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there are 8 titles featuring tod dockstader in stock.
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$10.62

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october 27th, 2006


threads:
1970s-electronic
1980s-electronic
analogue-synth
beat-research
electro-acoustic-composition
musique-concrète

creel pone (uk) #creelp tod cd

tod dockstaderelectronic [sbh 3082]” compact disc recordable

  • the second creel pone of dockstader’s late 70s/early 80s library music !!
side 1
  • 1. floatdown - - - tod dockstader - 1 m.29s. - electronic - ethereal
  • 2. snowbell waltz - - tod dockstader - 2m.17s. - electronic - tranquil
  • 3. rotary - - - - tod dockstader - 1 m.21 s. - electronic - frenzied
  • 4. binary song - - - tod dockstader - 1 m.04s. - electronic - weird
  • 5. stardrift in two - - tod dockstader - 1 m.21 s. - electronic - soaring
  • 6. gentle retrieval - - tod dockstader - 1m.17s. - electronic - spatial
  • 7. ion armada - - - tod dockstader - 2m.57s. - electronic - heavy dramatic
  • 8. ion drive - - - - tod dockstader - 1 m.05s. - electronic - insistent heavy
  • 9. stately 'bones - - - tod dockstader - 1 m.26s. - electronic - pulsating
  • 10. bellstomp - - - - tod dockstader - 2m.07s. - electronic - rhythmic
  • 11. knockwhistle - - - tod dockstader - 1 m.48s. - electronic - tribal
  • 12. silver float - - - tod dockstader - 2m.13s. - electronic - celestial
side 2
  • 1. chuffa - - - - tod dockstader - 2m.45s. - electronic - trains
  • 2. boingo background - tod dockstader - 1 m.42s. - electronic - dripping water
  • 3. khiss dance - - - tod dockstader - 2m.19s. - electronic - lively busy
  • 4. a little quiet - - - tod dockstader - 1 m.34s. - electronic - stealthy
  • 5. tictic- - - - - tod dockstader - 2m.32s. - electronic - eastern
  • 6. windbuzz in two - - tod dockstader - 1 m.32s. - electronic - menacing
  • 7. brass slipnslide - - tod dockstader - 1 m.53s. - electronic - mechanistic
  • 8. machine brass - - - tod dockstader - 1 m.26s. - electronic - heavy machinery
  • 9. slambrass - - - tod dockstader - 1 m.24s. - electronic - industrial heavy
  • 10. soft wow - - - - tod dockstader - 1 m.50s. - electronic - quiet
  • 11. knockgliss - - - tod dockstader - 1 m.32s. - electronic - starscape
exactly 50... discs (numbers? dots? crelplers? let’s go with crelplers) crelplers after the creel pone reproduction of tod dockstader’s first boosey & hawkes lp comes this; a reproduction of the second.

what made/makes the first creel pone great is again here in spades: much tweaked-out/rhythmic modular-synth riffing, buffered into very short vignettes for “production use.” dockstader was so incredibly ahead of the curve on this (these) record(s), it’s hard to fathom... contemporary sensibilities and almost proto-idm-ish figures abundant throughout.

much like the first volume, this is a great “gateway” creel pone into the deep, dark, seedy underbelly/chasm of time-obscured electronic tomfoolery that is creel pone. enjoy the voyage...
creel pone press release...
this creel pone edition includes:
1 x crystal-clear resealable polypropylene cd sleeve with a black / silver foil stamp affixed to the exterior
1 x single-sided six-color inkjet-printed hand-cut glossy-photo-stock booklet
1 x four-color inkjet-printed compact disc recordable in a high-density round-bottom cd sleeve

