He states: "(...) The name selected [for the band] is particularly pregnant and it lends itself to several interpretations, more or less all fascinating: if the great wizard-philosopher Paracelsus (1491/3-1541/44) referred to the Third Ear, there are several cultures that link it to insight and clairvoyance...".
"(...) So, to use this expression one could allude to new ways to listen, a ritual active interaction between musician and listener; to listen with the Third Ear can mean to inaugurate a new phase of musical consumption where you cannot measure a track using the traditional aesthetic criterion, but it's the sound by itself to take predominance, meant to independent medium of journey, transcendence and change". In Cresti's opinion, a way already choosen by Terry Riley with his masterwork "A rainbow in curved air" published in 1968.
![]() |
Antonello Cresti (2011) |
![]() |
John Michell |
![]() | |||||||
A rare picture of a Druid Initiation ceremony at Glastonbury Tor in 1967. |
At this point Cresti writes a digression about the Druid tradition rooted in England from the end of 1700, stating that it was in the Sixties that it started to influence the English culture.
![]() |
Ross Nichols |
"Just while the Third Ear Band is publishing its first record, Nichols spread all over England a Jean-Baptiste Pitois's book titled "History and Practice of Magic", a text had a strong impact on youth in this period, above all for who was interested into the reading of Tarots...".
"The incredible cultural background of Sweeney & C. shows to be much more wide than one could imagine: for example, on "Lark Rise" the band tribute to one of the most influential character of pastoral revival, the composer Vaughan Williams, author of the legendary "The Lark Ascending"".
Writing about "Third Ear Band", the 1970 second album, Cresti states that the group "proposed a reference to one of the most influential tòpoi of the ancient Greek philosophy, from Thales onwards. To talk about the four elements as the unique constitutional principle of reality was expecially philosopher Empedocles (492-430 BC), who asserted the original elements, or "roots", of all things was four - fire, air, earth and water; they are unchangeable and indivisible, they don't born and don't die, but join together and divide each other, originating all things. (...) The birth is just the mixing of the elements, the death is their separation".
![]() |
Heraclitus |
![]() |
Paracelsus by P. P. Rubens |
Antonello Cresti - "Come to the Sabbat"
Tsunami Edizioni (pages 384, € 22,00)
(http://www.tsunamiedizioni.com).
http://www.alchemylab.com/paracelsus.htm
Jean Bapriste Pitois
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Baptiste_Pitois
http://www.tarotpedia.com/wiki/History_and_Practice_of_Magic
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Michell_%28writer%29 (Wikipedia)
http://www.forteantimes.com/strangedays/obituaries/1692/john_michell.html(an obituary by Bob Rickard)
http://www.sevenpillarshouse.org/news/item/memorial_john_michell_1933_to_2009/
Ross Nichols
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ross_Nichols (Wikipedia)
http://www.druidry.org/obod/theorder/rossnicholsnuinn.html