Bruce Haack - The Electric Lucifer on limited colored vinyl
Artist: Bruce Haack | Label: Telephone Explosion | Format: LP | Genre: Misc | LP condition: Mint | Jacket condition: Sealed
Bruce Haack
The Electric Lucifer
Telephone Explosion Records 041C - re-issue LP on Super limited HEAVEN & HELL colored vinyl - ALREADY OUT-OF-PRINT!!
Throughout the 1960s, Canadian composer Bruce Haack was as ubiquitous on children’s and variety shows as were exotic animals from the San Diego Zoo. But he wasn’t there to perform so much as demonstrate.
In his formative compositions for theatre and ballet, he had experimented with tape loops and musique concrète techniques; by the early ’60s, he wasn’t just playing around with electronic sounds, but also making the very gizmos that generated them. By day, Haack would eke out a living as a composer for commercials and a series of instructive, interactive children’s records made with collaborator Esther Nelson. But by night, Haack was making music that was decidedly adults-only.
Originally released in 1970, The Electric Lucifer was Haack’s first work pitched to a contemporary rock audience, released by Columbia Records in the dying days of a post-hippie moment when bizarro outsider-psych could still find a home on a major label. If it was not the first rock record to feature electronics, it was certainly among the first to give them a starring role—both musically and conceptually.
In his formative compositions for theatre and ballet, he had experimented with tape loops and musique concrète techniques; by the early ’60s, he wasn’t just playing around with electronic sounds, but also making the very gizmos that generated them. By day, Haack would eke out a living as a composer for commercials and a series of instructive, interactive children’s records made with collaborator Esther Nelson. But by night, Haack was making music that was decidedly adults-only.
Originally released in 1970, The Electric Lucifer was Haack’s first work pitched to a contemporary rock audience, released by Columbia Records in the dying days of a post-hippie moment when bizarro outsider-psych could still find a home on a major label. If it was not the first rock record to feature electronics, it was certainly among the first to give them a starring role—both musically and conceptually.
Track Listing
Electric To Me Turn
The Word
Cherubic Hymn
Program Me
War
National Anthem to the Moon
Chant of the Unborn
Incantation
Angel Child
Word Game
Song of the Death Machine
Super Nova
Requiem
NEW SEALED re-issue LP on Super limited HEAVEN & HELL colored vinyl - ALREADY OUT-OF-PRINT!!