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Experimental film collaboration between Jim Henson and Raymond Scott, 1967
05.02.2014
01:10 pm
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Jim Henson made “Wheels That Go” for a film contest at Montreal’s Expo ‘67 featuring his three-year-old son Brian and a wild electronic score by the great Raymond Scott (who is credited here as “Ramond” due to a bummer of a typo).

The short film explores motion, basically. In cars, across bridges, in NYC, on trains… Brian looks at wheels, rides on them and plays with them. I don’t know what else to say about it. It’s only a minute long. Just hit play.
 

Posted by Richard Metzger
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05.02.2014
01:10 pm
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Raymond Scott celebration on Network Awesome
04.14.2011
02:53 pm
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Our pals at Network Awesome bring together the varied and disparate artifacts of your favorite geniuses for your trouble-free enrichment. Here’s a swell multi-pronged tribute to visionary composer and inventor Raymond Scott including an interview with Jeff Winner of the Raymond Scott Archives
 

Jeff Winner is one of the chairmen of the Raymond Scott Archives, founder of raymondscott.com and co-producer of Manhattan Research, Inc., a 2-CD & book set of Scott’s early electronic work. That makes him totally the dude to talk to about Raymond Scott himself. And on top of being a total badass on Raymond Scott-ology, he was a nice enough guy to answer a few of our questions. The conversation goes everywhere - from Looney Tunes to Benny Goodman to Mark Mothersbaugh.

 
video playlist:
 
The Raymond Scott Quintette - War Dance For Wooden Indians
The Philharmonicas - Powerhouse
The Raymond Scott Quintette  - Ali Baba Goes To Town (1937)
The Raymond Scott Quintette - Night and Day
Raymond Scott’s Electronium: The Restoration
Designs in Music - Dorothy Collins, Raymond Scott on the Bell Telephone Hour
Raymond Scott: On To Something (trailer)
 

 
The Sound of Surreal: Interview with Jeff Winner on Raymond Scott

Posted by Brad Laner
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04.14.2011
02:53 pm
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Jim Henson blows Middle America’s mind on Carson in 1974

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Did Johnny Carson know what he was getting into when his producers asked Jim Henson to perform without Muppets on his show in February 1974?

By the time of the clip below, Henson and his Muppets Inc. crew were five years into what was becoming a hugely successful partnership with the Children’s Television Workshop on the show that would raise Generation X, Sesame Street.

What better time to do something like, say, adapt electronic music pioneer Raymond Scott’s highly trippy piece, “The Organized Mind” as a short live multimedia stage performance? (By the way, the film playing in the background is apparently Henson’s film adaptation of the same piece of music.)
 

Previously on Dangerous Minds:
Cookie Monster helps train IBM sales staff (1967)
Jim Henson’s “Time Piece”

 
Bonus clip after the jump: “The Paperwork Explosion” another 1967 Henson/Scott collaborative film for IBM…
 

READ ON
Posted by Ron Nachmann
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09.14.2010
07:02 pm
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