A2695071771 10

McLaren, Norman - Rythmetic: The Compositions of Norman McLaren

Format: 2LP
Label: We Are Busy Bodies WABB-191
Year: 2024
Origin: Stirling, Scotland - Hudson, Québec, 🇨🇦
Genre: electronic, experimental
Keyword: 
Value of Original Title: 
Inquiries Email: ryder@robertwilliston.com
Release Type: Albums
Buy directly from Artist:  https://normanmclaren.bandcamp.com/album/rythmetic-the-compositions-of-norman-mclaren
Playlist: Experimental & Electronic, Quebec, 1940's, 1960's

Tracks

Side 1

Track Name
Now is the Time
Rhythmetic
Neighbours

Side 2

Track Name
Synchromy
Unreleased Composition (1945-1946)
Dots
Loops
Mosaic

Side 3

Track Name
Unreleased Composition (c. 1945)
Unreleased Composition (1945-1948)
Unreleased Composition (1969)
Unreleased Composition (1964-1965)

Side 4

Track Name
Opening Speech

Photos

A2695071771 10

Rythmetic: The Compositions of Norman McLaren

Videos

No Video

Information/Write-up

Norman McLaren was one of the rare artists who could make film sing and dance, treating the medium not as a vehicle for stories but as a living score of sound and motion. Born in Stirling, Scotland, in 1914, he studied interior design at the Glasgow School of Art, but quickly discovered film after seeing Oskar Fischinger’s abstract animations. Within a few years his own works were winning prizes at the Scottish Amateur Film Festival, where he met John Grierson, the visionary of British documentary. Grierson invited him to London’s GPO Film Unit, and McLaren’s surreal Love on the Wing (1938) hinted at what was to come—abstract imagery, direct work on film stock, and a willingness to defy conventions.

In 1939, unwilling to face another European war after witnessing the brutality of the Spanish Civil War while filming Defence of Madrid, McLaren emigrated to New York. He continued his experiments with cameraless animation, scratching, inking, and painting directly onto film, producing small jewels like Dots and Boogie-Doodle. In 1941, Grierson—by then the first Government Film Commissioner of Canada—brought him to Ottawa to work for the newly founded National Film Board. There McLaren found the freedom to explore without compromise. He directed wartime films and soon established Studio A, the NFB’s animation unit, training a generation of artists including Evelyn Lambart, Grant Munro, René Jodoin, and George Dunning.

McLaren’s brilliance lay in his refusal to separate image and sound. Discovering that spliced tape and scratches on optical tracks produced tones, he developed with Lambart a precise system of “drawn-on-sound” that allowed him to compose music visually, frequency by frequency. Years before synthesizers, he published technical guides that explained how to generate pure tones, chords, and rhythms directly onto film. In Synchromy (1971), the soundtrack’s jagged striations become the picture itself, so the audience literally sees the sounds it hears. His films anticipate the aesthetics of electronic and glitch music by decades, which is why Milton Babbitt called him “the first electronic musician,” and why John Cage counted him among his circle of avant-garde heroes.

The films themselves were playful and profound. Begone Dull Care (1949), painted and scratched in time to Oscar Peterson’s jazz trio, bursts with colour and rhythm. A Chairy Tale (1957), co-directed with Claude Jutra, turns a stubborn chair into a sly dance partner, scored by Ravi Shankar. Pas de deux (1968) stretches ballet into ghostly tracings through optical printing. And Neighbours (1952), his Academy Award-winning pixilation parable, depicts two men destroying each other over a flower—an unforgettable anti-war allegory later added to UNESCO’s Memory of the World Register.

Over his career McLaren won more than 200 international awards, including the Palme d’Or at Cannes for Blinkity Blank (1955). Yet he remained modest, more concerned with the craft than the acclaim. He described himself as “a filmmaker who made some interesting films,” but to his colleagues he was also a generous teacher, offering opportunities to the young and the untested. He was discreet but devoted in his private life, sharing four decades with his partner, NFB producer Guy Glover. His final major film, Narcissus (1983), brought his fascination with dance, myth, and mirror imagery to its fullest flowering.

Norman McLaren died in Hudson, Québec, in 1987. He left behind not just a body of films but a set of ideas—that sound can be seen, that images can be heard, that animation can embody music itself. His methods remain in circulation through the NFB archives, and his influence continues to reverberate in electronic music, experimental film, and every frame of animation that dares to move to its own rhythm.
-Robert Williston

"Hypnotic pointillist elegance...Not dissimilar from sounds that would emerge decades later. A rewarding experience."
The Wire

“McLaren’s visuals matched the electronic timbres of his compositions, literally carving sound from image, showing exactly what you hear."
MOJO

“Absolutely adorable music.”
BBC 6 Music

Released November 29, 2024

All music composed, performed, and produced by Norman McLaren

Synchromy
Mixing and re-recording by Roger Lamoureux

Mosaic
A film by Norman McLaren and Evelyn Lambart
Sound by Ron Alexander

Neighbours
Sound by Clarke Daprato

Rythmetic
A film by Norman McLaren and Evelyn Lambart

Liner notes by James Vella
Translation by Pénélope Mallard and Fleur Neesham
Mastered by Noah Mintz at Lacquer Channel Recordings
Artwork and layout by Steve Lewin

Special thanks to Don McWilliams, Nathalie Bourdon, Mary Graziano, François Jacques, Peter Kallianiotis, Saskia Latendresse, Rob McLaughlin, Mira Mailhot, Adam Abouaccar, Jonathan Bouchard, Meryem Alaoui

This project is funded in part by FACTOR, the Government of Canada and Canada’s private radio broadcasters, and Ontario Creates.
Ce projet est financé en partie par FACTOR, le gouvernement du Canada et les radiodiffuseurs privés du Canada et Ontario Creates.

Under license to We Are Busy Bodies and Phantom Limb
Sous licence de We Are Busy Bodies et Phantom Limb

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