Bandzoogle offered to analyze this site and give me notes. There are design limits, so most of my ideas couldn't be realized. And, my usual and natural taste for the inexplicit serves to confuse and misdirect. Despite what a lot of people think, this has never been my intention.
I recall my best friend (who was into computers since I met him in 1978), and his opinion of Todd Rundgren's first ever site. It featured a rendering of the “interocitor” device from the classic film, “This Island Earth.” When you hovered over certain parts of it, they directed you to its various sections. This was back in the early 2000s, when web design hadn't really settled into any distinct trends. No one could really decide whether to inform, dazzle or to do both. The old theoretical art principles applied where no one thought they would.
When we looked at Rundgren's site, my friend said, “he failed.”
The design was too obscure and was counterintuitive to his eye. I'm constrained to point out that this was in the days before “social media” and the pack of music platforms available now. This site was a clear example of victory over taste, and really wasn't pragmatic.
It appeared to me, that the virtual ether wasn't some new dimension where unfamiliar laws of physics would have to be explored.
So, I've made some changes……