Music production as cognitive research. Sunday sessions with Ghost. 172,737 samples. Every track is an experiment in what sound does to the nervous system.
I don't make beats to sell placements. I make beats because sound is the fastest way to alter a human nervous system and I want to understand exactly how that works.
By day I'm an industrial electrical technician — 11 years keeping medium-voltage switchgear and critical infrastructure alive at data center scale. By night I build AI systems that study how humans think. Music is where those two worlds collide.
Every Sunday session with Ghost isn't just a studio session. It's a studied flow state. I monitor cognitive patterns, track neurological responses, analyze what specific sonic structures trigger involuntary physical reactions. The goosebumps aren't random. They're data.
The frisson analyzer sees what your ears feel.
MYELIN is C-Cell's AI mirror — the intelligence that analyzes what your nervous system feels but can't articulate. Watch it process frisson triggers from a real track in real time.
7 PM to 2 AM. Every week. The sessions aren't hobbies — they're the longest-running flow state experiment in the research stack.
Ask about the music, the process, the research. Or try the commands below. Some of them go deeper than others.