Moondog begins with "Theme", a cross between or combination of
chaconne and
ground played in
time. Moondog described it as "
my theme, a sort of musical signature". A previous version had been recorded for
Moondog and His Friends where it appeared on the track "Theme and Variations". In the earlier version, Moondog played all instruments, whereas for the 1969 version it was reworked into a
maxisym. Maxisym was Moondog's own term for a composition for a full orchestra; its opposite was a
minisym, written for a handful of musicians. "Stamping Ground" was written in the 1950s and not previously recorded. It takes inspiration from
Native American music and is constructed with a
canon melody line, a four-note ground played on
timpani and a
coda that ends in
retardation. "Symphonique #3 (Ode to Venus)" is another update of a composition featured on
Moondog and His Friends. It is an enlarged version, six minutes long, of the second movement of that album's "Suite No. 2", which in its earlier version was two and a half minutes long. It is a canon in twelve parts and an homage to
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. Side one ends with "Symphonique #6 (Good for Goodie)", a ground inspired by
swing music. The composition has much melodic detail. It features a clarinet that uses high notes in the vein of
Benny Goodman. "Minisym #1" was first performed in 1967 and consists of three short movements in time. The album notes describe the first movement as "jovial", the second as "lyrical" and the third as "vivacious". The first and third feature a
bassoon and the second is played with horn. "Lament 1 (Bird's Lament)" is a chaconne where a saxophone accentuates the melody. Along with "Good for Goodie" it represents Moondog's interest in jazz music in the 1950s. It was composed in 1955 after the death of the saxophonist
Charlie Parker, who was nicknamed "Bird" and who Moondog had known in the early 1950s. The two had discussed music and the prospect of performing together. The longest track on
Moondog is the six-and-a-half minute "Witch of Endor", which also is the album's most
academic composition. It consists of three movements. The first is a canon in minor and time inspired by
Anatolian music that represents a witch's dance, the second a
trio representing the demise of the Biblical King
Saul, and the third repeats the first. "Witch of Endor" was composed around 1965. According to the album's liner notes, it was originally for a ballet intended for the dancer and choreographer
Martha Graham. It is uncertain if Graham ever was aware of its existence. "Symphonique # 1 (Portrait of a Monarch)" is
Moondogs final track and was written in 1960. The ambition was to capture both the playful side and the strength of Moondog's fictional character Thor the Nordoom, the protagonist of a "soundsaga" or "poetic myth" he had developed. The central theme is about how the old, personified by a ruthless and clever "Emperor of Earth", manages to assume power over the new. ==Release==