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Originally broadcast on Friday 29th October 2004 on London's
Resonance
104.4fm. Please forgiven the terrible 'booming' sounds
in the studio - the people next door to the radio station seemed
to have been having a party that night! This show is dedicated
to Jhonn Balance, who sadly departed this mortal Coil just 2
weeks after the show was broadcast. You can hear one of his
tracks in the show.
Early
Electronic Oddities is an exploration of the strange
and subliminal sounds of early electronic musical instruments
from 1860 to 1970, and many now almost obselete daring and
experimental creations like the Mixtur-Trautonium, the
Ondes-Martenot, the Rhythmicon, the Ondioline,
the RCA synthesizer, electro-theremin and the inventions
of the Italian Futurists and Raymond Scott.
Live discussions, field recordings and amazingly unearthed
rare recordings presented by two theremin players, Miss
Hypnotique and Bruce Woolley. Features recorded
contributions by Bob Moog and Jean-Jacques Perrey.
Listen
to the show:
Listen
to Early Electronic Oddities Pt 1 (33. 8Mb) right click
file to save, left click to play
Listen
to Early Electronic Oddities Pt 2 (30.1Mb) right click
file to save, left click to play
Playlist:
Part 1:
1. Radio Nottingham - the Radiophonic Workshop
2. Chorale - Antonio Russolo
3. Celestial Nocturne - Samuel Hoffman (theremin)
4. Concerto for Ondes-Martenot - Andre Jolivet featuring Jeanette
Martenot
5. Various soundtracks - Paul Tanner plays Electro-theremin
6. Now in heaven you can hear the latest Fall album - Hypnotique
(Rhythmicon)
7. Jean-Jacques talk about the Ondioline
8. Demonstration from Fantasy for Mixtur-Trautonium - Oscar
Sala
9. Telstar - The Tornadoes (Clavioline)
Part 2:
10: Bob Moog - talks about the RCA Synthesizer (background
music: the Man from Uranus)
11: Nola - Felix Arndt (RCA synthesizer)
12. Return of the Elohim Pt 1- Zorch (VSC3)
13. CoilANS - Coil (ANS synthesizer)
14. Silver apples of the moon - Morton Subotnik (Buchla Modular)
15: Bob Moog talks about Raymond Scott (music from 'Manhattan
Space Research')
16: Zwi Zwi oo oo oo - Delia Derbyshire (Wobbulator)
17: Modified clarinet - Reed Ghazal (Circuit Bent instrument)
18: In a Delian Mode - Delia Derbyshire (Radiophonic Workshop)
19. Return of the Elohim Pt 2 - Zorch (VSC3)
20: Futurama (Raymond Scott advert)
Written
resources:
Early Sound Experiments
Even
before the invention of electricity, man has experimented
with mechanics to produce sound, from ancient Tibetan prayers
wheels and the Greek's Aeolian Harp's which were played by
the wind, through to the first wind up barrel organ in the
sixteenth century, and in the eighteenth century, mechanical
birds and the glass harmonica which anticipated the sound
of electronics.
In
1752, the world became, quite literally Switched On, when
Benjamin Franklin performed his famous experiment with a kite,
drawing down electricity from the clouds and first stimulating
the fusion of science and nature which is electricity. One
of the founding fathers of electricity, Thomas Edison, illuminated
the world with his demonstration of the light bulb in 1879,
two years after inventing the phonograph. Telegraphs and telephony
began to connect people, and in 1910 the first radio broadcast
took place in New York. The world became connected by the
power of electricity, and sound produced through electricity
and electronic sound reproduction was set to take over the
20th century.
The
story of early electronic instruments is the story of pioneers,
dreamers, schemers and losers. It's a story of bold ideas
and bad debts, bizarre lives and forgotten deaths, and events
of "synchronicity" - actions which extend beyond
mere coincidence. The relationship between sounds found in
our environment and music has become closer, classical instruments
and the old masters have become increasingly redundant, as
new sonic possibilities have been unleashed to challenge the
warring world.
