Uncensored Explanation of Dead Hands Dig Deep Documentary (WATCH AT YOUR OWN RISK): www.patreon.com/posts/uncensored-of-93112100 Tier Timestamps: 4:40 - Layer 1 33:28 - Layer 2 01:09:00 - Layer 3 01:27:16 - Layer 4 01:38:52 - Layer 5 More timestamps for each entry can be found in the description!
@bndblazrt
10 ай бұрын
W
@ongpoc09
10 ай бұрын
Wasnt the chorus to that baphomet kun music video Rät by Penelope Scott? (I messed up artist in original comment) “I feel so stupid, and so used…”
@cutecottoncandycat340
10 ай бұрын
@@ongpoc09 Rät is by Penelope Scott, if memory serves.
@sagalight
10 ай бұрын
Look up david byrne horses its a really wired song
@ongpoc09
10 ай бұрын
@@cutecottoncandycat340 My fault you were right! I mixed up artists writing this!
@sunnydispositionn
10 ай бұрын
(515) by slipknot is pretty disturbing too. it's only 1 minute long but the whole song consists of sid wilson screaming. the story behind it is that he went to visit his grandfather but by the time he got to his house, his grandfather had already passed away. afterwards he went to the recording studio and just let out all his pain. it's pretty haunting...
@BigDumby
10 ай бұрын
Also IOWA by Slipknot is pretty disturbing, not the album tho, I’m talking about the 15 minute song
@sunnydispositionn
10 ай бұрын
@@BigDumby very true
@poopooHeaddodger64
10 ай бұрын
My grandfather is one of my most special family members to me …
@sorrowsxiii
6 ай бұрын
I actually feel so bad.. I can hear the pain in his voice and it's honestly sad, the concept of death is sad, not because it can happen to you, but other family members.
@cauliflowerconnoisseur2710
2 ай бұрын
honestly, the first 2 Slipknot albums have disturbing moments.
@nolablack222
10 ай бұрын
as an side note about Daddy by Korn, Jonathan has mentioned when they started playing the song live for the albums 20th anniversary that the person that had S.A.'ed him was his babysitter and that the only reason he felt comfortable enough to play the song live was because said babysitter died of cancer with Jonathan saying "Karam's a bitch." The song was only played live to celebrate the albums anniversary and Jonathan said he will never play the song live again because he still has those emotional struggles with it.
@Treppy_Gecky
10 ай бұрын
I can relate. As someone with SA trauma in their childhood a weight really is removed from your shoulders when an abuser finally dies. When mine died of cancer I felt free and it helped me start to move on from my trauma.
@mistuhwhite69
10 ай бұрын
I retyped this like five times but all I have to say is Jonathan deserves a huge hug.
@mikubrot
10 ай бұрын
I hope he felt a lot of relief and catharsis when he did perform. expressing one's trauma and emotions through art can be very freeing
@SOBEKCrocodileGod
10 ай бұрын
@@mikubrotseems like it. Also seemed really hard on him too though. One performance I saw ended with him throwing his mic down and you could hear the sheer agony in his voice when he hit that last note before slamming the mic to the floor.
@homedepotfetus
5 ай бұрын
People like that are the reason that I hope hell exists.
@danem2215
10 ай бұрын
Spending an entire month building a bizarre obscure instrument because you came across it for video research is the most ADHD thing I can imagine.
@theorist
10 ай бұрын
yes. yes it is LOL. It was really fun but towards the end I started to burn out on finishing it which is why it took so long. But hey I did it!
@Ihateschoolsobadly
10 ай бұрын
Deadass proud of you bro its incredible
@theorist
10 ай бұрын
@@Ihateschoolsobadly Thanks. That actually means a lot :)
@danem2215
10 ай бұрын
@@theorist Been there, done that. Not with instruments, but definitely other stuff. ADHD is fun sometimes.
@Batnano
10 ай бұрын
and failing HARD. so much cringe
@ScreamingAllTheTime
10 ай бұрын
The story behind Daddy is tragic to me. I cannot imagine ever denying or not believing my child in a situation like that. Another rough song from Korn is Pretty, which centres around a similar subject, based on a real experience Davis had while working in a morgue.
@ThisIsACreativeName
10 ай бұрын
Exactly. What child, what literal child would lie about something like that?
@imyychloe
10 ай бұрын
@@ThisIsACreativeName not just that, but how would a child know about anything surrounding sexual assault/just sexual themes in general, if something like that wasn't happening? that was actually how i managed to get help on my situation. just a child knowing about sex and all that stuff is already a red flag
@SOBEKCrocodileGod
10 ай бұрын
@@ThisIsACreativeName one thing to keep in mind is that Jonathan’s stepmother outright hated him and would physically and verbally abuse him. So I imagine she wouldn’t care even if she believed it. With his dad I think it was a “I can’t believe this is happening to my own kid there’s no way” type of denial, but it’s still really awful of him to just ignore it like that
@DustinRodriguez1_0
9 ай бұрын
People do not want to face child abuse. Just look at how society deals with it. We have hard statistics and science proving that we know parents, family, family friends, adult authority figures, and adults the child knows and trusts are almost always responsible for child abuse. And what do we focus on? Strangers. Who save children from abuse far, far, far more often than they commit it. We know things we could do to prevent and stop child abuse - education and empowerment of children. And society hates and forbids both of those things. They would rather fantasize about delusions of strangers hunting kids and keep victims of child abuse ignorant and powerless and trapped in abusive situations just so they don't have to face it. And then the things people say, which child abuse victims hear, do nothing to offer those victims hope. Next time you hear someone say 'that abuser destroyed that child and inflicted trauma they can never recover from' just think what that sounds like to a kid who finally realized after years of abuse that they were being abused when they came across some educational information they were not supposed to be looking at that not only were they abused - but their life is a hopeless void of despair which can not be recovered from.
