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‘Message From Thee Temple’: Magick, Occultism, Mysticism and Psychic TV

M. Dines, Matt Grimes

January 14, 2021 DOI: 10.5040/9781350086951.ch-010 via Semantic Scholar

Summary

Genesis P-Orridge's Thee Temple ov Psychick Youth (TOPY) was founded to catalyze individual development for those feeling different and dissatisfied. Psychic TV, formed in 1981 after Throbbing Gristle disbanded, produced a vast mixed media oeuvre over thirty years, collaborating with over thirty musicians, writers, artists, and philosophers. P-Orridge's awareness in occult and pagan ritual was integral to forming Psychic TV and TOPY, which became the magickal and philosophical wing of the band. Using Psychic TV's debut album Force the Hand of Chance (1982) as an investigative framework, this chapter analyzes Psychic TV and TOPY's multi-media texts, performances, rituals, and interviews to unpack the significance of magick, occultism, and ritual in asserting their 'cult'ural and philosophical space between music, performance art, and chaos magick.

Study at a glance

Design semiotic and discursive analysis
Key finding Magick, occultism, and ritual were central to Psychic TV and TOPY's assertion of a 'cult'ural and philosophical space between music, performance art, and chaos magick.

Abstract

Writing in The Psychick Bible (2006) Genesis P-Orridge notes how ‘Thee Temple ov Psychick Youth has been convened in order to act as a catalyst and focus for the Individual (sic) development of all those who wish to reach inwards and strike out. ‘Maybe you are one of these,’ he continues, ‘already feeling different, dissatisfied, separate from the mass around you, instinctive and alert? You are already one of us.’ Founded after the disbanding of Throbbing Gristle (seen by many as the founding fathers of the industrial music genre ), Psychic TV was formed in 1981 and over a period of more than thirty years, have produced a vast oeuvre of mixed media work including recordings, moving image, art installations and literature. As a band and performing arts group, they have embodied various incarnations, working collaboratively with over thirty musicians, writers, artists and philosophers, with P-Orridge remaining the one constant core member of the band. P-Orridge’s awareness in the occult and pagan ritual was integral to forming Psychic TV, and was also central to the simultaneous formation of the Thee Temple ov Psychick Youth (TOPY), an organisation that was to become the magickal and philosophical wing of Psychic TV, and which subsequently led to the incorporation of magick, occultism and ritual into their music and multi-media productions. Using the Psychic TV’s debut album, Force the Hand of Chance (1982) as an investigative framework, this chapter seeks to investigate, scrutinise and illuminate Psychic TV’s past and on-going relationship with magick, occultism, mysticism and paganism. A semiotic and discursive analysis of Psychic TV and TOPY’s multi-media texts, performances, rituals and interviews, this chapter unpacks the significance of magick, occultism and ritual in asserting Psychic TV’s occupying of an interesting ‘cult’ural and philosophical space between music, performance art and the practice and exposition of ‘chaos magick.’

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