Artist: Francisco
Album: Cosmic Beam Experience
Label: Cosmic Beam Records
Catalog: CBE-01
Released: 1976
Genre: progressive
Grade: *** 3 stars
Condition: VG+ cover / VG+ LP
Comments: --
Quantity available: 1
Price: $100.00
I'll readily admit this was another album I picked up for the interesting sci-fi cover and the fact it looked like a pretty bizarre outing (hippy guru singing/preaching to his congregation of zonked out apostles - Father Yod and Bobby Brown both readily came to mind).
Another
    true one-man job, 1976's  "Cosmic Beam
    Experience" is the work of L.A. musician Francisco
    Lupica.  Lupica wrote all of the material, arranged, produced, handled
    the vocals and played most of the instruments including an electrified
    I-beam (don't even ask) and other items that he apparently built himself.  Without knowing
    a great deal about his background, like Bobby Brown, Lupica seems to have
    performed at a lot of free events throughout Southern California (echoes of
    Bobby Brown).  (I also found out that he's credited with creating some
    of the sound effects for 1979's "Stark Trek: The Motion Picture"). 
    Anyhow, based on the title and cover art
    (courtesy of Stephen Moffitt who also co-produced and engineered some of the
    material), I was expecting to hear a collection of
    instantly forgettable new age dribble.  Well, I was only partially
    correct.  The album starts out with a killer piece of pop - with it's
    catchy chorus and uplifting lyrics 'Heal Yourself' would have made a dandy
    top-40 single.  The flip side opener 'Love
    Sweet Love' is almost as good. 
    Spread across two extended sections (at least part of it recorded in
    L.A.'s St. Paul's cathedral), the title track is much more in keeping with my original
    expectations.  Musically the mix of sound effects (waves, rain,
    thunder), electronics,
    acoustic sounds and choral segments is mildly entertaining.  Imagine a
    mix between 1990s industrial noise and a band of stoned hippies deciding to take a tape
    recorder along as they enjoy
    a day at the beach and you'll get a feel for how weird it is.  I'll at least admit
    that I like it more than say Atlantis Philharmonic.  By the same token
    you're not going to get up an dance your ass off to any of this.
    
 
    
Judging by an
    online interview conducted with Lupica (see below), no more than 1,00 copies
    were pressed; most of them apparently sold at his concerts.  I have no idea if
    it's a legitimate release, but the Radioactive label reissued the album in
    CD format (Radioactive catalog RR 112CD).  The album also attracted some attention when composer Hans
    Zimmer sampled some of it for his work on the soundtrack to Terrence
    Mallick's film "The Thin Red Line".  The film wasn't very
    good which probably explains why the soundtrack generated attention
    ... 
    
    
    "Cosmic Beam Experience" track listing:
(side 1)
(side 1)
1.) Heal
    Yourself   (Francisco) - 4:56
    
2.) Cosmic Beam
    Experience (Part One) (instrumental)  (Francisco) - 11:22
    
 
    
(side
    2)
1.) Love Sweet Love (Francisco) - 4:24
1.) Love Sweet Love (Francisco) - 4:24
2.) Cosmic Beam
    Experience (Part Two)  (Francisco) - 10:27
    
3.) Hey Mister
    Sun  (Francisco) - 1:47
    
 
Here
    are a couple of other Francisco tidbits.  
 
The
    first is a description of his I-bar contraption:  "Inside
    the tent was a guy playing a very long metal beam, like a steel I-bar, with
    a few piano type strings stretched from end to end. He had it hooked up with
    an electronic pickup, so it could be amplified and use echoplex effects. In
    one hand he held a thick metal cylinder, like a giant version of the one
    steel guitar players use. With the other hand he plucked, stroked, bowed and
    hammered on the strings while moving the bar. The harmonics and textural
    magic from this instrument, which literally moved through your body, was so
    incredible people would stay for hours..........John Beal"
 
I
    also found a brief and uncredited interview with the artist on the
    web.  I'll leave it out here until I get threatened with legal action.
 
