We use cookies on our website to provide you with the best experience. Most of these are essential and already present.
We do require your explicit consent to save your cart and browsing history between visits. Read about cookies we use here.
Your cart and preferences will not be saved if you leave the site.

Teresa Rampazzi

Teresa Rampazzi (1914-2001) studied at the Milan conservatory where she got to know Bruno Maderna and began to receive friends in her living room, people who would become important in the contemporary music scene. In 1952 and 1954, Teresa Rampazzi attended the Internationale Ferienkurse fur Neue Musik in Darmstadt and listened to electronic experiments made by Eimert. She had understood that that was the only way to completely reject tonal music. In 1956 Teresa began to play with the Bartok Trio, and decided to promote the Avant-Garde music by Anton Webern and Alban Berg. But her most noteworthy concert is the one set in 1959 with John Cage, H.K. Metzger and S. Bussotti. Combined with her fascination with electronic sounds, Cage\'s Informal music made Teresa see the possibility to leave behind tonal music and the traditional form \'start-development-end\'. She sold her piano in curious circumstances: in fact, she demolished it during a performance with John Cage.

Teresa Rampazzi (1914-2001) studied at the Milan conservatory where she got to know Bruno Maderna and began to receive friends in her living room, people who would become important in the contemporary music scene. In 1952 and 1954, Teresa Rampazzi attended the Internationale Ferienkurse fur Neue Musik in Darmstadt and listened to electronic experiments made by Eimert. She had understood that that was the only way to completely reject tonal music. In 1956 Teresa began to play with the Bartok Trio, and decided to promote the Avant-Garde music by Anton Webern and Alban Berg. But her most noteworthy concert is the one set in 1959 with John Cage, H.K. Metzger and S. Bussotti. Combined with her fascination with electronic sounds, Cage\'s Informal music made Teresa see the possibility to leave behind tonal music and the traditional form \'start-development-end\'. She sold her piano in curious circumstances: in fact, she demolished it during a performance with John Cage.

E 2 - Electronic Music Box
* Edition of 36 * Time for a new quite limited Die Schachtel edition, a very special deluxe box that contains five LP releases sold out since long (two by Teresa Rampazzi and one each by Gruppo NPS, Mario Bertoncini, and Arke Sinth) in addition to a brand new album, “Musica Elettronica / Computer Music 1966-1972” by SMET Studio di Musica Elettronica di Torino. Originally issued in 1972, this stunning artefact soon turned into one of the most rare and sought after Italian electronic LPs of its er…
Immagini per Diana Baylon
Small repress available.  The long and mesmerizing single piece of analogue electronic music that develops over the two sides of the latest Die Schachtel "silver series" LP is a soundscape composed by Teresa Rampazzi for the artist Diana Baylon's 1972 exhibition at the modern art gallery "Il Fiore" in Florence (Italy). Diana Baylon (1920-2013) was a cross-disciplinary artist active in abstract and programmatic art. In the summer of 1969 she appeared – along with with Alberto Burri, Pablo Picasso…
Musica Endoscopica
In its constant pursue of the lost treasures of the Italian avant-garde music, Die Schachtel ­ in collaboration with the University of Padua ­ has recovered from the ashes one of the lost and truly shining diamond of the early electronic/digital scene of the 60s and 70s. After more than two years of painstaking research and audio restoration, Die Schachtel is proud to present a new release dedicated to Teresa Rampazzi, a seminal yet very little known female Italian composer/musician, Founder of …
1