This sort of stuff is considered part of classical cannon at many educational institutions. The way "classical" is used by many is to refer to the specific era and not the genre. Your idea sounds like it would be very cool
@@fotgjengeren but even before he made this the same guy was also a composer of what more people would call classical. But he also brought those same Elements over to his electronic stuff as well
It makes me feel like I'm on another planet listening to the various signals that blare across the macrocosm. Or maybe a world inhabited only by robotic insects- and I'm listening to their songs in the night.
Netflix brought me here..............looks like im not the only one wow, how good do i have it, to have all of today's technology at my disposal, such as fl studio and various VSTs. The pioneers of electronic music went through shit to make sure we as future electronic music producers had it good. Thank you.
I have the record album. I was 16 years old in the late 80's listening to this when it was already over 20 years old. This early experimental analog synthesizer music is some of the first to try using machines to make music/make soundscapes. This was played on a wall of knobs and switches, wires running all over the place, not on a box with piano keys.
I bought the album when it came out in 1967, I would always come home from school and listen to it, I listened for a few months until the grooves on the vinyl were pretty much destroyed, but the images were great that came out of the random music.
@@daveking-sandbox9263 thanks for replying 7 years later. lol I do feel like listening to it again suddenly though. Luckily my copy is still in good condition.
Whats interesting about this is that it is so clearly spatial. Youi could point your finger at every sound. Incidentally, I visited Subotnick's studio on 8th Street when I was a young teenager. It was cool.
Star Trek Jonathan Archer's quoted Yeats' Song Of The Wandering Aengus, and the last two phrases were "The silver apples of the Moon, and the golden apples of the sun". I had to google those phrases and that brought me here. I have no regrets.
This is an excellent LP. I must have bought it around 1970 - and still have it. There was a short interview with Morton Subotnick on BBC Radio 3 Music Matters (16 January 2016)
Mr. Subotnick visited my university in 1975 for an electronic music symposium. I was into electronic music at the time and had this album. I jumped at the chance to participate n a dance composition called "Electronic Wedding" as best man. I was in love with the dancer who played the maid of honor, so it was a lot of fun.
Silver Apples of the Moon was Subotnick's first full-length LP of electronic music, the first electronic work commissioned by a record company. Composed in 1967 specifically for release on Nonesuch Records. Track listing "Part A" - 16:33 "Part B" - 14:52 Personnel Morton Subotnick - Liner Notes, Primary Artist Bradford Ellis - Digital Restoration, Mastering, Remixing Michael Hoenig - Mastering, Remixing H.J. Kropp - Cover Design Tony Martin - Illustrations
For people interested in synth music and its history, there is a kickstarter project by the same guys that did the "I Dream of Wires" documentary. They want to do a documentary on Moog's life. Although Sobotnik used Buchla synthesizers, you know Moog was the "east coast" sound of electronic music during the same period, if you watched "I Dream of Wires".
The first 35 seconds sounds very like a kind of Japanese flute that is often played in street festivals here in Tokyo. I wonder if Morton ever heard such a flute? It also sounds very much like the marvellous "noise" made by wind leaking through the gap in a door in my local subway train, which I have been meaning to record/sample for ages. Thank you Evan for the upload, Morton for the music, and Don Buchla (RIP) for the instruments.
Is it the nohkan? I just bring this up due to the fact that its tuning vastly differs from western scales. Otherwise it could be a shinobue or a ryuteki maybe?
This is 2.45 am, started writing about Buchla and played this and heard birds outside of my house started singing as well and later gave up. :D fantastic!
That whole string of albums he made from Silver Apples Of The Moon up through, I think it's Four Butterflies or A Sky Of Cloudless Sulphur, I forget which was the last, but that whole run of albums from circa 68 up through the mid 70's is fantastic. A couple of them are under a half hour in length! But they're all great records. Silver Apples Of THe Moon and The Wild Bull were reissued on a single CD back in the late 80's by Wergo, I'm not sure if it's still in print, and most of the others were reissued on Mode Records (there WERE DVD's available of the Mode releases, with surround sound mixes, and bonus interview footage and such, but those seem to be out of print, but I think the CD's are still available).