    
"Francisco
    Lupica has given many years performing in California and around the nation
    developing his unique musical expression, which he calls the Cosmic Beam
    Experience. A versatile performer, he plays acoustic guitar, electric space
    guitar, drums, chimes, zither and an array of four steel channel beams, as
    well as unusual vocal effects. All this, combined with a specially designed
    sound system to produce a very full range of frequencies from very high,
    full mid and super low vibrations, creates an extraordinary sound
    experience.
While sitting
    with him in his beachside cottage, filled with the sounds of the ocean and
    the sweet scent of incense, I gaze upon this good gentle man and sense the
    significance of his future. I am aware that his music has provided many with
    nourishment and inspiring moments.  Much effort and growth have gotten
    his music to this point and I have asked him to share some of his feelings
    and motivations. Here is some of our conversation:
Paul: How do
    you relate to life? What is important to you?
Francisco:
    Feeling really nice inside, simple and free, clean. I love relating to the
    ocean and the sun. The energy of the sun sometimes makes me want to cry out
    and have everyone just wake up and recognize the joy of being alive, and
    being able to experience whatever your experience is. What’s my feeling
    about life? I’m learning more and more not to take it for granted.
Paul: What is
    it you are trying to express through your music?
Francisco: It
    is an extension of me. It is my apparatus to express myself. I am trying to
    share my innermost feeling of how I see and experience life.
Paul: Through
    your music you express feelings of health and vitality. Your concerts are
    more than just you on a stage and people sitting in an audience. It’s a
    complete environment that you endeavor to create. What is the basis of this
    environment?
Francisco:
    Well, I am working to provide a pure sound experience in harmony with
    enlightening visuals, laser images, video images, and film images, so that
    the audience can grasp or comprehend that there is more to life that what
    they perceive. It’s kind of like pushing a button to stimulate parts of
    the body that are numb.
Paul: So you
    believe that the sound you generate actually stimulate?
Francisco:
    Yes. Stimulate and enliven. One of the first comments people make is
    "Aha! I feel so high and I didn’t even get stoned." That’s
    real pleasing feedback for me because it shows me that the lifestyle that I
    have chosen to live or has chosen me, however you want to relate to that, is
    coming through the music. I surrender myself to the sun and I comprehend its
    infinite energy, then when I play I feel the sun shine and I share it with
    my music.
Paul: How did
    you get started?
Francisco: I
    was inspired about fifteen years ago buy a drummer named Sandy Nelson who
    did drum songs. I started with the attitude of doing drum solo music, but
    with lyrics and melodiousness. Through time I worked with many other
    musicians and bands - Travel Agency, Taj Mahal, Lee Michaels - before I came
    to LA looking for a record deal. That’s when I met Richard Bock, a
    producer of World Pacific Records, who brought Ravi Shankar to America. He
    introduced me to Ashish Kahn and to Indian music. He asked me and Ashish to
    join forces and that’s how the group Shanti was realized. So, I went okay
    and put my soloist trip away and started playing in Shanti which produced an
    album and was very close to being successful. When Shanti broke up I left
    the Bay area, which was where Shanti was based and came to Santa Barbara.
    Santa Barbara seemed to be the place I always went to for refuge and to get
    my head clear. After about three months of Shanti being over with and me
    wondering what to do next, and with an incredible amount of information
    within me, musically  because of Shanti, I had a vision and that’s
    how the Cosmic Beam Experience began. It just came to me in my meditations.
    I began building this experience about five years ago, and I have been true
    to that vision to the point where it is now. I did my first soloist concert
    on New Year’s Eve night, 1972 going into 73. It was sold out, my knees
    were shaking, my throat was dry as a desert, and I did it, and I have been
    doing it ever since.
Paul: So, do
    you just let the music flow through you or do you have some way of
    determining the sounds you generate?
Francisco: I
    have certain sign posts that I have set up, but no limits, no fences, just
    certain sign posts and if I happen to be near that sign post I go to it, if
    I’m not feeling in tune. I guess I am a radio on one degree, you could
    say, I just tune in to whatever frequency or station. All music is already
    available on any level. As I see it, we’re just vibrations, human bodies,
    trees, rocks, just all vibrations. And as humans we are fortunate to have
    the ability to become a radio or a receiver. My body, which is the house I
    live in, my temple, the cleaner it is the more far out it is, for me, this
    doesn’t mean anybody else, but for me. The more neat I feel internally and
    externally the higher the music. I feel much close to the music. The music
    is already here. I didn’t conjure it up or sit down for years to learn it.
    There is now a label to the next stage of life which is called New Age. What
    I think New Age music is, is people tuning into themselves and them music.
    The music from intunement is more nourishing and inspiring.
Paul: There
    are those that feel that new music forms and media techniques, New image
    capabilities, actually have an evolutionary role. Do you agree with this?
Francisco:
    Yes. The potential is phenomenal. The technology that is available today
    could change the whole planet but somehow, I guess, not enough people want
    it yet. There are handfuls of people like me and groups like Positive Media
    who want to provide experiences in the hopes of reawakening everyone,
    enlivening them through the senses which is OK because we are in the body
    and the masses of people are sensory oriented so that’s why media is
    unfolding more and more. We are a bunch of sensory freaks here on the planet
    earth. People like to be taken on trips. I guess the disappointment is that
    so many of the trips aren’t for an awake and sensitized being. They’re
