The Electronic [Music] Century

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 I missed this 3x60min series 1st time around. Part 3 will be available online after Sunday night’s broadcast. The track list is at the bottom of each episode’s webpage - I think some of the composers have been mentioned on previous UKC threads

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000r39k
New Sonic Territories
Episode 1 of 3
One hundred years since the earliest electronic instruments began to appear, composer Gabriel Prokofiev explores how the advent of electronically generated sound has influenced how we make and listen to music. Over three episodes, Gabriel charts a personal journey through the key works that influenced his own composing style, and the impact electronics have had on contemporary classical music.

In this episode, Gabriel shares some of the earliest compositions made with electronically generated sound. Starting with the theremin, the first instrument to broaden the possibilities of the orchestra through electronics, Gabriel traces a line between the lesser heard electronic compositions of György Ligeti emerging from Stockhausen’s WDR studio in Cologne, to the madcap inventions of Raymond Scott and Wendy Carlos’ synthesized film scores.

We’ll feature music composed for early, lesser-known synthesizer prototypes such as the ANS machine from 1937, inspired by the Russian composer and synesthesiac Alexander Nikolayevich Scriabin, as well as Daphne Oram’s ‘Oramics Machine’ which also allowed her to draw shapes and turn them into sound. Gabriel re-evaluates the early electronic compositions that were sidelined into jingles, TV themes and film scores to hear how they still stand the test of time today.
 

 Jon Read 18 Mar 2022
In reply to Robin Montaigne:

Thank you!

In reply to Jon Read:

That's OK, Jon. Hope you enjoyed the series!


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