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Antique​ ​Electronic / Synthesizer Greats 1955​​​-​​​1984 Part 1 [the Acroplane Guide to Electronic Music] (2011)

by Fluorescent Grey

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about

Originally released on Acroplane Recordings 2011

"Like G**lt**k for music nerds"
- Barret Clark, 2010

From Igloomag: 'From Acroplane, comes this wonderful mash-up by Fluorescent Grey, chronicling the golden age of synthesizer. Released on their for free portion of this label to avoid the licensing nightmare, the tracks are available 26 easily digestible chunks or as one long continuous mix. The songs run the full gamut from synth pop (Depeche Mode, Human League), soundtracks (The Thing, The Terminator), to more obscure pieces (Zoviet France, Severed Heads). Of course the album would not be complete without sounds the grandfathers of modern electronic music: Kraftwerk.

The synth sounds are almost exclusively warm and analogue showcasing a time before the DX7 and Emulator ruled the sonic landscape. ARPs, Moogs, and Oberheims are shown in all their glory. The drums throughout the album are a mix of synthesized modular zaps, Roland CR series dings and disco backbeats. Sounds were reduced down to loops and single hits and sequenced the source material gives glimpses of its origin but not always revealing its true identity. Despite using a vast number of sources the tracks on this album and accompanying mix all fit together quite nicely and show the hand of both a skillful and well educated curator.

Part of me wishes that Fluorescent Grey had listed out the elements as to what songs were used to make up each of the tracks, as this album would serve as an excellent educational resource. In listening to this album, we are reminded that many of today’s genres had their prototypes within this golden age. Highly recommended for lovers of vintage electronica and people interested in a history lesson of where the music they listen to came from.'

credits

released November 11, 2011

"In early 2010, what would eventually become Antique Electronic Synthesizer Greats was simply a concept for a live set. Fluorescent Grey, aka Robbie Martin, cut almost a thousand tiny samples and loops from works dating from 1955 to 1984, limiting his sources to strictly electronic and/or synthesized recordings. His rules allowed for non-synthesized compositions (e.g., Delia Derbyshire's tape cutting based tones) as well as synthesizer audio of any kind, including the Hammond Novachord. And far from simply a stolen sample collage, or meta-mash-up project, Robbie wanted to allow the mix he composed to preserve and highlight the eras' best sounds in a comprehensive backdrop. Some of those painstakingly found and excised snippets may be all but indiscernible to most, while some tease with their familiarity (Depeche Mode bass drum? YMO hi hat?), and some are nakedly in homage (synth lines from Vangelis, Giorgio Moroder). All are as playful as the puzzling track names, one of the most obvious of which are pieces that re-imagine the sound of John Carpenter's best synth-centric movie scores. From the uneasy sounds of horror to the sweet spot of vintage synth-pop and industrial, to the brief satisfyingly bizarre vocal cameos by Alan Vega and a Spanish industrial/noise outfit, it runs the gamut of its chosen time period exhaustively.

One might wonder, why stop at 1984? or 1983 (the original cutoff)? In all honesty, the cut off year was first altered to make one Zoviet France record eligible. But why is it so important to draw the line in the early 80's when many classic and important electronic albums came out between 1984-1990, Skinny Puppy's Bites or DJ Pierre's Acid Tracks. The answer is simple, until 1984 most music that was 'electronic' relied primarily on synthesizers. Around mid-1983 romplers/samplers become par the course. The techniques sent waves through the electronic music production circles and arguably diluted the powerful earlier sound of acts like Tangerine Dream and Kraftwerk (ie electric cafe). Maybe most notably, the Klaus Schulze album 'Dig it' that proclaims the death of analog on it's opening track. Additionally the rules were not set yet, before rave culture took hold there was a more playful less specific purpose to it all. Lending itself automatically to a more varied feel.

Given the uncannily nostalgic or modern moods evoked, it can be all too easy to forget that the entire mix is comprised solely of an endlessly rotating roster of up to 15 isolated loops, all at least a quarter of a century old, some twice that age. On some songs, you could imagine a DJ dialing into the sounds of AFX or Mr. Oizo, an amusing stunt for some of the source material sounds unmistakably dated in a way that has yet to be retrofetishized. Proto-electronica futurism captured in Chris Carter's sequences or Morton Subotnick's Autechre-like FM synth splatters, works that indisputably sound futuristic in their own right. Dated or not, the novelty factor of an overwhelmingly corny synth brass sample is sometimes too good to resist, making it nigh impossible to prevent that old fashioned sound from antiquing the whole mix.

This pastiche is offered up in both a mix and an individually tracked album for maximum utility. Use the cover art and the hidden messages contained herein as a resource for your own Antique Electronic Music search." - acroplane.org



"Perhaps within the next hundred years, science will perfect a process of thought transference from composer to listener. The composer will sit alone on the concert stage and merely 'think' his idealized conception of his music. Instead of recordings of actual music sound, recordings will carry the brainwaves of the composer directly to the mind of the listener."
- Raymond Scott, 1949

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Fluorescent Grey Oakland, California

conceptual experimental electronic music

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