Moondog 2 | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1971 | |||
Genre | Classical music, modernism | |||
Length | 42:12 | |||
Label | CBS Records | |||
Producer | James William Guercio | |||
Moondog chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | link |
Moondog 2 is the sixth album by American composer Moondog AKA Louis Thomas Hardin.
This album was the followup to the 1969 album Moondog . Produced with James William Guercio, it featured Moondog's daughter June Hardin as a vocalist.
Unlike his previous instrumental album, which was largely performed by an orchestra, Moondog 2 contains vocal compositions in canons, rounds, and madrigals, and harked back to the home-recorded feel of his earliest records. [1] In the liner notes to the album, Hardin states he first began writing rounds in the late winter or early spring of 1951 but soon moved on to instrumental music. But after he'd heard in 1968 that Big Brother and the Holding Company had recorded "All Is Loneliness" he took to writing them again. [2]
The album has been re-released twice as a 2-for-1 CD combining Moondog and Moondog 2: once by CBS in 1989, and once by Beat Goes On Records in 2001. [2]
Big Brother and the Holding Company featuring Janis Joplin covered the song "All Is Loneliness" on their 1967 self-titled album. The song was also covered by Antony and the Johnsons during their 2005 tour. New York band The Insect Trust play a cover of Moondog's song "Be a Hobo" on their album Hoboken Saturday Night.
All compositions by Moondog (Louis Hardin) [3]
Louis Thomas Hardin, known professionally as Moondog, was an American composer, musician, performer, music theoretician, poet and inventor of musical instruments. Largely self-taught as a composer, his prolific work widely drew inspiration from jazz, classical, Native American music which he had become familiar with as a child, and Latin American music. His strongly rhythmic, contrapuntal pieces and arrangements later influenced composers of minimal music, in particular American composers Steve Reich and Philip Glass.
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