Digital Moonscapes


Digital Moonscapes is an album by Wendy Carlos. "Written for orchestra, it is inspired by several astronomical subjects." A symphony orchestra is simulated using Digital Synth's GDS and Synergy Digital Synthesizers. These used additive and complex FM/PM modulation. She named her ensemble the LSI Philharmonic: "". "This was the first digitally synthesized orchestra of any significance that a single composer could command."
These efforts bear fruit in her later work Beauty in the Beast and Tales of Heaven and Hell.
The music on the album is described as: "veer uncomfortably between murky electronic experimentalism and weedy pseudo-baroque," and as, "thoroughly tonal, Romantic-orchestra-inspired, electronic tone poems."
According to Curtis Roads, "Three compositions produced in the 1980s stand as good examples of compositional manipulation of analysis data: Mortuos Plango, Vivos Voco by Jonathan Harvey, Désintegrations by Tristan Murail, and Digital Moonscapes by Wendy Carlos."
The album was Carlos' first album since completing the score for Tron, and it would be her penultimate solo release for CBS. It was re-released in 2000 on the now-defunct East Side Digital label with new cover art that Carlos said was rejected by CBS. She further stated that the artwork for the original CBS release was not available to them due to CBS owning the copyright on it. The title is now out of print, as is the majority of her catalog following the collapse of ESD.