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  1. Raymond Scott (born Harry Warnow; September 10, 1908 – February 8, 1994) [1] was an American composer, band leader, pianist, record producer, and inventor of electronic instruments.

  2. Raymond Scott (1908 - 1994) was an American composer, pianist, electronic music pioneer, and electronic instrument inventor. His career spanned most of the 20th century and he was one of the earliest pioneers who laid the groundwork for electronic music as we know it today.

  3. Scott was born Harry Warnow in Brooklyn, New York in 1908, and was said to be composing his own music by 1924 in the "audio laboratory" he built as a kid. After graduating from New York's ...

  4. A Biography of Raymond Scott "My mind simply refused to accept the constant repetition of uninteresting facts about myself, repeated ad nauseam." Raymond Scott (Music and Rhythm, September 1941) The man who would later be known as Raymond Scott was born on 10 September1908 in Brooklyn, New York, as Harry Warnow.1 His parents, Joseph and

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  5. Oct 19, 2018 · These are among the dichotomies in the musical legacy of composer, bandleader, pianist, engineer and inventor Raymond Scott. Born in Brooklyn on Sept. 10, 1908, Scott (birth name: Harry Warnow) led a multidimensional career that reached both the heights of fame and the deepest corners of obscurity.

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    • Why was Raymond Scott called Raymond Scott?1
    • Why was Raymond Scott called Raymond Scott?2
    • Why was Raymond Scott called Raymond Scott?3
    • Why was Raymond Scott called Raymond Scott?4
    • Why was Raymond Scott called Raymond Scott?5
  6. Raymond would go around and adjust various things to change the sound patterns. I’d never seen anything like it. It was a huge, electromechanical ‘sequencer’!” Scott called it his “Wall of Sound.” Scott used the Moogs’ theremin module in the first prototype of his keyboard synthesizer, the Clavivox, which he patented in 1956.

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  8. Raymond Scott With Karloff — His Sound Effects Machine by Photographer UnknownThe Raymond Scott Archives Karloff, A Monster of a Sound Effects Machine In 1948, Scott began a decade of development on a monstrous sound-effects generator, which he called “Karloff,” as a nod to actor Boris Karloff, who turned Dr. Frankenstein’s monster into a cinematic icon.