This is a song I'm working on for a new album. Both of which are untitled.
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This is a song I'm working on for a new album. Both of which are untitled.
Synthesiser is a type of animal. To me.
Am I synthing correctly
KLAUS ENCOUNTERS | DEPARTURE AND RETURN
KLAUS ENCOUNTERS | DEPARTURE AND RETURN
A Dozen Klaus Schulze Albums Worthy Of Consideration When Klaus Schulze died on 26 April 2022 the world lost one of its foundation rock-electronic composers and a cornerstone of the early German indie music scene that became known as ‘Krautrock’. As someone who discovered his drifting, droning, pulsating synthesiser music back in the 1970s, I found myself in that odd state where loss jostles with…
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Vangelis at Nemo Studios in London’s Marble Arch, which at its peak was equipped with a Minimoog, SCI Prophet 10, Roland SH3a, Roland Jupiter 4, Roland Promars MRS2 Compuphonic, Roland VP330 Vocoder Plus, Roland System 100, Yamaha CS40M, Yamaha CS80, Fender Rhodes, Elka Rhapsody 610, Roland SH2000, Emulator, Yamaha GS2, Roland Juno 106, Roland CR5000 Compurhythm, Drumulator and a Linn Drum Computer.
#646 Herbie Hancock - Head Hunters
#646 Herbie Hancock – Head Hunters
A classic crossover jazz album, fusing funk, soul and electric synths with improvisational jazz. Head Hunters was the first jazz album to sell over a million copies. It’s not too hyperbolic to suggest that it changed the face of jazz. That, on its release in 1973, it lit the path for a new direction in jazz. Hancock had already been experimenting with his previous few albums (Crossings in…
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Suzanne Ciani
Ciani navigates the clunky music hardware with ease and little-to-no constraint. So much so that it’s entertaining in itself to visibly watch the musician manipulate the synthesised noises, and anticipating whatever wacky noise is about to blurt out of the machine. In her slot on the David Letterman Show in 1980 she probably isn’t the best answerer, giggling at times when the host queries, though who can blame her when she’s preoccupied with the equipment beheld to her that can generate a more compelling response, rather than a simple human response.
Link to her interview; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fZscRHkLMt0
TIL Australian Magpies can learn to recognise the humans they attack, and will attack the same person year after year, and... they can live for up to 20 years. Imagine being divebombed by the same bird every spring for twenty years of your life like
*shrug* so, we meet again *duck*
This only makes me love these rabid little flying synthesisers the more ❤