Raymond Scott's completely electronic 'ambient' albums:
Soothing Sounds For Baby
Released by Epic Records 45 years ago...

''SOOTHING SOUNDS FOR BABY is f**king brilliant. It's repetitive, with a beat pulse. I look to Raymond Scott as one of the originators of a techno aesthetic.'' -Paul D. Miller, aka DJ.Spooky

Vol.1 Vinyl LP cover Vol.2 Vinyl LP cover Vol.3 Vinyl LP cover

''Astoundingly ahead-of-their-time examples of inspired and
impeccably recorded electronic music. Predating by more than
a decade such innovators as BRIAN ENO and KRAFTWERK.''
-Billboard magazine

-
- - Despite its title, Soothing Sounds for Baby isn't just for infants. When it was recorded by composer / electronic music pioneer Raymond Scott, it was intended for babies -- but history has endowed this deceptively simple work with a broader significance. Had Scott known that this elemental music's appeal would continue as its target audience grew up, he might have entitled the series Sophisticated Sounds for Baby...

- - Released on three long-playing records in conjunction with the Gesell Institute of Child Development, Inc., Soothing Sounds... was intended to serve as an "aural toy" during the "feeding, teething, play, sleep and fretful periods" of infants in three distinct age groups. The original album notes stressed that a young child's sense of hearing is better developed than many people realize. Besides soothing infants, these recordings were intended to be "pleasantly stimulating." Babies like "new sights and new sounds," explained a booklet slipped inside the LPs. Music consists of vibrations, which babies also like -- "just vibrate baby's bed gently," the booklet noted, and "crying often stops." By approximating "the rhythmic tinkle of a music box" and "a ticking watch held close to [the] ear," Soothing Sounds for Baby provided a "quieting" atmosphere of relaxation, warmth, and contentment.

- - Ironically, these same qualities were embodied in a type of adult music that evolved in the 1970s and '80s. Brian Eno's 1975 album Discreet Music is often cited as the first deliberate attempt at "ambient music" (though Eno cited No Pussyfooting, a 1973 collaboration with guitarist Robert Fripp, as a forerunner). In his book A Year With Swollen Appendices, Eno stated, "Ambient Music is intended to induce calm and a space to think. [It] must be able to accommodate many levels of listening attention without enforcing one in particular; it must be as ignorable as it is interesting." His subsequent albums On Land, Music for Airports, Thinking Music, and Thursday Afternoon, along with Fripp's solo Frippertronics and Soundscapes, defined a genre of music that could justifiably be termed Easy Listening for the avant-garde. (For a complete history of sonic sedatives, read Joseph Lanza's Elevator Music, published by Quartet Books, UK.) This music, intended to pacify and mesmerize, later mixed with dance beats into such styles as ambient house, trance, techno, and trip-hop. Echoes can be heard in the recordings of Aphex Twin, The Orb, and Stereolab, among countless others.

- - By Eno's definition of ambient, Soothing Sounds for Baby qualifies, while pre-dating Discreet Music by over a decade. There's another parallel: Discreet Music was used to facilitate childbirth. Eno provided extended versions to hospitals when his recordings were found to have a calming effect on a mother's breathing. Soothing Sounds for Baby would have been useful after these mothers brought their newborns home from the hospital.

- - This reissue re-introduces Scott's seminal work to new generations of fans, whether their listening is active or passive -- and regardless of the age of those particular generations. In fact, since the original releases had such limited circulation, it could be claimed that this reissue is actually "introducing" this music to the world. It was easy to overlook the first time around -- it doesn't scream for attention.

- - So, relax. Listen closely. Or don't. In a world fraught with tension and insecurity, we trust you'll find Raymond Scott's gentle melodies and childlike rhythms to be soothing companions.

- - --Joachim Gurewitz, from the CD liner notes
-

''SOOTHING SOUNDS FOR BABY is experimentalism
in it's truest form. These are really weird.
They're not relaxing at all...
What would the baby grow up like?''
-Jack Dangers, Meat Beat Manifesto

Raymond Scott (solo/completely electronic)
''SOOTHING SOUNDS FOR BABY''
Complete
3-CD Box Set:
Vol. 1, Vol. 2, Vol. 3

ORDER this 3-CD set:

only $24.
+ $4. for US Priority Mail
(OPTIONAL: Add $1. for Insurance)
USA Orders only -- for Foreign info
e-mail:
info@RaymondScott.com
To pay by Check or Money Order
e-mail:
info@RaymondScott.com
Baby Box

Raymond Scott's completely electronic,
'ambient' series, originally released
by Epic Records 40 years ago...

This Exclusive 3-CD Box Set
is Not Available in Stores

Over 100 minutes of music

> > More Info Here < <
Also Available Separately:
Volume 1: Soothing Sounds For Baby
ORDER from: Amazon.com

Volume 2: Soothing Sounds For Baby
ORDER from: Amazon.com

Volume 3: Soothing Sounds For Baby
ORDER from: Amazon.com
Vol. 1
CD Vol. 1
Vol. 2
CD Vol. 2
Vol. 3
CD Vol. 3

''Perhapse Scott judged his audience too narrowly?
SOOTHING SOUNDS FOR BABY has developed a second
life in the 18-month to 90-year range.''
-Joel Chadabe, president
of Electronic Music Foundation

Volume 1 (1-6 months)

1. Lullaby
2. Sleepy Time
3. The Music Box
4. Nursery Rhyme
5. Tic-Toc

Volume 2 (6-12 months)

1. Tempo Block
2. The Happy Whistler
3. Toy Typewriter

 Volume 3 (12-18 months)

1. Little Tin Soldier
2. Little Miss Echo
3. The Playful Drummer

Original vinyl releases by Epic Records (1962)

CDs Reissued by Basta Records
REISSUE CREDITS:
Reissue producer: Gert-Jan Blom
Executive Producer: Theo van der Schaaf
Thank you to: Thomas Rhea, Ph.D.; Mitzi Scott;
Pearl Winters; Carrie Makover; Herb Deutsch;
Robert Moog; Music Sales Corp.; Byron Werner;
Jeff Winner; Dave Cross; S. Lester



All titles © Gateway Music, except "Little Tin Solder,"
"Little Miss Echo," and "The Playful Drummer"
© Music Sales Corp. for the U.S.
All titles ASCAP


"soothing sounds" CD covers

Mark Satola wrote:
>
> Soothing Sounds for Baby arrived; am listening in reverse
> order (vol 3-2-1) for that unique "back-to-the-womb" effect.

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