Toby Driver
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General Info
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Genre: Experimental / Other / Psychedelic
Location BROOKLYN, New York, US
Profile Views: 121122
Last Login: 7/30/2010
Member Since 3/12/2005
Website http://www.kayodot.net/toby
Record Label Tzadik, HydraHead, Robotic Empire, Ice Level Music
Type of Label Indie
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Bio
THE MUSIC OF TOBY DRIVER.. by H.P. Worcraft.... I have examined maps of the city with the greatest care, yet have never again found Jamaica Plain. These maps have not been modern maps alone, for I know that names change. I have, on the contrary, delved deeply into all the antiquities of the place, and have personally explored every region, of whatever name, which could possibly answer to the place I knew as Jamaica Plain. But despite all I have done, it remains an humiliating fact that I cannot find the house, the street, or even the locality, where, during the last months of my impoverished life as a student of metaphysics at the university, I heard the music of Toby Driver..... That my memory is broken, I do not wonder; for my health, physical and mental, was gravely disturbed throughout the period of my residence in Jamaica Plain, and I recall that I took none of my few acquaintances there. But that I cannot find the place again is both singular and perplexing; for it was within a half-hour's walk of the university and was distinguished by peculiarities which could hardly be forgotten by any one who had been there. I have never met a person who has seen Jamaica Plain..... The inhabitants of Jamaica Plain impressed me peculiarly; At first I thought it was because they were all silent and reticent; but later decided it was because they were all very high. I do not know how I came to live in such a place, but I was not myself when I moved there. I had been living in many poor places, always evicted for want of money; until at last I came upon that tottering house. It was the third house from the top of the street, and by far the tallest of them all..... My room was on the fifth story; the only inhabited room there, since the house was almost empty. On the night I arrived I heard strang music from the peaked garret overhead, and the next day asked old Blandot about it. He told me it was a bass player from Connecticut, a strange, young man who signed his name as Toby Driver, and who played evenings on Lansdowne Street; adding that Driver's desire to play in the night after his return from the club was the reason he had chosen this lofty and isolated garret room, whose single gable window was the only point on the street from which one could look over the terminating wall at the declivity and panorama beyond..... Thereafter I heard Toby every night, and although he kept me awake, I was haunted by the weirdness of his music. Knowing little of the art myself, I was yet certain that none of his harmonies had any relation to music I had heard before; and concluded that he was a composer of highly original genius. The longer I listened, the more I was fascinated, until after a week I resolved to make the young man's acquaintance..... One night as he was returning from his work, I intercepted Toby in the hallway and told him that I would like to know him and be with him when he played. He was a small, lean person, with shabby clothes, blue eyes, grotesque, satyrlike face, and oddly coloured hair; and at my first words seemed both bored and bemused. My obvious friendliness, however, finally melted him; and he grudgingly motioned to me to follow him up the dark, creaking and rickety attic stairs. His room, one of only two in the steeply pitched garret, was on the west side, toward the high wall that formed the upper end of the street. Its size was very great, and seemed the greater because of its extraordinary barrenness and neglect. Of furniture there was only a narrow iron bedstead, a dingy wash-stand, a small table, a Yaffa block, an iron music-rack, a stack of Decibel magazines, and three old-fashioned chairs. Sheets of music were piled in disorder about the floor. The walls were of bare boards, and had probably never known plaster; whilst the abundance of dust and cobwebs made the place seem more deserted than inhabited. Evidently Toby Driver's world of beauty lay in some far cosmos of the imagination..... Motioning me to sit down, Toby closed the door, turned the large wooden bolt, and lighted a candle to augment the one he had brought with him. He now removed his bass guitar from its motheaten covering, and taking it, seated himself in the least uncomfortable of the chairs. He did not employ the music-rack, but, offering no choice and playing from memory, enchanted me for over an hour with strains I had never heard before; strains which must have been of his own devising. To describe their