Electronic Movements is a four-track extended play (EP) by Dutch composers Tom Dissevelt and Kid Baltan (the alias of Dick Raaijmakers). It was recorded at the Philips Research Laboratories (NatLab) in Eindhoven and released by Philips in late 1959, with archival evidence pointing specifically to December 1959. A UK repress followed in 1962.
During the late 1950s, Dissevelt, a jazz-trained arranger and bassist, and Raaijmakers, an engineer and member of the Philips electroacoustic research team, collaborated inside NatLabâÂÂs electronic music studio. Their working environment included sine-wave generators, filters, oscillators, custom mixers and multi-track tape setups. Musicologist Kees Tazelaar notes that Dissevelt and Baltan were among the first European musicians to merge laboratory electronic techniques with structured, rhythm-based popular-music idioms.
Electronic Movements functioned as an intermediary step toward the duoâÂÂs later LP, The Fascinating World of Electronic Music (1963). Several compositional and technical approaches documented in NatLab archivesâÂÂparticularly tape-edited rhythmic cells, electronically generated counterpoint and controlled filter sweepsâÂÂappear in early form on the EP.
Philips issued the EP as catalog number 430 736 PE on 7-inch vinyl at 45 RPM. Although Philips rarely documented precise issue months for short-run experimental discs, internal NatLab archival sheets list Electronic Movements among 1959 releases processed for manufacturing toward the end of that year.
Repress editions appeared around 1962, including a UK Philips release retaining the same catalog number.
A modern reissue was later produced by Trunk Records, pairing the EP with Daphne OramâÂÂs Electronic Sound Patterns and restoring the original mastering from archival tapes.
All compositions by Tom Dissevelt; production and electronic engineering by Kid Baltan.
Some early pressings show alternate sequencing of sides A and B, although all contain the same four titles.
Although overshadowed by the duoâÂÂs later LP The Fascinating World of Electronic Music, the EP is regarded by scholars as a significant early document of Dutch electronic composition at Philips NatLab. Tazelaar identifies the work as emblematic of NatLabâÂÂs attempt to synthesize high-modernist laboratory practice with more accessible rhythmic structures.
Historical accounts position Dissevelt and Baltan as key figures linking academic electronic music with later forms of European electronic pop. This view appears in TazelaarâÂÂs musicological study and in modern retrospective analyses, including the Bandcamp Daily feature on DisseveltâÂÂs early output.
Material from Electronic Movements reappearsâÂÂwith altered sequencingâÂÂon releases such as Popular Electronics: Early Dutch Electronic Music from Philips Research Laboratories 1956âÂÂ1963 and some editions of The Fascinating World of Electronic Music.