The Electronic Spirit Of Erik Satie cover

The Electronic Spirit Of Erik Satie

Released

The Moog synthesizer — the first commercial synth and the mother of all analog synthesizers — made electronic music available to the masses. Robert Moog created the instrument with the intent to make futuristic gear more affordable to all musicians, and an explosion of experimentation followed in the wake of its release. Mort Garson famously made an album intended to help your plants grow, compositions from the baroque period took on new life, and even members of the Beatles were getting in on the trend. Erik Satie would not be spared from the craze when the The Camarata Contemporary Chamber Orchestra, who had previously recorded a pair of  relatively straight-laced collections of his work, decided to incorporate Moog synth into their third installment. According to the liner notes, the producer claims to have been possessed by the spirit of Satie himself, mirroring Satie’s peculiar claim that he was a vessel for a medieval cleric. The Moog player, who was unfamiliar with the instrument before having the responsibility foisted upon him, allegedly has no recollection of having even done the album. Whatever possessed them to make this thing, it’s one of the weirdest Moog albums out there — and that’s saying a lot.

Shy Clara Thompson

Suggestions
Music for a Cosmic Garden cover

Music for a Cosmic Garden

Andrea Esperti, Takashi Kokubo
For McCoy cover

For McCoy

Eiko Ishibashi
S-F-X cover

S-F-X

Haruomi Hosono, Friends of Earth
Strömen cover

Strömen

Miki Yui
Return Of The Ranters cover

Return Of The Ranters

Normil Hawaiians
Opus cover

Opus

Ryuichi Sakamoto
Satie Slowly cover

Satie Slowly

Erik Satie, Philip Corner
Jasmine Talk cover

Jasmine Talk

Koyohiko Semba