The Wozard of Iz | |
Type: | Album |
Artist: | Mort Garson |
Cover: | wozcover512.jpg |
Released: | 1968 |
Studio: | EmGee Electronic Studio |
Genre: | Electronic, spoken word, psychedelic |
Length: | 35:05 |
Label: | A&M |
Producer: | Bernard Krause |
Prev Year: | 1967 |
Next Title: | Black Mass Lucifer |
Next Year: | 1971 |
The Wozard of Iz (also known as The Wozard of Iz: An Electronic Odyssey) is a 1968 album of electronic music composed and realized by Mort Garson and conceived and written by Jacques Wilson. It psychedelically parodies the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz, setting the characters in the 1960s with a hippie mindset.[1] Throughout the story the main character, Dorothy, seeks out "where it's at".
The album was released the year following another collaboration between Garson and Wilson, , a concept album issued by Elektra Records.
In a 1969 interview, Garson admitted that he hadn't used the Moog synthesizer in "a very sophisticated way" for his 1967 album, . However, by the time of The Wozard of Iz, he had learned most of the techniques for using the instrument.
Kim Cooper, in the 2005 book Lost in the Grooves: Scram's Capricious Guide to the Music You Missed, described The Wozard of Iz as "the pinnacle of the rather small genre of psychedelic Wizard of Oz-themed albums", also citing The Wizard of Oz and Other Trans Love Trips, by the West Coast Workshop, in this genre.[2] Garson's album was sampled by the Avalanches for their 2016 album Wildflower, and gave its name to one of the tracks on that album.[3]