I know a lot of people who love music, but can’t stand Subotnick. It’s an acquired taste… not for everyone. I feel blessed that ever since I was 13 years old, this music has always made sense to my hearing and my aesthetic perceptions. I think it helped that I had proclivities towards science fiction and some amount of gothic horror. Probably drove my family crazy though...
i used to listen to WGTB back in the early to mid 70s . then came shaved face afterward with franklin ajai .. ONWARD INTO THE WEIRDNESS MY FELLOW BIPEDS .
The first time I heard Electronic Music of the 60s was at the World's Fair in NY at the Swedish Pavilion. I was blown away. I never heard that precise piece again though. It was rhythmic and futuristic and beautifully weird..
I think I know what you're talking about. There was a very early Swede composer of electronic music that made very "tuneful" -in an abstract chromatic way, satisfying e-music, way ahead of his time. Can't remember the name though.
This literally makes me want to die, I'm not trying to insult this. Also, my music teacher played this back when I was in kindergarten to teach us about varieties of music, I'm just now coming across it.
+aftmostfools7741 It's not your cup of tea, that's fine. If you can at least understand why it's an important album for avant-garde and electronic, then the album has served it's purpose. Perhaps try taking psychedelics and listening in the dark (WHILE I'M NOT CONDONING DRUG USE) it seems to work for most other people when they listen to this music.
Glad this is on youtube and I hope the recent doc I Dream of Wires gets it some more exposure. If Subtotnick et al pulls it under the DMCA I can't say I'd blame them. If it was my music I'd think hard about pulling it and I probably would but that is another discussion for another forum. Really all you guys saying this is avant garde shit or a masturbatory experiment might want to stop running your mouths for a minute and really look at what this is. Subotnick is about one of the the chillest guy you'll meet and he made this really cool thing. Pretentious? Nothing about this is pretentious. Dude sat down in front of a synth and worked his ass of with a team of recording engineers and made something unique and interesting and actually got it published. In that day? Shit. In today's world you or me or any other asshole could sit down with Garage Band and bang something similar out in an afternoon. But would we make this exact thing? No we would not. And would we make it in the context of that time? No again. Hey if you don't like the music, don't like it. Actually it's not really my thing either but don't sit around on your ass saying it's shit. This is a fantastic recording for the era and frankly we owe some of what we hear on the radio even today directly to this. So go fuck yourself.
+Fiver Hoo fiver I just saw "I Dream of Wires" last night and quite enjoyed it. It's a fairly comprehensive doc, and I learned about synths I had never heard of before. I had to assure my wife that I would NOT be going modular (we don't have the room, anyway!).
+Fiver Hoo fiver I wonder if Wendy/Walter Carlos pulled her music with DMCA, because I can't find Switched-on Bach, another groundbreaking synthesizer album on "I Dream of Wires".
+Fiver Hoo fiver : So how much aware are you of Swedish electronic music, mainly from the Swedish State Radio owned EMS (Electronic Music Studio), where artists like Ralph Lundsten and others got their head start in the late 50s/early 60s...?!? I bought this LP 35 years ago, btw. I guess you know where electronic pop duo Silver Apples got their name from? ;-)
Classic early Buchla synth masterpiece that is having fun with the device and Subotnick has never been interested in regurgitating the music of the past, he presses on to new sonic realms. Thanks.
It is too bad there is not an entire school of recorded music like this, in the same way there is a huge body of work by talented 1970's blues rock guitarists. Imagine fifty albums by 20 different artist all similar to this and yet each uniquely different and special; and all from that same original space and time.
+atwaterpub there is a place called School of Rock where teenagers/young adults play classic rock songs. My friend who goes there had an idea to create a School of Avant-Garde/Noise and it is a goal of mine to create this some day. The spectrum of noise can contain hundreds of genres, not just slow and fast guitar music, but electronic and anything in between. One day I will create this and inspire all the weird teens to make the future of music become all the more strange.
+atwaterpub hey dude you might appreciate this compilation called "Ohm: The Early Gurus of Electronic Music". It's a really great curated selection of all the biggest club bangers from this genre's rich history.
