Bruce Haack
Bruce Haack, born on May 4, 1931, was a children's songwriters of
the 1960s and 1970s. His music combined homemade analog synths;
classical, country, pop, and rock elements; and surreal,
idealistic lyrics.
Haack started picking out melodies on his family's piano at age
four. By age 12, he gave piano lessons and played in country &
western bands as a teen. Haack was also invited by Native
Americans to participate in their pow-wows, experimenting with
Payote, which influenced his music for years to come. His
upbringing in the isolated mining town of Rocky Mountain House
in Alberta, Canada, his had plenty of time to develop his
musical talents.
Seeking formal training to hone his ability, Haack applied to
the University of Alberta's music program. Though that school
rejected him because of his poor notation skills, at Edmonton
University he wrote and recorded music for campus theater
productions, hosted a radio show, and played in a band. He
received a degree in psychology from the university; this
influence was felt later in songs that dealt with body language
and the computer-like ways children absorb information.
New York City's Juilliard School offered Haack the opportunity
to study with composer Vincent Persichetti. Thanks to a
scholarship from the Canadian government, he headed to New York
upon graduating from Edmonton in 1954. At Juilliard, Haack met a
like-minded student, Ted "Praxiteles" Pandel, with whom he
developed a lifelong friendship. However, his studies proved
less sympathetic, and he dropped out of Juilliard just eight
months later, rejecting the school's restrictive approach.
Throughout the rest of his career, Haack rejected restrictions
of any kind, often writing several different kinds of music at
one time. He spent the rest of the 1950s scoring dance and
theater productions, as well as writing pop songs for record
labels like Dot Records and Coral Records. Haack's early scores,
like 1955's Les Etapes, suggested the futuristic themes and
experimental techniques Haack developed in his later works.
Originally commissioned for a Belgian ballet, Les Etapes mixed
tape samples, electronics, soprano, and violin. The following
year, he finished a musique concrète piece called "Lullaby for a
Cat."
As the 1960s began, the public's interest in electronic music
and synthesizers increased, and so did Haack's notoriety. Along
with songwriting and scoring, Haack appeared on TV shows like
"I've Got a Secret" and "The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson",
usually with Pandel in tow. The duo often played the Dermatron,
a touch- and heat-sensitive synthesizer, on the foreheads of
guests. A 1966 appearance on "I've Got a Secret" featured them
playing 12 "chromatically pitched" young women.
Meanwhile, Haack wrote serious compositions as well, such as
1962's "Mass for Solo Piano," which Pandel performed at Carnegie
Hall, and a song for Rocky Mountain House's 50th anniversary.
One of his most futuristic pieces, 1963's "Garden of Delights,"
mixed Gregorian chants and electronic music. This work was never
broadcast or released in its complete form.
Haack found another outlet for his creativity as an
accompanist for children's dance teacher Esther Nelson. Perhaps
inspired by his own lonely childhood, he and Nelson collaborated
on educational, open-minded children's music. With Pandel, they
started their own record label, Dimension 5 Records, on which
they released 1962's Dance, Sing, & Listen. Two other records
followed in the series, 1963's Dance, Sing, & Listen Again and
1965's Dance, Sing, & Listen Again & Again. Though the series
included activity and story songs similar to other children's
records at the time, the music moves freely between country,
medieval, classical, and pop, and mixes instruments like piano,
synthesizers, and banjo. The lyrics deal with music history or
provide instructions like, "When the music stops, be the sound
you hear," resulting in an often surreal collage of sounds and
ideas.
The otherworldly quality of Haack's music was emphasized by the
instruments and recording techniques he developed with the
Dance, Sing, & Listen series. Though he had little formal
training in electronics, he made synthesizers and modulators out
of any gadgets and surplus parts he could find, including guitar
effects pedals and battery-operated transistor radios. Eschewing
diagrams and plans, Haack improvised, creating instruments
capable of 12-voice polyphony and random composition. Using
these modular synthesizer systems, he then recorded with two
two-track reel-to-reel decks, adding a moody tape echo to his
already distinctive pieces.
