig for the DOs and the DON’Ts
They don't cross their Ts and they don't mark their quotes
Those fig-tossing, mis-quoting yodeling goats

Sing yodely-ohdely-dohdely, please
Let's run in the meadows and climb all the trees!
Sing yodely-ohdely-dohdely-dug
There's a goat in the pen and a goat in the rug

The yodeling goats, they have golden throats
And sing acapella, they know all the notes
They tap dance all summer, then drink root beer floats
Those tippy-tap, rooty-beer, golden throat goats

Sing yodley-ohdely-dohdely-dend
This yodeling goat song, will it never end?
Sing yodely-ohdely-dohdely-dain
Come back here next week and we'll sing it again!



Wednesday, November 13, 2013

The Oldest Song in the World



Michael Levy and his performance of the Oldest Goldy-est gets some press in Australia – follow the links!

The Oldest Song in the World - on the Other Side of the World!

My arrangement for solo lyre of the oldest complete song so far known from antiquity, the 2000 year old ancient Greek drinking song,"Epitaph of Seikilos", has been featured in a newspaper story  in the Australian Daily Telegraph...right on the other side of the world, from here in the rain-ravaged UK! The complete story can be read here

...It is just a pity that my early grainy Youtube video featured in the story, was filmed with my (rather suitably) "Iron Age" webcam! 

Monday, November 11, 2013

Ancient Music and The Scum Gentry



Michael Levy goes multimedia in his collaboration with a poet, an animator, and The Scum Gentry – click the links below to check it out!

Irish Poetry - Recited to my Lyre Music

I am pleased to announce the creation of a new animation featuring my composition, "Orpheus's Lyre: Lament For Solo Lyre in the Just Intonation of Antiquity". The animation is a collaboration project between the animator,Ciaran Leahy and the Dublin poet Peter O'Neill, based on his poem 'The Execution of Orpheus at Ephesus'. This animation was developed to feature on an Irish Arts & Media online magazine called "The Scum Gentry".

Below is a link to my new blog, featuring all the details about the poem and the Youtube video of the animation: 

Friday, November 1, 2013

Find Michael Levy on SoundCloud!


Michael Levy has a profile on SoundCloud now – check out the link below!

Ancient Lyre Music - Now on SoundCloud!

I am pleased to announce the launch of my new profile on SoundCloud - hopefully another 21st century means of bringing forth my 21st century (BC!) lyre music to the rest of the unsuspecting world...please feel free to share with the rest of the known UNIVERSE!


The direct URL to my new SoundCloud profile is:

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Em's Smashwords Interview



What inspires you to get out of bed each day?” asked the Smashwords Interview site, to which I replied with my own interpretation of inspiration: "I have to go to the bathroom.  And then the cats pounce on me."

My Smashwords Interview is live now, so you can follow the link and get the unadulterated truth as I answer questions about the Writer's Life, and how I have hopelessly mangled it. Find out what my writing desk looks like, and why it really belongs to a pint-sized thug named Jingle Monster. Thrill to tales of what Phoenix was like in the 1960s, and how cheap comic books used to be. Be astounded as I recount how easy it was to waste more than a year in a self-promotion campaign that pretty much didn't work. Visit my Smashwords Interview and be the first among your friends to say, “Well that's fifteen minutes I'm never getting back.”

Saturday, October 19, 2013

Big Business Is Doo-Doo (And Not In a Good, Fertilize-the-Crops Kinda Way)



I've heard it since the 1960s, and some of you may have heard it since the 1930s: Big Business is no friend to the worker. This is a Commie attitude, but it's also true – it can't be denied. The goal of any big business is to hire as few people as possible to do as much work as possible for as little money as possible. If the Big Business model is to be realized in its purest form, there should also be no benefits to go along with any job, other than the privilege of having it in the first place: no sick days, no insurance, no overtime, no paid holidays or vacation (in fact, no time off at all), no breaks, no limits to the hours worked daily, and no compensation for injuries received on the job. After all, if you work hard enough for your pittance, the quality of your character and your own native intelligence should shine forth and cause you to advance in the ranks until you become prosperous, right? After all nepotism, cronyism, and pure greed never factor into the equation at all.

