Morton Subotnick (born April 14, 1933 in Los Angeles, California) is an American composer of electronic music, best known for his Silver Apples of the Moon, the first electronic work commissioned by a record company, Nonesuch. He has taught for many years in the Music School at CalArts.
Subotnick has also worked extensively with interactive electronics and multi-media, co-founding the San Francisco Tape Music Center with Ramon Sender, and often collaborating with his wife Joan La Barbara. His sons are animator Steven Subotnick, sound designer Jacob Subotnick and his daughter is social worker Tamara Winer. His notable students include Ingram Marshall, Mark Coniglio, and Lois V Vierk.
Silver Apples of the Moon was notable for more than being an
answer to a record-biz trivia question. Early electronic music was made
using wave generators and tape-manipulated sounds. Subotnick was among
the first composers to work with electronic instrument designer Don Buchla.
Buchla's modular voltage-controlled synthesizer, which he called the
Electric Music Box and which was constructed partly based on
suggestions by Subotnick and Sender, was both more flexible and easier
to use, and its sequencing ability was integral to Subotnick's music.
At a time when electronic music was highly abstract, largely
concerned with pitch and timbre, with rhythm an afterthought or of no
consequence and patterns largely avoided, Subotnick broke with the
academic avant-gardists by including sections with regular rhythms. Its
rhythmic energy perhaps has something to do with Silver Apples and 1968's The Wild Bull
(another Nonesuch-commissioned work for tape; they have since been
combined on a Wergo CD) being subsequently choreographed by dance
companies around the world.
Where previous electronic music had been Subotnick's electronic
compositions are structured more like the classical music for acoustic
instruments that audiences are familiar with, but with the added
benefit of untraditional timbres and pitch manipulations no orchestra
could produce. He has, in fact, written for acoustic instruments, and
studied with Darius Milhaud and Leon Kirchner at Mills College in
Oakland, CA.
(via Wikipedia 1/6/2010 -- read more)
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