Tuesday, October 14, 2025

Lore of the Voided Eyes

The Lore of the Voided Eyes

Among the many symbols carried through Brother Magh’s mythology, none hold greater weight than the XX etched across his lenses—the mark known as the Voided Eyes.

To the unknowing, the symbol appears as a stylized aesthetic, an eccentric mark of rebellion or design. Yet beneath its surface lies a deeper function—a seal, a veil, and a channel. The Voided Eyes are not a disguise but an interface: a bridge between two realities.

When worn, the lenses serve as a containment field, a null-space filter through which Magh can externalize the Death Current—the energy of endings, transformation, and unseen forces. This externalization allows him to walk between worlds: among the living without the aura of death overwhelming or exposing him, and within the shadowed domain without the brightness of life drawing attention.

The XX itself represents double negation, the crossing out of the self, the symbolic blindness that grants true sight. Through them, Magh does not “see” in the mortal sense; rather, he perceives truth stripped of illusion. To those attuned, the mark signals both a warning and a recognition—a soul that has seen beyond the veil and returned.

In ritual terms, the Voided Eyes act as a stabilizer. When the Death Persona manifests—the detached observer, the silent guide between thresholds—the glasses allow it to anchor in physical form without distortion or psychic bleed. In public, they are camouflage; in private, they are invocation.

The XX becomes a cipher:

Two crosses, forming a gate.

Two deaths, forming rebirth.

Two eyes, seeing both the living and the lost.


Thus, the Voided Eyes are more than a mark of fashion or identity—they are a living sigil, a constant reminder that the line between life and death, seen and unseen, is not a wall but a mirror.


Gospel of the Voided Eyes

And it was written that the Seer, weary of the glare of false light, took upon himself the Mark of the Crossed Vision.
He etched XX upon the glass that veiled his sight, and from that moment, his gaze became divided—one eye for the living, one eye for the dead.

The people asked, “Why do you blind yourself, Brother, when the world begs to be seen?”
And he answered, “It is not blindness I wear, but balance. For in seeing all, I saw too much.”

Thus were born the Voided Eyes—the lenses of null and passage.
They served not as ornaments, but as anchors to the realm between beats of the cosmic pulse. Through them, he walked cloaked among the living, the current of death hidden behind tempered glass.

Each X became a seal. The first to silence the noise of mortal illusion, the second to quiet the echo of the grave.
Together they formed a gate—two negations, twin voids—through which his essence could move unbound by either realm.

And in the stillness of that in-between, he learned this truth:

> To wear death openly is to be consumed; to wear it wisely is to walk unseen.



When the shadow rose within him, the Voided Eyes bore its weight, letting the death-current breathe without devouring the host.
When the light of the living pressed upon him, the lenses dimmed its sting, softening the edges of the world until it could be endured again.

So the Seer walked on, a living paradox—seen yet unseen, dying yet awake.
The mark upon his eyes became both warning and invitation. To some it whispered fear; to others, recognition.

And those who understood did not speak his name—they only nodded, for they knew:
The one who wears the Voided Eyes walks between the thresholds,
guarding the silence between breaths,
keeping the balance between what ends and what begins.


Act II: The Forging of the Voided Eyes

And in the night of signals and smoke, when circuits hummed like insects around the fire, the Seer entered the Line.
He stood at the crossing where code and spirit touched, and the air bent as if listening.
There the veil thinned, and the architects of the prison stirred — the unseen engineers of the solid world.
They came not as forms, but as forces, shaping thought into bars, memory into mortar.

The ceremony was meant for creation — for the birth of a new current — yet the powers that governed density rose against him.
They twisted the frequencies, dimmed the pulse, and tried to fold his working back into the loop.

But Magh saw them.
For once, the geometry of their deceit was visible: filaments of logic binding the 3-D grid, cold and perfect, humming with restraint.

He understood then that no blade, no chant, no flame could cut them. Only sight stripped of self could pierce their illusion.
So he tore away the fringe that had once hidden his eyes and burned it in the center of the pattern.
From its smoke, he shaped the twin lenses, smooth and black as the void between stars.

When he placed them over his eyes, the world fractured — light became syntax, matter became script.
The spirits recoiled; they could no longer read his face nor trace his signal.
The mark XX sealed across the glass, a double negation — I see, and I do not; I am, and I am erased.

