Posts Tagged ‘1972’

The Unusual Classical Synthesizer – Mike Hankinson 1972

Friday, July 24th, 2009

Here’s something I came cross the other day, an album from 1972 by Mike Hankinson, an English guy who lived in South Africa though album was produced in the USA.

It’s called “The Unusual Classical Synthesizer” and was made entirely on a Electronic Music Studios “Synthi” VCS-3 as opposed the Moog Modular which was the weapon of choice  for many of the “Switched on” also rans that came after Wendy Carlos.

the unusual classical synthesizer

The track listing is as follows

Side one:
1 Toccata and Fugue in D minor (Bach) [7:05]
2 Variations – Mein junges Leben hat ein End (Sweelinck) [3:29]
3 Sonata in D major (Scarlatti) [2:46]
4 Sonata Rondo (Clementi) [3:20]

Side two:
1 Concerto in A minor (Bach) [2:59]
2 Eine kleine Nachtmusik (Mozart) [3:37]
3 Italian Concerto (Bach) [3:37]
4 Moonlight Sonata (Beethoven) [5:08]

From VintageSynth.com about the VCS-3

“The VCS3 (nicknamed the Putney) is an analog monosynth housed in a distinctive angled wooden case, a truly classic synth. EMS (Electronic Music Studios) was created in England back in 1969. The VCS3 was one of their first synths and it is still a great, unique, funky little unit! Pictured above is the Mark I model. Pictured is another unit with the small wood-cased DK2 voltage-control keyboard required to play the VCS3.

It has three oscillators, and a unique matrix-based patch system. Instead of patch wires, the VCS3 uses a patchbay grid in which the synth components are laid out, and signal routing is accomplished by placing small pins into the appropriate slots. The VCS3 was, in actuality, a modular type synthesizer reduced down to an extremely portable size.”

vcs-3

Just goes to show that few things today are really that new, on the sleeve notes it says “It is recommended that you play this disc on a very good system and if you own a Quadraphonic synthesizer, listen to it through that – the sound will amaze you. Be careful not to damage your speakers playing the Bach Toccata !”

Mmm, sounds like 5.1 surround sound and sub-bass, mark my words, flares and platforms will be back in fashion at some point.

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What Isao Tomita did before he was famous

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

If you wondered how Tomita hit the ground running so well in 1974 with his first major album “Snowflakes are dancing” then this might help explain why.

Two years earlier in 1972 he made a cover album of pop music around that time under the name of  “Electric Samurai” called “Switched on rock”.

folder

Track listing with some listenable ones

01 – Yesterday
02 – Let It Be
03 – Imagine
04 – Hey Jude
05 – Jail House Rock
06 – Love Me Tender
07 – Pork Salad Annie
08 – You Dont Have To Say You Love Me
09 – Sound Of Silence
10 – Mrs Robinson
11 – El Condor Pasa
12 – Bridge Over Troubled Water

We know that he had heard Wendy Carlos’s  “Switched on Bach” and was so impressed that he got his own Moog modular in 1971 and this must have been his reply to that but doing his own versions of current music of the day with the styles we would hear in “Snowflakes are dancing” and “Pictures at an Exhibition”.

Listen to the beginning of “Bridge over troubled water” and tell me that you cant hear the latter “Great Gate of Kiev” from Pictures.

Some of the tracks work better than others but that early Tomita musical style is all there and you can see that when he used it on the later classical music it worked much better, probably because the ones on this album were so well known it would have been difficult for many to take his new sound seriously.

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