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$10.12

new to stock as of
july 15th, 2005


threads:
1970s-electronic

file under:
early-electronic
electro-acoustic
sound-research
minimal-drones
creel pone (usa) #creelp dockstader cd

tod dockstaderelectronic [sbh 3073]” compact disc recordable

  • jigjag (1m.11s.)
  • floating up (1m.40s.)
  • glider (2m.10s.)
  • howl stomp (1m.40s.)
  • steam megawatt (1m.27s.)
  • snap sail (2m.20s.)
  • i.c. arabian (2m.10s.)
  • pile readout (1m.15s.)
  • pond dance (1m.53s.)
  • holiday meltdown (1m.23s.)
  • seance (1m.15s.)
  • old dark clock (1m.25s.)
  • soprano aloft (1m.06s.)
  • powerdown (1m.06s)
  • signal powerdown (1m.06s.)
  • snap prance (1m.18s)
  • night wolves (1m.48s.)
  • bottle dervish (2m.13s.)
  • frog march-by (1m.24s.)
  • sun surges (1m.20s.)
  • blackhole dropout (2m.05s.)
  • sundrift (3m.30s.)
  • soft aurora (2m.02s.)
recent claims made re: dockstader’s absence from the public eye since releasing his owl-label lps in the late 60s are somewhat off... in 1979 this and another “companion” volume were released on the boosey & hawkes library music label; consisting of a spate of sound-queues made by mr. dockstader for production/documentary use. i will say this; this sounds like no other dockstader recording you’ve heard. personally, i think it’s amazing and way ahead of its time, but i could understand if others out there are a bit befuddled by the music on the lp in question; mostly short (<2 minutes) rhythmic / melody-oriented modular-synth studies coming across like a paleozoic aphex twin (and i know people often say “xXx sounds like aphex twin” as that’s the sole reference point they have in discussing contemporary experimental electronic music... give me the benefit of the doubt (you’ve probably gathered that my vocabulary re: electronic music is slightly more... verbose)... still... this really does sound like “afx”-era aphex twin, quite a bit - staggeringly so given the 15-odd-year divide.) there are a couple of “fat brass synth-fanfares for sci-fi” kind of queues, but for every one of those there’s a drifting filtered white-noise beast or high-resonance/q oscillating beat with crazy atonal triplet-feel melodies that just hits home...

definitely one for the completists (dockstader fans are known for not resting until they’ve heard every sound carefully “organised” by the master), although there’s enough here for casual early-electronic music fans alike... if anything, this would be a great creel pone to bridge the gap between fans of contemporary melodic/“into depeche mode” electronic dance music that find all of the cold, emotionally-distant abstract concrète that i’m always going on about here a bit daunting...
creel pone press release...
this creel pone edition includes:
1 x crystal-clear resealable polypropylene cd sleeve with a green / silver foil stamp affixed to the exterior
1 x hand-cut single-sided inkjet-printed card-stock insert
1 x one-color inkjet-printed compact disc recordable in a high-density round-bottom cd sleeve

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$18.21

back in stock as of
november 7th, 2008

first in stock on
january 29th, 2003


threads:
1960s-electronic
musique-concrète
electro-acoustic-composition

rer megacorp (uk) #rer todd1 cd

tod dockstader / james reichertomniphony 1” compact disc

  • omniphony 1: 1 (10:27) 1966
  • omniphony 1: 2 (9:40) 1966
  • omniphony 1: 3 (2:30) 1966
  • omniphony 1: 4 (6:30) 1966
  • omniphony 1: 5 (15:30) 1966
  • study no 7 (8:05) 1961
  • past prelude (9:03) 1990
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "omniphony 1: 1"
the last of dockstader’s owl-era recordings to appear on cd. along with the 2 discs on starkland: completely essential ...
rer megacorp press release...
first reissue of this legendary 1966 loudspeaker composition for concrete sounds, chamber ensemble, electronically processed chamber ensemble, razorblades and tape.

...

the legendary collaboration between leading american musique concrete composer tod dockstader and an instrumental ensemble directed by james reichert where, for i think the first and to date only time, there was full integration of the written, played and manipulated sounds.

the instrumental parts were derived from ‘cells' of concrete sound and in turn were electronically transformed (in robert moog's then state of the art studio), then the whole mass of material was organised together. a true hybrid, and a one-off. long out of print since it's appearance on vinyl in 1966.

with two extra pieces by tod dockstader a new stereo version of no.7 (from the 1961 ‘8 electronic pieces' and very late and very different - piece from 1990 which has never escaped his studio until now. a classic and a milestone in the evolution of electronic, mediated sound.