exact nature is impossible for one unversed in music. They were a kind of fugue, with recurrent passages of the most captivating quality, but to me were notable for the absence of any of the weird notes I had overheard from my room below on other occasions..... Those haunting notes I had remembered, and had often hummed and whistled inaccurately to myself, so when the player at length laid down his pick I asked him if he would render some of them. As I began my request the satyrlike face lost the bored placidity it had possessed during the playing, and seemed to show the same curious mixture of anger and fright which I had noticed when first I accosted the young man. For a moment I was inclined to use persuasion, regarding rather lightly the whims of intoxication; and even tried to awaken my host's weirder mood by whistling a few of the strains to which I had listened the night before. But I did not pursue this course for more than a moment; for when the musician recognized the whistled air his face grew suddenly distorted with an expression wholly beyond analysis, and his long, cold, tattooed right hand reached out to stop my mouth and silence the crude imitation. As he did this he further demonstrated his eccentricity by casting a startled glance toward the lone curtained window, as if fearful of some intruder'a glance doubly absurd, since the garret stood high and inaccessible above all the adjacent roofs, this window being the only point on the steep street, as the concierge had told me, from which one could see over the wall at the summit..... The young man's glance brought Blandot's remark to my mind, and with a certain capriciousness I felt a wish to look out over the wide and dizzying panorama of moonlit roofs and city lights beyond the hilltop, which of all the dwellers of Jamaica Plain only this crabbed musician could see. I moved toward the window and would have drawn aside the nondescript curtains, when with a frightened rage even greater than before, the lodger was upon me again; this time motioning with his head toward the door as he nervously strove to drag me thither with both hands. Now thoroughly disgusted with my host, I ordered him to release me, and told him I would go at once. His clutch relaxed, and as he saw my disgust and offense, his own anger seemed to subside. He tightened his relaxing grip, but this time in a friendly manner, forcing me onto the Yaffa block; then with an appearance of wistfulness crossing to the littered table, where he wrote many words with a pencil, in the labored English of a Hampshire [alumnus]..... The note which he finally handed me was an appeal for tolerance and forgiveness. Driver said that he was drunk, high and afflicted with strange fears and nervous disorders connected with his music and with other things. He had enjoyed my listening to his music, and wished I would come again and not mind his eccentricities. But he could not play to another his weird harmonies without the rest of Kayo Dot, and could not bear hearing them from another; nor could he bear having anything in his room touched by an-other. He had not known until our hallway conversation that I could overhear his playing in my room, and now asked me if I would arrange with Blandot to take a lower room where I could not hear him in the night. He would, he wrote, defray the difference in rent..... As I sat deciphering the execrable words, I felt more lenient toward the young man. He was a victim of physical and nervous suffering, as was I; and my metaphysical studies had taught me kindness. In the silence there came a slight sound from the window - the shutter must have rattled in the night wind, and for some reason I started almost as violently as did Toby Driver. So when I had finished reading, I shook my host by the hand, and departed as a friend..... The next day Blandot gave me a more expensive room on the third floor, between the apartments of an aged money-lender and the room of a respectable upholsterer. There was no one on the fourth floor..... It was not long before I found that Driver's eagerness for my company was not as great as it had seemed while he was persuading me to move down from the fifth story. He did not ask me to call on him, and when I did call he appeared as though he had just woken up and took three hours to get ready. This was always at night - in the day he slept and would admit no one. My liking for him did not grow, though the attic room and the weird music seemed to hold an odd fascination for me. I had a curious desire to look out of that window, over the wall and down the unseen slope at the glittering roofs and spires which must lie outspread there. Once I went up to the garret during theater hours, when Toby was away, but the door was locked..... What I did succeed in doing was to overhear the nocturnal playing of the strange young man. At first I would tip-toe up to my old