Century 21
A vision of the future at the 1962 World's Fair in Seattle

The Seattle World's Fair, known as The Century 21 Exposition, was a six-month-long event from April to October of 1962 in which close to 10 million visitors got a peek at the Œglittering world of the future¹.
The official World's Fair souvenir program boasted that many of the predictions were Œcertain to be realities by 2001.¹ But while that date has come and gone, it seems the people of 1962 expected the year 2006 to look like an episode of The Jetsons (sadly, I still do).
The Fair had
five areas. The World of Science: featuring
Boeing¹s Spacearium, which took visitors on an imaginary 10-minute excursion to
the outer galaxies; The World of Tomorrow:
which housed the Bubbleator elevator, the House of Tomorrow, Gyrocopters and
the Office of Tomorrow;
The World of
Commerce and Industry: showcasing international exhibits;
The World of Art: where visitors could wonder at
masterpieces from 61 museums around the globe; and The World of
Entertainment: which presented everything from boxing to baton
twirling.
And while
adults gawked at the exhibits, kids would gravitate towards the
innocently-named Gayway, a space-oriented amusement zone.
Finally, no visit was complete with having a sumptuous meal at Seattle¹s now
landmark Space Needle for the
princely sum of $7.50.
At the World of Tomorrow, visitors ascended to the exhibit in a globe-shaped
elevator called the Œbubbleator¹ for a 21 minute tour of the future. The
bubbleator was Washington State's official exhibit in the Coliseum. It held 150
passengers as it went through displays that promised an easier life ahead. The
out-of-this-world Œelevator music¹ that accompanied the journey was courtesy of
Attileo Mineo; but the
highlight was the souvenir record presented here now for your enjoyment.

CAPITOL
CUSTOM RECORDS
This private issue LP was produced as a souvenir for
the 1962 Seattle World's Fair pressed on bright blue wax with die cut
see-through plastic window and issued with clear plastic inner sleeve. The
album features a symphonic orchestra with choir, sound effects, great
electronics and narration from Vincent Price.
Sonic Entrance
Signal 0.49
Illumination 1.47 ***LISTEN***
Monorail 2.21
The Home 5.08
Phone Magic 3.19
Computer Robot
2.12
Shine, Rain & Glory 2.39
Hundred a Minute 1.44 ***LISTEN***
In a Automated
Supermarket 2.41
The Dappler Dandler 2.46
Atom for
Humanity 2.54
Deep, Deep Sea 2.24
Turn Skyward into Space 3.33
Universal Love 1.15 ***LISTEN***
Grand March 1.59
Thanks John for supplying me with the correct titles.