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$16.74

back in stock as of
november 25th, 2008

first in stock on
august 31st, 2006


threads:
electro-acoustic-composition
musique-concrète

rer megacorp (uk) #rer tddm2 cd

tod dockstader / david lee myersbijou” compact disc

  • roll 'em
  • perp walk
  • closer
  • closer
  • encasement
  • illegible proposal
  • in the hold
  • dementia
  • scene of the crime
  • emergency response
  • air one/recovery
  • city of industry
  • bzzzzt!
  • unfortunate incidents
  • the cringing unknown
  • phoning home
  • the return of the cringing unknown
  • the doktor is in
  • abstractions unchained
  • abstractions unchained director's cut
  • contraptions (short)
  • dark funnels
  • underground ops
  • underground ops redux
  • machine mystique
  • battle finale
  • credits
  • wrap
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "battle finale"
second collaborative disc w/myers... a series of shorter vignettes (well... shorter than the extended pieces on “pond”) mixing digitally processed field recordings in with dosckstader’s shortwave timbres and myers’ feedback circuitry. quite lovely...
rer megacorp press release...
a subtle, moody, rich and wide-ranging work, in which atmosphere, emotion and dramaturgy lead the ear far beyond music into a world of hints, evocations, anticipation and association and, in passing, reveal a complex metonymic language that, at a deep level, invokes that mostly unconscious lexicon of sound we have all absorbed collectively and subliminally in the course of a century of movie-going, television viewing, documentary recording and electroacoustic experimentation.

once sounds have been abstracted from events, they are free to act and interact as signs; they are no longer indications of the real. and from their use as indicators we learn new meanings (the low drone from jaws, the shower strings from psycho, a tv theme, these are all as directly meaningful to us as a barking dog or an approaching train; after 1000 movies, the sound of a helicopter has as many fictional as factual meanings, and these accretions make experience imaginatively richer).

this is the language dockstader and myers explore, and although, in a sense, such signs are weightless (there is nothing there), nevertheless we cannot unhook them and inevitably they conjure fragmentary narratives, events, places, situations and meanings. where their last cd (pond) abstracted sound from the life (in fact, documentary recordings of frogs), this one invokes a fictional life invoked in a language of purely mediated abstraction.

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back in stock as of
november 7th, 2008

first in stock on
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threads:
electro-acoustic-composition
musique-concrète

rer megacorp (uk) #rer tddm1 cd

tod dockstader / david lee myerspond” compact disc

  • crepitata
  • slow marsh
  • horsefly
  • chorus
  • surge
  • glottalk
  • assembly
  • twango
  • swarm
  • bellpool
  • springers
  • pterygota
  • corridor
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "glottalk"
this was the first time tod dockstader had peeked out from a silent void of nearly 20 years; it’s a collaborative release with david lee myers; otherwise known as arcane device (fantastic 7” pack on rrr if you can find it..) a suite of excellent modern-age musique concrète, with pieces hovering in the 5-6 minute range; just enough for each section to develop fully & stay it’s welcome... superb.
rer megacorp press release...
life meets art. born of a long written correspondence and a mutual affection for frogs between david myers (the artist formerly known as arcane device) and tod dockstader which eventually spawned this programme of electronic/concrete pieces derived almost entirely from field (and swamp) recordings of frogs - choral and solo - processed, manipulated and organised in a million ways. this release also marks the welcome return of tod dockstader to the lists; it's his first large-scale new published work for decades.