fifth floor, then I grew bold enough to climb the last creaking staircase to the peaked garret. There in the narrow hall, outside the bolted door with the covered keyhole, I often heard sounds which filled me with an indefinable dread - the dread of vague wonder and brooding mystery. It was not that the sounds were hideous, for they were not; but that they held vibrations suggesting nothing on this globe of earth, and that at certain intervals they assumed a symphonic quality which I could hardly conceive as produced by one player. Certainly, Toby Driver was a genius of wild power. As the weeks passed, the playing grew wilder, whilst the old musician acquired an increasing haggardness and furtiveness pitiful to behold. He now refused to admit me at any time, and shunned me whenever we met on the stairs..... Then one night as I listened at the door, I heard the shrieking Telecaster swell into a chaotic babel of sound; a pandemonium which would have led me to doubt my own shaking sanity had there not come from behind that barred portal a piteous proof that the horror was real - the awful, inarticulate cry which only a Driver can utter, and which rises only in moments of the most terrible fear or anguish. I knocked repeatedly at the door, but received no response. Afterward I waited in the black hallway, shivering with cold and fear, till I heard the poor musician's feeble effort to rise from the floor by the aid of a chair. Believing him just conscious after a fainting fit, I renewed my rapping, at the same time calling out my name reassuringly. I heard Toby stumble to the window and close both shutter and sash, then stumble to the door, which he falteringly unfastened to admit me. This time his delight at having me present was real; for his distorted face gleamed with relief while he clutched at my coat as a child clutches at its mother's skirts..... Shaking pathetically, the young man forced me into a chair whilst he sank onto a pile of laundry, beside which his guitar and pick lay carelessly on the floor. He sat for some time inactive, nodding oddly, but having a paradoxical suggestion of intense and frightened listening. Subsequently he seemed to be satisfied, and crossing to a chair by the table wrote a brief note, handed it to me, and returned to the table, where he began to write rapidly and incessantly. The note implored me in the name of mercy, and for the sake of my own curiosity, to wait where I was while he prepared a full account of all the marvels and terrors which beset him. I waited, and Toby's pencil flew..... It was perhaps an hour later, while I still waited and while the young musician's feverishly written sheets still continued to pile up, apparently mostly with drawings, that I saw Toby start as from the hint of a horrible shock. Unmistakably he was looking at the curtained window and listening shudderingly. Then I half fancied I heard a sound myself; though it was not a horrible sound, but rather an exquisitely low and infinitely distant musical note, suggesting a player in one of the neighboring houses, or in some abode beyond the lofty wall over which I had never been able to look. Upon Driver the effect was terrible, for, dropping his pencil, suddenly he rose, seized his Fender, and commenced to rend the night with the wildest playing I had ever heard from his amplifier save when listening at the barred door..... It would be useless to describe the playing of Toby Driver on that dreadful night. It was more horrible than anything I had ever overheard, because I could now see the expression of his face, and could realize that this time the motive was stark fear. He was trying to make a noise; to ward something off or drown something out - what, I could not imagine, awesome though I felt it must be. The playing grew fantastic, dehnous, and hysterical, yet kept to the last the qualities of supreme genius which I knew this strange young man possessed. I recognized the air - it was a wild Bauhaus piece, popular with the goth kids, and I reflected for a moment that this was the first time I had ever heard Toby play the work of another composer..... Louder and louder, wilder and wilder, mounted the shrieking and whining of that desperate electric guitar. The player was dripping with an uncanny perspiration and twisted like a monkey, always looking frantically at the curtained window. In his frenzied strains I could almost see shadowy satyrs and bacchanals dancing and whirling insanely through seething abysses of clouds and smoke and lightning. And then I thought I heard a shriller, steadier note that was not from the amplifier; a calm, deliberate, purposeful, mocking note from far away in the West..... At this juncture the shutter began to rattle in a howling night wind which had sprung up outside as if in answer to the mad playing within. Toby's screaming guitar now outdid itself emitting sounds I had never