Re: I'm on a Mortuary Radio
Yeah_Right said:
The so called dialogues I heard sounded like the "spirit" was chatting through a voice synthesizer
This was the hallmark of the Spiricom success. I saw a documentary about EVP a few years ago, and there was some accompanying video footage of someone working the spiricom, being ordered about by a rather grumpy-sounding ghost. Truly astonishing, if you were to take it at face value.
The spiricom recordings represented a quite unprecedented level of success in the field of EVP. All other researchers were making do with mere snippets of sound, which had to be listened to and relistened to painstakingly, followed by scouring of as many foreign dictionaries as one could find, before an entirely ungrammatical sentence was reconstructed, stitched together from different languages (which EVP researchers called 'polyglot'). A lot of the time, no exact word could be found, so instead it was suggested that the entities were inventing new words! I'm sure you don't need me to spell out the skeptical alternative explanation.
And the spiricom voice does indeed sound just like a voice synthesiser. Also, no-one else could replicate the spiricom people's success, not even when using a spiricom device. So the state of the art in EVP collapsed back down to where it had been before, and there (as far as I'm aware) it's stayed up until the present day.
There is a CD of EVP recordings,
The Ghost Orchid, reproducing some of the early results, but not, alas, any of the spiricom output. As a document of the phenomenon, it is valuable and it has a pop culture weirdness appeal (like the Conet Project 'numbers stations' recordings), and would make great post-rock/electronic music sample fodder. But as evidence of anything supernatural it is very unconvincing.