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$13.67

back in stock as of
november 7th, 2008

first in stock on
january 31st, 2006


threads:
electro-acoustic-composition
minimalism-drones

sub rosa (belgium) #sr 228 cd

tod dockstaderaerial #2” compact disc

  • approach
  • omaggioa fellini
  • pipes
  • orgal
  • babbel
  • yaya
  • ba loon
  • clocking
  • wail
  • bottom
  • feeder
  • spindrift
  • surfer
  • low roller
  • still
  • beating
  • piccolo
  • wire
  • knock
  • wah
  • aah
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "wah"
behold! the second disc in dockstader’s awesome “aerial” trilogy... despite not reaching completion in 2005; i have placed this series at the very top of my “best of 2005” list (thusfar.) in my mind no other early electronic pioneer has kept as surprising and vital as mr. dockstader in the contemporary era. these new recordings rival anything he’s done in the past 40 years while sounding completely fresh...

interesting and funny to see an honest to goodness quote from mimaroglu music sales on the cover of a record!!! also interesting to see a reference to fellini in the track-titles (its long been rumored that dockstader, along with mimaroglu and andrew rudin, worked on sound design & the score for fellini’s epic “satyricon”)
sub rosa press release...
a few biographical facts

tod dockstader was born in 1932 in st. paul, minnesota. after studying psychology and art at the university of minnesota, dockstader went . . on to study painting and film, earning money by drawing cartoons for local newspapers and magazines. in 1955, married, he moved to hollywood and worked as an apprentice film editor: he cut picture and sound for animated cartoons including 'mr magoo'. after working with cartoonist jules feiffer and director ralph bakshi, in 1958 he was hired by the gotham studio where he spent most of his free time experimenting with musique concrete.

in 1960 he began a cycle of very powerful works: dockstader's radical construction and ,manipulation of audio fragments . eschew the harmony and rhythm which typically define music,yet their flow, balance and spatial dynamics suggest an artistry far beyond the noisy experiments of his peers. he composed 'traveling music' (1960), 'luna park' (1961), 'two fragments from apocalypse' (1961), 'apocalypse' (1961); revolutionary projects like 'drone' (1962) and 'water music' (1963) followed. by the time he had completed his masterpiece 'quatermass' in 1994 dockstader had accumulated a sound library of about 300,000 feet of tape, equalling 125 hours of source material. the final piece is 46 minutes long. in 1966, tod dockstader made 'omniphony' with james reichert. he left the gotham studio in 1967 and moved to montreal where he worked in air canada's pavilion for expo 67, making dozens of soundtracks and slide-shows. but because he did not have the proper academic qualifications he was denied grants and access to electronic music facilities, at the columbia-princeton center among others. he therefore returned to audio-visual. work full time. he worked in westport on audio-visuals: films, filmstrips, slide shows, tv films and videotapes for a variety of publishers - most notably a series on american history for american heritage. in the nineties his name started to be heard among the new generation of electronic music, and his work gradually began to be re-released.

in 1990 he returned to 'aerial', a second cycle of very intense works: 'i started collecting source-sounds from short-wave radio - not the broadcasts, but the sounds in between the stations.' and a quote from an unknown source: 'airwaves allow for a silence that is not dead, representing a presence even without a signal.' in 1994 tod dockstader made and mixed the first piece of the 'aerial' cycle. in 2005, his complete work of four hours is published in three parts on sub rosa.

the realisation of 'aerial' was helped by a grant from the connecticut commission on the arts. .

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back in stock as of
november 7th, 2008

first in stock on
april 4th, 2005


threads:
electro-acoustic-composition
minimalism-drones

sub rosa (belgium) #sr 223 cd

tod dockstaderaerial #1” compact disc

  • song
  • om
  • rumble
  • shout
  • raga
  • dada
  • tremblar
  • lala
  • myst
  • aw
  • march
  • harbor
  • swell
  • pulse
  • second song
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "shout"
contemporary work from the master!.

you have no idea how excited i was to hear about this entirely ambitious three-album series... sitting here now, listening to the first installment i am completely bowled over by the staggering quality of these pieces, all of which reside in the same hoth-frozen wasteland mapped out on everything from dockstader’s own early 60s ouput on through the contemporary work of composers such as thomas köner, gilles gobeil, and troum.

