Speaker 2
That's just a title. That's just a title. Interrupt while you still have, you listeners left. I've got an album coming out.
Speaker 1
You've got an album coming out, really, like a music album, actual proper album, not self-released on an actual proper freaking label. A label, an already established label. That's it. You're a signed artist on an actual record label. Nothing's been signed. And
Speaker 2
yeah, but apart from that, it's a one album situation by my alias, which I'm still not sure I like the name, but it's Glytech Audio.
Speaker 1
Glytech Audio. This is your new alias, your artist name.
Speaker 2
Because I'll tell you why, because James Thompson, there's about a million of them. Jim Thompson, there's about another million of them, the most prominent of which is a very right-wing Trump-supporting country music singer. So I don't really want to be confused with them. And if you go on discogs, there's a number next to the title, next to the artist's name. And with Jim Thompson, there's about 36 of them. There's about 36 years ago. It couldn't be my name. I had to think of a name. Glytech Audio is slightly based on Alan Moore's Snake God Glycon, who is a Roman puppet god, which was actually a satire on the culture of the pantheon of gods, I believe, by some Roman satirist who invented a god, which was basically ludicrous. So instead of taking Alan Moore's basic point, which is you should find your own god, I just stole his.
Speaker 1
And just renamed it slightly.