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Soothing Sounds for Baby-Vol 1 (1 - 6 months) | 
| Artist: Raymond Scott Label: Basta Category: Music
List Price: £20.99 Buy New: £18.19 You Save: £2.80 (13%)
New (21) Used (4) from £6.67
Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 20025
Format: Import Media: Audio CD Running Time: 39 Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 9064 UPC: 608917906424 EAN: 0608917906424 ASIN: B000001YCG
Release Date: December 30, 1997 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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| Tracks:
| • | Lullaby | | • | Sleepy Time | | • | Music Box | | • | Nursery Rhyme | | • | Tic Toc |
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| Editorial Reviews:
From Amazon.com Alongside apple-cheeked watercolor paintings of infants, the original cover design for the Soothing Sounds series of records bore the charming inscription, "An Infant's Friend in Sound." Composer Harry Warnow was already legendary (as "Raymond Scott") for his whimsical electronic and big-band novelty musics. With this 1962-63 series, Scott turned his astonishing array of invented and modified keyboards and recording techniques toward pure electronic music with an infant-friendly spin. Intended as "aural toys" for the nursery, Soothing Sounds' deceptively simple "tic-tocs" and unthreatening seesaw melodies play on the calming properties of repetition--much like music boxes, Fisher-Price's mobiles, and the comforting "Again!" video mentality of the Teletubbies. Despite endorsement from the Gesell Institute of Child Development, the records sold poorly. But they had a curious afterlife, prefiguring such "adult" descendents as ambient music ("invented" by Brian Eno in 1975) and the mechanical pop-tronic textures of Kraftwerk and Gary Numan. --Gil Gershman
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| Customer Reviews:
Terrific for newborns & great for Eno and Aphex Twin fans! August 17, 2001 18 out of 18 found this review helpful
There's good news and there's good news. After 10 minutes of track 1, Lullaby, my one-month-old was fast asleep. As it played on, she continued to rest peacefully at a time when she would normally have been one alert little munchkin. And now for the other good news: This is a fantastic recording, and an important one for music lovers and musicologists. Having been recording in 1962/3, this sounds extraordinarily sophisticated (in a mellow, analogue "soothing" way). It sounds as if it could have been made today, and put out on Warp Records. The melodic blips and rhythyms are echoed in Radiohead's recent releases and, as the liner notes point out, this work pre-dates Brian Eno's Discreet Music by a decade. Raymond Scott himself was a nutty genius who made it his life's work to experiment with sounds and instruments. While I appreciate a lot of his stuff - notably the outlandish cartoon music he made for Warner Brothers cartoons of the 30s, as chronicled on Reckless Nights and Turkish Twilights - I wouldn't necessarily listen to it over and over again. But the music found on Soothing Sounds.. is not only innovative; more importantly, it is extremely listenable and, well, 'soothing'. Just one note of caution. Not all parents enjoy Eno or Aphex Twin. And so some parents might not actually get a kick out of this whole album. But the album is worth the first track alone - and I defy you to try it with your baby and not be impressed by the results. This is experimental stuff for both you and your little one.
Haunting Echoes of a Distant Past September 7, 2000 10 out of 10 found this review helpful
This first volume of soothing sounds for baby is a wonderful journey into a distant world, maybe our own pre-memory past."Sleepy times" is a haunting melody conjuring images of sleepy and content babies. "Music box" sounds like a group of tiny pipe players and "Nursery Rhyme" takes this one step further and envokes the idea of scores of small wooden toys coming to life for a festive dance.Like any re-release, the music is open to completely different interpretation from the modernistic sixties. It is much more likely to appeal to adults with curiosity for the cover art, the dated sounds, or just for academic interest.What possibly seemed cheap and plasticky music on its release has now mellowed into a charming collection of melodies that show up contempory childrens music for being too overstated. The historic perspective is made all the more interesting by the fact that Raymond Scott was an intensely private man in search of his dream of directly realising the composer's sounds without interference from other musicians' interpretations. So in a way, when we listen to this CD we are observing the sounds inside Mr Scott's head. Those comments about his rooms of electronic equipment being his "play rooms" were not far wrong! Well worth a listen and a trip back in time.
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