@neonstrat4088
8 ай бұрын
Pretty is such an underrated song definitely one of my favorites
@aceynickel
6 ай бұрын
Hey, I recorded the version of Dolphins you used here back when I was in my early twenties, and I'm utterly thrilled by you using my shitty recording in your video! I made it for a friend on Tumblr at the time (who jokingly claimed she was really a dolphin IRL), after we both saw the lyrics circulating on the site. It's genuinely wild to me that people are still stumbling across my version today! Thanks again for the boost--I love your channel and I'm beyond flattered. 💜
@ihatespiders-_-84
6 ай бұрын
Cool!
@ouchtor
10 ай бұрын
"He would jump into the crowd while performing and beat up people in the audience" this has to be the funniest shit ever ☠️🙏😭
@4444-LV
3 ай бұрын
would it be funny if he beat you up??
@maryleethefox8642
10 ай бұрын
Beethoven becoming deaf must've been torture to him, I think that people with talents like that should really appreciate their ability to do it. I couldn't even begin to imagine what my life would be like if I wasn't able to do art anymore, he truly was a musical genius and earned the recognition he has gotten.
@silverluvr102
10 ай бұрын
ive seen AI covers using Chester Bennington's voice and it makes me fucking sick. especially since linkin park and chester's family have asked people not to do that shit.
@flytrapJester
10 ай бұрын
Ayo wtf
@Callie_with_a_bible
9 ай бұрын
That is fucking horrible
@TheRickluna
7 ай бұрын
Shut up, shut up, shut up Shut up when I'm talking to you Shut up, shut up, shut up Shut up!
@I.G.S.A.N.A.G.M
6 ай бұрын
People need to respect that and not do it.
@John_number_1
2 ай бұрын
Ai covers of real life people (especially dead) disgusts me.
@bloodroses626
10 ай бұрын
Everywhere at the End of Time broke me super early into my listen of it. My grandma was dying of Dementia at the time, and all I could think of was the fear she felt everyday. She could no longer walk or do anything she used to enjoy, she laid in bed at the end of her life. This is a piece of art that will continue to break me.
@floproro4
10 ай бұрын
My great grandmother is currently suffering from dementia. She only remembers one of her 9 children. She has completely forgotten my grandfather, her oldest son, who died recently ):
@MercuryKurogane
8 ай бұрын
I was cryinf from it barely into part two, though I was listning to it a month after my grandmother passed from several issues (she was showing signs of dementia but she also had two heart attacks which really messed with her head too) I had lost my other gradmother to it, but I was too young at the time to really know her so it didn't affect me in the way this other passing has
@huckleberrysucks
7 ай бұрын
my grandpa is currently going through dementia, and it's been hard for him, and although i want to listen to the whole thing, it'll be hard for sure
@Sum67
7 ай бұрын
Hey buddy, you’re not the only one! AATEOTCR had just broke me with the Rolie Polie Olie clarity! I loved that show when I was 3
@Teerez4
10 ай бұрын
You’re definitely not alone regarding how dear you hold SpongeBob. My mom and dad were big fans upon the shows release, and when I was born I watched it all the time. My dad passed away in 2002 and SpongeBob was something very special that my mom and I bonded over in the fallout of that grief and my early childhood. I’m well into my 20’s and even though I haven’t watched an newer aired episode in some time, I return to seasons 1-3 occasionally to feel closer to my dad and that part of my life. Sometimes I feel silly when I am brought to tears by this cartoon and what you had to say really resonated with me. Thanks for the awesome video ❤
@TheSteakJustice
10 ай бұрын
Nah your Spongebob feelings are totally valid dude, people need to allow themselves to be more vulnerable and you're doing a good thing by allowing yourself to be honest with your audience. Thank you, sincerely.
@kaydwessie296
10 ай бұрын
100% agreed and also based pfp
@theorist
10 ай бұрын
thanks! It always feels weird to be intimate/vulnerable with my audience but I do it when i feel like its necessary. I genuinely couldn't figure out how to write that segment without including all that commentary on it
@sophiaisabelle01
10 ай бұрын
These iceberg analyses are what keeps me wide awake. They are sure disturbing as hell.
@theorist
10 ай бұрын
The bottom 2 layers surprised me (in a bad way). I did not think this topic would hold such disturbing things
@zachariahpoltergeist4516
10 ай бұрын
"Alright, men! Prepare for battle!" "No, we don't want to fight, we're too scared!" "Hmm... How about if I add another string to this random instrument?" "Seriously?! LET'S GOOOOOOOOO!!"
@Corrupted-file
10 ай бұрын
Didn’t take much, huh? 😆
@froggycutie0
10 ай бұрын
i only ever listened to Daddy by Korn once, amd had to pause in the middle of the song. Jonathan is such a strong person to write such a song, i was crying so hard while listening to it, like waterfall of tears falling from my eyes. it's one of the songs i can't physically listen to because of the emotions it brings out and/or the topics it talks about
@Hyperdeath.Kisses
10 ай бұрын
EATEOT fucked me up pretty bad in 2020-2021 because my boyfriend’s health was rapidly declining after having seizures out of nowhere. He started sleeping nearly all day from the meds, he was struggling mentally and physically to perform day to day tasks and his medication sedated him horrifically. The way things were going, he and I were already thinking of worst case scenario plans. This album became popular around that time and I’ve always associated it with that time in my life. I got to the middle and was so badly triggered by all of it that I stopped. He went off the meds and his overall state improved immensely. He hasn’t had a seizure since that time. After that time in his life, he wants to live life to the fullest. He’s been hiking, doing physically intense tasks, working out and he’s back to using computers after being highly sensitive to screens. He and I are closer than ever and we’re celebrating 5 1/2 years together in February. I finished it recently as a way of conquering that fear and never listening to it again. It’s beautiful, horrific and reading the comments is absolutely heartbreaking. It’s incredible how someone could create something so emotional and gripping with samples, editing and precision. I will also never revisit that album again though.