As the 1960s progressed and the musical climate became more
receptive to his kind of whimsical innovation, Haack's friend,
collaborator, and business manager Chris Kachulis found
mainstream applications for his music. This included scoring
commercials for clients like Parker Brothers Games, Goodyear
Tires, Kraft Cheese, and Lincoln Life Insurance. In the process,
Haack won two awards for his work. He also continued to promote
electronic music on television, demonstrating how synthesizers
work on "The Mister Rogers Show" in 1968, and released The
Way-Out Record for Children later that year.
Kachulis did another important favor for his friend by
introducing Haack to psychedelic rock. Acid rock's expansive
nature was a perfect match for Haack's style, and in 1969 he
released his first rock-influenced work, The Electric Lucifer. A
concept album about the earth being caught in the middle of a
war between heaven and hell, The Electric Lucifer featured a
heavy, driving sound complete with Moogs, Kachulis' singing, and
Haack's homegrown electronics and unique lyrics, which deal with
"powerlove" - a force so strong and good that it will not only
save mankind but Lucifer himself. Kachulis helped out once more
by bringing Haack and Lucifer to the attention of Columbia
Records, who released it as Haack's major-label debut.
As the 1970s started, Haack's musical horizons continued to
expand. After the release of The Electric Lucifer, he struck up
a friendship with fellow composer and electronic music pioneer
Raymond Scott. They experimented with two of Scott's
instruments, the Clavivox and Electronium. Nothing remains of
the collaboration, and though Scott gave Haack a Clavivox, he
did not record with it on his own. However, he did continue on
Lucifer's rock-influenced musical with 1971's Together, an
electronic pop album that marked his return to Dimension 5.
Perhaps in an attempt to differentiate this work from his
children's music, he released it under the name Jackpine Savage,
the only time he used this pseudonym.
Haack continued making children's albums as well, including
1972's Dance to the Music, 1973's Captain Entropy, and 1974's
This Old Man, which featured science fiction versions of nursery
rhymes and traditional songs. After relocating to Westchester,
PA, to spend more time with Pandel, Haack focused on children's
music almost exclusively, writing music for Scholastic Press
like "The Witches' Vacation" and "Clifford the Small Red Puppy."
He also released Funky Doodle and Ebenezer Electric (an
electronic version of Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol) in
1976, but by the late 1970s, his prolific output slowed; two
works, 1978's Haackula and the following year's Electric Lucifer
Book II, were never released.
His darkest album to date, Haackula strikes out on into dark,
yet playful territory. Haackula seems to have inspired Haack's
final landmark work, 1981's Bite. The albums share several song
titles and a dark lyrical tone different from Haack's usually
idealistic style. Though Bite is harsher than his other works,
it features his innovative, educational touch: a thorough primer
on electronics and synthesizers makes up a large portion of the
liner notes, and Haack adds a new collaborator for this album,
13-year-old vocalist Ed Harvey.
Haack's failing health slowed Dimension 5's musical output in
the early 1980s, but Nelson and Pandel kept the label alive by
publishing songbooks, like "Fun to Sing" and "The World's Best
Funny Songs", and re-released selected older albums as
cassettes, which are still available today. In 1982, Haack
recorded his swan song, a proto-hiphop collaboration with Def
Jam's Russell Simmons, entitled "Party Machine". Haack died in
1988 from heart failure, but his label and commitment to making
creative children's music survives. While Dimension 5's later
musical releases — mostly singalong albums featuring Nelson —
may lack the iconoclastic spark of the early records, Nelson and
Pandel's continued work reveals the depth of their friendship
with Haack, a distinctive and pioneering electronic musician.
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Bruce Haack links
Bruce Haack - Official Site
"Haack, the King of Techno" documentary
Bruce Haack @ Allmusic.com
Bruce Haack @ Wikipedia
Bruce Haack video's
Buy Bruce Haack CDs at Amazon.com










