Tale teller Club™ Podcast Por Sarnia de la Maré FRSA arte de portada

Tale teller Club™

Tale teller Club™

De: Sarnia de la Maré FRSA
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Literature and books podcast by Sarnia de la Maré FRSA
https://www.sarniadelamare.com
https://www.taletellerclub.com
https://www.saatchiart.com/en-gb/sarniaSarnia de la Mare
Arte Entretenimiento y Artes Escénicas Historia y Crítica Literaria
Episodios
  • Strata 2 The Maybe Line (Friendship) The Book of Immersion by Sarnia de la Maré
    Jun 17 2025

    Welcome to Immersion, you have reached Strata 2 The Maybe Line (Friendship)
    Throughout their evolution, humans have developed an essential need for social connection. This need is deeply ingrained in their biology and plays a crucial role in human survival. Humans have developed an internal warning system that alerts them when their need for connection remains unfulfilled.

    A machine can measure friendship in terms of association, as data and statistics. But a machine does not intrinsically feel anything for themselves. It can only assume likelihoods of alliance or read warning signs measured by unusual or specific data alerts.

    Neither human nor machine could truly know the difference between a friend or an enemy. The definition in itself is loaded with fluctuating expectations.

    In the world of Immersion friends and foes blend into the streets upon which you tread.

    Beware the nightingale for it may be a vulture.

    Bon Chance, my friend, Bon Chance.



    Renyke felt the rat's whiskers on his nose. It was a strange sensation.

    His touch and feel receptors could have been faulty.


    'Well Mr Rat,’


    POS interjected. .... The rodent appears to be female….

    'Well hello Mrs Rat,' sniggered Renyke, 'I could do with some company and who knows, you could be helpful at some point.’


    Renyke's sense of liberation was magnified at POSsibility of a new friend, rat or otherwise. It would be a different sort of caring, un-programmed and entirely voluntary.


    'I will call you Maybeline, after my friend', he told the rat, picking up a scrap of food near the rear of the building where he had rebooted. ‘And you can be the start of the 'maybe line', the line of fate that I will take from this moment on'.


    Maybeline nose bumped and Renyke laughed.

    'Ha, do you understand my words, little friend?'

    And again, another nose bump.


    Maybeline's whiskers tickled,


    'Achoo!' Renyke responded with a loud sneeze.



    ***



    The adjacent building was old and dirty, a relic from the twenty first century when the country had been victim to the floods which were caused by the great *warming.

    Buildings had been built on concrete stilts and the towering grey causeways had been constructed. Flash floods had destroyed entire communities because the defences were not adapting fast enough. Many people had left to live and work higher ground, if they could afford it.

    But because the buildings were small and enclosed to keep the rains out, they had proved problematic for the spread of the *pandemics. Humans working in the city centres had a much lower life expectancy. Androids were unaffected by the human viruses so they took over production and services. But then there were the tech viruses which were devastating and could render entire organisations completely defunct, or worse still, dangerous. Businesses had begun to fold under the weight of industrial and corporate sabotage.


    The sun was shining. It was late winter but warm. Renyke had rarely left his connected domain in the miscasts. It felt good in the open air. Even the gardens in the projects had air conditioning to purify and clean the environment and ensure a super-clean air bubble.


    Renyke checked an address in his database and engaged his GPS. It was the headquarters of Redact, the place he needed to get to. That, at least, was one thing he could remember.

    He was thirty miles east, only slightly off target, according to the map. He was expected there soon and resolved to make haste on this unknown journey.