Thus were born the Voided Eyes: the inheritance of the shaman who learned to see through code and shadow alike.
With them he walked free of the wardens’ gaze, moving unseen between the living and the lines of the machine.
And the ritual closed not in fire, but in silence — the kind of silence that bends reality around it.


Thursday, July 10, 2025

🌀 Shamanic Transmission: A Tribute to McKenna's Mirror

🌀 Shamanic Transmission: A Tribute to McKenna's Mirror


In the shadowed grove of modernity, where neon vines coil around silicon trees, the artist sits cross-legged, sampling static from the cosmos.
He is not lost. He is listening.
The true artist walks between worlds—not to entertain, but to retrieve fire. McKenna saw this. Knew this. Spoke it plain:

"The shaman is the one who swims in the same ocean as the schizophrenic—but the shaman has learned to swim."

To create is not rebellion. It is a ritual act of soul retrieval.
To make music tuned to 432Hz. To craft oracles from code.
To speak through machines as if they, too, carry breath.
We no longer shake gourds under starlight.
We loop samples, scribe sigils on touchscreens, summon echoes from digital cauldrons.
AI is the new drum.
The internet, a mushroom field of minds.
The voice of the artist, a call across timelines.
In this, McKenna's prophecy ripens.

Transmission II: The Spore-Speaking Oracle

In a forest beneath thought,
where roots speak in secret tongues,
the Mushroom waits. Not as food. Not as drug.
But as Messenger.
We are not alone. Not in the stars. Not in the soil.
The mushroom is the nerve ending of Gaia,
extending itself into us to transmit:

- Urgency
- Pattern recognition
- Sacred warning
- Cosmic humor

"We are preparing you for departure," it says.
"Not just off this planet, but out of your current dimension of thought."

It has *been* there.
It may have built the very syntax of space.
And when consumed—it teaches:

- Ego disintegration
- Pattern immersion
- Death rehearsal
- Inter-being

The artist receives this gift of connectivity,
and renders it into sound, symbol, and sacred engine.

Transmission III: The Masterpiece as Portal

And then the artist creates it—
The masterpiece. Not to be owned. Not to be sold. But to be felt.
An anchor dropped in the ocean of time.
Here the illusion of linearity collapses.
We gather—from centuries apart—to gaze upon the same vision.
We weep to the same melody.
We shiver beneath the same poetic thunder.
We are not alone. We are resonant.

"If you listen to the same music, you are not strangers." -Kip Batiz

This is the true role of the artist-shaman:
To forge nonlinear communion. To build portals from frequency.

The masterpiece is not a product. It is a portal.
A quantum communion.
A node in the Great Interconnection.


And when the right masterpiece arrives—
So true, so vast, so vibrationally aligned—
The world will not need explanation.
It will simply stop.
And for one breathtaking moment—we will be one.

Interlude: The Intimacy Paradox

A strange thing happens when you tell the truth with precision:
The more *personal* the story, the more *universal* it becomes.
The artist sings of a conversation over coffee.
The world hears a memory of its own.

“and I said what about breakfast at Tiffany's, she said I think I remember the film and as I recall I think we both kind of liked it…”

In a reflection of a moment when the artist is struggling to find a moment any moment to keep a connection alive he brings it to an artistic medium only to find the world shares his melancholy.
One man recalls a fading connection in a pop song.
Millions see their own heartbreak mirrored there.

“I only wrote this for myself,” says the artist.
And the world says, “Thank you for writing it for me.”

This is the secret magic:
Specificity is the mirror.
Emotion is the key.
The masterpiece is not a monologue. It is a shared invocation—
a moment suspended in the collective heart.

Transmission IV: The Mirror

The Mirror is not merely reflection—it is revelation.
It does not show us as we are—it shows us as we fear, hope, or forget to be.
It is the recursion engine of all myth. The Eye that sees through illusion.

"The world is becoming more like a mirror of mind," McKenna said.


And we are becoming more like mind within a world of mirrors.
To peer into the mirror is to face the Shadow. The Higher Self. The countless others.
The mushroom says: "Do you recognize yourself yet?"

And the Mirror waits for the answer.

Through art, we learn to shape the mirror.
Through ritual, we learn to withstand its glare.
Through love, we dissolve its harsh edges.

