Tyler Engle (Bassforge)
Frequency to Form: How Sound Built The Ancient World
Tyler Engle
Multidisciplinary sound designer and music producer exploring the intersection of vibration, resonance, and consciousness.
TOPIC: Frequency to Form: how Sound Built the Ancient World
Tyler Engle is a multidisciplinary creator, researcher, and electronic music artist investigating the hidden architecture of reality—where ancient civilizations, sacred geometry, sound, and consciousness intersect. He is the founder of BassForge, a creative and educational ecosystem that spans books, immersive courses, live “temple-style” experiences, and large-scale music performances. His work explores the idea that many ancient monuments and mythologies were not symbolic in the modern sense, but functional systems designed to encode knowledge about perception, energy, and the nature of the universe itself.
Tyler is the author of Cryptex Esoterica, a deep exploration into how geometry, pattern, and myth function as a timeless operating system that outlives language, culture, and belief. Drawing from archaeology, physics, neuroscience, and comparative mythology, he challenges conventional historical narratives while grounding his ideas in observable structure, proportion, and resonance. His approach avoids blind mysticism, instead focusing on repeatable patterns that appear across civilizations—from Egyptian and Vedic temples to Greek architecture and megalithic sites worldwide.
Alongside his research and writing, Tyler is an established electronic music artist with a global audience, using sound design and performance as a medium for altered states, integration, and transformation. By merging education, art, and experience, his work aims to help people move from passive consumption of information to active participation in understanding reality—reframing ancient knowledge not as relics of the past, but as tools for navigating the future.
Why Sound Is Not Secondary—But Foundational
Tyler Engle’s work enters this forgotten lineage. By examining resonance chambers, harmonic ratios, and cymatic geometry, his research suggests that ancient builders understood sound as a form-generating force—capable of organizing matter, perception, and mind.
Participants leave with:
- A new way of listening—to space, structure, and self
- Conceptual tools for understanding resonance and harmonic order
- Greater sensitivity to how environments affect consciousness
- A felt sense of sound as an organizing principle, not decoration
For many, this becomes a gateway into deeper exploration—of acoustics, meditation, architecture, and inner states.
More From Tyler Engle—Sound, Frequency and Ancient Knowledge
Tyler Engle’s investigations continue through published works and in-depth discussions that explore the role of sound, resonance, and harmonic proportion in the ancient world.
His research bridges modern sound design with ancestral knowledge systems—revealing vibration as a foundational principle of form and consciousness.