The Holmes Archive of Electronic Music

Those We Have Lost—Electronic Musicians Who Passed in 2021


Listen Later

Episode 66

Those We Have Lost—Electronic Musicians Who Passed in 2021

 

Playlist

In this episode, we pay tribute to electronic composers and musicians who passed in 2021. I’ve put together what I hope will be a satisfying playlist of these diverse artists and their works.

  1. Alvin Lucier, “Vespers” from Electric Sound (1972 Mainstream). This work was performed by Lucier and other members of the Sonic Arts union, David Behrman, Robert Ashley, and Gordon Mumma. The musical instrument was a device not intended for making electronic music. It was the Sondol, a hand-held pulse oscillator designed for “boat owners, acoustic engineers, and the blind.” Lucier bought a few of these devices and worked out a piece for echolocation. Each performer was equipped with a Sondol and asked to move blindfolded inside a defined performing space. This resulted in a work comprised of four independent streams of percussive pulses that sound as if they have their own relationship to one another as each musician moves about in the space. VESPERS is written as a prose score in which Lucier invites the performer to explore the world beyond human limits: “Dive with whales, fly with certain nocturnal birds or bats (particularly the common bat of Europe and North America of the family Vespertilionidae), or seek the help of other experts in the art of echolocation.”
  • Richard H. Kirk, with Cabaret Voltaire, “Let it Come Down” from International Language (1993 Plastex). This album was released during a period of transformation for CV. Founding member Chris Watson had left to pursue other sound interests, while Mallinder and Kirk remained and headed into the instrumental direction embodied by dance music. The liner notes for this album state, “Abandon thinking. Everything you will hear in the next seventy-four minutes is true. This music is dedicated to the Merry Pranksters past present & future.” Not sure what that means, but hey. This group was fantastic.
  • Richard H. Kirk, solo, "Information Therapy" from Disposable Half-Truths (1980 Industrial Records). This was from Kirk’s first solo cassette release while he maintained his parallel work with Cabaret Voltaire.
  • Joel Chadabe, “Rendevous” from Rhythms for Computer and Percussion (1981 Lovely Music). Joel had such a long list of accomplishments in electronic music, a pioneer of analog systems as well as computer music. On this album, his collaboration with percussionist Jan Williams was startlingly fresh. Electronics, computer synthesizer system (Synclavier), Joel Chadabe; percussion, wood block, vibraphone, marimba, slit drum, log drum, temple block, cowbell, singing bowls, Jan Williams. "The equipment used in RHYTHMS is a portable minicomputer/digital synthesizer system designed and manufactured by New England Digital Corporation in Norwich, Vermont, expressly for making music."
  • Jon Hassell, “Abu Gil” Last Night The Moon Came Dropping Its Clothes In The Street (2009 ECM). Trumpet, keyboard, composed by Jon Hassell; bass, Peter Freeman; Live sampling, Jan Bang; guitar, Rick Cox; drums, Helge Norbakken; violin, Kheir-Eddine M’Kachinche.
  • Jon Hassell, “Wing Melodies” from Power Spot (1981 ECM). Trumpet, composed by Jon Hassell; guitar, electronic treatments, Michael Brook; electric bass, Brian Eno; electronic keyboards (bass, percussion, string sounds), Jean-Phillippe Rykiel; percussion, acoustic and electronic, alto flute, J. A. Deane; produced by Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois.
  • Sophie, Eeehhh” from Nothing More to Say (2012 Huntleys & Palmers). Electronics, vocals, composed and performed by Sophie Xeon. I chose a couple of earlier tracks that were largely instrumental experiments.
  • Sophie, “Elle” from Bipp/Elle (2013 Numbers). Electronics, vocals, composed and performed by Sophie Xeon. Sophie was primarily known for electronica dance music.
  • Malcolm Cecil, “Gamerlonia Dawn” from Radiance (1981 Unity Records). Composed By, Performer, Producer, Engineer, Malcolm Cecil. English bassist and inventor of the unique TONTO synthesizer ("The Original New Timbral Orchestra"), a massive integrated synthesizer system that was used on many analog electronic albums in the early 1970s. Episode 36 was devoted to Cecil’s work so you might want to catch-up with that to get more detail about this amazing musician and producer. This track uses TONTO and also features the “golden flute” of Paul Horn.
  • Peter Zinovieff, “M Piriform” from Electronic Calendar—The EMS Tapes (2015 Space Age Recordings). Computer music from 1981 by the founder of EMS, Peter Zinovieff, with composer/conductor Justin Connolly. Collaborating with classical composer Connolly, Zinovieff created the electronic music in his Putney studio, using computer-controlled audio generators, and combined it with instrumental parts written by Connolly for soprano, flute, and violin. This performance of the work was staged in 1969 and featured Jane Manning (soprano), Judith Pearce (flute) and Pauline Scott (violin), who all played along with a tape recording of the electronic part.
  • Murray Schafer, “Threnody” from Threnody (Youth Music by R. Murray Schafer) (1970 Melbourne). This Canadian release features an instrumental work with electronic sound by Schafer, who is perhaps more familiar to us as a creator of soundscapes and ambient audio experiments. But he also worked in traditional instrumental music and featured electronics in some of these. There are not many recordings such as this example from 52 years ago.
  • Background music:

    Opening and closing sequences voiced by Anne Benkovitz.

    Additional opening, closing, and other incidental music by Thom Holmes.

    For additional notes, please see my blog, Noise and Notations.

     

    ...more
    View all episodesView all episodes
    Download on the App Store

    The Holmes Archive of Electronic MusicBy Thom Holmes

    • 4.9
    • 4.9
    • 4.9
    • 4.9
    • 4.9

    4.9

    12 ratings


    More shows like The Holmes Archive of Electronic Music

    View all
    99% Invisible by Roman Mars

    99% Invisible

    26,211 Listeners

    How Did This Get Made? by Earwolf and Paul Scheer, June Diane Raphael, Jason Mantzoukas

    How Did This Get Made?

    23,080 Listeners

    Making Sense with Sam Harris by Sam Harris

    Making Sense with Sam Harris

    26,375 Listeners

    Code Switch by NPR

    Code Switch

    14,617 Listeners

    Why We Bleep by Mylar Melodies

    Why We Bleep

    149 Listeners

    The Blindboy Podcast by Blindboyboatclub

    The Blindboy Podcast

    1,801 Listeners

    Guided Sleep Meditation & Sleep Hypnosis from Sleep Cove by Sleep Hypnosis, Meditations and Bedtime Stories

    Guided Sleep Meditation & Sleep Hypnosis from Sleep Cove

    2,287 Listeners

    You're Dead to Me by BBC Radio 4

    You're Dead to Me

    3,191 Listeners

    Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford by Pushkin Industries

    Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford

    5,160 Listeners

    Random Shipping Forecast by Random Shipping Forecast

    Random Shipping Forecast

    74 Listeners

    The Rest Is History by Goalhanger

    The Rest Is History

    14,606 Listeners

    Unexplainable by Vox

    Unexplainable

    2,299 Listeners

    The Rest Is Politics by Goalhanger

    The Rest Is Politics

    3,082 Listeners

    Calm History: Relax with Bedtime Sleep Stories in Slow English for Kids & Adults by Harris | ASMR & Insomnia Network

    Calm History: Relax with Bedtime Sleep Stories in Slow English for Kids & Adults

    703 Listeners

    If Books Could Kill by Michael Hobbes & Peter Shamshiri

    If Books Could Kill

    9,012 Listeners