thought a Marshall stack could emit. The shutter rattled more loudly, unfastened, and commenced slamming against the window. Then the glass broke shiveringly under the persistent impacts, and the chill wind rushed in, making the candles sputter and rustling the sheets of paper on the table where Toby had begun to write out his horrible secret. I looked at Toby, and saw that he was past conscious observation. His blue eyes were bulging, glassy and sightless, and the frantic playing had become a blind, mechanical, unrecognizable orgy that no pen could even suggest..... A sudden gust, stronger than the others, caught up the manuscript and bore it toward the window. I followed the flying sheets in desperation, but they were gone before I reached the demolished panes. Then I remembered my old wish to gaze from this window, the only window in Jamaica Plain from which one might see the slope beyond the wall, and the city outspread beneath. It was very dark, but the city's lights always burned, and I expected to see them there amidst the rain and wind. Yet when I looked from that highest of all gable windows, looked while the candles sputtered and the insane Telecaster howled with the night-wind, I saw no city spread below, and no friendly lights gleamed from remembered streets, but only the blackness of space illimitable; unimagined space alive with motion and music, and having no semblance of anything on earth. And as I stood there looking in terror, the wind blew out both the candles in that ancient peaked garret, leaving me in savage and impenetrable darkness with chaos and pandemonium before me, and the demon madness of that night-baying guit-box behind me..... I staggered back in the dark, without the means of striking a light, crashing against the table, overturning a water-pipe, and finally groping my way to the place where the blackness screamed with shocking music. To save myself and Toby Driver I could at least try, whatever the powers opposed to me. Once I thought some chill thing brushed me, and I screamed, but my scream could not be heard above that hideous guitar. Suddenly out of the blackness the madly thrashing pick struck me, and I knew I was close to the player. I felt ahead, touched the back of Toby's chair, and then found and shook his shoulder in an effort to bring him to his senses..... He did not respond, and still the Telecaster shrieked on without slackening. I moved my hand to his head, whose mechanical nodding I was able to stop, and shouted in his ear that we must both flee from the unknown things of the night. But he neither answered me nor abated the frenzy of his unutterable music, while all through the garret strange currents of wind seemed to dance in the darkness and babel. When my hand touched his ear I shuddered, though I knew not why - knew not why till I felt the still face; the ice-cold, stiffened, unbreathing face whose glassy eyes bulged uselessly into the void. And then, by some miracle, finding the door and the large wooden bolt, I plunged wildly away from that glassy-eyed thing in the dark, and from the ghoulish howling of that accursed electric guitar whose fury increased even as I plunged..... Leaping, floating, flying down those endless stairs through the dark house; racing mindlessly out into the narrow, steep, and ancient street of steps and tottering houses; clattering down steps and over cobbles to the lower streets and the putrid canyon-walled river; panting across the great dark bridge to the broader, healthier streets and boulevards we know; all these are terrible impressions that linger with me. And I recall that there was no wind, and that the moon was out, and that all the lights of the city twinkled..... Despite my most careful searches and investigations, I have never since been able to find Jamaica Plain. But I am not wholly sorry; either for this or for the loss in undreamable abysses of the closely-written sheets which alone could have explained the music of Toby Driver..... ..http://www.kayodot.net/toby.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .......... ........... -
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5 Songs | Sep 21, 2008
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THE MUSIC OF TOBY DRIVERby H.P. Worcraft
I have examined maps of the city with the greatest care, yet have never again found Jamaica Plain. These maps have not been modern maps alone, for I know that names change. I have, on the contrary, delved deeply into all the antiquities of the place, and have personally explored every region, of whatever name, which could possibly answer to the place I knew as Jamaica Plain. But despite all I have done, it remains an humiliating fact that I cannot find the house, the street, or even the locality, where, during the last months of my impoverished life as a student of metaphysics at the university, I heard the music of Toby Driver.
