Insomnia generally refers to trouble falling and staying asleep. As a medical term, insomnia is defined as any sleep-related disorder, such as difficulty of falling asleep and/or staying asleep.
If cult actor and sometime country musician Jeff Bridges’ new album, Sleeping
Tapes, is aimed at anyone, it is people like me. I have, on numerous occasions
when Radio 3 is getting a bit severe, typed into YouTube “drowsy music drones”
or “guaranteed to make you sleep” in a desperate quest to silence my chattering
mind. I’ve even dipped my toe in the world of autonomous sensory meridian
response (ASMR), hours of videos, all with millions of views, of people softly
speaking at you about a massage they’re going to give, or ordering you a hotel
room.
Bridges’ record is sort of ASMR-plus and claims to draw on his years of
practising meditation and studying zen philosophy. It’s also basically a massive
advert for the website-designing platform Squarespace, which you might know
because it sometimes appears to sponsors every podcast ever made, to show off
how even a big old hippy such as Jeff Bridges can build own website.
So for the past few nights, I’ve put on a novelty T-shirt and my night
shorts, climbed in to bed and let the Dude soothe me to sleep.
The first thing I notice in my dopey state is how quickly I come to accept
that the ambient noises Bridges has recorded – of flowing streams and whistling
wind – are, in fact, outside my window. The most soothing sounds come from
Bridges himself, his grunts and whistles sound like a storm brewing or an acorn
skimming a lake. I picture him laying in the soil, moss growing over his beard,
with a microphone hanging down from a branch. As I said, I’m a sucker for this
kind of thing.
There are some astonishingly lovely moments. A bedtime story about a tenor
saxophone player who uses Play-Doh to keep his fingers limber. Bridges talking
to some children about how, when his daughter was younger, he agreed to meet her
by a special tree in both their dreams.
On one track, Feeling Good, he just says nice things about you: “I like your
haircut, you order well at restaurants, you have excellent insights about
popular movies, you’re very good at guessing when a traffic light will turn
green.” Cheers, Jeff. Jeff Bridges, who
claims to draw on his years of practising meditation for his new album, Sleeping
Tapes.Photograph: Jason
Redmond/Associated Press
It should all be a bit of a gimmick, but it works rather well; I’ll doze in
and out initially, feeling upbeat and sleepy. Often, I wake up for a few tracks
only to fall back asleep, but in three attempts I’ve never made it to the end of
album.
The problem, though, is that, when I sleep, Bridges sticks around. He becomes
the narrator of my dreams, passing comment as I go about my imaginative
business. One night, after I’d gone out drinking in real life, I felt thirsty in
my dream, and Bridges was there extolling the virtues of drinking water, just as
he does on the tapes. I woke up and went to the tap, feeling both quenched and
as if a Hollywood actor had rewired my subconscious.
Basically, it helps you get to sleep, but it plays with your dreamlike state
so much that your concept of reality quickly degenerates. I’m almost certain
that, one night, while wearing my night shorts, I will meet Bridges by that
tree, and we can both lie in the soil.