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When I wrote about my recent visit to the Moogseum in Asheville NC in this thread in the General Discussion forum, I commented:
I bought those albums on tape cassettes, which eventually became unusable due to sticking tape reels or flaking iron oxide or whatever, probably by the 1990s. They weren't among my last remaining cassettes which I digitized in the mid to late 2000s.
So, after I returned from Asheville, I started looking for them on CD, and was surprised to learn that they're out of print, even though they were best-sellers in their day.
The original releases were on Columbia Records, one of the old-time major labels, which was bought by Sony in 1988. Carlos's contract with them apparently ended sometime in the 1990s. She remastered the recordings, and released them on CD around 2000 on the small East Side Digital label in Minneapolis.
According to her web site, she lost her distribution by ESD. According to another site, she has not made any of her music available online via download or streaming. So the only way to find the music now is via sellers of used or remaindered (leftover) recordings.
Her website has apparently not been significantly updated since 2009, except to warn visitors about an unauthorized biography of her which appeared in 2020, written by the author of the second link in the preceding paragraph.
On Amazon, I found a third-party seller with the East Side Digital CDs of my two old albums, plus two other albums which I never bought in their original versions:
Between the remastering and the format change, I'm sure they sound a lot better than my old cassettes. They certainly bring back memories.
jtbell said:When I was in high school in the late 1960s, two of the first albums I bought were Walter/Wendy Carlos's Switched-On Bach and The Well-Tempered Synthesizer, which helped make Moog famous.
I bought those albums on tape cassettes, which eventually became unusable due to sticking tape reels or flaking iron oxide or whatever, probably by the 1990s. They weren't among my last remaining cassettes which I digitized in the mid to late 2000s.
So, after I returned from Asheville, I started looking for them on CD, and was surprised to learn that they're out of print, even though they were best-sellers in their day.
The original releases were on Columbia Records, one of the old-time major labels, which was bought by Sony in 1988. Carlos's contract with them apparently ended sometime in the 1990s. She remastered the recordings, and released them on CD around 2000 on the small East Side Digital label in Minneapolis.
According to her web site, she lost her distribution by ESD. According to another site, she has not made any of her music available online via download or streaming. So the only way to find the music now is via sellers of used or remaindered (leftover) recordings.
Her website has apparently not been significantly updated since 2009, except to warn visitors about an unauthorized biography of her which appeared in 2020, written by the author of the second link in the preceding paragraph.
On Amazon, I found a third-party seller with the East Side Digital CDs of my two old albums, plus two other albums which I never bought in their original versions:
- Switched-On Bach (1968)
- The Well-Tempered Synthesizer (1969)
- Switched-On Bach II (1973)
- Switched-On Brandenburgs (1980), with all six of Bach's Brandenburg Concertos
Between the remastering and the format change, I'm sure they sound a lot better than my old cassettes. They certainly bring back memories.
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