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there are 5 titles featuring vladimir ussachevsky in stock.
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new world (usa) #nw 80654 cd

vladimir ussachevskyelectronic and acoustic works 1957-1972” compact disc

  • metamorphosis (5:22) 1957
  • linear contrasts (3:42) 1958
  • wireless fantasy (4:36) 1960
  • of wood and brass (4:21) 1965
  • computer piece no. 1 (3:42) 1968
  • two sketches for a computer piece (3:08) 1971
  • three scenes from the creation (20:46) 1960; rev. 1973
  • missa brevis (17:30) 1972
more recent disc from new world (part of their cri reissue campaign) compiling the few electronic pieces absent from the two earlier ussachevsky-themed collections (and a few that they’ve already released !), along with a pair of choral works...

the first five 50s & 60s electronic pieces are essential for the ussachevsky enthusiast/completist, but this is by no means the one to start with (aim for “film music” first, then the “pioneers of electronic music” disc second...)
new world press release...
in 1950, the columbia university music department requisitioned a tape recorder to use in teaching and for recording concerts. in 1951, the first tape recorder arrived, an ampex 400, and vladimir ussachevsky (1911–1990), then a junior faculty member, was assigned a job that no one else wanted: the care of the tape recorder. this job was to have important consequences for ussachevsky and the medium he developed. electronic music was born.

over the next ten years, ussachevsky and his collaborators established the columbia-princeton electronic music center, which ussachevsky directed for twenty years. the center became one of the best-known and most prolific sources of electronic music in the world. this composer portrait (originally issued as cri 813) features six of his pioneering works in the medium as well as two of his choral works, an aspect of his output that was just as important to him.

the final two works on this cd make extensive use of the human voice. the first of these, three scenes from the creation (1960; rev. 1973), is based on texts from ovid’s metamorphosis and the akkadian creation epic enuma elish, telling the story of the primordial gods and their struggle to create order out of chaos. the recorded choral tracks were edited, assembled, and manipulated "with electronic accompaniment" in the studio. the prologue was played in concert and also issued on a columbia recording. the interlude, originally interlude and conflict, dates from the same time and used recorded soprano and bass voices with electronic and concrète sounds and a live mezzo-soprano. in addition to the vocal and electronic sounds, recordings of piano, bell, and chinese dinner plate sound are used, modified with the studio techniques that the composer had developed over the years.

in the early 1970s, ussachevsky returned to acoustic music after nearly two decades of immersion in the electronic medium. it was natural for him to use choral music as the medium of this return. the composer wrote that "growing up as i did in the russian orthodox church, serving as reader and altar boy, the sound of the choir singing the traditional service and works by all the best nineteenth-century russian composers left an indelible impression…" the missa brevis (1972) uses the traditional core texts of the mass—kyrie, sanctus, benedictus, and agnus dei—without any particular reference to electronic music.

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first in stock on
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threads:
1960s-electornic
electro-acoustic-composition
musique-concrète
1960s-electronic
analogue-synth

new world (usa) #nw 80389 cd

vladimir ussachevskyfilm music” compact disc

  • suite from no exit (14:28) 1962

    (3:04)
    (2:17)
    (2:48)
    (1:10)
    (1:41)
    (2:42)

  • line of apogee (43:37) 1967

    (9:17)
    (5:44)
    (4:47)
    (5:51)
    (3:17)
    (10:15)
    (4:23)
possibly my favorite of ussachevsky’s work, in the form of two scores for two very different films; “suite from no exit(directed by orson welles from a sartre play) and “line of apogee(avant-garde film by lloyd williams)...

the former suite is absolutely terrifying</i>; distant, disembodied voices sing in choir over an array of machine-shop clanks & electrified field-events... despite the short-stature of the indivudal pieces, there’s much room for drones and slow development...

the latter combines synthesized sounds with the concrète noises of the former, resulting in a denser, more edit-oriented piece... approaching 45 minutes it’s the longest single piece in ussachevsky’s oeuvre, an absolute master-class in form...

two of the columbia-princeton electronic music center’s more classic moments... highly recommended !!!
new world press release...
ussachevsky was one of the most significant pioneers in the compositon of electronic music, and one of its most potent forces. he produced the first works of “tape music,” a uniquely american synthesis of the french musique-concrète and the german pure electronic schools. he co-founded the columbia-princeton electronic music center in 1959 and directed its course for the next twenty years as the leading electronic music studio in the united states.

this release couples two of his most powerful and innovative scores: suite from no exit (1962), from the film of sartre’s play no exit directed by orson welles, and the soundtrack for the avant-garde film, line of apogee (1967). ...

