Don had an awesome setup in his Berkeley living room. A whole ring of synths of different kinds, a Buchla Box or two, a Moog of some sort, and some new stuff he was working on.
I don't think we tripped out on that trip, but maybe Don didn't let us handle the synths enough.
On the way to Don's, we stopped in San Francisco to visit a recording studio somewhere south of Market. When we walked in the front door, no one was at the reception desk, so we wandered around and ended up in the coffee room.
In walked Art Garfunkel to grab a cup, and we got to talking. Will had his Rolleiflex twin lens reflex camera hanging from his neck and asked Art if he could take his picture. "Sure! Hey, while you're here, we're doing some recording, do you want to hang out in the control room and listen?"
Well of course the answer was yes!
After a while, Art's recording engineer noticed us and hollered into the talkback mic, "ART!!! Who are these people?!?!?" Art said, "It's OK, Roy, they are cool."
Roy Halee would have nothing of it. He marched Will and me out the back door of the studio and down the steps to the street. A bit embarrassing but worth it for the experience.
I did learn one thing. Of course I'd seen the Simon and Garfunkel album covers where Art practically towered over Paul. I always thought Art must be really tall! But in person, he was barely an inch over my own 5' 8" height. I just never knew that Paul Simon was on the shorter side at 5' 2".
The things you learn when you wander into recording studios uninvited...
> About 45 minutes later, Curtis began to feel a little strange. He described it as a weird, tingling sensation. He discovered this was the feeling of the beginnings of an LSD experience or trip.
LSD is extremely potent as far as drugs go. Doses are measured in micrograms. Tylenol doses are measured in hundreds of milligrams. Many prescription drug doses are measured in tens of milligrams. As such, LSD is orders of magnitude more active than the drugs most people have experience with.
At that level of activity, both dermal absorption via solution with cleaning fluid penetrating gloves, and inhalation of particles could be viable routes of entry.
I believe it was Abbie Hoffman who in one book advocated preparing a solution of LSD in DMSO for use as a weapon in demonstrations to pacify police. DMSO readily penetrates skin, so a solution of it containing LSD is plausible as a way to dose it. No idea whether it actually works.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronium
https://www.laweekly.com/music/raymond-scotts-electronium-ne...
He worked for Motown for several years as a creative director, but it seems no music that used the Electronium was ever released by them.
Scott himself was a very interesting man, having earlier lead jazz bands and some of his earlier compositions were frequently used in cartoons of the day, the most famous of which are probably "Powerhouse" and "The Penguin".
Great music regardless. There's a cool version of War Dance for Wooden Indians with indian dancers on YouTube.
You're not wrong. See:
https://www.raymondscott.net/features/accidental-music-for-a...
I find his music to be clever, entertaining and well ahead of its time in many respects. His music was sometimes dismissed by jazz purists of the time as being "novelty" or "dada" jazz.
There was a documentary I saw a little while back which included a discussion of Scott's surprise when he started receiving royalty checks again the 1990's when Ren & Stimpy started to use a lot of his music as well.
All original synths were analog
The Electronium was late enough not to qualify as an "original" synthesizer, unless you mean it was "all original" work by Scott, which I'm not sure is completely true either. With the first working unit developed only by 1969[3] and used at Motown throughout the 70's, I thought that it was worth differentiating from the digital synthesizers which really arrived not that much later.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Analog_synthesizer
Like cleaning the Parthenon statues.
I'll make sure not to lick them.
BTW, Suzanne Ciani, mentioned in the article is definitely worth listening to.
I was the lab tech for a semester and had a key to the lab. Occasionally, after a night of imbibing, my friends and I would go to the lab and turn on all the workstations and arrange some very large pieces. Looking back, I wish we had hit record and taken some of that work with us. Back then though everything was in the moment for me.
It would have been pretty crazy if any of those machines had been dipped! What a trip.
I certainly don’t recommend moving them unnecessarily or traveling/touring with them, though. They’re fragile.
We all use it but there are now possibly two generations of people who never used an adm-5 or vt100 so what exactly is being emulated?
It's a terminal program. It implements the function of a command line access protocol.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-mu_Emulator
It was called such, because it could be used to 'emulate any instrument' by recording it, and playing back the samples ..
If you open it up you can lift then reseat an IC (I think it's the only one in a socket) and you get random drum patterns and sometimes those a great.