This music is still very much alive today, but mostly limited to university performances and international festivals (wherein the composers/performers are often affiliated with universities...the general public doesn't seem to respond to this music very well, sadly). You should check out the Canadian record label empreintes DIGITALes. They're an amazing company that puts out music of composers who were directly inspired by and/or studied with composers like Subotnik, Pierre Schaeffer, Francis Dhomont, Stockhausen, Herbert Eimert, et. al.
One of the most astonishing electronic music pieces ever composed. And Buchla needed to invent an instrument for it. 😊 I also wonder how much Subotnick wrote down (like Stockhausen did in his endeavours), and how much was improvisation.
+Evan Cooper Not sure. TH-cam's been weird since long ago. This music is not what people usually listens to, though... and thank you for that! Listening to this is just amazing. :)
+Evan Cooper There is nothing weird about an analog synth! Especially the first recording of one?! This is history, and the future all wrapped into one.
I think i found my lost mind...Sometime music helps to know that your mind is the controller to do anything...mind can heal you without knowing by you..😂
2:06 when it drops off, this happened right with the feelings and chills in my body, I belive it’s intended by him, it has to be, it’s exactly what I felt/anticipated, it’s like it craddled my feelings or something lol
Remember all the strange noises you would get out of an Atari when you pulled the cartridge out in the middle of a game? This is somewhere between that and Tomita with a nasty hangover.
Wait, kaste... don't even tell me you saw us play... somewhere between 1992 and 1994. Los Angeles mostly. We only played 6 shows as Tomita With A Nasty Hangover. At max we had 11 people show up. Things fell apart when somebody stole Jason's reel to reel deck and we couldn't afford to fix the Yamaha.
Chartre Khan 1. Pat yourself on the back. 2. Get up from your pod. 3. Try to grow up. 4. Stand on your tippy toes and raise your hands child. 5. Reach harder. You are not the type. 6. Reach for it...almost... 7. You might get it. 8. Oops the pos fails. Dubious.
Yeah I'm sure there's some joke I fail to understand, or reference I don't know. I'm legitimately interested in the meaning of your comment, if any meaning exists.
Anyone have tabs for this song?!?
You mean guitar tabs or acid tabs?
lol
@@evanhasablog underrated comment
I don't have the tabs, but I believe it's in the key of Z, if that helps.
I got some MDMA if you want
Great memory. We skipped school, went to the library and got this album and played it all day, circa 1978.
That’s a better school than any “real” school will give you. 🧐🤓🤫😞😛🤤😵
I'm sure y'all were smoking too tho innit?
Imagine if someone made an animated film like Fantasia but with music like this instead of classical music?...
This sort of stuff is considered part of classical cannon at many educational institutions. The way "classical" is used by many is to refer to the specific era and not the genre. Your idea sounds like it would be very cool
@@fotgjengeren but even before he made this the same guy was also a composer of what more people would call classical. But he also brought those same Elements over to his electronic stuff as well
Fantastic Planet
Our music teacher introduced us to this in 5th grade(I'm 45). I've not forgotten the name and found it hear today: THANK YOU!!
wow my music teacher introduced me to nothing interesting though we did have one class on the Beatles but I am sure he was forced into doing that.
Our music teacher introduced us to the recorder... Count yourself extremely lucky.
that's quite the long wait
What other tracks did your music teacher introduce you to?
Mine introduced me to Danse Macabre
Great piece. I have also heard The Wild Bull and Touch. The 1950's and 1960's is a goldmine for abstract electronic music.
Also 70s, 80s, 90s, 00s, 10s.
Just found this wonderful album in a dusty record store in West Texas…..Anything Nonesuch is worth buying!!
i feel the same way. Nonesuch records open new sound doors
Amazing how after all these years this still sounds fresh and avant-garde.
It makes me feel like I'm on another planet listening to the various signals that blare across the macrocosm. Or maybe a world inhabited only by robotic insects- and I'm listening to their songs in the night.
Netflix brought me here..............looks like im not the only one
wow, how good do i have it, to have all of today's technology at my disposal, such as fl studio and various VSTs. The pioneers of electronic music went through shit to make sure we as future electronic music producers had it good. Thank you.
Where did this song appear on netflix?