That my memory is broken, I do not wonder; for my health, physical and mental, was gravely disturbed throughout the period of my residence in Jamaica Plain, and I recall that I took none of my few acquaintances there. But that I cannot find the place again is both singular and perplexing; for it was within a half-hour's walk of the university and was distinguished by peculiarities which could hardly be forgotten by any one who had been there. I have never met a person who has seen Jamaica Plain.
The inhabitants of Jamaica Plain impressed me peculiarly; At first I thought it was because they were all silent and reticent; but later decided it was because they were all very high. I do not know how I came to live in such a place, but I was not myself when I moved there. I had been living in many poor places, always evicted for want of money; until at last I came upon that tottering house. It was the third house from the top of the street, and by far the tallest of them all.
My room was on the fifth story; the only inhabited room there, since the house was almost empty. On the night I arrived I heard strang music from the peaked garret overhead, and the next day asked old Blandot about it. He told me it was a bass player from Connecticut, a strange, young man who signed his name as Toby Driver, and who played evenings on Lansdowne Street; adding that Driver's desire to play in the night after his return from the club was the reason he had chosen this lofty and isolated garret room, whose single gable window was the only point on the street from which one could look over the terminating wall at the declivity and panorama beyond.
Thereafter I heard Toby every night, and although he kept me awake, I was haunted by the weirdness of his music. Knowing little of the art myself, I was yet certain that none of his harmonies had any relation to music I had heard before; and concluded that he was a composer of highly original genius. The longer I listened, the more I was fascinated, until after a week I resolved to make the young man's acquaintance.
One night as he was returning from his work, I intercepted Toby in the hallway and told him that I would like to know him and be with him when he played. He was a small, lean person, with shabby clothes, blue eyes, grotesque, satyrlike face, and oddly coloured hair; and at my first words seemed both bored and bemused. My obvious friendliness, however, finally melted him; and he grudgingly motioned to me to follow him up the dark, creaking and rickety attic stairs. His room, one of only two in the steeply pitched garret, was on the west side, toward the high wall that formed the upper end of the street. Its size was very great, and seemed the greater because of its extraordinary barrenness and neglect. Of furniture there was only a narrow iron bedstead, a dingy wash-stand, a small table, a Yaffa block, an iron music-rack, a stack of Decibel magazines, and three old-fashioned chairs. Sheets of music were piled in disorder about the floor. The walls were of bare boards, and had probably never known plaster; whilst the abundance of dust and cobwebs made the place seem more deserted than inhabited. Evidently Toby Driver's world of beauty lay in some far cosmos of the imagination.
Motioning me to sit down, Toby closed the door, turned the large wooden bolt, and lighted a candle to augment the one he had brought with him. He now removed his bass guitar from its motheaten covering, and taking it, seated himself in the least uncomfortable of the chairs. He did not employ the music-rack, but, offering no choice and playing from memory, enchanted me for over an hour with strains I had never heard before; strains which must have been of his own devising. To describe their exact nature is impossible for one unversed in music. They were a kind of fugue, with recurrent passages of the most captivating quality, but to me were notable for the absence of any of the weird notes I had overheard from my room below on other occasions.
Those haunting notes I had remembered, and had often hummed and whistled inaccurately to myself, so when the player at length laid down his pick I asked him if he would render some of them. As I began my request the satyrlike face lost the bored placidity it had possessed during the playing, and seemed to show the same curious mixture of anger and fright which I had noticed when first I accosted the young man. For a moment I was inclined to use persuasion, regarding rather lightly the whims of intoxication; and even tried to awaken my host's weirder mood by whistling a few of the strains to which I had listened the night before. But I did not pursue this course for more than a moment; for when the musician recognized the whistled air his face grew suddenly distorted with an expression wholly beyond analysis, and his long, cold, tattooed right hand reached out to stop my mouth and silence the crude imitation. As he did this he further demonstrated his eccentricity by casting a startled glance toward the lone curtained window, as if fearful of some intruder'a glance doubly absurd, since the garret stood high and inaccessible above all the adjacent roofs, this window being the only point on the steep street, as the concierge had told me, from which one could see over the wall at the summit.