which is to say... yes, it does live up to my somewhat unreasonable expectations. i honestly can’t think of another composer whose 60s/70s work resonated at such uncharted depths that has continued to make relevant singular music with current technology (most get lost along the way: see pierre henry, stockhausen, even our beloved mimaroglu)

unequivocally awesome... grand in scope, colossal in sound. let’s start holding our breath now for the next two installments...

note - the slipcase 3cd-blank-jewelcase version is sold out. this is simply a compact disc w/artwork in a jewelcase...
sub rosa press release...
notes on aerial

i've written before of my interest in shortwave radio, in the notes to the quatermass cd. also, in the notes to the omniphony cd (which has my first 'aerial' mix, 'past prelude' in it), i mentioned 'the aerial etudes', which was my working title for what became the three cds you have. and, at the end of an interview with chris cutler (which can be found in the 'unofficial td website'), the piece i mentioned i was starting to work on at the time became 'aerial'.

when i was very~young, people got most of their entertainment from radio. they called it 'playing the radio', as if it were a musical instrument. that's what i've tried to do in this piece.

the mixing of the work began in 1990. before that, i'd been collecting the sound-materials from an old shortwave radio i had. i worked at night because that's when the best reception occurs; during the day, short-wave sounds are limited and scarce - at least the kind i was listening for: the kind that occur when there are so many stations on the air, they over-ride each other and something strange emerges from the conflict.

because shortwave am radio is of the lowest possible fidelity (little better than a telephone), i recorded on ordinary audiocassettes. it was also for economy, because i knew i'd have to do a lot of recording to capture the momentary events i was looking for. periodically, i would transfer the best (most potentially useful) of these recordings to 1/4 inch tape, turning them into 'hi-fi stereo' as i did, with a variety of techniques.

slowly, eventually, i made a library of 72 reels of tape and 35 dat cassettes, for a total of about 90 hours of sound. each track was given a descriptive name, and catalogued.

i found that many of the tracks, . though they were 'electronic' by nature, sounded not unlike the sounds i'd used before in my work: bells, voices, drums, strings, trains, water, wind... and, in the mixing, i went for that physical sound.

i began mixing in october of 1994. for this, i had two old ampex 2-track tape machines and two, newer, dat decks - giving me the possibility of eight tracks of feed. (this is the same amount i had for my 'quatermass' and 'apocalypse' lps.)

everything was sent, analogue, to a third dat: my first digital pieces (or parts of pieces). eventually, i had 580 2-track mixes, on 16 dats, and i was facing transferring the best of these back to analog tape, for final, physical editing - the old razor-and-splicing-tape technique, which was all i knew.

about this time, a few people encouraged me to look into using a computer for this work.i’d never used one, but i saw it would allow me to keep my mixes digital - no more transfer losses. so, at the end of 2001, i got a computer and an editing program for it, and spent what seemed a long time learning it. i began selecting mixes and loading . them into the computer in late march, 2002.

out of the 580, i selected 90 'best' mixes - eventually reduced to 59, the ones on the cds.

i found the computer program i was using allowed me to deepen and expand the surprisingly 'acoustic' sound of many of the mixes: even 'choirs' emerged, shouting voices, calliopes, detonations, whispers. so that the sound, as before in my work, dictated the form of each piece.

finally, in assembling the cds, i followed david myers' suggestion to allow each piece to flow into the next - making a continuous journey to the end.

tod dockstader, 14 september 2003

the realisation of aerial was helped by a grant from the connecticut commission on the arts

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$14.55

back in stock as of
july 21st, 2008

first in stock on
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threads:
1950s-electronic
1960s-electronic
1970s-electronic
1980s-electronic
electro-acoustic-composition
musique-concrète
digital-musics

sub rosa (belgium) #sr 200 cd

an anthology of noise & electronic music / second a-chronology 1936-2003” double compact disc set

