The Holmes Archive of Electronic Music
Music:Music History
Episode 107
Crosscurrents in Early Electronic Music of Norway
Playlist
Opening background music: Arne Nordheim, “Caliban's Warning” (excerpt) from The Tempest (Suite From The Ballet) (1980 Philips). An abrupt moment of electronic sound blended into the instrumentation. The electronic realization was done in the Studio Eksperymentalne, Warsaw, Poland. The Tempest was commissioned by the Schwetzinger Festival and first performed by Ballet Rambert at the Rokokotheater, Schwetzingen on 3. May 1979. 7:35
Opening and closing sequences voiced by Anne Benkovitz.
Additional opening, closing, and other incidental music by Thom Holmes.
See my companion blog that I write for the Bob Moog Foundation.
For additional notes, please see my blog, Noise and Notations.
Vintage Dutch Electronic Music
A Conversation with Pamela Z
New Arrivals to the Archives
Sounds for Museums
Monophonic Imagination: A Conversation with Sound Artist Aki Onda
Bonus Tracks from the Archives
Before “New Age” Music
Youseff Yancy--Pioneer of Electronic Jazz, Part 2
Listening to Malcolm Cecil and T.O.N.T.O.
Sonic Suitcase Edition—Springtime Apparition
When Synth-Pop Ruled Britannia
Youseff Yancy--Pioneer of Electronic Jazz
African American Pioneers of Electronic Music, Part 1
Electronic Literature
Music of the Body
Sitars and Synthesizers
Symphonic Rock with Electronic Keyboards
Keith Emerson: An Appreciation of His Moog Musicianship
Not Tangerine Dream--Revisited
The Hammond Novachord—An Early Synthesizer
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Irish Songs with Ken Murray
A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs
Hit Parade | Music History and Music Trivia
Behind The Song
GOOD OL’ GRATEFUL DEADCAST