@Kneon_Knight
8 ай бұрын
You are a very good woman. I am wishing you and your boyfriend a long, happy, and healthy life together.
@Dersill6
6 ай бұрын
EATEOT makes me feel like im in a empty room with random instruments
@animesenpai1163
4 ай бұрын
Burning Memory is everywhere on the internet and it reminds me of the whole entire album and I get goosebumps.
@idioticwaffles116
10 ай бұрын
This is perfectly timed. Currently writing a report on music, specifically rock music, and its affects. Now I have a great music iceberg for a late-night essay
@theorist
10 ай бұрын
Hope u get ur essay done!
@DarkOmen_91
8 ай бұрын
Effects*
@InvaderBB
8 ай бұрын
Don’t leave us hanging how did the essay go?
@idioticwaffles116
7 ай бұрын
@@InvaderBB it went good! I got a 94 on it
@bicumber
10 ай бұрын
My thoughts on songs of schizophrenia as a schizophrenic myself: The execution is poor in my opinion, however, I have schizophrenia, therefore I research it a LOT, and as I understand it, it's impossible to put one sound to schizophrenia. Schizophrenia is essentially a blanket term for thousands of very different mental conditions, like an 'other' category. The only commonality being some sort of hallucination. Someone could make an artpiece perfectly representing their own personal experience, but then another person with schizophrenia may not relate to it at all. I believe the perfect album representing schizophrenia would have to bring in many different people with the condition and base each song off of their own experiences or make it clear that it is only representing the specific experiences of the artist themselves. In terms of my personal experience, though I have no song I feel captures it well, SCP-513 seems to be a good representation for PART OF my experience, though only focusing on one of many aspects.
@OmegaSMG
10 ай бұрын
There are very few art pieces that get schizophrenia correct on purpose, even less music that does it. I'd say Schizophrenia by Sonic Youth manages to hit on some of the emotional beats of how hard the "self" can change when Schizophrenia starts popping up. Two pieces of media that get it absolutely right though. First one is Hellblade: Senua's Sacrifice. The audio effects of that game sell it to me, the hallucinations in the game are some of the only representations of the hallucinations that I've found that really works. Second is not a piece specifically, rather a character. Dale Gribble from King Of The Hill is a PERFECT representation of schizophrenia imo. His delusional, child-like conspiracies mixed with the fact that he's very suggestible, and cannot even fathom someone he fully trusts betraying him. He isn't meant to represent schizophrenia by the creators, but I think he ends up doing a great job explaining how people with schizophrenia really live.
@Prettywhite4awhiteguy
10 ай бұрын
Well put, as someone who works in the mental health care field, schizophrenia can also be built up by other disorders and it really depends on what that patient is dealing with when it comes to this very difficult disorder
@theorist
10 ай бұрын
First off, thanks for the informative and thoughtful reply! My gf and I were unsure if I should include what I said because I think tackling any type of issue such as schizophrenia can be taken a lot of ways. So thanks for just giving clearer insight and not taking easy jabs at me! Secondly, that's a really well explained thought. I never really considered how different the experience could be for many people and I think its awesome that you educated me on that. I'll try to take this into account going forward if I talk about similar topics. I think in that aspect then songs of schizphrenia might've been ok. I admit I didn't listen to much of the album besides 2-3 songs and since those 3 sounded extremely similar i kind of brushed off the entire album. For all I know, the other songs got across different aspects/hallucinations. I always appreciate when someone comes in and shares their own personal experience so I really want to thank you for that! And thanks for taking the time to write this out so the rest of us can learn about it!
@Horrorangell
9 ай бұрын
Dude check out Everywhere at the end of time (schizophrenia edition)/The Catatonic (Stages 1-3). One of my best friends is schizophrenic and I showed him the first, according to him it was an amazingly accurate representation of what it’s like to be psychotic!!!
@demioussleigon
8 ай бұрын
@@Horrorangelleverybody is different
@AlexPostScript
10 ай бұрын
Other disturbing ones is Current 93 'I Have a Special Plan For this World', Throbbing Gristle 'Hamburger Lady', Ruth White 'Spleen', the entirety of Xiu Xiu's 'Girl with a Basket of Fruit' album, and bedwetter 'man wearing a helmet'
@OmegaSMG
10 ай бұрын
Uneven Compromise by Lil Ugly Mane (betwetter) is only a song but it's great and can fit
@honeybee1256
10 ай бұрын
So could “It’s in my Bloodstream” by Coil
@joelowry1323
10 ай бұрын
"mary turner, mary turner" by xiu xiu is actually the most disturbing piece of music i've come across. i've only listened to it and read the lyrics once. never again. that poor woman. it's absolutely vile.
@KikoElGatito
9 ай бұрын
Yooo, I was expecting hamburger lady or Frankie Teardrop by Suicide
@ev5837
5 ай бұрын
@@KikoElGatito Frankie teardrop is a certified suburban classic
@milkemoments1366
10 ай бұрын
19:30 This piece honestly weirdly depicts what it feels/sounds like for me when I get overstimulated, especially by noise. The misleading breaks of peace and both the choppy and drawn out long noises remind me so much of how it feels when small sounds trigger my sensory issues and misophonia. It's weirdly comforting to listen to, I like it
@divinity_cove
10 ай бұрын
as someone with schizophrenia i find that a lot of songs by swans portray it quite well, namely “coward” and “weakling”
@precious_muse
10 ай бұрын
I’m surprised that “Timothy” isn’t on the iceberg. This was a hit song in the 70’s about cannibalism! Todd in the Shadows did a good video about it, which left me feeling quite shaken after I watched it.
