Bizarre 70’s Moog + Psychological Experiment Project, Campfire Orb, ‘Not Approved For Therapeutic Purposes’

Author J. Robert Lennon shared the story of a bizarre lost 70’s Moog + psychological experiment album, Campfire Orb, that brings together the 70’s infatuation with the novelty of electronic sounds, pseudoscience, psychedelic drugs and tragic death.

Lennon was browsing through the items at his local library sale (pre-pandemic), and came across a set of recordings by Dr. Noving Jumand. Here’s what Lennon has to say about it:

“Jumand was something of an Ithaca legend back when I first moved here in the nineties, though he’s mostly forgotten now. He’d come to town for a Cornell PhD in psychology, and was teaching as a lecturer, when he got approval for a controversial study involving the effect of narrative on human behavior. A few of his subjects—students, getting paid five dollars an hour—ended up hospitalized, and one was (and perhaps still is) committed to a mental institution.

This created all kinds of paranoid rumors about Jumand’s narratives—that they were in some way magical, or had been funded by the defense department—but it turned out that he’d given half of these students an experimental drug cocktail, derived from Phencyclidine, and this is what sent them on their dangerously dissociative journeys.

An investigation followed, during which it was revealed the the subjects knew they might be drugged and had signed release forms saying so; and the ones who were hospitalized already had histories of mental illness and drug addiction that could explain their reaction. As a result, no criminal charges were brought against Jumand—but the University cancelled his research and kicked him off campus. He eventually went on to form a quasi-utopian collective that lived in makeshift geodesic domes on some farmland outside of town, and died at 43 when he—accidentally, it’s believed—drove his bicycle off a cliff and into a waterfall.

Anyway, one extant artifact of his brief period of notoriety is a series of rare recordings of his narratives, made in collaboration with some former Moog employees he met at a swap meet in Trumansburg.

You can preview the album via the embed below or via Bandcamp:

Note: There’s no information to be found on the Internet about Jumand or these recordings, so the provenance of these recordings is unclear, at best. If any readers have additional information about the Moog connection or background on Jumand and these recordings, please share it in the comments.

via boing boing

20 thoughts on “Bizarre 70’s Moog + Psychological Experiment Project, Campfire Orb, ‘Not Approved For Therapeutic Purposes’

  1. This is a superb hoax! Just listen to it, the audio quality, context, and content are just not consistent with the 70’s. Prove me wrong though! I’d love for this to be real.

  2. Fake.
    Recordings sound new and if you read the text there’s hints. Also they list disorders on the sticker that didn’t exist in the 70s! They should have done their homework better. haha

      1. it’s the artist’s name on 3 previous albums but also supposedly on the cover of some 1970’s vinyl sleeve he found at a swap meet. which makes boing boing’s poorly researched irresponsible reporting even more glaring.

        irresponsible in its portrayal of former moog employees as being involved with occultism and some unethical psycho.

  3. They could’ve at least used the free izotope vinyl plugin and made this a lot more convincing.

    Somebody recently did this exact thing with the fictional zealot in Nicholas Cage’s Mandy film. Released an album under his name and tried to convince people he was a real person.

  4. Who cares if it is fake…it’s a fun background story and the album is very cool listen…Right up there with “Kosmischer Läufer” and “Ursula Bogner: Recordings 1969-1988”

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