But that's old news. All of that has been said before, and much better, by others. I've got my own argument for why Big Business is doo-doo. It comes from an experience I had at Borders, the big book chain that bit the bullet back in 2011. Prior to the sinking of that ship, we were engaged in rearranging the deck chairs, and at that point the doo-doo had become so thick, we were slipping and falling into it.


Things had become particularly nasty in 2008-2009. A new CEO had been hired, and though he resembled Mister Rodgers, he was actually the malignant doppleganger of that guy. He decided that we had to become relevant to our venders (the publishers who provided us with our product) by turning selected titles into bestsellers. (Personally, I think we would have become more relevant to them by paying them what we owed them, but that's just me.) The best way to do that, according to him, was to recommend these titles to absolutely everyone who came through the front door, regardless of what they were looking for.

So we all had to sit through training films on the computers in the back office to prove we could sell these select titles to people. In the films, a Borders employee would pose as a customer and ask the other Borders employee (posing as herself) for a book. Invariably, the sort of book they wanted was exactly the sort of thing we were promoting that month. We all electronically signed our initials at the end of these programs to indicate that were were enlightened as to the technique of selling books people didn't want and hadn't asked for.


One month, our selected title was in the Zombie Classics series. I don't recall the exact title, but for the sake of argument let's call it Jane Zombie. So, here I am at the information desk, answering phones and desperately trying to think up ways to insert the subject of zombies into the conversation without sounding like a nut case. A guy walks up and asks, “Do you carry the Chilton manuals for car repair?”

In the old days, I would have said Yes and walked him back to the car repair section, then helped him find the title he needed. Under the new regime I was obliged to say, “Yes sir, it's called Jane Zombie. It's the story of an undead governess who eats brains and repairs cars.”


Okay, I didn't actually say that, but I was sorely tempted.

That CEO eventually utilized his golden parachute and quit the company, moving on to another field where his techniques at mental torture might actually advance national security (or so I imagine). His methods for saving Borders from destruction did not work (because, as I mentioned earlier, they did not include the method of paying our bills). Borders went down, and a good many people drowned or died of hypothermia. Another Big Business success story (at least for the executives who managed to squeeze fat “retention bonuses” out of the dying carcass).

I'm not trying to say none of that crap goes on at the small/medium business level. There are plenty of self-made men and women out there who will bite your head off if you ask for any time off, who can't afford to offer insurance, or who may fire you because you're good-looking and that may threaten their marriage (or hire you for the same reason).


But the funny thing about good workers is that they really are hard to come by. Smaller businesses tend to have bosses who interact with the workers and who are involved in daily operations on the ground level. They notice who is competent, and reliable, and honest. Big businesses are managed from an extreme distance, they don't know or care who works for them unless the margin moves perceptibly, which it may do for any number of reasons. If there are hundreds of small businesses operating in a given town, you have choices where to work. If there's only one, and it's Walmart – god help you.

Here, let me recommend a book that may help you with your plight. It's about a zombie governess who eats brains and earns extra income through stock investments.



Once again, I have plundered Ernest Hogan's stock of wacky illustrations, which somehow always seem to fit the tone of these posts. I have probably used some of them before, but that's just a bunch of tough noogies. 

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Mucho Mega Music from Michael



Michael Levy has some wonderful news about his re-re-release, and some fabulous links for you to follow. Check out every single one of them, and don't forget to write reviews!

Third Time Lucky!

I am pleased to announce the re-re-RE release of my second compilation album, "Musical Adventures in Time Travel"...phew!

Trying to compile a suitable selection of the best tracks from my lyre albums has proved to be a task which almost needed the invocation of Apollo to achieve. It all began earlier this year...

At 23 tracks, the first release was far too long to fit onto the physical CD of the album (manufactured on demand by Reverbnation) and I grew to hate the album artwork I somewhat too hastily came up with!

In the second release, I loved the album cover -  "Alcaeus of Mytilene playing a kithara while Sappho listens" by Lawrence Alma-Tadema, 1881".Tadema does through art, what I intend to do through my music! However, at 22 tracks, I still could not squeeze them all into CD format, and since its release, I had recorded my new extended length single, "Orpheus's Lyre: Lament For Solo Lyre in the Just Intonation of Antiquity" and my audio producer, Dominik Johnson also came up with an amazing new mix for my other extended length single, "Ancient Lyre Strings", both of which I wanted to include in the final compilation...ARGH!