@@miscellaneous1276 I Dream Of Wires
RIP synth designer and friend of Subotnik, Don Buchla. You did good!
The inventor of the music easel himself.
I played this at home for months when I was 15 years old, a real trip!
I have the record album. I was 16 years old in the late 80's listening to this when it was already over 20 years old. This early experimental analog synthesizer music is some of the first to try using machines to make music/make soundscapes. This was played on a wall of knobs and switches, wires running all over the place, not on a box with piano keys.
I bought the album when it came out in 1967, I would always come home from school and listen to it, I listened for a few months until the grooves on the vinyl were pretty much destroyed, but the images were great that came out of the random music.
@@daveking-sandbox9263 thanks for replying 7 years later. lol I do feel like listening to it again suddenly though. Luckily my copy is still in good condition.
I was about 19 when i bought it. 50 + years ago.... still an interesting place to visit.
Whats interesting about this is that it is so clearly spatial. Youi could point your finger at every sound. Incidentally, I visited Subotnick's studio on 8th Street when I was a young teenager. It was cool.
Star Trek Jonathan Archer's quoted Yeats' Song Of The Wandering Aengus, and the last two phrases were "The silver apples of the Moon, and the golden apples of the sun". I had to google those phrases and that brought me here.
I have no regrets.
Fabulous! I remember doing these compositions on a Buchla synthesizer in college. Morton Subotnick was a true pioneer.
"Doing"? Exactly what do you mean by that?
@@Krabadaque I assume you no speak English. he meant what he said.
This is some crazy good rock 'n roll. It sounds good really loud.
This is the most amazing thing I’ve ever heard
This never gets old. 1967...
This is an excellent LP. I must have bought it around 1970 - and still have it. There was a short interview with Morton Subotnick on BBC Radio 3 Music Matters (16 January 2016)
Mr. Subotnick visited my university in 1975 for an electronic music symposium. I was into electronic music at the time and had this album. I jumped at the chance to participate n a dance composition called "Electronic Wedding" as best man. I was in love with the dancer who played the maid of honor, so it was a lot of fun.
I found this album on a Publishers Central Bureau, I think it was, long ago. They had albums and books I would have missed otherwise. Good times.
Silver Apples of the Moon was Subotnick's first full-length LP of electronic music, the first electronic work commissioned by a record company. Composed in 1967 specifically for release on Nonesuch Records.
Track listing
"Part A" - 16:33
"Part B" - 14:52
Personnel
Morton Subotnick - Liner Notes, Primary Artist
Bradford Ellis - Digital Restoration, Mastering, Remixing
Michael Hoenig - Mastering, Remixing
H.J. Kropp - Cover Design
Tony Martin - Illustrations
yea I know,isin,t it facinating
yup, thanks.
just stumbled across this, and it is now a new favorite of mine!
The very first synthesizer album i bought and listened to way back!
🙋♂️me too!
I love 20 minutes in where it starts to get this 4/4 dance rhythm. I heard he played it somewhere and people started dancing to that part.
Don Buchla who made this music possible with his synthesizers just passed away at the age of 79.
Truly a wonderful piece of electronic creation. This is music for my soul.
Wow.I had heard of Subotnick and know about musique concrete but I hadnt heard this before.A guy in my yoga class told me to lookit up.So glad i did..
For people interested in synth music and its history, there is a kickstarter project by the same guys that did the "I Dream of Wires" documentary. They want to do a documentary on Moog's life. Although Sobotnik used Buchla synthesizers, you know Moog was the "east coast" sound of electronic music during the same period, if you watched "I Dream of Wires".
Thank you TH-cam for recommending this masterpiece to me 🦠🫂👾
The first 35 seconds sounds very like a kind of Japanese flute that is often played in street festivals here in Tokyo. I wonder if Morton ever heard such a flute? It also sounds very much like the marvellous "noise" made by wind leaking through the gap in a door in my local subway train, which I have been meaning to record/sample for ages.
Thank you Evan for the upload, Morton for the music, and Don Buchla (RIP) for the instruments.
Is it the nohkan? I just bring this up due to the fact that its tuning vastly differs from western scales. Otherwise it could be a shinobue or a ryuteki maybe?
