MATRIXSYNTH: Electronic Music 101


Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Electronic Music 101


via daddio:

"Your old classified post reminded me of a 'document' I saved from my college days. Circa 1972, this was handed out in my Electronic Music 101 class at U.M.B.C. (University of Maryland Baltimore County) taught by Felix Powell. Textbook for the class was Allen Strange's Electronic Music (which I still have), the one with the purple graphic on the cover. Our studio consisted of a Moog series III with the sequencer complement, a pair of suitcase Synthi's, a Teac four track w/SOS and a pair of Revox half track A77's (yes, we did 'fripper' them ;-).

Thought you and your readers might get a kick out of it.
pg1.jpg
pg2.jpg

btw,
These tunes were made in that studio:
01_Alma.mp3 (my first ever piece - no pun intended - lol)
02_DOM.mp3 ('vocals' added in '99) [not safe for work]

peace bro,
gm
www.tapewarm.com"

10 comments:

  1. link should be:
    http://www.tapewarm.com/OS/01_Alma.mp3

    ...apparently missing the '3' in .mp3

    ReplyDelete
  2. fixed. sorry about that.

    ReplyDelete
  3. its interesting to put those prices in an inflation calculator to see how much cheaper modular stuff is today....

    ReplyDelete
  4. I'm suspecting this document is from 1973 (or possibly early 1974) seeing as neither the Moog Satellite, Arp Pro Soloist nor the EML 500 were available in 1972.

    Micke

    ReplyDelete
  5. Looks like "Summer 72" is handwritten on the first page

    ReplyDelete
  6. The Moog Sonic-six wasn't available in 1972 either (it wasn't commercially released until late '73 or '74) so I strongly doubt the document dates from that year.

    Micke

    ReplyDelete
  7. I can't believe the prices! How could anyone afford this stuff back then?

    ReplyDelete
  8. I was in California by September of 1972. The price list was printed prior to that (spring semester of that year). Perhaps the models released after that were included as 'soon to be available' but I cannot say for sure. I can only testify to when the list came into my possession.

    Prices quoted are for "Institutional Use" as in Universities etc. I guess a looney bin would also qualify if credentialed.
    ;-)
    I would assume that private ownership would have cost even more.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Assuming 1972, here is the conversion into 2006 dollars. conce

    Arp Soloist MKII $995 -> $4785
    Arp Odyssey $1295 -> $6225
    Arp 2600 $2790 -> $13415
    Buchla System 201 $2850 -> $13705
    EML-101 $1295 -> $6225
    Synthi AKS $1195 -> $5745
    Moog Satellite $595 -> $2860
    Moog Mini Moog $1495 -> $7190

    ReplyDelete
  10. again, how could anyone afford this gear back then?

    ReplyDelete

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