Iasos, the pioneer of new age music, died on Saturday (January 6). Iasos’ producer and friend Carlos Niño confirmed the news in a message shared by Douglas Mcgowan of Numero Group—the label behind the 2013 compilation Celestial Soul Portrait. Iasos was 77 years old.
Born in Greece and raised in Upstate New York, Iasos graduated from Cornell University and relocated to Berkeley, California shortly after. There, he engaged in the region’s psychedelic music scene. Iasos has said that while attending Cornell University in the late 1960s, he began hearing what he called “paradise music” in his head.
He defined paradise music, which he also called inter-dimensional music, as an “Earth reproduction of music that exists here and now in other dimensions.” He firmly believed the sounds he heard in his head were literal transmissions from a being on a different plane named Vista.
“Around ’67 or ’68, I just started hearing it in my head,” Iasos said in a 1979 documentary. “I didn’t know where it was coming from, it was like a radio station inside. So I’d be running around listening to it and loving it. That happened for a few years. And then around 1973, I had a profound experience where I sensed a particular being from a higher dimension and I knew in that instant that he was one that all this time that had been purposely, mind to mind, transmitting into my mind. And I also remembered him from before I was born. I realize it’s hard for you to believe, but at least I’m telling you what I believe and you’re free to handle that reality any way you like.”
Iasos began creating some of the earliest new age works by utilizing electronic effects on acoustic instruments, like slide guitars with feedback loops, compressors, and an Echoplex. He was initially resistant to early synthesizers. “I couldn’t stand the way they sounded,” he said in 2011. “It was very cold, sterile, inorganic, didn’t turn me on at all.” That changed when he became fascinated with the RMI Keyboard Computer.
His first album, Inter-Dimensional Music, was released in 1975; that same year, he played electric flute on another pioneering new age album, Steven Halpern’s Spectrum Suite. Across decades, he released heaps of music with titles like Crystal Love, Jeweled Space, and Realms of Light. His most recent piece was “The Garden of Salathooslia,” which was released in September.
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