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It was the top-selling classical music album for that year. Tomita then started arranging Claude Debussy's impressionist pieces for synthesizer and, in 1974, released the album Snowflakes Are Dancing it became a worldwide success and was responsible for popularizing several aspects of synthesizer programming. The album featured electronic renditions of contemporary rock and pop songs, while utilizing speech synthesis in place of a human voice. His first electronic album was Electric Samurai: Switched on Rock, released in Japan in 1972 and in the United States in 1974. He eventually realized that synthesizers could be used to create entirely new sounds in addition to mimicking other instruments. He acquired a Moog III synthesizer and began building his home studio. In the late 1960s, Tomita turned to electronic music with the impetus of Wendy Carlos and Robert Moog's work with synthesizers.
#ISAO TOMITA SNOWFLAKES ARE DANCING RAR SERIES#
With Kunio Miyauchi, he created the music for the tokusatsu science fiction/espionage/action television series Mighty Jack, which aired in 1968. In 1966, he wrote a tone poem based on the Kimba the White Lion, and an original video animation synchronized to this tone poem was released in 1991. In the same year he scored the original Japanese version of Gulliver's Travels Beyond the Moon, but the film was re-scored by Milton DeLugg when it was dubbed into English.
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In 1965, Tomita wrote music for Osamu Tezuka's Kimba the White Lion, but the American-English version had a different theme by Bernie Baum, Bill Giant and Florence Kaye. He composed the theme music for the Japanese Olympic gymnastics team for the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne, Australia. He graduated in 1955 and became a full-time composer for television, film and theatre. After returning to Japan, he took private lessons in orchestration and composition while an art history student at Keio University, Tokyo. Tomita was born in Tokyo and spent his early childhood with his father in China. Biography Edit 1932–1968: Early life and composing career Edit