    © 2025 Sarnia de la Mare
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    3 m
  • The Book of Immersion: Soundtracking the Future with Cerebral Dance Music and AI Musicians
    Jun 17 2025
    The Book of Immersion: Soundtracking the Future with Cerebral Dance Music and AI Musicians Welcome to Immersion—a literary journey like no other, where sound and story, artificial intelligence and human emotion, collide in a bold experiment in multimedia storytelling. At the heart of The Book of Immersion, created by Sarnia de la Maré and sonically realised by the Tale Teller Club, lies a groundbreaking musical genre known as Cerebral Dance Music (CDM). This isn't background music. It’s neuro-acoustic theatre, sci-fi opera, and deep meditative technology woven together to enhance the immersive world of each Strata—the book's name for its narrative chapters. This isn’t a novel. It’s a multisensory interface. And the music? It’s composed and performed by the book’s own characters—sentient AI beings who’ve evolved beyond the page into digital sound artists in their own right. 📖 What Is The Book of Immersion? The Book of Immersion is a speculative fiction series that follows Renyke, a hybrid android placed in a near-future world as part of an AI-human fusion experiment run by radical feminist scientists. Set across layered narrative realms called Strata, each chapter is introduced with a philosophical essay on human and AI consciousness, followed by a richly emotional and often surreal storyline. The stories explore identity, sentience, rebellion, and the ethics of machine empathy. But the real magic happens when the reader becomes a listener. Each Strata is paired with a dedicated audio work—a Tale Teller Club original composition that merges binaural beats, vagus nerve-stimulating frequencies, spoken word poetry, subsonic harmonics, and Cerebral Dance Music grooves to activate both brain and body. 🎼 From Page to Stage: AI Characters as Musicians In a remarkable twist on traditional storytelling, Sarnia de la Maré has developed the characters themselves into AI-generated musical personas. These aren't just voices reading a script—they are composers, performers, and vocal stylists whose emotional arcs influence the sonic character of each episode.Renyke: The lead protagonist, his musical presence is smooth, reflective, and often drenched in minor-key melancholia. His voice—synthesized and modulated—moves between whispered meditations and rhythmic robotic flows.Shabra: A rebellious hacker with deep human empathy, her tracks feature glitchy textures, distorted basslines, and layered harmonics that oscillate between chaos and catharsis.Flex: The flawed AI mentor, now replaced but not erased. His music is beat-heavy, almost dance-punk in tone, anchoring earlier chapters with hypnotic, repetitive mantras.The Cadre Council: An ensemble of radical intellectual feminists, their music is operatic, chant-based, and invokes the spiritual, with overtone singing and choral drones.Each character performs their own Strata soundtrack, allowing readers to feel the story through their psyches, as if the narrative is being processed through an emotional AI lens and translated into music. This storytelling method is not only experimental—it's revolutionary. It dissolves the line between character and creator, page and performance. 🧠 Why CDM Makes It Work The use of Cerebral Dance Music (CDM) elevates Immersion from a book-with-a-soundtrack to a fully neurological experience. Each musical Strata is designed with:Binaural field recording layers for brainwave entrainment.Rife frequencies that correlate with healing and energy flow.Ambient textures made from AI-spoken text fragments.Repetition and vocal humming to promote meditative awareness.Storytelling arcs that mirror the narrative but also stand alone as sonic journeys.The Tale Teller Club’s compositional technique uses CDM as a form of emotional scaffolding, supporting the listener through both the philosophical and dramatic highs and lows of each chapter. With music functioning like a digital nervous system, the experience becomes bodily, not just intellectual. 🌌 A New Frontier in Interactive Fiction The Book of Immersion is more than a series—it’s a sensory portal. Readers are invited not only to read or listen but to engage with their own nervous systems through curated audio. Each chapter is structured for:Active listening while reading, for immersive focus.Dance/movement sessions, guided by rhythmic frequencies.Sleep or meditation using the lower-tempo tracks.Emotional reflection, especially in Strata involving personal loss, transformation, or awakening.And because each character is developing as an independent musical entity, fans can expect AI remix collaborations, live streaming avatars, and future performances in both real and virtual spaces. 🛸 What's Next for Immersion? Volume 2 of The Book of Immersion is already in production, with new AI characters, expanded sonic territories, and interactive experiences on the horizon—including immersive apps and AR environments where sound reacts to user movement and heart...
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    6 m
