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Mort Garson
Mort Garson
Canadian-born composer, arranger, songwriter, and pioneer of electronic music
1
Starlite Campbell Band
Starlite Campbell Band
British band
2
Lenny Kaye
Lenny Kaye
American guitarist, songwriter, producer, journalist
3
Bruce Woolley
Bruce Woolley
English singer-songwriter
4
Kingdom Come
Kingdom Come
British band
5
Steve Miller Band
Steve Miller Band
American rock band
6
Robert Margouleff
Robert Margouleff
American record producer
7
Ozric Tentacles
Ozric Tentacles
English instrumental rock band
8
Clara Rockmore
Clara Rockmore
Russian-born American musician
9
Hawkwind
Hawkwind
English rock band
10
Bruce Haack
Bruce Haack
Canadian musician
11
Blues Magoos
Blues Magoos
American rock band
12
Peter Banks
Peter Banks
British musician
13
Blues Project
Blues Project
band
14
Mad River
Mad River
band
15
Tangerine Dream
Tangerine Dream
German electronic music band founded in 1967 by Edgar Froese
16
Kevin Ayers
Kevin Ayers
English singer-songwriter, record producer
17
Suzanne Ciani
Suzanne Ciani
Italian American composer and musician
18
Jean-Jacques Perrey
Jean-Jacques Perrey
French composer
19
Gershon Kingsley
Gershon Kingsley
American composer and musician
20
Gong
Gong
French-British progressive/psychedelic rock band
21
The Litter
The Litter
1960s psychedelic rock band
22
Wendy Carlos
Wendy Carlos
American composer and electronic musician
23
The Electric Prunes
The Electric Prunes
band
24
Circulus
Circulus
25
Fifty Foot Hose
Fifty Foot Hose
musical artist
26
Bernie Worrell
Bernie Worrell
American musician
27
Return to Forever
Return to Forever
American jazz fusion group led by Chick Corea
28
Tony Kaye
Tony Kaye
English rock musician
29
Charlie Clouser
Charlie Clouser
American musician
30
Soft Machine
Soft Machine
English rock band
31
Emerson, Lake & Palmer
Emerson, Lake & Palmer
English progressive rock band
32
White Noise
White Noise
band
33
Justice
Justice
French electronic music duo
34
David Axelrod
David Axelrod
American musician, record producer, composer and arranger
35
Larry Graham
Larry Graham
American bass guitar player
36
Flash
Flash
English progressive rock band
37
The Crusaders
The Crusaders
American 1960s garage band
38
Amon Düül II
Amon Düül II
German musical group
39
The Holy Modal Rounders
The Holy Modal Rounders
band
40
Genghis Tron
Genghis Tron
American three-piece experimental metal band
41
Third Ear Band
Third Ear Band
musical group
Intro
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Lothar and the Hand People were an American late-1960s psychedelic rock band, known for their spacey music and pioneering use of the theremin and Moog modular synthesizer.

The band's unusual appellation refers to a theremin nicknamed "Lothar", with the "Hand People" being the musicians in the band, who included John Emelin (vocals), Paul Conly (keyboards, synthesizer), Rusty Ford (bass), Tom Flye (drums) and Kim King (guitar, synthesizer).

The band was notable for being "the first rockers to tour and record using synthesizers, thereby inspiring the generation of electronic music-makers who immediately followed them". Formed in Denver, Colorado, in 1965, Lothar and the Hand People relocated to New York in 1966. The band jammed with Jimi Hendrix and played gigs with groups such as the Byrds, Canned Heat, the Chambers Brothers, Grateful Dead and the Lovin' Spoonful. Lothar and the Hand People played music for Sam Shepard's play The Unseen Hand, and was the opening act at the Atlantic City Pop Festival in August 1969.

After three initial singles, Capitol Records released two albums by this short-lived band: Presenting ... Lothar and the Hand People (1968, produced by Robert Margouleff) and Space Hymn (1969, produced by Nick Venet). A Rolling Stone review written by Lenny Kaye described Lothar and the Hand People's music:

It is electronic country, a kind of good-time music played by mad dwarfs, and it is really good to listen to. There is no tension here, no jarring forces at war with each other. It may be strange that New York, the city which deifies speed and insanity, could produce this music, but it is as if Lothar and the Hand People have gone through this madness and come out on the other side, smiling.

The band's most popular recording was the title song "Space Hymn," which received significant FM radio play.

The first album featured a notable "robotic" cover of Manfred Mann's UK hit "Machines" (composed by Mort Shuman), which Capitol released as a single.

In 1997, the Chemical Brothers sampled the Lothar song "It Comes on Anyhow" in "It Doesn't Matter" on their album Dig Your Own Hole. A music video for "Space Hymn" screened in 2004 at the New York International Independent Film and Video Festival as well as at the ION International Animation, Games, and Short Film Festival in Los Angeles.

Lothar and the Hand People was the source for a Saturday Night Live skit called "Lothar of the Hill People" and a Boston-area theremin band named the Lothars.