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Revision as of 16:46, 4 June 2009

File:Orpheus Business1.jpg

Rodney Orpheus was born on 8 July 1960 in Moneymore, Northern Ireland, and attended Rainey Endowed School on a scholarship. He became interested in music during the punk rock movement of the mid-70s and led one of Ireland's first experimental punk bands, The Spare Mentals. In 1980, dissatisfied with the lack of opportunity in Ireland, he migrated to Leeds, England where he formed The Cassandra Complex with Paul Dillon, whom he met when he gatecrashed Dillon's 21st birthday party. The two originally financed the band by working at The Sorceror's Apprentice occult store.

After the release of The Cassandra's Complex's first records Orpheus spent several years touring Europe, originally basing himself in Aachen, Germany, where he joined Ordo Templi Orientis. Orpheus had been studying the works of Aleister Crowley and other occult authors since his teenage years, and previously had been founder and editor of the UK occult newspaper Pagan News along with Phil Hine[1]. While in Aachen he began work on the book Abrahadabra.[2]

Orpheus moved to Hamburg in 1990 where he formed Makhashanah Oasis (later Lodge) of O.T.O. During this period he also formed the band Sun God,[3] based on Santeria initiation he had received from Baba Raul Canizares on a visit to New York. He set up a recording studio where The Cassandra Complex recorded their next albums, as well as producing and remixing several records for other German alternative artists, including Die Krupps and Girls Under Glass.[4] He also made his first feature film appearance, in the German vampire movie Kiss My Blood,[5] and toured with The Sisters of Mercy.[6]. He was described as a "technopagan" in Mark Dery's seminal 1996 overview of cyberculture Escape Velocity:[7]

To Rodney Orpheus the ease with which such metaphors are turned upside down underscores his belief that there's nothing oxymoronic about the term technopagan in end-of-the-century cyberculture. "People say 'pagans sit in the forest worshipping nature; what are you doing drinking diet coke on front of a Macintosh?' " says Orpheus, who in addition to being a card-carrying Crowleyite is a hacker and a mind machine aficionado. "But when you use a computer , you're using your imagination to manipulate the computer's reality. Well, that's exactly what sorcery is all about - changing the plastic quality of nature on a nuts-and-bolts level. And that's why magickal techniques dating back hundreds of years are totally valid in a cyberpunk age."

Orpheus had been a user of Steinberg's computer music software in the studio for some time, and soon after moving to Hamburg he joined the company to pioneer their Internet Services division. He became a well-known figure presenting the company's software at trade shows, and in 1999 relocated to Los Angeles to work on one of the first Web 2.0 community sites, cubase.net.[8] While based in L.A. Orpheus served as a member of the US Grand Lodge O.T.O. Supreme Grand Council.

In Los Angeles Orpheus spent time working within the movie sound industry[9] and became a strong supporter of Surround Sound. The led to him moving to Henley-on-Thames and becoming Business Development Manager for the DTS Entertainment surround record label in 2004.[10] During this period he produced the surround albums Planet Earth for LTJ Bukem and A Gigantic Globular Burst of Anti-Static for The Future Sound of London.

Orpheus has always been fascinated by games, and during the 1980s had written RPG scenarios and articles for Steve Jackson Games.[11] During a long period of illness after 2001 he started designing modules for the computer game Neverwinter Nights, eventually running an online server called The Hidden Tradition, and winning a Neverwinter Vault Hall of Fame award.[12]

Rodney Orpheus now lives in Stroud, in the Cotswolds region of England, where he works as a college lecturer in media production and music technology. He was appointed Deputy National Grand Master General for UK Grand Lodge of O.T.O. at the Spring Equinox 2009.[13]

He appeared with Nick Margerrison on Kerrang Radio representing O.T.O. in May 2009:[14]

We're chatting to a bloke, Rodney Orpheus, who is part of the religion which Crowley left behind after he died, it's called O.T.O. I'm asking him what would happen if we were to play out Crowley's magical spell ritual designed to call out demons. He tells me probably nothing, "if demons were to come out of the radio I'd be very surprised, if they're going to come out of anywhere, they'll come out of people's heads". Awesome. Great bit of radio. Hit play on the song. Two minutes in the station has a major technical glitch. The consoles in all three studios stop working. The mic won't turn on and then won't turn off. We play three songs in a row as we try to sort it out. Chaos as broadcast assistants and producers run about like headless chickens trying to sort it out. Technical response team on the phone. Finally we're back on air. Not the most impressive bit of radio ever. An example of Crowley's curse?

Notes

  1. ^ Hine, Phil. "Occult magazine publishing". Retrieved 2009-05-29.
  2. ^ Orpheus, Rodney (2005-09-30). Abrahadabra: Understanding Aleister Crowley's Thelemic Magick. Red Wheel/Weiser. ISBN 1578633265.
  3. ^ Jester (1996-01). "Sun God Interview". Retrieved 2009-05-31. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  4. ^ "Rodney Orpheus Discography". Retrieved 2009-05-29.
  5. ^ Jazay, David (Director). Kiss My Blood (1998). Retrieved 2009-05-29.
  6. ^ "1996/07/14, Stadthalle, Offenbach, Germany". Retrieved 2009-05-29.
  7. ^ Dery, Mark (1996-01-01). Escape Velocity: Cyberculture at the End of the Century. New York, NY Grove Press, Inc.
  8. ^ "Sonic State - News Steinberg unveils Cubase.Net, A new web community for Cubase users". 1999-11-12. Retrieved 2009-05-29.
  9. ^ Border, W.K. (Director). Sex, Death & Eyeliner (2000). Retrieved 2009-05-29.
  10. ^ "DTS Expands DTS Entertainment in Europe; Company Appoints Business Development Manager, DTS Entertainment, Europe". 2004-06-22. Retrieved 2009-05-29. {{cite web}}: Text "Business Wire" ignored (help); Text "Find Articles at BNET" ignored (help)
  11. ^ Orpheus, Rodney (1988). "Convoy Tactics". Autoduel Quarterly. Vol. 6, no. 4. Retrieved 2009-06-04.
  12. ^ Savicki, Steve (2006). "Hall of Fame Interview - Rodney Orpheus (Hidden Tradition)". Neverwinter Nights 2 Vault. Retrieved 2009-06-04.
  13. ^ "Current News - UK Grand Lodge, Ordo Templi Orientis". 2009-03-20. Retrieved 2009-05-29.
  14. ^ Margerrison, Nick. "Straight From The Nicholarse". Retrieved 2009-06-03.