Jim Fassett
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1904 - Dec 17 1986age 82-ish
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Jim Fassett is celebrated among experimental music enthusiasts for his 1960 masterpiece Symphony of the Birds,
which fused the principles of the symphonic idiom with the practices of
musique concrète to forge a complex, otherworldly sound assembled
entirely from ornithological field recordings. Little is known about Fassett's
early years -- according to the SpaceAgePop website, he was born in
1904, and began his formative career in radio, appearing on Boston
station WBZ during the late '20s. For a number of years he also served
as a classical music critic for The Boston Globe. Upon relocating to New
York City in 1936, Fassett
was appointed assistant musical director for CBS Radio, doubling as
host of the intermission show that aired each week during performances
by the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. Fassett
was named CBS Radio's lead musical director in 1942, a position he
retained for over two decades -- as a top-ranking executive at the
nation's largest broadcasting network, he was privy to all the new
recording technology created during the postwar era and over time began
experimenting with magnetic tape, in his spare time manipulating
everyday sounds by altering their speed and pitch via up to as many as
three tape machines. Fassett
eventually introduced his own Sunday afternoon radio program, Strange
to Your Ears, where he broadcast some of his more outré tape experiments
-- Columbia Records later compiled some of the recordings on an LP
issued under the show's title. Fassett teamed with CBS technician Mortimer Goldberg to create Symphony of the Birds,
which painstakingly assembled bird call recordings compiled by
ornithologists Jerry and Norma Stilwell -- the two men re-recorded the
bird calls on tapes at varying speeds, then superimposed multiple
playbacks on one tape reel to create the album's dense, swirling sound,
which Fassett organized into three separate movements in adherence to symphonic traditions. He premiered Symphony of the Birds
on the Strange to Your Ears radio series, followed by an LP release --
he also produced two additional albums, Scandinavia and the children's
release Hear the Animals Sing, before retiring from CBS in 1963. Fassett
later published a travel book, Italian Odyssey, and resumed his
previous work as a music critic. AllMusic
Symphony Of The Birds
01 Explanatory Comments
02 First Movement (Andante E Lirico)
03 Second Movement (Buffo)
01 Explanatory Comments
02 First Movement (Andante E Lirico)
03 Second Movement (Buffo)
04 Third Movement (Misterioso)
A Revelation In Birdsong Patterns |
05 Cardinal, Mockingbird, Catbird, Robin, Summer Tanager
06 Yellow Warbler, Blackburnian Warbler, Song Sparrow, Vesper Sparrow
07 Carolina Wren, Goldfinch, Indigo Bunting, Purple Finch
07 Carolina Wren, Goldfinch, Indigo Bunting, Purple Finch
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