@jet7735
10 ай бұрын
An almost 2 hour video!? Let's go!! Can't wait to get this one started. Especially sense this seems like such an interesting topic for an iceberg.
@theorist
10 ай бұрын
tried extremely hard to pick interesting topics for this one which is kind of new for me? hope it pays off and hope you like it!
@jet7735
10 ай бұрын
@@theoristwell as I always say. You make some great content and I'll watch anything you post. I'm sure it'll be great! Keep doing you.
@AdamDGoff
10 ай бұрын
Glad you liked my iceberg! I liked the changes you made to it and all the extra research you did and dedication you showed! If you’re ever interested in doing an update, I just posted v.3 with more entries.
@saladsayshi3015
10 ай бұрын
I'm really suprised that skinny puppys album " too dark park " wasnt on here!!! Its really disturbing, it puts you in the perspective of a dog starving to death, and the desperation weakness and eventually manic hallucinations it exspecives as its slowly and painfully starving. Its a really inchresting album and definitely one to check out if you havent heard of it before!
@justjade256
4 ай бұрын
Skinny Puppy mentioned!!!
@zyxaqc
10 ай бұрын
Microphones are also a pretty scary way to get electrocuted. There's a video of Emmure playing a concert when lead singer Frankie Palmeri suddenly falls over stiff as a board. The stage wasn't properly grounded and the mic in his hand sent a shock directly into his body.
@tlh0121
10 ай бұрын
49:20 There’s many people who think SpongeBob’s outro song is creepy on its own. It’s something I never even considered until I just listened to the music without any visuals, and now I somewhat get it. If you free your mind, I genuinely believe anything can be made creepy, if you choose to let it wander in that direction. Ps - if anyone’s looking for more disturbing songs, Immortal Technique’s “Dance With The Devil” is a good one that is self explanatory through the lyrics and allegedly a true story. As well as Slipknot’s “515” where Sid had just gotten the news his grandfather passed and went into the studio and recorded himself completely breaking down and losing it.
@anarchohannibalism
10 ай бұрын
this video is incredible. a lot of these iceberg videos are only good for sleeping, have basic common info from google or wikipedia, and bad pacing. this one has incredible amounts of research, snappy editing where it counts but still knows when to linger on certain moments, and a very charismatic and thoughtful host. definitely subscribing & hoping for more on this level of quality :)
@yaboimccoy8109
10 ай бұрын
to me, everywhere at the end of time is one of the most genuinely unsettling and horrifying pieces of music (or audio for that matter). part of it is because alzheimer's runs in my family, and the other part is knowing how this disease is an unstoppable force that slowly factory resets a brain if you ever make a part two to this, i recommend you look into operation wandering soul. when listening to it put yourself into the shoes of a soldier in the jungles of southeast asia in the late 1960s in the darkest part of the night
@penguin714
10 ай бұрын
the fact you spent an entire month to make your own apprehension engine for a video goes to show your dedication and love for creating content keep up the incredible videos everyday theorist! :)
@djsalad7891
10 ай бұрын
To know that you tried to make that instrument is super cool, major respect
@Mossatea1030
10 ай бұрын
You know it is crazy when a music iceberg contains graphic content
@f.p.2010
8 ай бұрын
not really, that's just music
@Snook_YT
10 ай бұрын
been waiting for this, so excited to watch!
@theorist
10 ай бұрын
Yooo my man
@sk8rbug
9 ай бұрын
buyer's market pisses me off because, frankly, I see the argument all the time that "oh the damage is already done to those kids". NO. you are continually REVICTIMIZING them by revisiting their trauma, and I think that applies to the creation of that album.
@iamdamosuzuki_
7 ай бұрын
It’s just senseless cruelty and exploitation and Peter Sotos is a disgusting scumbag. I listen to some music that goes pretty far with taboo subject matters like Throbbing Gristle and Swans really early output but even I have limits on what I can justify
@postal2forthe3ds
9 ай бұрын
23 minutes in, so far i absolutely love how respectful and thorough you are with each entry, and how willing you are to give the music a chance.
@Kalitayy
10 ай бұрын
Consume Red was one of the first Noise music album that I listened to and genuinely enjoyed. It’s the second album after Swans’ The Seer that jumpscared me. It was unsettling, truly unique experience. Felt like I was in the middle of a nuclear warzone. It gets hella exciting and heavy at around 28 minute mark, where it becomes a headbang material.
@iamdamosuzuki_
7 ай бұрын
The part where the entire band first comes in with that massive slam of drums, bass, saxophone and distorted turntables is pure catharsis
@jaime_lynn
10 ай бұрын
I've performed 4'33". Three times. The whole concept of, without silence,there is no music is something to ponder. As a classically trained musician with a few degrees in it, I feel like this composition is the opposite of a ton the atonal pieces coming out at the time. Best performance? A bunch of 8th graders sang the Oscar Meyer weiner jingle. Seriously. Trying to join in was incredibly hard. 😂
@epicdude257
10 ай бұрын
I've played multiple times in my life, always when asleep
@f.p.2010
8 ай бұрын
@@epicdude257 that's not how the piece works
@chambergoosepaste9164
7 ай бұрын
I perform it every day
@truebornseeker9767
10 ай бұрын
By the way in the “Penelope Scott” MV you referenced while talking about baphomet kun, the song isn’t his, Penelope Scott is the artist of that song (and the song is overall about feeling betrayed by public figures who you look up to turning out to be assholes, using Elon Musk as a stand in, though this isn’t to take away other interpretations of the lyrics, especially when they’re taken in separation from the rest of the song, a lot of people do interpret the lyrics as about an abusive/toxic relationship) /info
@Snootzle
10 ай бұрын
Singer: Dolphins 🐬 are youu 🎵 Ukelale: BRRRRING A RINKA A RINK
@inmysites3
10 ай бұрын
This isn't a joke, here in Portland we have the flame throwing bagpipes thats played by Darth Vader on a unicycle.