Therefore, in the third and final release, I edited the compilation to my favourite18 tracks. These include the track "Realm of the Ancestors" -  for possibly the first time in 3000 years, a unique duet of lyre and harp, featuring the wonderfully delicate harp accompaniment to my spontaneous lyre improvisation, provided by the talented folk harpist, Rebecca Penkett

In my endless quest of seeking musical perfection, my final version of "Musical Adventures in Time Travel", now includes all my extended length singles, including a track which only exists by pure serene serendipity...

"The Battle of Thermopylae - Paean For Solo lyre", another of my recently released extended length singles, was originally nothing but a random rough recording I did whilst improvising in my experiments to try and imitate an electric guitar pitch-bending "whammy bar" on lyre - using my right hand wrist as the said "whammy bar" on the top string above the  bridge, during some wild strummed sections!

I uploaded the raw audio file to Mediafire for possible future use and then completely forgot about it - for 3 years!! It was only whilst I was providing Dominik Johnson with the Mediafire URLs of my raw audio files for mixing in compiling "Musical Adventures in Time Travel", that purely by chance, I happened to accidentally copy and paste the URL to my frenzied lyre whammy bar improvisation, instead of the track I actually intended to send Dominik to mix!

The result is a bit rough and hissy compared to the other tracks in the compilation, but it sure ROCKS!!! Here is a video I recently uploaded to my Youtube Channel, featuring a clip of this piece:



The Rocky Road To Musical Perfection!

My second compilation also demonstrates the ruthless, relentless refining process I have put myself though over the last few years! My arrangement for solo lyre, of Dr Richard Dumbrill's interpretation of the 3400 year old Hurrian Hymn Text H6, started out as a now virtually viral, lo-fi Youtube video (recorded back in 2008 with my then suitably "Bronze Age" webcam!):


I eventually recorded a better quality version of this arrangement, which I bravely attempted to mix myself on my chunky old desktop, which then featured in my early experimental album from 2009, "An Ancient Lyre" - the only album I have ever been bold enough to attempt to produce from scratch myself!

Later in 2009, thanks to the now sadly defunct Myspace, I became acquainted with the awesome music production skills of Dominik Johnson, who masterfully re-mixed the raw audio of the recording - this then featured as track 1 from my first compilation album of 2011, "Ancient Landscapes".

In my new version of the Hurrian Hymn, now forming track 1 of "Musical Adventures in Time Travel", this time, I recorded my arrangement on my new hand-made lyre, using strings made of wound silk (made by ancient string technology expert, Peter Pringle) for a unique, truly ancient timbre - these strings provide almost the nearest match in tone to the unpolished strings of either wound gut or natural fibre which were generally used on the actual lyres of antiquity.

In this new arrangement, I also tuned my lyre in the wonderfully pure-sounding just intonation of antiquity, and for the repeat of the theme in my new arrangement, I experimented in the ancient Mesopotamian percussive lyre playing technique (using a small wooden baton to hit the strings, rather like a hammered dulcimer).

In the production of this track, Dominik also somehow managed to create a haunting natural reverb, authentically sampled from an actual Iranian cave -the relentless quest of seeking musical perfection!

This final arrangement of the Hurrian Hymn is currently being used in support of the exhibition at the Royal Ontario Museum - "Mesopotamia - Inventing Our World" (CDs of "Musical Adventures in Time Travel" are also available to purchase from the Royal Ontario Museum Shop). Below is a video featuring a clip from my new arrangement of the Hurrian Hymn:


The physical CDs of my compilation album "Musical Adventures in Time Travel" and indeed, of absolutely every other one of my many releases, are available to order, anywhere in the world, from my Reverbnation Store. This epic new compilation album is currently available from iTunesAmazonand lossless audio or 320kbps quality MP3s of the album are available to download from both CD Baby and Bandcamp.

NB! Any new reviews of either this new album or any other of my releases on either iTunes or Amazon would be utterly, amazingly appreciated - many thanks!!