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Switched-On Bach
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Switched-On Bach : ウィキペディア英語版
Switched-On Bach


''Switched-On Bach'' is a musical album by Wendy Carlos (originally under the name of Walter Carlos) and Benjamin Folkman, produced by Carlos and Rachel Elkind and released in March 1968 by Columbia Masterworks Records. It played a key role in popularizing classical music performed on electronic synthesizers, instruments which had until then been relegated to experimental and "pop" music. This fostered a significant increase in interest in electronically rendered music in general, and the Moog synthesizer in particular.
''Switched-On Bach'' was one of the first classical albums to sell 500,000 copies. Entering the top 40 of the ''Billboard'' 200 pop chart on March 1, 1969, it climbed quickly to the Top 10; it stayed in the Top 40 for 17 weeks,〔Joel Whitburn. ''Top 40 Albums''. New York: Billboard Books.〕 and in the Top 200 for more than a year. In the 1969 Grammy Awards, the album took three prizes: Best Classical Album, Best Classical Performance – Instrumental Soloist or Soloists (with or without orchestra) and Best Engineered Classical Recording.
==Details==
The album consists of pieces by Johann Sebastian Bach, performed on a Moog synthesizer, a modular synthesizer system, one of which can be seen on the album cover. ''Switched-On Bach'' was recorded on a custom-built eight-track recorder (constructed by Carlos from superseded Ampex components). This was long before MIDI sequencers or polyphonic keyboards. Recording was a tedious and time-consuming process—each of the pieces had to be assembled one part at a time. Carlos, Elkind and Folkman devoted many hours to experimenting with suitable synthetic sounds for each voice and part.
Due to the monophonic nature of the Moog instrument, Carlos never had the option of recording multiple notes on the same track and in the same take. The simplest chordal constructions required multi-tracking, synchronization, and perfect timing, adding greatly to the overall time consumed by the project.〔Thom Holmes. ''Electronic and Experimental Music." New York: Routledge. 2008〕
Carlos, a highly proficient musician and studio engineer and a former student of Vladimir Ussachevsky, worked closely with synthesizer designer Robert Moog throughout the recording process, testing his components and suggesting many improvements. In 1968, not long before the album was released, Moog gave a paper at the annual Audio Engineering Society conference, where he played one of Carlos' completed recordings:
:"At the end of the talk I said to this fairly big audience, 'As an example of multi-track electronic music studio composition technique, I would like to play an excerpt of a record that's about to be released of some music by Bach.' It was the last movement of Walter's Brandenburg No. 3. I walked off the stage and went to the back of the auditorium while people were listening, and I could feel it in the air. They were jumping out of their skins. These technical people were involved in so much flim-flam, so much shoddy, opportunistic stuff, and here was something that was just impeccably done and had obvious musical content and was totally innovative. The tape got a standing ovation."
:"CBS had no idea what they had in ''Switched-On Bach''. When it came out, they lumped it in at a studio press party for Terry Riley's ''In C'' and an abysmal record called ''Rock and Other Four Letter Words''. Carlos was angered by this, so he refused to come. So CBS, frantic to have some representation, asked me to demonstrate the synthesizer. I remember there was a nice big bowl of joints on top of the mixing console, and Terry Riley was there in his white Jesus suit, up on a pedestal, playing live on a Farfisa electronic organ against a backup of tape delays. ''Rock and Other Four Letter Words'' went on to sell a few thousand records. ''In C'' sold a few tens of thousands. ''Switched-On Bach'' sold over a million, and just keeps going on and on."〔Robert Moog, quoted in ''Vintage Synthesizers'' by Mark Vail (Miller Freeman, Inc.)〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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