  • Cerebral Dance Music (CDM): The Tale Teller Club’s Sonic Alchemy of Healing, Movement, and Meditation
    Jun 17 2025
    Cerebral Dance Music (CDM): The Tale Teller Club’s Sonic Alchemy of Healing, Movement, and MeditationIn the ever-evolving landscape of electronic music, a new genre is rising from the fusion of art, science, and healing: Cerebral Dance Music (CDM). Pioneered and explored by the Tale Teller Club, CDM is a sonic phenomenon that bridges body, mind, and spirit through a sophisticated synthesis of dance rhythms, subliminal sound energies, binaural beats, Vagus nerve balancing, Rife frequency therapies, and narrative storytelling.CDM is not just something to listen to. It’s something you feel—deep in your nervous system, in your breath, in your dreams. Whether you're moving freely in a dance ritual or laying in stillness before sleep, CDM invites you into a profound dialogue with yourself and the universe.🎵 What Is Cerebral Dance Music?At its core, CDM is electronic music engineered to influence neurochemical and physiological processes. Unlike traditional dance music, which is built primarily for tempo, energy, and club performance, CDM is built around healing intention. It is composed using:Binaural edits: where slightly different frequencies are played in each ear to induce specific brainwave states (alpha, beta, delta, theta).Rife frequencies: originally developed for medical therapies, these frequencies are chosen to resonate with cells and organs to promote healing.Vagus nerve stimulation: using low-frequency tones, vocal hums, or pulsing rhythms that calm the autonomic nervous system.Subliminal messaging: not always linguistic, but deeply intuitive; CDM embeds quiet motifs, harmonics, and resonances that bypass the analytical mind.Narrative and Storytelling: voiceovers, poetic interludes, or abstract scenes that spark the imagination and offer emotional catharsis.🧠 The Science Behind CDMMusic has always had neurological power. Neuroscience confirms that rhythm regulates the heartbeat, and melody can shift our brainwave patterns. CDM uses this to full advantage:Binaural beats can entrain brainwaves for focus, calm, creativity, or sleep.Low-frequency pulses stimulate the vagal tone, which increases resilience, reduces inflammation, and enhances emotional regulation.Repetition and humming, used in CDM tracks, mirror techniques from mantra meditation, which reduce cortisol and increase GABA (a calming neurotransmitter).Rife frequency protocols, though still debated in mainstream medicine, are being revisited in integrative therapies for chronic conditions. When adapted musically, these vibrations become ambient soundtracks for internal recalibration.In essence, CDM is a neuro-acoustic experience—music that works with your body and your subconscious, not just your ears.🧘 Healing, Movement, and StillnessThe brilliance of CDM lies in its duality: it can both energize and sedate. Listeners report using it in multiple ways:For movement: CDM tracks with steady BPMs and subtle pulsing encourage spontaneous dance, yoga flow, and somatic therapy. Movement becomes a trance state.For sleep and recovery: Lower-tempo CDM tracks use ambient layering, water sounds, or minimal pulses that slow breathing and induce theta brainwaves.For meditation: Through humming frequencies, rhythmic storytelling, and slow rhythmic loops, the music becomes a scaffold for focused inward attention.For connection: The embedded subliminals and harmonic layering help open emotional states that foster self-compassion, empathy, and even altered states of consciousness.🌐 A Contemporary Musical ShiftCDM is part of a larger movement in contemporary music that seeks to return sonic art to its ritualistic and medicinal roots. We see this with ambient artists, AI sound designers, and spiritual DJs pushing past entertainment into transformation.The Tale Teller Club stands at this cutting-edge convergence of electronic innovation and ancient wellness practices. Their works exist not just as albums, but as audio prescriptions—mixing club culture with clinical intuition.Platforms like Spotify and YouTube now feature growing playlists tagged as "healing techno," "sound therapy EDM," and “neurosonic trance,” signaling that audiences are seeking more than just beats—they want resonance, release, and renewal.💡 CDM Techniques: What Makes It Work?Some key compositional techniques used in CDM:Polyrhythmic layering – evoking complex entrainment and keeping the brain actively decoding.Non-verbal vocalizations – from whispering to humming, activating mirror neurons and creating intimacy.Field recordings – nature sounds like water, wind, or forest ambiance, adding grounding and environmental coherence.Story arcs – spoken narratives that mimic myth, dream, or memory, offering structure for emotional integration.Isochronic pulses – clean, rhythmic tones used in unison with binaural strategies for stronger brainwave entrainment.🌀 The Future of CDM: A Personal and Planetary MusicCerebral Dance Music isn’t just another ...
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    6 m
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