Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center.
1/ Stereo Electronic Music No. 1 by Bülent Arel. 10:30.
Provided to YouTube by Sony Classical Stereo Electronic Music No. 1 · Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center · Bülent Arel Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center ℗ Originally released 1964 Sony Music Entertainment Released on: 2014-03-14 Producer: Producer not researched.
2/ Leiyla and the Poet, by Halim El-Dabh. 05:18.
Sony Classical Leiyla and the Poet · Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center · Halim El-Dabh Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center ℗ Originally released 1964 Sony Music Entertainment Released on: 2014-03-14 Producer: Producer not researched.
3/ Creation-Prologue, by Vladimir Ussachevsky. 08:13.
Sony Classical Creation-Prologue · Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center · Vladimir Ussachevsky · Ian Morton · Macalester College Little Chorus Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center ℗ Originally released 1964 Sony Music Entertainment Released on: 2014-03-14 Producer: Producer not researched.
4/ Composition for Synthesizer, by Milton Babbit. 10:36.
Sony Classical Composition for Synthesizer · Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center. Milton Babbitt Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center ℗ Originally released 1964 Sony Music Entertainment Released on: 2014-03-14 Producer: Producer not researched.
5/ Electronic Study No. 1, by Mario Davidovsky. 05:50.
Sony Classical Electronic Study No. 1 · Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center · Mario Davidovsky Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center ℗ Originally released 1964 Sony Music Entertainment
Released on: 2014-03-14 Producer: Producer not researched.
6/ Gargoyles, by Otto Luening. 09:22.
Sony Classical Gargoyles · Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center · Max Pollikoff · Otto Luening Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center ℗ Originally released 1964 Sony Music Entertainment Released on: 2014-03-14 Producer: Producer not researched.
7/ Ensembles for Synthesizer, by Milton Babbitt. 10:41.
Sony Classical Ensembles for Synthesizer · Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center · Milton Babbitt Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center ℗ Originally released 1967 Sony Music Entertainment Released on: 2014-03-14 Producer: David Behrman.
Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center was an album of electronic music released in 1964. It was the recording of a concert performed at the McMillin Theater (today called the Miller Theater) at Columbia University on May 9 and 10, 1961. The stereo version was MS 6566 and the monophonic version was ML 5966. There was a sequel released in 1998 on the New World label titled Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center 1961–1973. Bülent Arel is the only artist who appears on both albums.
The Arel composition is completely electronic, with articulated signals over a continuous background texture. Halim El-Dabh’s composition, an “electronic drama,” has a text drawn from the epic of Layla and Majnun, and consists primarily of tape manipulated instrumental and vocal sounds. Ussachevsky’s work has lyrics derived from the Enuma Elish creation myth, with chorus and electronic accompaniment. Babbitt’s piece is composed entirely on the RCA Synthesizer of the Columbia-Princeton Computer Music Center. Davidovsky created a work manipulating sine wave, square wave, and white noise generators. Luening’s composition combines solo violin with RCA Synthesizer sound followed by tape manipulation.
Various – Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center.
Label: Sony Classical – 88843 03268 2.
Series: Prophets Of The New – 888430326828.
Format:
CDr, Album, Reissue.
Country: US.
Released: 2014.
Genre: Electronic.
Style: Experimental, Electroacoustic.