The
Futurists
Before
electronic instruments became commonplace in the 1910s and
1920s, the Italian avant-garde Futurists called for an exploration
into the possibilities of new sound worlds in their manifestos,
like Busoni's exploration of Microtonal Harmony and the breaking
of classical timbres in Russolo's Art of Noises.
The futurists experimented with homemade 'sound boxes' to
produce original and novel sounds. Edgar Varese, composer
of percussive-sonic piece Ionisation saw the scope
for 'sound producing machines' that would ultimately lead
to the 'liberation of sound'.
The
first electronic instruments
Towards
the end of the 19th century, a number of instruments that
can be considered electronic were invented by scientists and
academics. Helmholtz's 1860 'Helmholtz Resonanator'
used electro-magnetic vibrating glass and metal sphere to
create different sensations of tone.
Although
Elisha Gray was piped by Alexander Graham Bell to the patent
of the telephone by just a few hours, he didn't miss a beat
when he invented the Musical Telegraph in 1876 which
amplified sounds from an electronic oscillator - the world's
first electronic keyboard.
The
greatest of the early electronic beasts, the Telharmonium,
was drawn to live like Frankenstein's monster by Thomas Cahill
in 1906. The 200 tonne 60 foot long sand, water and cement
constructed keyboard instrument used dynamos to produce alternating
current over various audio frequencies. Controlled by many
keyboards, gears and wires and amplified by giant acoustic
horns, the idea was to hook up the machine to a phone network
to pipe music into restaurants, stores and theatres - a forerunner
to Musak. So vast was the machine, during concerts it broke
the stage, and the machine interfered with the phone network,
so consequently it died a death before the first world war.
Cahill was ahead of his time; it was to be another 50 years
before electronic keyboard instruments finally caught on,
as the principle of the Telharmonium formed the basis of one
of the most successful electronic instruments of all time
- the Hammond organ.
Vacuum
tube technology
De
Forest was a prolific inventor with 300 patents to his
name. Shortly after a failed collaboration with Thomas "Telharmonium"
Cahill, De Forest discovered a method of combining two inaudible
high-frequency sound waves to produce an audible low-frequency
wave, a technique called heterodyning, or beat frequency oscillation.
In 1915, De Forest created the first vacuum tube instrument
- a small monophonic keyboard called the Audion Piano
(nicknamed by De Forest the "Squak-a-Phone"), but
once more, it quacked an early death. However, vacuum tube
technology was to take over the next era of electronic instruments
from the 1920s onwards.
The
theremin
The
theremin, invented by Russian Lev Termen (also known
as Leon Theremin), in 1920 remains the world's only
true space control instrument - and one which has proved enigmatic,
mysterious and popular for the last 85 years. Originally marketed
by the RCA radio corporation as an instrument that "anyone
who can hum, sing, or whistle" could play, it's unusually
design of a cabinet with two aerials and nothing short of
unconventional playing technique of the hands moving in the
ether creating part of the electromagnetic circuit, one hand
for pitch, the other for value - is visually hypnotic, but
near impossible to master - which caused an untimely death,
before it was revived in film soundtracks in the 1950s. The
giant theremin, the Terpsitone, which the musician had to
'dance' the melody in a huge playing field was an even more
challenging and bizarre incarnation which no longers exists.
Only a handful of players over the years have truly mastered
it, namely: 1930s Russian virtuoso Clara Rockmore,
whose Art of the Theremin CD remains the classic theremin
recording; Dr Samuel Hoffman, a chiropodist by day
and thereminist by night who played on the soundtrack for
spooky sci-fi and horror films like The Day the Earth Stood
Still and Spellbound.
Nowadays,
everyone who is anyone plays the theremin to standards good,
bad and indifferent- from Comedians like John Otway and
Bill Bailey to more serious contenders like Leon Theremin's
grand-niece Lydia Kavina - considered the world's greatest
living thereminist. Slide, glide, shape, gyrate, imitate,
modulate or create - although just a simple pure electronic
tone, the theremin remains the ultimate electronic oddity.
