Tod Dockstader - Apocalypse (1993)

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  • Опубликовано: 21 сен 2024
  • As an undergraduate at the University of Minnesota, Dockstader majored in psychology and art. Then, as a graduate student, he went on to study painting and film, paying his way by doing cartoons for local newspapers and magazines.
    In 1955, Dockstader headed for Hollywood. For his first job there as an apprentice film editor, he cut picture and sound for animated cartoons, including “Mr. Magoo” and “Gerald McBoing-Boing.” He moved on to writing and storyboarding cartoons, where his greatest creation was “The FreezeYum Story,” about a Good Humor salesman who turned his ice-cream truck into a sonic spectacular, and got himself fired for his dreams. Truth following fiction, Dockstader was then laid off when the studio folded, and he moved to New York.
    Becoming a self-taught sound engineer and sound effects specialist, in 1958 he apprenticed as a recording engineer at Gotham Recording. At this major commercial studio, Dockstader surreptitiously used off-work hours to collect interesting sounds and to experiment with musique concrète.
    Dockstader studio photo
    DOCKSTADER’S GOTHAM STUDIO C. 1964
    In the mid 1960s Owl Records released three albums of Dockstader’s music, which led to favorable reviews in such publications as Saturday Review, Audio and High Fidelity.
    Around this time of his new national recognition, Dockstader, being an outsider without academic credentials, was denied grants and access to the major electronic music centers. (The Columbia-Princeton Center turned him away.)
    In the early 1980s, interest in Dockstader was further stimulated by some highly enthusiastic reviews of the Owl recordings in alternative publications like OP, Recordings of Experimental Music, and Surface Noise.
    Released in the early 1990s, Starkland’s two Dockstader CDs brought steadily increasing recognition to this pioneering composer. These CDs elicited further acclaim, from international alternative music publications like the UK’s The Wire (which praised both the music and the “obsessive care” used to produce these CDs) to mainstream US publications like The Washington Post and Stereophile (which places Dockstader alongside Varèse, Stockhausen, and Subotnick in the area of electronic music). Reinvigorated, Dockstader returned to music at the start of the 21st century, adopting computer composition in favor of tapes. New CDs appeared from Sub Rosa and ReR Megacorp.
    In the mid 2000s, Tod’s health diminished, but he continued composing until dementia stopped him. He died peacefully on February 27, 2015, listening to his music.
    TRACK LIST:
    Tracklist:
    01. Tod Dockstader - Travelling Music
    02. Tod Dockstader - Luna Park
    03. Tod Dockstader - Two Fragments from Apocalypse - First
    Fragment
    04. Tod Dockstader - Two Fragments from Apocalypse - Second
    Fragment
    05. Tod Dockstader - Apocalypse - Part One
    06. Tod Dockstader - Apocalypse - Part Two
    07. Tod Dockstader - Apocalypse - Part Three
    08. Tod Dockstader - Apocalypse - Part Four
    09. Tod Dockstader - Drone
    10. Tod Dockstader - Four Telemetry Tapes - No. 1
    11. Tod Dockstader - Four Telemetry Tapes - No. 2
    12. Tod Dockstader - Four Telemetry Tapes - No. 3
    13. Tod Dockstader - Four Telemetry Tapes - No. 4

Комментарии • 1

  • @global_nomad.
    @global_nomad. 10 месяцев назад +1

    thanks for sharing this...i'm following a rather peculiar rabbit hole....