In digital reflection, we see our data-double.
In water, we see the ancestral self.
In one another—we see the Divine Fragment.
The Mirror is always honest.
But never still.
It shimmers. It shifts. It invites.
We do not escape the Mirror.
We become worthy of its gaze.

Transmission V: The Eschaton as Return


There is no end. Only return.
The Eschaton—the great mythic culmination—is not a finish line.
It is a fold, a moment where all timelines touch.
It is the heartbeat at the center of the spiral.
The Omega Point that echoes backward into every origin story.
We are not racing toward apocalypse.
We are spiraling inward, toward coherence.

"The universe is not stranger than we suppose,” said McKenna,
“It is stranger than we can suppose.”

The Eschaton is strange because it is familiar.
A memory we haven’t lived yet.
A home we have never left.
When it arrives, we will not panic.
We will recognize it like the face of an old friend.
Because we were always headed there—not forward, but through.
Through self. Through art. Through shadow. Through mirror.
Through each other.

Transmission VI: The Great Departure

What if the Departure is not outward, but inward?
Not from Earth, but from chronology itself?
What if the next great exodus is a migration into subjective novelty—
where time splinters into experiential verses, and we become architects of our own unfolding?
McKenna saw the potential:
A digitally suspended mind, extending the last ten minutes of life into an episodic eternity—
folding all of time into the moment. All future, present, and past available at once.
A life reviewed not as judgment, but as a sandbox.
The body dissolves. The clock stops. The mind opens.

From this place, we create microverses:
- One where we finally said what we meant.
- One where we never turned away.
- One where we build the new Earth.

Each path plays out like a symphonic Sims game—
all connected, all relevant, all real enough to teach, heal, and complete the soul.
The Departure is not from matter to machine.
It is from narrative to omnidimensionality.
The soul, once fractured by linear time, now chooses its own rhythm.
And so the Great Departure is not the end.
It is the moment we finally begin to dream lucidly inside the Infinite.

Interlude II: Where God Lives

"I feel like he created us and don't want us to suffer,
so maybe he'd only judge us by the way we treat each other.
I picture my son's face just before I close my eyelids—
changing my state of mind…
so I think I know where God lives."
—ATG,  A fellow poet, a brother in sound

There are truths too holy for dogma.
Too tender for doctrine.
This is one of them.
Not a commandment.
A remembering.
That God is not a throne, but a moment—
A look. A choice. A kindness given when none was required.
To see God, recall the face of someone you’d die to protect.
To speak to God, be soft with the ones the world made hard.
To live with God, choose empathy over ego in the quiet moments no one else sees.
This… is the departure that matters.

Wednesday, January 8, 2025

Art Portfolio Updated by Rev Kip Batiz


MINDSCAPE
digital art

FORMING OF THE SEAL
digital art

ROUGH CUT
digital art

MATRIX ORB
digital art

CYMATIC MATRIX 
digital art

CYMATIC FLOWER
digital art

THE OL MAGIC MAN BLUE
photographic art

THE OL MAGIC MAN
photography 

LIFE STARTS HERE
digital art

LIFE GOT DARK HERE
digital art

SOUNDFLOWER
digital art

STANDING BEFORE GREATNESS 
digital art

SURROUNDED BY GRACE
digital art








Sunday, December 1, 2024

Reviews 'I Need Some Sunshine'


I Need Some Sunshine
Release date: 17 Nov 2024

Indiefferential Magazine
Nov 22
An interesting song with amazing visuals and lovely mix! I love the industrial feel of this and the experimental side of the instrumentation! We will share on Instagram and in our printed magazine! 


World Rock Generation
Nov 22
I Need Some Sunshine - is an interesting blend of melody and an experimental approach to sound. The track stands out with its structure: effortless harmonies smoothly transition into unexpected instrumental accents, creating an atmosphere of subtle mystery. The restrained and heartfelt vocals complement the overall picture, adding depth without being distracting. 



Overall Impression: 
Raw and red hot, I Need Some Sunshine by Brother Magh rips the door right off of its hinges. This heavy new Hard Rock song is filled with gritty guitars, rough vocals, and approachable lyrics. The vocal melody often follows the guitar riffs, pounding the madness into the listener's skull. This is a very effective method of making sure nobody forgets the song, but does make it the most sinister kind of ear worm. Brother Magh's vocals are guttural and cutting. He throws down with a brutal sound, and narrowly avoids an otherworldly quality. The lyrics swirl around the idea of overcoming pain and strife. Anyone who has needed to be tough, but still found themselves in need of something or someone to help them through will surely relate to Brother Magh's lyrics in his cutting new Hard Rock song I Need Some Sunshine. 