@genesisdenesis
8 ай бұрын
man i gotta go to portland
@justjade256
4 ай бұрын
that sounds like the sickest thing ever omg, I love it
@Medic_main_wanabee
2 ай бұрын
you have the _fucking _*_what_*
@isaacbrecht4015
10 ай бұрын
Daddy by Korn is 17 minutes long because there is a hidden track at the end. It runs for about 6-7 minutes, silence for about 8-9 minutes, then there is a secret audio at the end.
@LIFEFORCECOMMANDEXCHANGE
10 ай бұрын
Babe wake up your everyday theorist just posted
@theorist
10 ай бұрын
:D hope you enjoy
@MightGuy15
10 ай бұрын
Thanks honey. The break from the blow job was worth it.
@Mieskun1
10 ай бұрын
omg baebe yyyy
@CornPop2
10 ай бұрын
go back sleep silly
@Sir_Bukkit
10 ай бұрын
IM UP-
@IvanTolstoy-dp5lk
10 ай бұрын
Definitely should have mentioned the Pioneer Industrial group, Throbbing Gristle. If you want to talk about crazy on-stage attics, they did everything way before metal acts pretended to do it first. True Transgression.
@mayhare9754
10 ай бұрын
For real. I was expecting Hamburger Lady to be on this list.
@EvilConquering845
8 ай бұрын
I love them !!!❤
@iamdamosuzuki_
7 ай бұрын
Their early composition Very Friendly is one of the most horrifying songs that I think has ever been recorded. It’s a 15 + minute long song about the Moors murders
@melody.melancholy
10 ай бұрын
Listening to Everywhere at the End of Bikini Bottom made me re-experience finding out Stephen Hillenburg passed away.
@boiwhoactuallyareyou
10 ай бұрын
there’s a mini fake football pitch next to my old place, metal bars were around the whole thing to keep the ball inside of the pitch (obviously). but when i played there while there was heavy wind the metal bars would produce a music like sound that sounds exactly like the cave sounds from minecraft, or some angelic noise. it’s very uncomfortable and it makes you feel like there’s multiple people just watching you.
@snowqueen_8958
10 ай бұрын
Art is up to interpretation and sometimes there's some types of music and whatnot that can scare and make people feel unsettled And the apprehension engine sounds cool!
@ericdoe3596
10 ай бұрын
Pseudoscorpian is not an 'alleged' or apparent album. It is very real and disturbingly easy to find. Please do not look for it.
@CatzlovichCatnipAndCabbages
6 ай бұрын
...No, it actually does not exist and if it does it is not "easy" to find.
@ericdoe3596
6 ай бұрын
@@CatzlovichCatnipAndCabbages dawg it is, or was at least back in the day.
@justtyler147
3 ай бұрын
Granted, I’m not searching for that shit so idk maybe it is easy to find, but any of the supposed 100% totally actually real youtube uploads are confirmed fakes by people who have allegedly heard the real one
@jasonmeyer6048
10 ай бұрын
THE BROWN NOTE NEEDS TO BE LOUD ENOUGH FOR YOUR INTESTINE TO FEEL IT NOT YOUR EARS ...
@SOBEKCrocodileGod
10 ай бұрын
I found out that Edwin from Kettle Cadaver took his own life in 2017 “Daddy” is one of those songs I don’t even put on “most disturbing” playlists because I’d rather not have it unexpectedly come up on shuffle. Great song, but definitely not something I can easily listen to. The acapella intro and the song’s instrumental are already extremely creepy and haunting even just by sound, but when you add the subject matter, Jon’s mental breakdown, and how Korn’s debut album cover art ties into it, it’s just the coldest, darkest thing. Other pretty disturbing Korn songs are Kill You, Am I Going Crazy, Mr. Rogers, and Pretty. Pretty’s subject matter is so deeply fucked up that I don’t think I can even type it here. All I’ll say is it’s about something Jonathan saw when working as a mortician’s assistant that was so utterly sickening, horrifying, and vile that he continued to have nightmares about it for decades.
@HitchRune
10 ай бұрын
Correct me if I’m wrong but I’m pretty sure baphomet kun is actually just a horror/weird or art/editing channel. A lot of the songs are by various artists that I recognise. Still pretty cool though!!
@theultimatedriver3858
10 ай бұрын
You uploaded this at the literal scariest time for a spooky video! It’s 3 AM here when I got the notification! Great Video So Far and I hope you have a wonderful day! I’d also like to make an iceberg to have someone cover sometime! Can someone let me know how to make one if possible thank you! Have a wonderful start to your week and end to your weekend everyone!
@diabeticmonkey
10 ай бұрын
Everywhere isn't anywhere near classical music. It's Ballroom from the early 1900's.
@Treppy_Gecky
10 ай бұрын
The Peter Sotos thing is fascinating because honestly? I can't tell if he's an offender or a victim either. He's so sketchy it leaves me with so many questions that I still don't have answers to.
@SOBEKCrocodileGod
10 ай бұрын
I think I heard him get arrested for possession of…you know
@celestialnull
10 ай бұрын
@@SOBEKCrocodileGod He was. He straight-up made a cover for one issue of his magazine 'Pure' with a photo of CP. The man is a fcking lunatic and abuses the power of free speech. There is, in my eyes, a difference between free speech and being an absolute degenerate who uses that excuse to publish disgusting material for their own and/or other's pleasure. Which is exactly what his horrid magazine was all about.
