Jolyon jenkins biography of martin
“Anxiety Attack”
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The people who think they tune into dead voices
Advocates of Electronic Voice Projection (EVP) claim they can use radio equipment to communicate with the dead.
But are they just hearing what they want to hear?
In 1969, a mysterious middle-aged Latvian doctor turned up in Gerrards Cross with a large collection of tape recordings.
He had, he said, been conducting experiments in communication with the dead, and had established contact with Hitler, Stalin, Mussolini and many other deceased 20th Century statesmen.
Jolyon jenkins biography of martin
The recordings - 72,000 of them - contained their voices.
His name was Konstantin Raudive, and he called his technique Electronic Voice Projection, or EVP.
It wasn't real-time interactive communication. You asked your questions, and then left the tape running, recording silence.
But listening back, through the mush and static, you could sometimes just about make out people speaking.
Gerrards Cross was the home of a publisher, Colin Smythe, whom Raudive hoped