Its scope extends far beyond the spooky sounds of sci-fi popularised
in the movies, it delves into the deepest realms of the sonic
imagination.
More
information:
www.thereminworld.com
www.theremin.info
www.hypnotique.net/theremin
Ondes-Martenot
Another
instruments using the principle of heterodyning oscillators
actually caught on a little. In 1928, French telegraphist
and cellist Maurice Martenot conceived and constructed
the Ondes-Martenot. Much like the theremin, Martenot's instrument
was intended to be integrated into the traditional orchestra
and it is still featured in orchestras across the world, principally
in Olivier Messiaen's Turangalila Symphony.
Some argue that the reason for the Ondes Martenot's success
was that, unlike the theremin, it used a traditional keyboard
layout, with a separate finger control for glissando and vibrato
as well as keys to adjust the timbre. Martenot wowed the French
academia to love and admire his instrument, even at the curse
of more commercial electronic instruments like the Ondioline,
and to an extent Martenot had a stranglehold over other electronic
instruments being used in serious contemporary music, thanks
to the support of French composers like Varese and
Messiaen. The Ondes-Martenot also found its way into
the sounds of Hollywood with Franz Waxman's 1936 score for
The Bride of Frankenstein and the three Ondes-Martenot's
score for Hitchcock's film Rebecca. Today the instrument
is still manufactured and ever-popular, even Johnny Greenwood
from Radiohead plays one on their albums Kid A
and Amnesiac.
Electro-theremin
This
instrument really does give off Good Vibrations, as
it was used on THAT Beach Boys track. The electro-theremin
is not actually a theremin as it isn't played in space, but
uses an oscillator with a guiding keyboard base to allow for
better pitch accuracy - a sort of cross between an Ondes Martenot
and a Hawaiian slide guitar. The sound is closer to that of
the Ondes than the theremin as it is less rich, using only
a sine wave and no vibrato, sounding more 'other worldly'
than the vocalistic theremin sound. The electro-theremin was
created by actor and electronics wizard, Bob Whitsell
in 1958, and it was made famous by former Glen Miller Trombonist
Paul Tanner on the album Music from Heavenly Bodies,
numerous TV and film soundtracks, and recordings with the
Beach Boys. Tanner sold his electrotheremin in the
late 1960s to a hospital to use for checking hearing when
he felt keyboard synthesizers were taking over.
More
information:
www.electrotheremin.com
Rhythmicon
The
brainchild of American avant-garde composer Henry Cowell
in 1916, the Rhythmicon was the first prototype of
a drum machine and sequencer. Cowell commissioned Russian
inventor Leon Theremin to build him a machine capable
of transforming harmonic data into rhythmic data and vice
versa, which used broken up light playing on a photo-electric
cell. Cowell wrote only two piece on the instrument before
losing interest. The Rhythmicon featured in some movies in
the 1950s and 60s including Dr Strangelove and the
Tangerine Dream album Rubicon. No working instruments
exist today, but you can use a four part digital simulation
on the internet on The Online Rhythmicon website, and record
your 'hit' to their internet database.
More information:
The
online rhythmicon
Ondioline
A
rival instrument to the institutionally powerful Ondes-Martenot,
the Ondioline achieved a little popularity in cabaret and
popular music - and it was possibly the first instrument capable
of imitating the sound of other instruments. Few working Ondiolines
exist today, but one who has championed its cause is composer
Jean-Jacques Perrey on his early albums with Gershon
Kingsley like Kalaeidoscopic Vibrations and The
In Sound From Way Out.
The
Clavioline and Joe Meek
M Constant made the Clavioline in 1947, a monophonic,
portable keyboard which can control octave, timble, attack,
and vibrato. It recreated sounds of brass and string in a
natural way, and was widely manufactured as a dance-hall organ,
marketed as being suitable for "twist, trad and rock".
The Clavioline was made popular by pop musicians like The
Beatles, Sun Ra, and Joe Meek with the Tornadoes
hit Telstar, inspired by the 1962 first satellite transmission.