@MVCx_xB
9 ай бұрын
its not uncommon for victims to become offenders
@celestialnull
9 ай бұрын
@@MVCx_xB That is correct, but the amount of those who were abused compared to those who say it in the hopes of being prosecuted a lot less is uneven. It's hard to prove how many of those claims are actually true when, one, many of those supposed abusers will never admit to it, and two, the ones that have been confirmed false still highly outweigh the potentially true ones.
@ConvincingPeople
8 ай бұрын
Sotos is an extremely strange guy. His work is very clearly meant to criticise and even satirise the mainstream and tabloid media's crass exploitation of sexual violence and child abuse, particularly how clear prurient interest is disguised with what he sees as disingenuous and hypocritical moral outrage, but the lengths that he is willing to go to make his point and the very evident preoccupation he has with this subject matter results in art which is incredibly difficult to stomach and raises all sorts of ethical questions in and of itself. That said, in interviews, such as a very odd recent article where a Pitchfork writer sat him and several other figures in the Chicago noise scene down to talk about contemporary metal, the man can be remarkably funny in a very dry way which both sharply contrasts with how repugnant his work often is and is somehow also recognisably in the same voice.
@HailHydreigon
10 ай бұрын
Wow, you do so much research and ground work! Thank you for your video!
@mase000
10 ай бұрын
one thing he forgot to mention towards the end is that Edwin Borsheim committed suicide in 2017 about a year and a half after the films release
@Ryo7_7
10 ай бұрын
Much respect to your dedication. I'm a metal musician and I find this fascinating. 👍
@Ambaaahhh
10 ай бұрын
Holy shit. Mad respect to you for the amount of research you’ve put into this, along with how transparent you were with the process. This is definitely going to be a video that I will obsessively re-watch along with my Blameitonjorge list. Thank you 💕
@cornonthecobb_4562
10 ай бұрын
I've been DYING to see a big KZitemr review a music icerberg!
@sahelhappenstance8992
8 ай бұрын
In regards to Buyer's Market, Peter Sotos was actually convicted and spent time in jail for owning child exploitation materials (aka 'cheese pizza') and claimed it was just for "research" for his writing. I've never read any of his work personally, I have no need or desire to, but I know that he inexplicably has many avid defenders and fans. Personally I think your assessment of him and his work is spot on: he created the art he wanted to see in the world, and I find it hard to believe his motivations were as altruistic as raising awareness. I think he's an extreme edgelord at best and a predator at worst.
@Tedris4
6 ай бұрын
I wonder if someone with more willpower than I could compare his books to Lolita, which is similarly written from the perspective of a child predator, but the author was a victim of such and wrote the book as a psychological horror that would connect aspects of the main character's thought process and justifications for what he does with that of the reader, and use the story to help people recognise bad patterns and change them before they go down the slope further.
@roz5415
8 ай бұрын
Even without listening to Korn, my eyes just teared up by reading the lyrics. I'm a SA victim and it really made me sad. I'm a boy and no one really trusts my story. I only told this story to my close friends and I NEVER told about it to my family. To anyone who struggled with these, i just wanted to let you know that you can still thrive. Turn those traumas into strength so that you can move further into your life. Now, I'm continuing my study in Biology in university and all, I wouldn't lie that the incident really shook me to the core till these days, but you're not alone in this. I'm so proud of myself for being able to go through my life. And, you who read this. You're worthy and will always be loved. ❤
@BananaSpiral
10 ай бұрын
in 3rd grade my music teacher would scare us with the banshee and flicker the lights at the loud parts
@qxlf
10 ай бұрын
about Pseudoscorpion, the contents is to lightly, kids who are in pain. this is very light, the real contents from what we do know about it, its WAY worse
@chocolate_gore
10 ай бұрын
Just before layer 5, but I’m kinda surprised Hamburger Lady by Throbbing Gristle wasn’t mentioned yet It’s kinda like Penderecki but more industrial Also, people may know work of Penderecki from Shutter Island or The Shining. Surprised it wasn’t mentioned ~
@theyalwayscomeinfall
10 ай бұрын
Is "Evil" by Interpol being about Fred and Rosemary West even a theory? I thought that was pretty much a fact.
@cmcneil726
10 ай бұрын
Yeah I’ve never heard differently.
@JadenSalads
10 ай бұрын
Dude.. I adore the amount of effort you've been putting into your videos. You're one of my favorite content creators, never change. 🤘🤘
@jinsouwolf
10 ай бұрын
thank you for all the effort you put in to make these videos. made my day
@tacohands4203
10 ай бұрын
Jonathan Davis is amazing, he (and korn) has really helped me through so much in my life. He is a brilliant artist and man.
@FunnyLittleFella
10 ай бұрын
Hi there! So I deal with, like, a bullshit amount of mental illnesses including dissociation and schizoaffective disorder. Thankfully I'm doing pretty well right now, but during darker and more stressful periods I have experienced a lot of terrifying things including audio and visual hallucinations. These included seeing shadowy figures for a fraction of a second (usually in the corner of my vision or when turning around doorways, that kind of thing), hearing people talking nearby but nobody being there, scratching noises in the wall, etc. I actually have a whole playlist of music that I feel does a pretty good job of kind of emulating the feeling of being in a more detrimental state of mind. Mostly dark atmosphere kind of stuff. Some stuff I would recommend checking out that are kind of "schizo-core" would be: The OST for Postal 1, the industrial songs from Silent Hill 1 and 2 like "My Heaven" and "Mansion Horrors" (hell, I would just recommend the full OST for both if you haven't listened to them or played the games, they're really beautiful), "Rainbow Mirror", by Prurient/Dominick Fernow, CoConuts (very mysterious band that only released one self-titled album), and some of the pieces from "Flowers of Evil", by Ruth White (an amazing take on Baudelaire's work). Obviously none of these fully emulate hallucinations/schizophrenic symptoms, I don't think such a thing is truly possible, but they're all things I listen to because they kind of feel like a musical version of those feelings, if that makes any sense. Even though they're meant to be unnerving, ironically they can kind of be comforting for me when I'm going through a rough patch because they give a voice to the often abstract feelings associated with mental illness. Anyway, I hope that helps.