I thought i was the only one that thought the intro had a sorts Japanese vibe
This the first album I bought and I'm glad to hear it again. Good channel you have here.
Lynn Hansen has anyone ever told you you look like Colonel Sanders?
Do you know Trout Mask Replica by Captain Beefheart?
@@harrymartin684 so many times; iyts very old by now..
@@RayMarkAngel nop, Ishoul look itb up.
This is 2.45 am, started writing about Buchla and played this and heard birds outside of my house started singing as well and later gave up. :D fantastic!
saw the documentary "I Dream of Wires" on Netflix, and just had to search out this album.
+Darryl Minsky Thanks for the heads up about the doc. I just watched the trailer and will seek out the film.
Is that referencing a Gary Numan song?
same lol
Yep!
same :-)
ein fantastisches Meisterwerk!!
jeden Tag höre ich es gerne!!
Ah, the memories. I preferred side 2. Listened to it a million gazillion times and wore out the grooves. Classic.
Play this at my funeral
on for
That whole string of albums he made from Silver Apples Of The Moon up through, I think it's Four Butterflies or A Sky Of Cloudless Sulphur, I forget which was the last, but that whole run of albums from circa 68 up through the mid 70's is fantastic. A couple of them are under a half hour in length! But they're all great records. Silver Apples Of THe Moon and The Wild Bull were reissued on a single CD back in the late 80's by Wergo, I'm not sure if it's still in print, and most of the others were reissued on Mode Records (there WERE DVD's available of the Mode releases, with surround sound mixes, and bonus interview footage and such, but those seem to be out of print, but I think the CD's are still available).
this album is indelibly part of my psyche.bought when it first came out.Zoweee! Love it.
This is what it sounds like inside of a computer.
I know a lot of people who love music, but can’t stand Subotnick. It’s an acquired taste… not for everyone. I feel blessed that ever since I was 13 years old, this music has always made sense to my hearing and my aesthetic perceptions. I think it helped that I had proclivities towards science fiction and some amount of gothic horror. Probably drove my family crazy though...
Especially with albums like this. For people just getting into Subotnick, it's better that they start with Sidewinder.
idk when I first came across this album but it's one of my absolute favorites desert island pick type yum
i used to listen to WGTB back in the early to mid 70s . then came shaved face afterward with franklin ajai .. ONWARD INTO THE WEIRDNESS MY FELLOW BIPEDS .
Subot for life !!!! thanks a lot for this Evan ;-) the real old good electronic music !
I could see dancing to this in an EDM club, at least the last- bits. Highly rhythmic and dance-able!
COOL STUFF!!
When i listen to this now,i wrap my self in aluminum foil and curl up into a little ball so i don't explode!
The first time I heard Electronic Music of the 60s was at the World's Fair in NY at the Swedish Pavilion. I was blown away. I never heard that precise piece again though. It was rhythmic and futuristic and beautifully weird..
I think I know what you're talking about. There was a very early Swede composer of electronic music that made very "tuneful" -in an abstract chromatic way, satisfying e-music, way ahead of his time. Can't remember the name though.
Sounds like when Squidward went into that white world with colored tiles in the time machine
lol
This literally makes me want to die, I'm not trying to insult this. Also, my music teacher played this back when I was in kindergarten to teach us about varieties of music, I'm just now coming across it.
+aftmostfools7741 It's not your cup of tea, that's fine. If you can at least understand why it's an important album for avant-garde and electronic, then the album has served it's purpose. Perhaps try taking psychedelics and listening in the dark (WHILE I'M NOT CONDONING DRUG USE) it seems to work for most other people when they listen to this music.
only new sounds. only new compositions. only new methods. ahead of its time.
Subotnick has such reverence for the pure sounds. And then, putting them together...
used to own this LP have no idea where it went
Glad this is on youtube and I hope the recent doc I Dream of Wires gets it some more exposure. If Subtotnick et al pulls it under the DMCA I can't say I'd blame them. If it was my music I'd think hard about pulling it and I probably would but that is another discussion for another forum.
Really all you guys saying this is avant garde shit or a masturbatory experiment might want to stop running your mouths for a minute and really look at what this is.