The young man's glance brought Blandot's remark to my mind, and with a certain capriciousness I felt a wish to look out over the wide and dizzying panorama of moonlit roofs and city lights beyond the hilltop, which of all the dwellers of Jamaica Plain only this crabbed musician could see. I moved toward the window and would have drawn aside the nondescript curtains, when with a frightened rage even greater than before, the lodger was upon me again; this time motioning with his head toward the door as he nervously strove to drag me thither with both hands. Now thoroughly disgusted with my host, I ordered him to release me, and told him I would go at once. His clutch relaxed, and as he saw my disgust and offense, his own anger seemed to subside. He tightened his relaxing grip, but this time in a friendly manner, forcing me onto the Yaffa block; then with an appearance of wistfulness crossing to the littered table, where he wrote many words with a pencil, in the labored English of a Hampshire [alumnus].
The note which he finally handed me was an appeal for tolerance and forgiveness. Driver said that he was drunk, high and afflicted with strange fears and nervous disorders connected with his music and with other things. He had enjoyed my listening to his music, and wished I would come again and not mind his eccentricities. But he could not play to another his weird harmonies without the rest of Kayo Dot, and could not bear hearing them from another; nor could he bear having anything in his room touched by an-other. He had not known until our hallway conversation that I could overhear his playing in my room, and now asked me if I would arrange with Blandot to take a lower room where I could not hear him in the night. He would, he wrote, defray the difference in rent.
As I sat deciphering the execrable words, I felt more lenient toward the young man. He was a victim of physical and nervous suffering, as was I; and my metaphysical studies had taught me kindness. In the silence there came a slight sound from the window - the shutter must have rattled in the night wind, and for some reason I started almost as violently as did Toby Driver. So when I had finished reading, I shook my host by the hand, and departed as a friend.
The next day Blandot gave me a more expensive room on the third floor, between the apartments of an aged money-lender and the room of a respectable upholsterer. There was no one on the fourth floor.
It was not long before I found that Driver's eagerness for my company was not as great as it had seemed while he was persuading me to move down from the fifth story. He did not ask me to call on him, and when I did call he appeared as though he had just woken up and took three hours to get ready. This was always at night - in the day he slept and would admit no one. My liking for him did not grow, though the attic room and the weird music seemed to hold an odd fascination for me. I had a curious desire to look out of that window, over the wall and down the unseen slope at the glittering roofs and spires which must lie outspread there. Once I went up to the garret during theater hours, when Toby was away, but the door was locked.
What I did succeed in doing was to overhear the nocturnal playing of the strange young man. At first I would tip-toe up to my old fifth floor, then I grew bold enough to climb the last creaking staircase to the peaked garret. There in the narrow hall, outside the bolted door with the covered keyhole, I often heard sounds which filled me with an indefinable dread - the dread of vague wonder and brooding mystery. It was not that the sounds were hideous, for they were not; but that they held vibrations suggesting nothing on this globe of earth, and that at certain intervals they assumed a symphonic quality which I could hardly conceive as produced by one player. Certainly, Toby Driver was a genius of wild power. As the weeks passed, the playing grew wilder, whilst the old musician acquired an increasing haggardness and furtiveness pitiful to behold. He now refused to admit me at any time, and shunned me whenever we met on the stairs.
Then one night as I listened at the door, I heard the shrieking Telecaster swell into a chaotic babel of sound; a pandemonium which would have led me to doubt my own shaking sanity had there not come from behind that barred portal a piteous proof that the horror was real - the awful, inarticulate cry which only a Driver can utter, and which rises only in moments of the most terrible fear or anguish. I knocked repeatedly at the door, but received no response. Afterward I waited in the black hallway, shivering with cold and fear, till I heard the poor musician's feeble effort to rise from the floor by the aid of a chair. Believing him just conscious after a fainting fit, I renewed my rapping, at the same time calling out my name reassuringly. I heard Toby stumble to the window and close both shutter and sash, then stumble to the door, which he falteringly unfastened to admit me. This time his delight at having me present was real; for his distorted face gleamed with relief while he clutched at my coat as a child clutches at its mother's skirts.