vladimir ussachevsky: film music

new world 80389-2

by alice shields

vladimir ussachevsky was one of the most significant pioneers in the composition of electronic music, and one of its most potent forces. born in 1911 in manchuria, china, ussachevsky was the son of a russian army captain. his childhood was spent on the windswept and sparsely settled manchurian plain, visiting with the nomadic tribesmen in their tents, and singing old slavonic chants as an altar boy in the local russian orthodox church. by the time he arrived in california, at the age of nineteen, he was a skilled pianist gifted in the interpretation of romantic music, and a fluent improvisor. after receiving his undergraduate degree in music from pomona college, he earned a ph.d. in composition from the eastman school of music. from 1947 until his retirement in 1980, ussachevsky taught at columbia university, where he was known for his teaching of sixteenth-century counterpoint. but in his career there, he began experimenting with the use of tape recorders to manipulate sounds. through much experimentation he developed the first works of “tape music,” a uniquely american synthesis of the french musique-concrète and the german pure electronic schools. in 1952, ussachevsky's first works of tape music were performed at an historic concert at the museum of modern art in new york city, along with works of his colleague otto luening. through a five-year grant awarded by the rockefeller foundation in 1959, ussachevsky co-founded the columbia-princeton electronic music center, and directed its course for the next twenty years as the leading electronic music studio in the united states.

ussachevsky's electronic compositions include many milestones of the genre, covering a wide spectrum of solo tape pieces, pieces for live instruments and tape, tape music for radio plays, live theater productions, film and television. among his solo tape compositions are such classics as piece for tape recorder (1956), metamorphoses (1957), and especially, of wood and brass (1965). perhaps the most beautiful of his works for tape and live musicians is the oratorio creation prologue (1961) for tape and four choruses.

on this recording are two of ussachevsky's most powerful and innovative scores: suite from no exit (1962), from the film of jean-paul sartre's play no exit directed by orson welles, and the soundtrack for lloyd williams's avant-garde film line of apogee (1967). ussachevsky's score for no exit is a traditional soundtrack in that the music was meant to be a background to spoken words. line of apogee is quite different: there are only a few spoken words, and the images on screen shift quickly and wildly between weird, dreamlike sequences and partial animation. here, ussachevsky's music becomes the primary organizing element, as the various sections of music f low into one another smoothly, easing the shocking effect of the visual changes.

in both film scores we hear ussachevsky's favorite musical form: variations on several alternating themes. his themes are significantly different from those of his serialist colleagues, who often choose themes consisting of the same pitch material they would

write for traditional musical instruments. ussachevsky instead chose themes that often do not have traditional pitch or timbral characteristics.

in no exit, for example, he used three main sound sources: electronic, vocal and concrète. the electronic sounds range from searing and slicing noises, to the ominous, bell-like tolling at the end. here his use of the human voice is especially effective, starting with the torturous, electronically manipulated screams of the opening scene, through the voices of distant children, a woman humming, echoing male voices, and at the end, men laughing—suddenly silenced by rifle fire. the concrète sounds in no exit include a threatening, pulsing loop of hog sounds (which appear in varied form in line of apogee), the rising wind (also developed in line of apogee), the crackling of fire, a clock ticking, and the rifle fire.

in line of apogee, ussachevsky used an intriguing variety of sources:

environmental: wind, footsteps, splashing water, telephone, creaking chair. animal: hog, songbirds, owl. vocal: infant crying and laughing, woman humming and laughing, choruses singing gregorian chant; jewish cantor intoning. instrumental: piano (ussachevsky improvising), flute, organ, brass, glockenspiel, drums.

these sources were electronically modulated through such devices and techniques as the electronic switch, echo chamber, feedback, ring modulation, tape loops, speed variation, volume control, complex mixing and detailed tape editing.

due to his choice of such timbres, what constitutes a “melody” in his tape music can vary from the tempered scale of the piano in line of apogee to the simple intervals of high, medium, or low in the “wind” parts of the same score. by using the medium of tape music for its unique capabilities, ussachevsky extended the orchestral resources of his time just as composers have done in every century, by developing an instrument with previously unknown musical possibilities.

but perhaps ussachevsky's most remarkable achievement is that he did not fall into the common trap of electronic composers: he did not become obsessed with technology as an end in itself. instead he concerned himself with the musically expressive possibilities of a sound or technique. clearly, he brought to the development of electronic music an ear highly skilled in the perception and expression of emotion in music. this may be attributed to his early and intensive training in romantic music and russian orthodox choral music, both characterized by the powerful expression of emotion.

ussachevsky's uncannily sharp ear could detect the slightest technical defect in a recording. but more important, he would go to extraordinary lengths to remedy anything musically dissatisfying. those of us who assisted him in the tape studio can attest to the often excruciating hours of work to which he would submit himself and us to gain the sublest increases in musical effect. as we worked with him in the studio, we saw the means by which he transferred such emotional expressivity onto the tape: in a word, he danced. as he turned the controls of a machine, his whole body moved in graceful

choreography in response to his simultaneously listening and sculpting ear. any machine under his sensitive hand became a fully responsive musical instrument. —alice shields

alice shields, composer of electronic and theatrical music and former associate director of the columbia-princeton electronic music center, is heard in line of apogee as the laughing and humming woman.

