Subotnick composed the album over 13 months in a small New York studio, working 10 to 12 hours a day on a modular synthesizer.
: The name comes from W.B. Yeats’s poem, The Song of Wandering Aengus . The Sonic Journey
: A groundbreaking experiment in "rhythm". It features a steady, sequenced pulse that many critics now credit as a direct ancestor to modern techno and electronic dance music . The Legend of the "Vinyl Rip" Silver Apples Of The Moon (VINYL RIP)
The story of is the story of a revolution in how music is made and consumed. Released in 1967 by Morton Subotnick, it was the first electronic music album ever commissioned by a record label ( Nonesuch Records ). Unlike previous electronic works that were often academic or live recordings, this piece was designed specifically for the LP format, essentially creating the "studio-as-instrument" model that defines modern production. The Creation: 13 Months with the Buchla
The album is split into two distinct sides, originally dictated by the physical limitations of vinyl: Subotnick composed the album over 13 months in
: The production was painstakingly manual. Subotnick would spend up to 10 hours fine-tuning a single sound, recording it to one of two tape recorders, and then overdubbing it with new layers.
: A slow, atmospheric exploration of "pitch" and timbre, full of whistles, sirens, and alien-sounding chirps. The Sonic Journey : A groundbreaking experiment in
: He helped designer Don Buchla develop this synthesizer, which notably lacked a traditional keyboard, using touch-sensitive plates instead to avoid the "tyranny" of standard scales.
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