And like Dr.Morbius, Mr.D'Agostino's enlightenment will be overcome by his ego as he doles out advanced technology only as he sees fit, ultimately unleashing his Id destroying those who question and oppose him, subconsciously through his amplifiers.....
Recall of Krell Amplifiers
I just received information that the US CPSC (Consumer Product Safety Commission) in conjunction with Krell Industries has recalled 2,300 of their KAV-250a, KAV-250a/3, KAV-500 and KAV-1500 amps due to 50 reports that the amps overheat causing smoke and electrical fires. A component input device can fail and cause the amps to overheat posing burn and fire hazards to consumers. These amps were sold between January 1997 through to February 2001 for between $3,000 and $8,000. Consumers should immediately stop using the amps and contact Krell to schedule free installation of replacement fuses. The number is (888) 436-6055 between 9:00am and 4:30 pm EST, or go to their website at www.krellonline.com or e-mail at service@krellonline.com
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And this all goes to show, as Winston Churchill once said, you can fool some of the Audiogoners all of the time, and all of the Audiogoners some of the time, but you can not fool all of the Audiogoners all of the time. Al you are quite right that the Id Monster was unleashed by the massive mind amplifying power of the Krell machines (almost the whole planet was a massive mind amplifier) and the sparks were indeed flying as it came up against the Cruiser's force field. And by the way, the ladies swoon for Robby the Robot - he is one classy fella. |
Magfan, From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theremin: A theremin was not used for the soundtrack of Forbidden Planet, for which Louis and Bebe Barron built "disposable" oscillator circuits and a ring modulator to create the "electronic tonalities" for the film.[20][21] From Reference 20 of that article: The musical score, termed "electronic tonalities," was composed by Louis and Bebe Barron. They were a married couple, collaborators of avant-garde composer John Cage. The "bleats, burps, whirs, whines, throbs, hums and screeches" that make up the sound track contained carefully developed themes and motifs, as well as providing general atmosphere. Unlike Bernard Herrmann's score for The Day the Earth Stood Still, which used the Theremin as well as an unconventional selection of standard musical instruments, Forbidden Planet's innovative score was entirely electronic. And from Reference 21 of that article: The groundbreaking Forbidden Planet soundtrack is credited as the first all-electronic music soundtrack for a major commercial movie and was unlike anything that audiences had heard before. In fact, during one preview of Forbidden Planet, the audience actually broke out in spontaneous applause as the sounds of the spaceship landing on Altair IV filled the theater! Fascinating, as a leading character in a later and not completely dissimilar creation would have said! Regards, -- Al |
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