Synth magus Mort Garson may no longer be with us, but the bleep-bloop trailblazer left an outsized musical legacy that is spurring on musicians young and old to this day. Garson was one of the first ...
Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click. Nearly in tandem with the release date, July 20th will mark Garson's 99th birthday ...
Aside from Pink Floyd, few artists’ catalogs seem more tailored to score a laser show than the one left behind by electronic music pioneer Mort Garson. Within his varied projects you'll hear sounds ...
Sacred Bones is reissuing four albums by Canadian-born composer, arranger, and electronic music pioneer Mort Garson. Didn’t You Hear OST (1970), Lucifer’s Black Mass (1971), Ataraxia’s the Unexplained ...
The 1960s and early 1970s ushered in a new Age of Aquarius, and also jump-started mainstream America's love affair with the occult, making once taboo subjects like witchcraft and devil worship ...
As an arranger and conductor in the 1960s, Mort Garson worked on albums by such artists as Mel Torme, Joanie Sommers and Glenn Yarbrough. As a composer, Mr. Garson — who died Jan. 4 at age 83 of renal ...
Sacred Bones Records, which recently announced plans to reissue four Seventies albums by Mort Garson, has shared the electronic pioneer’s unreleased song “Dragonfly.” “We chose this song to really ...
As Sacred Bones Records gears up to reissue four Mort Garson albums this fall, the label has shared “Ode to an African Violet,” an alternative take from 1976’s Mother Earth’s Plantasia. Plantasia was ...
New York label Sacred Bones has been undertaking the important job of reintroducing Canadian composer/synthesist Mort Garson's variegated recordings into the marketplace. Garson (1924-2008) was at ...
Great news: Mother Earth's Plantasia, an ultra-rare 1976 album by the phenomenal composer and Moog synthesizer master Mort Garson, is finally getting a legit vinyl reissue by New York label Sacred ...
With a recent study signalling that the global rate of plant extinction is now twice the number of extinct birds, mammals and amphibians combined (and, staggeringly, 500 times greater than before the ...