Subotnick is about one of the the chillest guy you'll meet and he made this really cool thing. Pretentious? Nothing about this is pretentious.
Dude sat down in front of a synth and worked his ass of with a team of recording engineers and made something unique and interesting and actually got it published. In that day? Shit.
In today's world you or me or any other asshole could sit down with Garage Band and bang something similar out in an afternoon. But would we make this exact thing? No we would not. And would we make it in the context of that time? No again.
Hey if you don't like the music, don't like it. Actually it's not really my thing either but don't sit around on your ass saying it's shit. This is a fantastic recording for the era and frankly we owe some of what we hear on the radio even today directly to this. So go fuck yourself.
+Fiver Hoo fiver I just saw "I Dream of Wires" last night and quite enjoyed it. It's a fairly comprehensive doc, and I learned about synths I had never heard of before. I had to assure my wife that I would NOT be going modular (we don't have the room, anyway!).
+Fiver Hoo fiver I wonder if Wendy/Walter Carlos pulled her music with DMCA, because I can't find Switched-on Bach, another groundbreaking synthesizer album on "I Dream of Wires".
+Christopher Daniels yeah, it's all covers... Bugs me.
+Christopher Daniels Torrenting is your friend
+Fiver Hoo fiver : So how much aware are you of Swedish electronic music, mainly from the Swedish State Radio owned EMS (Electronic Music Studio), where artists like Ralph Lundsten and others got their head start in the late 50s/early 60s...?!? I bought this LP 35 years ago, btw.
I guess you know where electronic pop duo Silver Apples got their name from? ;-)
Classic early Buchla synth masterpiece that is having fun with the device and Subotnick has never been interested in regurgitating the music of the past, he presses on to new sonic realms. Thanks.
You're too conservative and uptight. What are you? 110 years old? Your TH-cam channel has no content, so this makes me think you're just a troll.
It is too bad there is not an entire school of recorded music like this, in the same way there is a huge body of work by talented 1970's blues rock guitarists. Imagine fifty albums by 20 different artist all similar to this and yet each uniquely different and special; and all from that same original space and time.
+atwaterpub there is a place called School of Rock where teenagers/young adults play classic rock songs. My friend who goes there had an idea to create a School of Avant-Garde/Noise and it is a goal of mine to create this some day. The spectrum of noise can contain hundreds of genres, not just slow and fast guitar music, but electronic and anything in between. One day I will create this and inspire all the weird teens to make the future of music become all the more strange.
Evan Cooper Great idea. This is what is great about youtube. Thanks.
+atwaterpub hey dude you might appreciate this compilation called "Ohm: The Early Gurus of Electronic Music". It's a really great curated selection of all the biggest club bangers from this genre's rich history.
Kareem, Thanks I have one of those collections I think. Yes. TH-cam is a great resource also.
This music is still very much alive today, but mostly limited to university performances and international festivals (wherein the composers/performers are often affiliated with universities...the general public doesn't seem to respond to this music very well, sadly). You should check out the Canadian record label empreintes DIGITALes. They're an amazing company that puts out music of composers who were directly inspired by and/or studied with composers like Subotnik, Pierre Schaeffer, Francis Dhomont, Stockhausen, Herbert Eimert, et. al.
Holy shit this is awesome. Can't believe I slept on it for so long
that BURST OF NOISE make me go WOOOO
One of the most astonishing electronic music pieces ever composed. And Buchla needed to invent an instrument for it. 😊 I also wonder how much Subotnick wrote down (like Stockhausen did in his endeavours), and how much was improvisation.
Morton Sobotnik is performing at MoogFest Friday May 20, 2016 in Durham NC.
Every reply should be a video response dancing to this.
My copy of Silver Apples (bought in 1970)? is still in pretty pristine condition,... now i remember why....
I've been waiting for someone to upload this. Thanks.
Thanks for sharing!! Great Mind
Sample this with the Koala app. Tons of material to sample/modify.
Magnifiquement déjanté
It's whale noises. They're soothing to me. It helps me sleep. I can't turn off the lights in here.
THANK YOU EVAN I WANT THIS ON COMPACT DISC!!!
