An industrial piece in 17 notes per octave performed on an AXiS 49,
Oxygen 25, Digitech Control 8 controlling 2 instances each of Albino,
Z3ta+, and Kontakt 4 plus session 4 drummer.<br>
<br>
Listen online here<br>
<a href="http://notonlymusic.com/board/viewtopic.php?f=23&t=699#p4183">http://notonlymusic.com/board/viewtopic.php?f=23&t=699#p4183</a><br>
<br>
download (20 megs) here<br>
<a href="http://micro.soonlabel.com/17-ET/axis-albino2-numbers-radio-broadcast.mp3">http://micro.soonlabel.com/17-ET/axis-albino2-numbers-radio-broadcast.mp3</a><br>
<br>
Have a Good Day,<br>
<br>
Chris<br>
<br>
<br>
Background from Wikipedia<br>
<br>
Numbers stations (or number stations) are shortwave radio stations of
uncertain origin. They generally broadcast artificially generated voices
reading streams of numbers, words, letters (sometimes using a spelling
alphabet), tunes or Morse code. They are in a wide variety of languages
and the voices are usually female, though sometimes male or children's
voices are used.<br>
<br>
Evidence supports popular assumptions that the
broadcasts are used to send messages to spies. This usage has not been
publicly acknowledged by any government that may operate a numbers
station, but in 2001, the United States tried the Cuban Five for spying
for Cuba. The group had received and decoded messages that had been
broadcast from a Cuban numbers station.[1] Also in 2001, Ana Belen
Montes, a senior US Defense Intelligence Agency analyst, was arrested
and charged with espionage. The federal prosecutors stated: "Montes
communicated with the Cuban Intelligence Service through encrypted
messages and received her instructions through encrypted shortwave
transmissions from Cuba”. In 2006, Carlos Alvarez and his wife, Elsa,
were arrested and charged with espionage. The U.S. District Court
Florida stated: "defendants would receive assignments via shortwave
radio transmissions”. In June 2009, the United States similarly charged
Walter Kendall Myers with conspiracy to spy for Cuba and receiving and
decoding messages broadcast from a numbers station operated by the Cuban
Intelligence Service to further that conspiracy.[2][3]<br>
<br>
It has
been reported that the United States uses numbers stations to
communicate encoded information to persons in other countries.[1]<br>
<br>
Numbers
stations appear and disappear over time (although some follow regular
schedules), and their overall activity has increased slightly since the
early 1990s.