  • vladimir ussachevsky + otto luening - incantation for tape (1963) 2:39
  • luc ferrari - visage v (1958-59) 10:36
  • tod dockstader - aerial > song (2002) 12:56
  • johanna m. beyer - music of the spheres (1938) 6:01
  • morton subotnick - mandolin (1962) 7:02
  • daphne oram - four aspects (1960) 8:10
  • robin rimbaud / scanner - emily (2003) 4:49
  • hugh davies - quintet (1967-68) 12:10
  • alan r. splet - space travel w/changing choral textures (1983) 4:02
  • kim cascone - zephirum scan (2002) 4:50

  • sean booth + rob young / autechre - bronchus one.1 (1991) 6:04
  • yoshihiro hanno / multiphonic ensemble - on/off edit (2001) 9:12
  • meira asher + guy harries - torture - bodyparts (2001) 3:42
  • lasse steen / choose - purzuit of noize (1994) 5:37
  • woody mcbride - pulp (1993) 6:07
  • david lee myers / arcane device - lathe (1988) 5:54
  • laibach - industrial ambients (1980-82) 9:57
  • spk - slogun (1979) 6:15
  • percy grainger - free music #1 (for four theremins) (1936) 2:04
  • don van vliet / captain beefheart - she’s too much for my mirror/ my human gets me blues (1969) 5:22
second volume of curiously-linked historic and contemporary electronics... it’s becoming apparent that this selection is intended as more of a personality-driven mix-cd (bearing the imprint of its compiler; sub rosa’s guy-marc hinant) than an authoritative overview of electronic music trends over the last 70 odd years. so we can relax and just enjoy, stop scratching our heads at the inclusion of otherwise questionable content (captain beefheart???)... still a heroic act as many of the pieces included herein have yet to be converted to digital for mass-appreciation. nice one...
sub rosa press release...
an anthology of noise & electronic music vol. 2 - second a-chronology 1936-2003
wladimir ussachevsky + otto luening - luc ferrari - tod dockstader - johanna m. beyer - morton subotnick - daphne oram - robin rimbaud - hugh davies - alan r. splet - kim cascone - autechre - yoshihiro hanno - meira asher + guy harries - woody mcbride - lasse steen - arcane devices - laibach - spk - percy grainger - sun ra - captain beefheart
digipack 2 cd + 30 pages booklet / sr200

slow explorations of the past and the present
given the present system of production there are reasons, some of them identifiable, why only a few names emerge in each period. there may also be a preference for concentrating information rather than letting it pile up in disordered fashion. over the past 40 years the same ten electronic music composers get mentioned again and again (including in music dictionaries and histories). yet behind them are many other names. who are they? second-raters? not necessarily. for we then need to define the concept of top-rate (rated by who, and on what criteria?) and second-rate or minor artist. great pleasure can be derived from the works of minor artists. the case of tod dockstader is instructive: when "for lack of academic qualifications" he was denied access to the electronic music facilities he needed, was there not great beauty in the pieces he nevertheless created and in his determination to make music without those facilities? his name was never seen on the labels of top record companies. but he influenced quite a few people - richard james quoted him, and others then referred to his work. some of his records were reissued, and what one could call the rehabilitation process continues. the same applies to many other composers. all such stories spell a passion for music, and weave myth.

historical axes
at the turn of the century there were efforts to find new sources of sound - a number of machines were exhibited, including thaddeus cahiel's telharmonium in 1887 and the dynamophone presented to the new york public in 1906; they generally played well-known romantic or post-romantic pieces. after a few flamboyant skirmishes described in the previous volume, the postwar period saw the arrival in 1951, of wladimir ussachevsky and otto luening in new york's columbia-princeton electronic music center. when audiences of the 50's and 60's first heard varèse, pousseur, stockhausen, berio, ussachevsky, yuasa, dockstader and mumma, what did they feel? perhaps a sort of break, an epistemological break, like it must have been for the first audience of monteverdi's orfeo (in mantua, italy on 24 february 1607). they left the auditorium completely stunned, because they had never heard anything like it.

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