Meek added the sound of the Clavioline to create an otherworldly
sound, and he also supposedly added the sound of a flushed
toilet played backwards. The weird space-age single rocketed
straight to No. 1 and became a worldwide smash hit. Symbolically,
when the Telstar satellite became damaged, Meek's life became
more and more shattered as his career failed and demons took
him over. He killed his landlady in Holloway Road in London
before taking his own life in 1967, aged just 37. Meek was
a true sonic pioneer and his "Meeksville sound"
of compression and close-micing influenced a generation of
music producers.
More information:
www.clavioline.com
Trautonium
In
1930, Dr. Friedrich Trautwein invented the Trautonium,
the only instrument in the world capable of producing subharmonics,
which are the mirror opposite of harmonics, or 'ghost' note
like playing a string on a violin only half held down. Oscar
Sala, a young student of Trautwein's, pioneered the development
of the instrument and made the Mixtur-Trautonium, an
improved polyphonic instrument which was used in the soundtrack
of Alfred Hitchcock's film The Birds, as the
instrument sounded more ominous than the sound of real birds.
The Trautonium has advantages over a synthesizer giving freedom
of intonation like a fretless string instrument to play microtones
and continuous, unrestricted variations of pitch, tone and
volume. The player makes contact with a wire stretched over
a metal strip to create a circuit. It was a forerunner to
the modular synthesizers of the 1960s. Nearly all knowledge
of the performance and workings of the Trautonium has died
with Oscar Sala in 2002, but the album My Fascinating Instrument,
which is available today, is testament to Sala's musical genius.
The
evolution of the synthesizer
By
the end of the 20th century, synthesizers had take over the
world's aural landscape. To synthesize means to take many
parts and make it whole, which is basically what a synthesizer
does. It is a purely electronic instrument, in other words,
it won't make a sound until you amplify it. The early synthesizers
were analogue and huge - a whole room full of equipment -
but 1970s transistor technology allowed for more portable
instruments - and thus classic analogue synths like Bob Moog's
Mini Moog, which is still being manufactured today, the
ARP Odyssey and the WASP are still revered by
techno and electronic musicians today for their "phat"
and squelchy sounds. Electronic music took over the world
- the highly conservative Musician's Union condemned synthesizers
as non-musical, worried that they would replace the need for
real, acoustic trained musicians - which indeed they have,
as virtually every popular music track now uses synthesized,
sampled and sequenced parts. The Japanese 1980s electronics
boom made a cheap keyboard possible in every home - with Casio,
Yahama and Roland models now available from only a few pounds.
RCA
synthesizer
The
synthesizer revolution started in 1956 when RCA unveiled its
Electronic Music Synthesizer. Originally invented in
the 1940s by engineers Harry Olson and Herbert Belar,
they produced a machine based on random probability, which
would be capable of creating melodies based on the folk songs
of Stephen Foster . It used Sixteen Function Binary Selection
and pitch sequencing, but the device failed miserably in its
intention, as the machine was incapable of determining characteristics
that only a human ear can - idiosyncrasies of form, structure
and melody. Olson and Belar intended this prototype synthesizer
not to explore new sonic worlds yearned for by the avant-garde,
but to reproduce the conventional. The result was a series
of seemingly random notes and bleeps. Their prototype synthesizer
was eagerly seized by the intellectual music academia of Princeton
University and the avant-garde composer Milton Babbit,
and premiered in 1956 as the RCA MK 1. It featured
vacuum tube oscillators and a punch paper interface that allowed
the user to program and control a wide range of sound parameters,
a little like a 19th century pianola. The output was fed to
disk recording machines, which stored the results on lacquer-coated
disks.