Shaking pathetically, the young man forced me into a chair whilst he sank onto a pile of laundry, beside which his guitar and pick lay carelessly on the floor. He sat for some time inactive, nodding oddly, but having a paradoxical suggestion of intense and frightened listening. Subsequently he seemed to be satisfied, and crossing to a chair by the table wrote a brief note, handed it to me, and returned to the table, where he began to write rapidly and incessantly. The note implored me in the name of mercy, and for the sake of my own curiosity, to wait where I was while he prepared a full account of all the marvels and terrors which beset him. I waited, and Toby's pencil flew.
It was perhaps an hour later, while I still waited and while the young musician's feverishly written sheets still continued to pile up, apparently mostly with drawings, that I saw Toby start as from the hint of a horrible shock. Unmistakably he was looking at the curtained window and listening shudderingly. Then I half fancied I heard a sound myself; though it was not a horrible sound, but rather an exquisitely low and infinitely distant musical note, suggesting a player in one of the neighboring houses, or in some abode beyond the lofty wall over which I had never been able to look. Upon Driver the effect was terrible, for, dropping his pencil, suddenly he rose, seized his Fender, and commenced to rend the night with the wildest playing I had ever heard from his amplifier save when listening at the barred door.
It would be useless to describe the playing of Toby Driver on that dreadful night. It was more horrible than anything I had ever overheard, because I could now see the expression of his face, and could realize that this time the motive was stark fear. He was trying to make a noise; to ward something off or drown something out - what, I could not imagine, awesome though I felt it must be. The playing grew fantastic, dehnous, and hysterical, yet kept to the last the qualities of supreme genius which I knew this strange young man possessed. I recognized the air - it was a wild Bauhaus piece, popular with the goth kids, and I reflected for a moment that this was the first time I had ever heard Toby play the work of another composer.
Louder and louder, wilder and wilder, mounted the shrieking and whining of that desperate electric guitar. The player was dripping with an uncanny perspiration and twisted like a monkey, always looking frantically at the curtained window. In his frenzied strains I could almost see shadowy satyrs and bacchanals dancing and whirling insanely through seething abysses of clouds and smoke and lightning. And then I thought I heard a shriller, steadier note that was not from the amplifier; a calm, deliberate, purposeful, mocking note from far away in the West.
At this juncture the shutter began to rattle in a howling night wind which had sprung up outside as if in answer to the mad playing within. Toby's screaming guitar now outdid itself emitting sounds I had never thought a Marshall stack could emit. The shutter rattled more loudly, unfastened, and commenced slamming against the window. Then the glass broke shiveringly under the persistent impacts, and the chill wind rushed in, making the candles sputter and rustling the sheets of paper on the table where Toby had begun to write out his horrible secret. I looked at Toby, and saw that he was past conscious observation. His blue eyes were bulging, glassy and sightless, and the frantic playing had become a blind, mechanical, unrecognizable orgy that no pen could even suggest.
A sudden gust, stronger than the others, caught up the manuscript and bore it toward the window. I followed the flying sheets in desperation, but they were gone before I reached the demolished panes. Then I remembered my old wish to gaze from this window, the only window in Jamaica Plain from which one might see the slope beyond the wall, and the city outspread beneath. It was very dark, but the city's lights always burned, and I expected to see them there amidst the rain and wind. Yet when I looked from that highest of all gable windows, looked while the candles sputtered and the insane Telecaster howled with the night-wind, I saw no city spread below, and no friendly lights gleamed from remembered streets, but only the blackness of space illimitable; unimagined space alive with motion and music, and having no semblance of anything on earth. And as I stood there looking in terror, the wind blew out both the candles in that ancient peaked garret, leaving me in savage and impenetrable darkness with chaos and pandemonium before me, and the demon madness of that night-baying guit-box behind me.