@chambergoosepaste9164
10 ай бұрын
Who are you and why do we have the same diagnoses and the same hallucinations?
@FunnyLittleFella
10 ай бұрын
@@chambergoosepaste9164 I'm you, but stronger
@loy2195
10 ай бұрын
Recognizing and calling out exploitative media will never not be based.
@meanpersona4686
10 ай бұрын
If we talk about Leyland Kirby, I really reccomend "Eager to tear apart the stars"! It feels like a journey through the vast void of space, amazing! Also, Your pronounciation of Penderecki is ok, but he "c" is pronounced like "ts" so Pen-deh- reh-tski. He was so good with expressing bad emotions, the atrocities. He's a great contemporary composer, that abroad is totally unknown.
@shandalyn4869
9 ай бұрын
A family friend was diagnosed with dementia (she is only in her early sixties) several months after she went on a trip with me, my grandmother, and my younger sibling to Orange Beach. Months before she was diagnosed, on this trip, she was walking on the beach with my younger sibling when they got disoriented and mixed up which hotel we were staying in. A lot of them look similar or the same from the beach. So they walked off of the beach all the way to the road along the hotels, thinking seeing it from the front would be easier. She got lost. My younger sibling called my grandmother on her phone. We had to go find them to bring them back with us. It wasn't super common during the trip; the signs were small and few in between. Yesterday, she called my grandmother (they're best friends) on her cell phone to talk to her. Most of the things she'd said were punctuated with nervous, shaky laughter. Jumbled up words, random mentions of her surroundings at home. Sometimes she would make absolute sense, and other times she would talk about how cold it had gotten outside and how she'd go out there if it didn't mean cutting her feet off. All I could think was maybe she was thinking about frostbite? But eventually she sniffled a lot on the phone and then began to weep between sentences. "I was looking for you and I couldn't find you, I miss you, I think the world of you, thank you for saying that, you make everything better." And of course my grandmother, who is in her mid seventies, is talking to her and trying to keep her from feeling sad by just talking to her like she normally would. At one point, she got quiet and sniffled, "I don't want to die," and my grandmother responded with, "We're going to live for a long time! Don't think about that. You and me are going to live for a long time." And she responded with, "The doctors said I had something and I couldn't believe it. I didn't want to believe it. And it's real bad. It's real bad." Trying to comfort her, my grandmother said, "Well, I hope you get to feeling better!" "I hope so, I really hope so." They talked about babies and grandchildren and how sweet they were, some old memories that she seemed to recall because she's the one that brought them up. We love her a lot. So so much. She's more like family than she is a family friend. And so when I heard her on the phone like that it brought all of the desperate pain I felt back when we were told that she was diagnosed with it after our trip. Knowing that this is happening to her and that things are slipping away, that this sickness is robbing her of not only her health but her peace of mind because of how frustrating it is to search for simple words and not being able to properly voice your thoughts/communicate-- it sucks so much. Everywhere at the End of Time, when it was first popularized-- just the idea of the album alone makes me want to cry. Listening to the tracks and how it progresses and becomes to disorienting with flashes of familiar sounds and tunes-- it's ... I haven't read into the artist and why they did it but I have to imagine that they knew someone that they loved who was diagnosed. I wish there was a cure.
@therealbigjerm444
10 ай бұрын
you know its a gonna be a good day when your everyday theorist uploads a 2 hour video to listen to while you work
@therealbigjerm444
10 ай бұрын
that everywhere at the end of bikini bottom analysis has me crying at work i regret this now
@devinallen4708
10 ай бұрын
53:45 i know exactly what you mean man for me it was the original star wars films, (and prequels as i started getting towards my double digits) it's a couping mechanism that acts as a barrier from traumatic reality... the imagination of a child is their saving grace because of how vivid it is... It definitely was for me
@Null42x86
10 ай бұрын
I can't stop watching iceberg videos
@Vexseus
10 ай бұрын
it's not really a song specifically saying it's an example of schizophrenia, but Lullaby by Perfect Circle always made me feel severely uncomfortable with the voices that would fade in and out.
@Focalor
10 ай бұрын
I can't be the only one who wants to see Epic Sax Guy play a Flameaphone.
@MrFordxanakov
10 ай бұрын
When we got the part about Kettle Cadaver, it really reminded me of a band from my youth where I grew up....The Bad Luck 13 Riot Extravaganza. I tend to believe that what Kettle Cadaver was doing was undoubtedly worse, but if that kind of thing interests you Bad Luck 13 might be up your alley. They were also into the extreme wrestling sort of stuff and basically got kicked out of every venue in Philly. Don't know how much video there is out there of them (and the music wasn't great either). But I dunno, they might be an interesting rabbit hole for the curious.
@DustinRodriguez1_0
9 ай бұрын
Something else to note about the Castrati - they never stopped growing. Part of puberty involves increasing bone density when the bones lengthen, and then the ends of the bones fuse to stop growth. Without testicles to produce the hormones needed for this, their bones continue to lengthen - but they do not increase in density. Likewise, puberty causes the number of muscle fibers in the body to double (this is why it is so easy for kids in puberty to benefit from exercise very quickly and why pre-pubertal children are so weak no matter how much they exercise) and that doesn't happen either for Castrati... so they end up extremely tall, with weak bones and the muscles of a child. Their singing voice is preserved, but they had tons of other problems as they got older.