More
information:
Peter
Forrest's The A-Z of Analogue Synthesizers, RCA synth
Mike
Schutz's RCA synthesizer page
Synthesizers,
their technologies and inventors have come and gone like the
winds from world fairs to car boot sales in a flash. Here
are a few of the more esoteric and innovative synthesizers:
EMS Synth
The
EMS studios, founded in 1969 by English engineers and composer
Peter Zinnovieff, created some of the more important
synthesizers of their era, including the forerunner to software
synthesis. The VCS3 was their classic synth which is
still made today - operated with a joystick and a pinboard
(instead of bulky patch leads) - making it also perfect for
a game of battleships. The amazing sounds of the VCS 3 are
unmatchable and great for ethereal sound effects. Zorch
were Britain's first all synthesizer band who headlined the
first Stonehenge Festival, their psychedelic "head"
music was matched with a mind blowing lightshow. Their first
album "Ouroboros" is the only album ever recorded
at Peter Zinovieff's EMS studio in 1975, featuring the classic
VCS3 Synthi 100.
More information:
Zorch's
official website
EMS
Studios Homepage
ANS glass synthesizer
The
ANS is a photo-electronic instrument from Russia, made in
1958. Based on the photo-optic sound recording used in cinematography
to create a visible image of a sound wave, the machine has
a rotating glass disk with 144 optic phonograms of pure tones,
or sound tracks, from high in the centre to low at the rim;
the player selects a tone from a "score" made from
a glass disk. The ANS is capable of producing 720 pure tones
of everything from microtones to white noise.
You can hear the mysterious and somewhat "glassy"
sounds in the new album COILANS by Coil members
Jhon Balance, Peter Christopherson and Thighpaulsandra
who recorded the album during a few days at the Moscow
State University.
More
information:
www.martin.homepage.ru/ans.htm
Buchla Modular
Don
Buchla has been making world class modular synths since
1963, his latest invention the Piano Bar - a way of converting
sounds from an acoustic piano to a midi (computerized) map
- is now manufactured and produced by his old competitor,
Bob Moog. With Serialist composer Morton Subotnik,
they produced the seminal work, Silver Apples On The Moon
(1967), the first work to be commissioned for record rather
than live performance. A 'studio art' work, they believed
it could be played, via a phonograph, by anybody, in intimate
surrounds - a kind of 20th century chamber music style. Subotnik
believed that using both programmed and random parameters
allowed him complete artistic control, and "
the
flexibility to score some sections of the piece in the traditional
sense; and to mould other like a piece of sculpture".
The Buchla allowed for evolving timbres during a single note
duration, making possible "sustained yet transforming
streams of sound".
More
information:
www.buchla.com/
Inventors & pioneers
The
evolution of electronic music, until the corporate 1980s,
was driven by inspired individuals - inventors, scientists,
musicians who were more often than not part-genius and part-lunatic.
Many created equipment and instruments to create new sounds
for their own recordings, purely out of a desire to produce
something new more than for commercial gain. Here are a few
of Switched On's favourite electronic pioneers:
Raymond
Scott
In
the early 40s, Raymond Scott, the young leader of the CBS
radio house band found fame composing quirky jazz-influenced
scores for Warner Brothers' "Merrie Melodies" and
"Loony Toons" cartoons. Despite his success with
his quintet, Scott preferred working in the studio with machines
rather than the musicians who could never quite match his
exacting standards. Jazz singer Anita O'Day believed
that Scott "reduced musicians to something like wind-up
toys."
In
1946 Scott founded Manhattan Research, Inc., "Designers
and Manufacturers of Electronic Music and Musique Concrete
Devices and Systems," where he focused his efforts on
creating the machines that could meet his requirements. In
1949, Scott remarked:
"Perhaps within the next hundred years, science will
perfect a process of thought transference from composer to
listener. The composer will sit alone on the concert stage
and merely THINK his idealized conception of his music. Instead
of recordings of actual music sound, recordings will carry
the brainwaves of the composer directly to the mind of the
listener".
He created a sound effects machine called the Karloff,
and his most commercially successful instrument, the Clavivox,
like a theremin played with a keyboard. To realize his notion
of "thought transference" composition, Scott spent
twenty years working on the Electronium, an "instantaneous
composition-performance machine". It had no keyboard,
only switches and settings, and was a pitch and rhythm sequencer
that controlled a bank of oscillators, a modified Hammond
organ, an Ondes-Martenot and a few Clavivoxes. In 1960 on
the Electronium he produced his three-volume work of minimalist
synthesized lullabies, Soothing Sounds for Baby.