I staggered back in the dark, without the means of striking a light, crashing against the table, overturning a water-pipe, and finally groping my way to the place where the blackness screamed with shocking music. To save myself and Toby Driver I could at least try, whatever the powers opposed to me. Once I thought some chill thing brushed me, and I screamed, but my scream could not be heard above that hideous guitar. Suddenly out of the blackness the madly thrashing pick struck me, and I knew I was close to the player. I felt ahead, touched the back of Toby's chair, and then found and shook his shoulder in an effort to bring him to his senses.
He did not respond, and still the Telecaster shrieked on without slackening. I moved my hand to his head, whose mechanical nodding I was able to stop, and shouted in his ear that we must both flee from the unknown things of the night. But he neither answered me nor abated the frenzy of his unutterable music, while all through the garret strange currents of wind seemed to dance in the darkness and babel. When my hand touched his ear I shuddered, though I knew not why - knew not why till I felt the still face; the ice-cold, stiffened, unbreathing face whose glassy eyes bulged uselessly into the void. And then, by some miracle, finding the door and the large wooden bolt, I plunged wildly away from that glassy-eyed thing in the dark, and from the ghoulish howling of that accursed electric guitar whose fury increased even as I plunged.
Leaping, floating, flying down those endless stairs through the dark house; racing mindlessly out into the narrow, steep, and ancient street of steps and tottering houses; clattering down steps and over cobbles to the lower streets and the putrid canyon-walled river; panting across the great dark bridge to the broader, healthier streets and boulevards we know; all these are terrible impressions that linger with me. And I recall that there was no wind, and that the moon was out, and that all the lights of the city twinkled.
Despite my most careful searches and investigations, I have never since been able to find Jamaica Plain. But I am not wholly sorry; either for this or for the loss in undreamable abysses of the closely-written sheets which alone could have explained the music of Toby Driver.
http://www.kayodot.net/toby ..
Member Since:
March 12, 2005Members:














Arnulfo González 3 years ago
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Nestroit 4 years ago
10 of 347MoreThanks for the add Toby!!!
your music its in another level
keep doing the great stuff, i want the new album of Kayo dot
i get it!
i fucking get it!
you wrote boner on my dollar bill, lmao
me and my partner thought it might have been some toby esoteric-ness
haha
twas a good laugh
and after the nonsense of this comment i want to thank you again for giving us the privilege of hearing your music
it was a real honor to hear you guys play, though sadly we missed the first show and had to freeze our butts off for a good hour and half waiting for the next.
hope the tartar lamb performance went great.
once again, thank you.
enjoy your consciousness bro, have a nice day ;)
tobyyyyyyy we havent spoken in like >9000 years. suup
Thanks for adding me. Your stuff's really inspiring.
Idol!
Happy birthday, Toby! Everyone is sending you well-wishes over Facebook, so I'll be defiant and post here, haha. I hope Europe is treating you well. An acquaintance of mine, Jaime, is sorry he couldn't make it to the Marseille show yesterday. Hopefully I'll get to see you next Friday in NYC with Extra Life! Take care.
a salute from cold and humid holland ;-)
congratulations on the success of the new maudlin album, very refreshing to my ears. I am looking forward to the new kayo dot album, it was a treat seeing you play bass live; a nice change of pace for an instrument that often goes overlooked. good luck in any new musical ventures you take on. sincerely - taylor
Oiiiiiiii Toby.
I made a new song if you're interested.. and another one incase I didn't tell you. They're up now.
regarding to the latest motW album, I'm forced to adore you, Mister Driver. :)