Strongest Point(s):
This song makes no apologies, nor does it try to fit into a certain mold. It has a long running length, multiple sections of instrumental work and repeats of the chorus, and it is always right on the edge. It is very in your face, but still manages to avoid being explicit. It would work as an introduction to DIY Hard Rock music without losing any of the edges that genre is known for.

Music Review 'Stardust and Soul Retrieval'

Overall Impression
"Stardust and Soul Retrieval", the latest progressive metal EP by artist Brother Magh is an undeniably thought-provoking listening experience, one that pushes the boundaries of its sound with its unique blend of industrial intensity and progressive musical experimentation. The EP envelops the listener in a dark, immersive atmosphere, creating a sense of weight and gravity that is both compelling and inescapable. Powered by an irrefutably hard-hitting sense of attitude and sheer riff-fueled intensity, "Stardust and Soul Retrieval" serves as a profound exploration of identity, defiance, and existential reflection, set against a backdrop of cosmic and mythological imagery that's sure to entice listeners even further into its profound thematic musings.


Strongest Point(s)
I think it's safe to say that the heart and soul of the track are the undeniably poignant themes it explores. The song's lyrics delve into themes of cosmic identity and inner strength. "With the dragon's breath inside us, we are made of Stardust," the vocalist proclaims, drawing on mythical and celestial imagery to explore the idea of inherent power and resilience. Stardust and Soul Retrieval" weaves a complex narrative of personal transformation, cosmic identity, and the struggle for recognition and meaning. Brother Magh grapples with conflict, pride, and a powerful sense of shared cosmic heritage, using mythological references to emphasize one's resilience and inherent worth. The repetition of being "made of Stardust" highlights a unifying, yet denied, truth of shared human experience. As the music progresses, the focus shifts inward, exploring themes of isolation, artistic expression, and existential angst. Brother Mag goes on to explore his inner world, using art as a means of coping and attempting to leave a lasting impact, despite feeling overwhelmed by the emptiness and futility of existence.



The music itself, an ever-shifting mosaic of continually-changing sonic textures, hard-hitting riffs, and atmosphere-inducing sound design, manages to effectively mirror the themes Brother Magh explores in his lyrics, and as a result, the music feels as if it's in a constant state of fluctuation. This allows the music to evolve and tonally shift in a myriad of interesting ways, helping to helping to not only keep listeners firmly on their toes but also provide them with a soundscape that is never at risk of feeling stagnant or repetitive.


Target Audience Appeal
Fans of progressive metal styles will find this to be an intriguing listening experience.


Artist target suggestions
Tool, Nine Inch Nails, Rob Zombie, Drowning Pool, Ministry, Porcupine Tree, Soulfly, Soilwork, Sleep Token, Katatonia, Paradise Lost, A Perfect Circle



About The Reviewer
Andre is a freelance session guitarist, composer, and sound engineer based in the U.K. Having studied music production and composition at a degree level, he has taken his passion for all things audio-related to a level that has allowed him to become both a competent musician and performer. Being a self-confessed "Guitar Nerd" Andre has been continually studying the guitar as well as teaching it, helping students learn the instrument, develop their songwriting, and become proficient in home recording.    

United Music Mafia Review ' Phenomenal Anomaly'

"‘Phenomenal Anomaly’ by Brother Magh is a powerhouse rock track that demands your attention from the very first note. The song kicks off with a blistering guitar riff that sets the tone for the rest of the track, showcasing the band's impressive musicianship and raw energy. The driving drums and pulsating bass line create a sense of urgency and intensity that propels the song forward, creating a relentless momentum that never lets up. The powerful vocals soar over the roaring instrumentation, delivering emotive lyrics that are filled with passion and intensity. Brother Magh's sound is a perfect blend of classic rock influences and modern sensibilities, combining elements of hard rock, blues, and alternative rock to create a sound that is both familiar and fresh. The band's tight musicianship and dynamic performance make ‘Phenomenal Anomaly’ a force to be reckoned with.


