
Working for the liberation of all beings everywhere. Bringing higher consciousness to the planet, one eternal moment at a time.
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The song "Outside Time" was inspired by E.J. Gold's discourse on "It's All About Sound."
Everything we see around us — the news, the politics, the noise of the world — all of it takes place inside the space-time universe. This is the stage where events unfold. Causes lead to effects. One moment follows another....
In that sense, what happens here normally stays here.
But human beings have always suspected something deeper going on beneath the surface of events. Mystics, musicians, poets, and scientists have all brushed up against the same strange discovery: certain kinds of work performed inside space-time appear to influence levels of reality that are not limited by space-time.
One of the most powerful of those forms of work is sound.
A song seems simple enough. A vibration in the air. A voice singing, a guitar string moving, a drum striking a skin. But sound is vibration, and vibration is one of the most fundamental forces in the universe. Long before there were galaxies or planets, there were oscillations, frequencies, waves. Modern physics describes the universe itself as a vast field of vibration.
So when we create a song, we are not just entertaining ourselves.
We are introducing a new pattern of vibration into the universe.
And patterns have consequences....
When a song is created with attention, intention, and awareness — when the maker understands that sound itself carries energy — the song becomes something more than entertainment. It becomes a carrier wave. A structure through which meaning, feeling, and even subtle influence can travel.
The song is played here, inside space and time.
But the pattern it creates can echo far beyond the moment of its creation.
Think of it like throwing a stone into a still pond. The splash happens at one point in space and time, but the ripples move outward in expanding circles. Some ripples reach shores the thrower cannot even see.
Songs work like that.
A melody, a rhythm, a particular arrangement of sound can set vibrations in motion that continue long after the singer has stopped singing. Those vibrations move through minds, memories, communities, and sometimes through history itself.
This is why people who work consciously with music — composers, chanters, sacred singers, and modern song creators — often feel they are participating in something larger than the song itself.
They are shaping vibration.
And vibration shapes reality.
So the work we do here may look simple: writing songs, experimenting with sounds, mixing styles, playing with rhythms and melodies.
But the deeper view is this:
We are practicing how to introduce intentional vibrations into the universe.
We do the work here, in the ordinary world of space and time.
But the resonance of that work may travel much farther than the room in which the song was written.
That is the power of song.
And that is why we keep making them. — E.J. Gold
To listen to a sample mp3 from the album Outside Time go to E.J. Gold's blog published on March 31, 2026 entitled "Outside Time."