@cynicalbuddha1660
10 ай бұрын
When I saw the notification, I thought, death metal and art rock. I was wrong. Well thought out and produced. Well done!
@MyOddExperiences
9 ай бұрын
I have schizophrenia. The best auditory representation of it would be a radio blasting songs that overlap and change constantly. There’s so much noise in your head and voices are only a small part of that.
@powderpupp
10 ай бұрын
Super excited to see GISM included on this list! They came to mind as soon as you explained what kind of content you'd be covering in your into! I love them, mostly for the overtly wild and problematic behavior exhibited during their shows.
@senoreverything6366
10 ай бұрын
Bro i love this guy. He's so well spoken, open-minded, and creatively driven. My ONE comment for you my guy, is to get a better camera. The quality is the quality, but the low fps is a little jarring to watch. That's it though, youre killing it❤
@unknown6390
10 ай бұрын
Why hasn't Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention included? In fact, Revolution 9 by the Beatles and Zappa probably were the first to combine avant garde and pop to make Noise music. On top of that, "Brown Shoes Don't Make It" is a criticism on the peverseness and p3d0philes who hold positions of power (the lyrics tell a story about a US state governer?) Awesome creepy jazz-rock composition. Also. "Who Are The Brain Police?" And "Chrome Plated MegaPhone of Destiny". This was happening in the late 60's, they took sounding "tough" to sounding "scary" and made it cool
@IvanTolstoy-dp5lk
10 ай бұрын
I know!!! I'm surprised Diamanda Galas or AMM wasn't mentioned at all. Most of this iceberg just paints metal as the only genre to be "disturbing." It completely neglected SO MANY avant-garde acts from the 60s/70s.
@yinbakalu
14 күн бұрын
@@IvanTolstoy-dp5lk there's hardly any metal on this list at all
@o0indridspirit0o
10 ай бұрын
I definitely want to listen along to the spongetaker and everywhere at the end of time. I hope you post the videos.
@The.Mawnster
10 ай бұрын
I'm surprised Christmas Kids by Roar isn't on this iceberg This video is fascinating though, had my attention the whole way through
@karupurisky3428
9 ай бұрын
This is my first time watching your videos and I just want to thank you for how thoughtful you are about mental illness and real people, somehow it's rare to find people who are so genuine and respectful.
@coreyyy4909
9 ай бұрын
i have schizophrenia and the some that most co-alligns with me is ptolemaea by ethel cain. the whispering on top of the buzzing flies, and some of the lyrics really like “woah!! huh!”
@SirAlienGuy
10 ай бұрын
Just started watching, and i really hope this covers the concept/genre of danger music, stuff like one musician driving an excavator into a venue during their concert
@chilli3724
7 ай бұрын
Simply stunned by how much care you put into each and every layer of this iceberg! You dove deeper into the individual topics here than some other youtubers do into entire icebergs!
@lilymasters2863
10 ай бұрын
I've barely started this video and I'm so excited. Noise music is something I find so great and fascinating. I'm not sure if it counts but The Diamond Sea (extended cut) by sonic youth is a great way to dip your toes into long, drawn out tracks with a theme throughout but so many different emotions expressed in 20ish minutes.
@cwrichardson1229
8 ай бұрын
First vidoe I’ve ever watched from this guy and you seem like a really good guy that cares for his viewers
@brandonharris9160
8 ай бұрын
People don't get electrocuted by guitars unless the guitar itself is improperly grounded in its individual wiring setup or the amp is improperly grounded. It is very rare but cheap guitar companies often mess up wiring
@RileyGein
10 ай бұрын
Pretty hard to put schizophrenia into a music context. I suffer from paranoid schizophrenia and the way it presents itself to me which is the most terrorizing is hearing the voices of people I know/trust discussing everything I’m doing, secrets about me, how they are going to ruin my life, etc. The impact of the disease comes from how personal the experience is for the person suffering.
@KoalaProductions
10 ай бұрын
I listened to an EATEOT minecraft version and it had a similar effect on me, was so surreal hearing those songs changed and distorted, like alternate reality versions, and a similar emotional effect of thinking back on how my good memories of minecraft are going to fade and not quite be the same as the first time. Gives you a moment to really soak in just how much you truly enjoyed something when you hear the physical incarnation of it being forgotten
@manwiththeredface7821
10 ай бұрын
I would have added the Song of the Second Moon by Tom Dissevelt & Kid Baltan from 1957 when electronic music was in its infancy. This track was the intro music to a long-running Hungarian scientific TV-program called Delta and coupled with the video montage it terrified a lot of small kids back in the day (me included lol).
@ShiolaValntn
9 ай бұрын
surprised theres mention of GISM but not of gerogerigegege or hanatarash
@MatameVideos
9 ай бұрын
Lame anyway
@halseyseneschal5196
10 ай бұрын
IIRC Alessandro Moreschi, the castrato in the recording, was speculated to have undergone the procedure for a medical reason (a hernia surgery I think??) and that the practice of performing it to preserve the voice had become rarer if not completely disappeared by the time of his career.
@julian3620
6 ай бұрын
28:00 the sad thing about this is, iirc, beethoven stated he preferred being reputated a rude person rather than having to admit why he didnt answer to people calling and greeting him in the streets. he was so damn ashamed about being deaf. i feel so sorry for him but i'm glad he kept making music, we wouldnt have so many wonderful pieces if he didnt decide to keep going.. he sure was ahead of his time.
@zekkie54
10 ай бұрын
the love and effort you put into your videos is unparalleled. keep doing what you do! you deserve more attention
@DaedricPrinceOfNaps
10 ай бұрын
I find it difficult to listen to "Everywhere At The End Of Time" as I have a family member that was like a second mom to me suffering from dementia. I think its brilliant though! The fact that its causing those feelings just goes to show how well done it is.
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