I'm kind of a ditz when it comes to performers. They either come to my attention and captivate me, or I don't bother with many of them that were hugely popular.
I heard of Captain and Tenile but not Darryl Dragon and don't know a thing about them.
As to Jung, I did find him more interesting, but he seemed to be an occultist. I do believe in the concept of the collective unconsciousness but don't know if it is valid. This could be ridiculous, but I believe Christians if they have reached a certain level of spirituality, not that they have worked for it, are freed from being entrapped in that. For God's purposes, He most certainly could impart whatever knowledge, gift or sensing to a soul He wished.
The reason I came to believe he may have tapped into the occult is t hat he had an OBE where he describes himself as halfway to the moon at an incredible speed.
I tend to have a habit of trying to simplify philosophical concepts that are hard to understand and I might be more open if it hadn't been for the nihilists and what followed.
“One Voice” is a grear choral number.
My wife and I have seen Barry Manilow in concert numerous times. He has the most eclectic fan base of any performer I’ve seen.
Darryl Dragon is The Captain.
“Love Will Keep Us Together” is one Captain and Tenille song you might have heard. Perhaps “Muskrat Love” or “We Never Really Say Goodbye”.
I would not describe Jung as an occultist, and the collective unconscious is something in which I strongly believe. It’s also something that changes with our thoughts and activities. It’s simply the subconsciously accepted beliefs of the human race that we mostly take for granted and act on without being aware of them.
Interestingly, I dated a girl in college for a while who was a psych major and she was always telling me abotu her lab rats. (She tended to behaviorism.) I kept saying, “OK, but people are not lab rats.” We had some very interesting discussions.