Great stuff, but do read the small print:
"COMMON SIDE EFFECTS
Alopecia, Diarrhea, Paresthesia, Headache, Hypophosphatemia, Neutropenia, Increased liver enzymes, Lymphopenia Nausea, Arthralgia, Hypertension, Hyperkalemia
SEVERE SIDE EFFECTS (RARE)
Hepatotoxicity, Myelosuppression, Pancytopenia, Agranulocytosis, Sepsis, Tuberculosis, Peripheral neuropathy, Stevens-johnson syndrome, Toxic epidermal necrolysis, Interstitial lung disease, Acute renal failure"
Ha ha!
I love how It randomly goes all jazzy in the middle.
Recorded in 1967 at Bleeker st Studio in NYC. Available on CD at:
"Morton Subotnick: Silver Apples of the Moon - The Wild Bull" - Wergo WER 2035-2.
next dinner party i do, i will play this just to see what everyone reaction is
re-logic: write that down, write that down
Fantastic!!!
'I dream of wires' brought me here...
th-cam.com/video/Wers1cRsSXw/w-d-xo.html
It's amazing, simply put :)
Why is this actually really cool
The progression on this track is so fucking unbelievable
This my jam when I do B-BOY Power moves too. Also Dr. Robotnik brought me here.
this album in 8d must be something otherworldly
Now I know where the band Silver Apples got its name.
It seems the Buchla synth is perhaps the quintessential instrument for atonal music.
Very catchy!
a garland of martian fireflowers to you
A true electronic music classic. Silver Apples should be bronzed.
The intro Kinda of sounds like the flute line that the engineers play in the movie, "Prometheus".
My dog is freaking out.
I think I'm responsible for establishing the weird part of TH-cam. I'm not sorry.
+Evan Cooper Not sure. TH-cam's been weird since long ago. This music is not what people usually listens to, though... and thank you for that! Listening to this is just amazing. :)
+Pppoosch I'm glad you like it so much! Being weird is a good thing though--it makes you unique! :~)
Long life weirdness! Far out man! Jerry would enjoy
I agree. I was just making a joke about youtube comments being like "oh no I'm on the weird part of youtube :(" but this is just good music.
+Evan Cooper There is nothing weird about an analog synth! Especially the first recording of one?! This is history, and the future all wrapped into one.
I think i found my lost mind...Sometime music helps to know that your mind is the controller to do anything...mind can heal you without knowing by you..😂
Acid badtrip. Like it.
somewhere in my vinyl stacks this album lurks...muahhh-ha ha...
thanks for the upload
Buchla: Lick the Red panel to start.
Random Musician/Engineer: What?
Buchla: Trust the process bro...
2:06 when it drops off, this happened right with the feelings and chills in my body, I belive it’s intended by him, it has to be, it’s exactly what I felt/anticipated, it’s like it craddled my feelings or something lol
Art of sound...
24:00 this is lovely
The soundtrack to Metroid II on the original Game Boy... sounds a lot like this. But running on a microprocessor that fit in your pocket.
Caralho... isso é de 1968!!! incrível!!
Remember all the strange noises you would get out of an Atari when you pulled the cartridge out in the middle of a game? This is somewhere between that and Tomita with a nasty hangover.
Wait, kaste... don't even tell me you saw us play... somewhere between 1992 and 1994. Los Angeles mostly. We only played 6 shows as Tomita With A Nasty Hangover. At max we had 11 people show up. Things fell apart when somebody stole Jason's reel to reel deck and we couldn't afford to fix the Yamaha.
ocpd23 This is interesting. Spooky. Please tell me more about this mystery band that some internet guy somehow knows about?
Chartre Khan
1. Pat yourself on the back.
2. Get up from your pod.
3. Try to grow up.
4. Stand on your tippy toes and raise your hands child.
5. Reach harder. You are not the type.
6. Reach for it...almost...
7. You might get it.
8. Oops the pos fails.
Dubious.
Yeah I'm sure there's some joke I fail to understand, or reference I don't know. I'm legitimately interested in the meaning of your comment, if any meaning exists.
Chartre Khan Do you really need someone to hold your hand with this?
that background riff starting around 18:05 through 24:00 is proto-NIN
3:30 R2D2 joins the band