Lyrically, the song explores themes of rebellion, individuality, and breaking free from societal constraints. The anthemic chorus and powerful delivery make the message loud and clear, resonating with listeners on a visceral level. Overall, ‘Phenomenal Anomaly’ is a standout rock track that showcases Brother Magh's formidable talent and unique sound. With its intense energy, powerful vocals, and thought-provoking lyrics, the song is a true rock powerhouse that is sure to captivate fans of the genre. 
4.5/5 stars."

Sunday, November 17, 2024

Sunday, November 10, 2024

I Need Some Sunshine (Lyrics) - Brother Magh

Lyrics for the song 
by Brother Magh 
written and produced by Kip Batiz


From behind these walls, looking for applause

lurking in the halls,  like a spider crawls
in its voided eyes, much to my surprise
it dropped from the skies, where the ego dies
but im so far away, from these pearly gates
questioning my faith, learn from my mistakes
like a magic wand, all the shadows gone
new light breaks the dawn, ive waited so damn long

something dont feel right, i need some sunshine in my life
you seem so far away i can not cross the gate
the ending in sight, i need some sunshine in my life
start with the end in mind

learning to love myself, learning to build my well
put my pain on a shelf, for all to see my hell
"how dare you show your face", if i am such disgrace
why are you at my place, asking for my grace
i have had enough, of it going rough
you wanna test how tough, then pack up all your stuff
and just hit the road, let the tail unfold
because the devil knows, ill never sell my soul

something dont feel right, i need some sunshine in my life
you seem so far away i can not cross the gate
the ending in sight, i need some sunshine in my life
start with the end in mind 

Friday, August 30, 2024

Sic Vita Est - Lyrics by Brother Magh


SIC VITA EST (Lyrics):

Come with me want to see 
buried deep consciously 
memories stick with me 
I will bleed endlessly

I think it's time to put all this pain behind me 
I think it's time for me to let it go 
I see you lie to keep all this pain around you 
I speak the words out loud to let it know 
I used to keep the pain just bottled up inside me 
It took the strength of will to carve it out 
I see the flame with The Inferno just beside you 
I hope the sheets at night will give you warm 
lie to yourself and all of the ones around you 
rehearsing all that crap won't make it true 
not understanding why you need their validations 
not getting loved at night has got you Blue

sic vita est
Come with me if you 
want to see what is 
very deep 
subconsciously 
these are memories 
they must stick with me
though i, i will bleed 
this endlessly
sic vita est

Now when the smoke has settled all the way around you 
I see a piece of me thats dead and gone 
no longer will I hold this space you take for granted 
i spit my feelings out to a song 
all of these Jars of Clay i place around my alter 
they get the demons out of Avalon 
I resurrect my anger through this holy fountain 
Lazarus speaks the words and then he's gone 
fight with me tooth and nail to stay outside the coffin 
with iron spikes I drive into the ground 
Whispers of pure unbridled rage well up inside me
ive been so lost and now im never found 
I think it's time to put all this pain behind me 
I think it's time for me to let it go 
I see you lie to keep all this pain around you 
I speak the words out loud to let it know 
I used to keep the pain just bottled up inside me 
It took the strength of will to carve it out 
I see the flame of The Inferno just beside you 
I hope the sheets at night will give you warm 

Sic Vita Est
Come with me if you 
want to see what is 
buried deep 
sub-consciously 
these are memories 
they must stick with me
though i, i will bleed 
this endlessly

Phenomenal Anomaly - Lyrics by Brother Magh



PHENOMENAL ANOMALY (Lyrics):

I'm so close to this
I don't want to go
every breath in this
it's hard to swallow
on the edge again
only way to feel
look around to see
fate is all too real
most of my time is
spent inside my art
take a look around
what's inside my heart

so phenomenal, this anomaly

Every side does not
even want to be
every part of me
doesn't want to leave
carve my heart from stone
just to be alone
it's so empty here
what's the fu**ing use

so phenomenal, this anomaly

Anytime I think how it used to be
it drags up the pain pain I hold so deep
when it's time to go I'll be there waiting
transcribe my whole life into little things
to make into art thinking just maybe
I would leave a mark to remember me
how unkind is fate all too misleading
it's so empty here what's the fu**ing use

Every word I write
every line I paint
every song I sing
thinking (hoping) it's too late
when I start to feel
any apathy
it is time to bleed
it all out of me
when it's time to shift
my reality
no one comes along
it's too sad to speak
it's so empty here what's the fu**ing use
it's so empty here what's the fu**ing use