    limited and without substance.
Paul: What is
    the substance of your songs which I find very enlivening and uplifting?
Francisco:
    I’m finding myself trying to present simplicity again in the hopes that
    the message that does come through will be heard. The songs come from my
    relationship with myself in life. The songs are also for me to learn. I mean
    some of the songs I sing, if I was living that way, I would be Joe Holy, so
    they’re also my therapy. They’re like reminders. Sometimes I have a hard
    time singing some of the songs I write because they’re saying something
    really neat about life and I’m not quite living that way yet, although I
    had the vision at the time it came through me. The songs are to remind me to
    get my act together and become more centered. I sing them publicly because
    we are all connected on one level or another and sometimes by someone
    speaking out we realize, "Wow, she or he’s going through that too. So
    I guess it’s OK. I’m not alone"
Paul: Some of
    the songs are called "Heal Yourself," "Sit Back and
    Relax," "Cosmic Feeling." They are simple direct songs we can
    relate to.
Francisco:
    Yes "Sit Back and Relax," for example I want to create a sound
    expression for that feeling. The image I had in my head was of somebody who
    worked all day long, stuck doing a job that’s not really what they want to
    do. One of their only outlets is listening to music. After a long day of
    work they come home and if they happen to have a cassette of the Cosmic Beam
    Experience they can play that song and if you surrender to it, it does just
    that. You will get a relaxed experience.
Paul: Talking
    about your tapes and records, you succeeded in achieving something a lot of
    artists strive for, that’s independently producing your own album. How did
    that come about?
Francisco:
    Well, the people materialized the album. What I mean is, during four years
    of performing as a soloist, people would talk to me after concerts and give
    me validation or whatever and within a couple of sentences they would say,
    "Have you got a record out yet?" and I would say,
    "Soon." I said soon for years. Finally I was able to comprehend it
    fully in my mind and feel, yeah, it’s time and actually do it. I sought
    out people to invest in me in sort of a friendship-business relationship.
    Because of all the years working with other musicians, recording on albums
    and just learning the ropes of the industry through my eyes, I was able to
    produce my own album and all of the right people were there. Steven Moffit
    who does the Beach Boys was the engineer and I did some of the recording at
    St. Paul’s Cathedral where my next concerts are.
Paul: You
    also have distributed your records yourself.
Francisco:
    Yes, thousands of people have my tapes or records from direct sales at my
    concerts and mail orders. I would like to see Cosmic Beam records at all
    stores. It can be done. I like just the idea of visualizing an artist, she
    or he having an independent record company. For me, it just all came
    together as the songs came together.
Paul: How do
    you feel about playing in St. Paul’s Cathedral?
Francisco:
    It’s beautiful. I love to play with the sound within the Cathedral. It
    allows all the instruments that I play to have a more expansive sound, the
    harmonics that are developed inside the Cathedral are just beautiful. It’s
    just the sort of perfect place, perfect environment for the Cosmic Beam
    Experience. It’s one of my fantasies to play cathedrals all around the
    world. All those sort of epic environments that were built for people to go
    to for unique events. I feel honored to be able to play in St. Paul’s
    Cathedral. I really do. There’s something that seems to happen to me just
    sitting in that environment playing. It’s like a feeling of renaissance.
    It’s just a big beautiful open space and people can bring a pillow and a
    blanket and just lie down and share this experience with me.
Paul: As you
    and other artists who share a healthy, humanistic perspective, are able to
    reach larger audiences, what effect do you think this will have on our
    culture?
Francisco: I
    feel there will be a chain reaction and it will inspire more fulfilling
    relationships and neater environments to live in.
Paul: Who are
    you?
Francisco:
    Me. I’m just me, and if I want to step out of me I can create
    multidimensional experiences, whatever me wants to be. I can be Francisco or
    me is capable of channeling real neat energy by the Cosmic Beam Experience,
    but if we take all that away, I’m just me.
Paul:
    You’re working as an artist to express yourself, in that effort, are you
    also working with a sense of purpose in relationship to other people in the
    world?
Francisco: I
    sense a oneness with everyone. Sometimes I do feel isolated. I notice that
    the more I get involved in the here and now, a goal in mind seems to
    disappear. Goal is future talk which doesn’t exist now. Everyone is always
    trying to help the masses which is neat, but society is really made up of
    individuals. My concern isn’t a relationship with humankind but a
    relationship with myself. The fruit of it is that I can be more in harmony
    with others because I’m expressing myself. I do see people hurting
    themselves, being asleep. They’re not very happy. And yet inside I know
    that’s another part of me, a reflection of me. We’re all interconnected.
    I do feel humankind. We’re so many different facets. I used to try to
    promote healing and TM which I like, but there are many diverse ways of
    doing things. And I don’t promote it verbally, I just sort of sneak it in
    with my music. Just like the sun, it rises, just appears gradually and then
    goes down. Some people notice it happening and some don’t. Eventually
    everyone says, "Hey. What’s going on here? I feel different. I feel
    more alive." Even the numbest people. I guess wanting so much to scream
    out "Wake up, come on brother, come on sister, wake up." These
    incredible ideas of sound and visual art materialize. I want to provide
    encouragement for people. Hopefully they’ll come out of the Cosmic Beam
    Experience feeling a little more alive, feeling in tune with themselves and
    more aware of their potential. Yes, I have a sensitivity for humankind, more
    than I even know about."

 
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