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Irish avant-pop composer Maria Somerville gifts us a special hour long show entitled "The Invisible World", inspired by the words of poet John O'Donohue, featuring music from her Irish musical predecessors, as well as The Durutti Column, Suzanne Kraft, & John Maus. The mix is inspired by an interview I heard with irish poet John O’ Donohue, he talks of growing up in the west coast of Ireland, theories on the passage of time and a “lifelong fascination with the inner landscape of our lives” and with what he called "the invisible world". “The Irish poet, theologian, and philosopher insisted on beauty as a human calling. He had a very Celtic, lifelong fascination with the inner landscape of our lives and with what he called "the invisible world" that is constantly intertwining what we can know and see. This was one of the last interviews he gave before his unexpected death in 2008. But John O'Donohue's voice and writings continue to bring ancient mystical wisdom to modern confusions and longings.” “He devoted himself full-time to meditating and writing on beauty, friendship, and how the visible and the invisible, the material and the spiritual, intertwine in human experience."

Mort Garson

NTS aired an episode dedicated to the music of Mort Garson on 8 January 2022. Mort Garson has been played on NTS over 130 times, featured on 105 episodes and was first played on 13 April 2014.

Morton S. Garson (20 July 1924 – 4 January 2008) was a Canadian-born composer, arranger, songwriter, and pioneer of electronic music. He is best known for his albums in the 1960s and 1970s that were among the first to feature Moog synthesizers. He also co-wrote several hit songs, including "Our Day Will Come", a hit for Ruby & the Romantics. According to Allmusic, "Mort Garson boasts one of the most unique and outright bizarre resumés in popular music, spanning from easy listening to occult-influenced space-age electronic pop."

'Mother Earth's Plantasia', which was released in 1976, was a series of Moog compositions designed to be played for growing plants. According to his daughter, Day Darmet, Garson made the album inspired by her mother's plants. Despite its extremely limited distribution, the album became a cult hit in the late 2010s when it was circulated online.

Mort Garson was born in Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada. He later moved to New York City where he studied music at the Juilliard School of Music. He worked as a pianist and arranger before being called into the Army near the end of World War Two.

Garson died of renal failure in San Francisco in 2008, at the age of 83.

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Mort Garson

NTS aired an episode dedicated to the music of Mort Garson on 8 January 2022. Mort Garson has been played on NTS over 130 times, featured on 105 episodes and was first played on 13 April 2014.

Morton S. Garson (20 July 1924 – 4 January 2008) was a Canadian-born composer, arranger, songwriter, and pioneer of electronic music. He is best known for his albums in the 1960s and 1970s that were among the first to feature Moog synthesizers. He also co-wrote several hit songs, including "Our Day Will Come", a hit for Ruby & the Romantics. According to Allmusic, "Mort Garson boasts one of the most unique and outright bizarre resumés in popular music, spanning from easy listening to occult-influenced space-age electronic pop."

'Mother Earth's Plantasia', which was released in 1976, was a series of Moog compositions designed to be played for growing plants. According to his daughter, Day Darmet, Garson made the album inspired by her mother's plants. Despite its extremely limited distribution, the album became a cult hit in the late 2010s when it was circulated online.

Mort Garson was born in Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada. He later moved to New York City where he studied music at the Juilliard School of Music. He worked as a pianist and arranger before being called into the Army near the end of World War Two.

Garson died of renal failure in San Francisco in 2008, at the age of 83.

Original source: Last.fm

Artist in focus

Most played tracks

Plantasia
Mort Garson
Homewood Records1976
Ode To An African Violet
Mort Garson
Homewood Records1976
Rhapsody In Green
Mort Garson
Homewood Records1976
Music To Soothe The Savage Snake Plant
Mort Garson
Homewood Records1976
Cathedral Of Pleasure
Mort Garson
Sacred Bones Records2020
Big Sur
Mort Garson
A&M Records1968
Concerto For Philodendron And Pothos
Mort Garson
Discos Hermanos0
Swingin' Spathiphyllums
Mort Garson
Homewood Records1976
Concerto For Philodendron & Pothos
Mort Garson
Homewood Records1976
Symphony For A Spider Plant
Mort Garson
Homewood Records1976

Tracks featured on