Despite his success, Scott was very protective, perhaps even
paranoid, of people stealing his ideas, thus Manhattan Research
remained purely research. In 1955 a young theremin maker,
20 year old Robert Moog, called at his studio on Long
Island, and he was given a job assembling the Clavivox. Raymond
Scott's work was to directly influence the next generation
of electronic instrument designers who went on to realise
his dream of what he called the "artistic collaboration
between man and machine."
BBC
Radiophonic Workshop & the Wobbulator
In
1957, a group of BBC producers used radiophonic technique
to create music for dramas, modifying natural sounds using
tape loops, tape modulations and splicing, similar to Pierre
Schaeffer's academic technique of music concrete. In the
1960s, the Radiophonic workshop became a household name with
their pioneering recordings on the BBC science fiction show
Dr Who. Stars of the workshop including Delia Derbyshire
and its founder Daphne Oram, who created the technique
of Oramics - drawing onto strips of 35mm film read
by photo-electric cells which controlled the sound characteristics
- a technique developed from the RCA synthesizer. Daphne later
left the BBC to pursue her career of creating serious art
music. Early on, the Workshop acquired a wobbulator,
originally designed as a test tone generator, it created a
tone varied by a second oscillator which providing sweeping
waves of sound. Delia Derbyshire's Ziwzih Ziwzih OO-OO-OO,
composed for a sci-fi play based on an Isaac Asimov story,
uses backwards voices and the tones of the Wobbulator.
More
information:
Radiophonic
workshop: an engineering persective
Reed Ghazalas Circuit bending
Reed
Ghazalas is know as 'the father of circuit bending' - he's
been doing it since the 1960s. The circuit-bent instrument,
often a re-wired audio toy or game, creates a new instrument
and a new musical vocabulary, which is part of Reed Ghazalas'
'anti theory' of opening up electronic to all audio frontiers,
creating chance music and unpredictable audio events. You
don't need to be have money, expensive instruments, or knowledge
of electronics - just a speak-and-spell machine and a few
parts from a radio store! Body contact is encouraged for the
electricity to flow through the player's flesh and blood.
Don't try this one at home, kids!
More
infomation:
www.anti-theory.com
As
electronic hardware is increasingly replaced with electronic
software, perhaps the era of electronic oddities, bizarre
boxes with sliders to fade, knobs to twiddle, and keys to
hammer, is drawing to a close. Yet in the 1990s, musicians
brought their old synthesizers, machines and theremins our
of the bargain bin and began to recognize again the magical
sounds which had so nearly become lost. So why not invent
your own electronic oddity? It could prove to be the sounds
of the future.
Credits:
Thanks to
The
Man
From Uranus
Chris & the engineers at Resonance FM
Jean-Jacques Perrey
Bob Moog
Dave Miller from Electrotheremin.com
Basil Brooks & Gwyo Zepix from Zorch
Mike Schultz for the RCA Synthesizer track
Further reading:
Obsolete.com:
120 years of electronic music
Fantastic resource site with a timeline of many weird and
wonderful electronic instruments like the Sphäraphon,
the Tuttivox and the Rhythmicon and detailed descriptions,
diagrams and photo archives.
History
of electronic and computer music
An academic essay compiled and annotated by Dr. Kristine H.
Burns
This production and sound recording ©
Switched On Radio 2004. All Rights Reserved.
This
documentary is the second in a series of music documentaries
and live radio shows entitled 'Switched On' which celebrates
the 125th anniversary of the invention of electricity - showcasing
electronic music pioneers and recordings of the 20th century.
The series will run throughout 2004 and 5 on Resonance FM
in the UK and other internet and public radio stations. This
show is available for radio syndication worldwide. For further
information regarding this radio series and website contact
info@switchedonradio.co.uk,
or join the mailing list
for ocassional radio updates.
Bookmark this website: www.switchedonradio.co.uk
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