Available
Garson, Mort
Mother Earth's Plantasia
First official reissue of this legendary 1976 album. Includes full reproduction of original booklet plus liner notes by
Andy Beta (Pitchfork). Mort Garson was a pioneer of the Moog synthesizer and created the soundtrack for the 1969 moon
landing. RIYL Brian Eno, Wendy Carlos, Suzanne Ciani, Tangerine Dream, Giorgio Moroder, video game music. If you
purchased a snake plant, asparagus fern, peace lily, or what have you from Mother Earth on Melrose Avenue in Los Angeles
(or bought a Simmons mattress from Sears) in 1976, you also took home 'Plantasia', an album recorded especially for
plants. Subtitled "warm earth music for plants... and the people that love them," it was full of bucolic, charming,
stoner-friendly, decidedly unscientific tunes enacted on the new-fangled device called the Moog. Few characters in early
electronic music can be both fearless pioneers and cheesy trend-chasers, but Garson embraced both extremes, and has been
unheralded as a result. When one writer rhetorically asked: "How was Garson's music so ubiquitous while the man remained
so under the radar?" the answer was simple. Well before Brian Eno did it, Garson was making discreet music, both the man
and his music as inconspicuous as a Chlorophytum comosum. Julliard-educated and active as a session player in the
post-war era, Garson wrote lounge hits, scored plush arrangements for Doris Day, and garlanded weeping countrypolitan
strings around Glen Campbell's 'By The Time I Get To Phoenix.'
Price
€ 16.95
Genre
Format
CD - 1 disk
Release
21-06-2019
Label
Item-nr
477716
EAN
0843563116029
Availability
Exp. 21-06-2019