“It might have been a coincidence,” Bahary says, “but it was very spooky.” But when he returned to get his gear an hour later, the plant started reacting, making tones that got higher and higher. When one of the studio musicians set a plant on fire as a practical joke, it stopped singing, and the guy was asked to leave. “When they added water to the plants, they would give off different vibrations,” Bahary recalls. During the recording of that album, Bahary and Wonder got so deep into designing specialized equipment that at one point they were attaching electrodes to plant leaves and putting them through the synths. Over the next several years, Bahary was Wonder’s synthesizer guru, working on 1979’s mind-expanding synth-odyssey Stevie Wonder’s Journey Through the Secret Life of Plants.
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