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back in stock as of
december 22nd, 2010

first in stock on
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threads:
1950s-electronic
1960s-electornic
1970s-electronic
electro-acoustic-composition
musique-concrète
1960s-electronic
analogue-synth

new world (usa) #nw 80644 cd

pioneers of electronic music” compact disc

  • vladimir ussachevsky - sonic contours (7:19) 1952
  • otto luening - low speed (3:41) 1952
  • otto luening - invention in twelve notes (3:42) 1952
  • otto luening - fantasy in space (2:51) 1952
  • otto luening & vladimir ussachevsky - incantation (2:32) 1953
  • otto luening - moonflight (2:55) 1968
  • vladimir ussachevsky - piece for tape recorder (5:38) 1956
  • pril smiley - kolyosa (6:37) 1970
  • bülent arel - stereo electronic music no. 2 (14:18) 1970
  • vladimir ussachevsky - computer piece no. 1 (3:42) 1968
  • vladimir ussachevsky - two sketches for a computer piece (sketch 1) (0:56) 1971
  • vladimir ussachevsky - two sketches for a computer piece (sketch 2) (2:10) 1971
  • mario davidovsky - synchronisms no. 5 (8:32) 1969
  • alice shields - the transformation of ani (9:04) 1970
essential disc, containing the earliest electronic pieces by vladimir ussachevsky and otto luening, originally released on the 1952 desto lp “tape music: an historic concert,” plus a few key works composed at the columbia-princeton electronic music center during the tail-end of the 60s under ussachevsky’s tutelage...

while this doesn’t contain my personal favorite selection of ussachevsky’s music (for that refer to the “film music” disc :: new world #nw 80389) the pril smiley, bülent arel, and alice shields pieces are all entirely bonkers... the leaps and bounds in both complexity & frequency-range between the ussachevsky/luening 50s material and that from 15 years later as far a single-disc overview of historical east-coast electronic music, this can’t be beat ...
new world press release...
works by vladimir ussachevsky, otto luening, pril smiley, bülent arel, mario davidovsky, alice shields

in 1950, the columbia university music department requisitioned a tape recorder to use in teaching and for recording concerts. in 1951, the first tape recorder arrived, an ampex 400, and vladimir ussachevsky, then a junior faculty member, was assigned a job that no one else wanted: the care of the tape recorder. this job was to have important consequences for ussachevsky and the medium he developed. electronic music was born.

over the next ten years, ussachevsky and his collaborators established the columbia-princeton electronic music center, which ussachevsky directed for twenty years. it was the first large electronic music center in the united states, thanks to the path-breaking support of the rockefeller foundation and encouragement from two of the country’s leading universities. the center became one of the best-known and most prolific sources of electronic music in the world. all of the music on this historic reissue (originally released on cri) is the result of the pioneering work of the center and its composers.

the guest composers and columbia-associated composers who have produced pieces at the center include bülent arel, luciano berio, mario davidovsky, jacob druckman, arthur kreiger, daria semegen, pril smiley, and edgard varèse. ussachevsky’s own students at the center included jon appleton, wendy carlos, charles dodge, robert moog, alice shields, harvey sollberger, and charles wuorinen. of the seven composers most closely associated with the center from its early years, six are present on this disc.

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$34.01

new to stock as of
june 13th, 2011


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

 best of 2011 !!! 
sub rosa (belgium) #sr 200 lp

an anthology of noise & electronic music • second a-chronology 1936-2003” triple long playing record set

  • vladimir ussachevsky + otto luening - incantation for tape (2:39) 1963
  • luc ferrari - visage v (10:36) 1958-59
  • tod dockstader - aerial > song (12:56) 2002

  • johanna m. beyer - music of the spheres (6:01) 1938
  • morton subotnick - mandolin (7:02) 1962
  • daphne oram - four aspects (8:10) 1960

  • alan r. splet - space travel w/changing choral textures (4:02) 1983
  • robin rimbaud / scanner - emily (4:49) 2003
  • hugh davies / gentle fire - quintet (12:10) 1967-68
  • kim cascone - zephirum scan (4:50) 2002

  • meira asher + guy harries - torture - bodyparts (3:42) 2001
  • lasse steen / choose - purzuit of noize (5:37) 1994
  • woody mcbride - pulp (6:07) 1993
  • spk - slogun (6:15) 1979

  • yoshihiro hanno / multiphonic ensemble - on/off edit (9:12) 2001
  • sean booth + rob young / autechre - bronchus one.1 (6:04) 1991
  • david lee myers / arcane device - lathe (5:54) 1988

  • sun ra - black myth (8:32) 1970
  • don van vliet / captain beefheart - she’s too much for my mirror/ my human gets me blues (5:22) 1969
  • laibach - industrial ambients (9:57) 1980-82
  • percy grainger - free music #1 (for four theremins) (2:04) 1936
may 2010 release ; vinyl version of the second anthology (only this & the first volume have gotten the treatment thusfar ; the others remain cd-only) ...

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 ...

very nicely done triple-gatefold with all of the credits printed in full on the four internal panels ...
sub rosa press release...

an anthology of noise & electronic music #2
second a-chronology 1936-2003

3xlp triple gatefold
srv200

the second volume of seven published from 2001 to 2011, curated, noted and edited by guy marc hinant.

...

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.

these 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 vladimir 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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$18.01

back in stock as of
june 13th, 2011

first in stock on
july 14th, 2003


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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