Manhattan Research, Inc.

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Manhattan Research, Inc. album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 69   Total Length: 121:47

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Andy Battaglia

eMusic Contributor

Andy Battaglia writes about music and culture of various other kinds from a home base in New York. His work has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, the Wire, t...more »

04.22.11
Zany and brainy commercial jingles from an electronic pioneer.
1999 | Label: Spunky Monkey Music / IODA

The work of Raymond Scott lends invaluable context to an electronic-music survey, but more importantly, it's an absolute blast to listen to! Scott was a strange composer who worked in a number of different guises; in this one, he was a commercial jingle artist and inventor of zany, brainy sonic backgrounds. Tracks like "IBM MT/ST: The Paperwork Explosion" feature hokey (and brilliant) ad copy over electronic tones that Scott recorded on machines of his own making. It's hard to overstate how modern most of them sound — just listen to "The Bass-Line Generator" and then remember it was made by an old guy in a lab coat in the '50s.

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hmm seems expenisive

seppo

good stuff, very interesting for all who are into sounddesign and history of it, but 2 cd s set costs about 17.- on amazon

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this is it. electronic good fun, vintage sounds,

velvetoverground

i love the electronic sounds. raymond scott is purely creative with these commercials.

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Vim 08

elrod

Everytime...Instantly. Now I know where sound tribe acquired one of their samples..STS9!!!

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Amazing collection of music.....

yonkerzguy

but don't download it!!! Buy the CD!!! It comes with an amazing booklet that's packed with photos, schematics, lab notes, etc....

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sample-tastic

RichyRich

check the Dilla / Madlib samples scattered throughout....

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Quark, Strangeness and Charm

plumocelot

Don't be put off by the number or shortness of tracks on this incredible compilation. This stuff was so far ahead of it's time. Think of the retro-futurism of Pram or Broadcast and the work of the BBC Radiophonic workshop and anything released on WARP. This is electronic music at it's most exploratory and experimental before samplers made us all lazy.

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They Say All Music Guide

Subtitled “New Plastic Sounds and Electronic Abstractions,” Manhattan Research, Inc. is an excellent compilation of electronic pioneer Raymond Scott’s works from the ’50s and ’60s. Nothing that has been recorded since within the field of electronic music has obscured the originality and genius of these works. Even the amusing tracks of corporate advertisements for the likes of cough drops, fragrances, and Twinkies demand repeated listening for their fascinating use of electronics. Tracks like “Bandito the Bongo Artist,” “Cindy Electronium,” and “The Pygmy Taxi Corporation” are just as intriguing as their titles. And the packaging — from the compilation of tracks to the exhaustive liner notes, photographs, and interviews (including a fascinating one with Scott associate Robert Moog) — is a clinic in reissue presentation. Not only detailing some of the instruments he developed for use in his compositions (the Clavivox, Circle Machine, etc.), it also documents other inventions and aids, like the Videola, which enabled him to score films conveniently as he watched them. Absolutely essential for any electronic music fan, and completely out of this world, regardless of century. Every library should own a copy of this as well — Scott’s name should be just as well-known as Beethoven. – Andy Kellman

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