MATRIXSYNTH: Raymond Scott


Showing posts with label Raymond Scott. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Raymond Scott. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 08, 2019

Yuri Suzuki gives Raymond Scott's Electronium electronic sequencer an AI makeover


Uploaded on May 8, 2019 Dezeen

Note Yuri Suzuki brought us the Global Synthesiser Project. You can find additional posts featuring Yuri here. See the Electronium label for demos of the original and more (including an unexpected user, none other than, Michael Jackson).

"Japanese designer Yuri Suzuki has reimagined a sixty-year-old electronic sequencer machine as a physical piece of music software that uses artificial intelligence to generate melodies.

Conceived by musician Raymond Scott in 1959, the Electronium, which is regarded as the world's first electronic sequencer, was made up of three switchboards mounted on a wooden cabinet.

Although the machine was never completed, it was meant to allow users to perform and compose music simultaneously.

Using pre-programmed algorithms, it would turn a snippet of any given melody into a full composition while enabling users to add embellishments over the top.

Presented at the upcoming Barbican exhibition AI: More Than Human, Suzuki – who is a partner at Pentagram – wanted to recreate the landmark machine using musical AI software Google Magenta.

Read more on http://www.dezeen.com/?p=1355258"

Wednesday, October 24, 2018

Vintage Synthesizer Brochures Including Rare Vako Orchestron, Moog Constellation, and Electronium

Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.

via this auction

"A nice set of very rare synthesizer brochure / catalog paperwork. Raymond Scott ELECTRONIUM May 70, MOOG Syn Amp, VAKO Orchestron for YES, MOOG Sonic Six, Moog Constellation 1973 Taurus Apollo Lyra - for Keith Emerson of ELP. These documents are used but in good condition. Will not separate, sold as-is, thank you."

Tuesday, October 23, 2018

Ego Plum Performing Raymond Scott’s “Hall of the Mountain Queen.”


Ego Plum Performing Raymond Scott's "Hall of the Mountain Queen." from Stan Warnow on Vimeo.

"Ego Plum with John Nobori playing Raymond Scott's electronic composition "Hall of the Mountain Queen" at Scottworks, The Raymond Scott Festival on September 8th, 2018"

And the original:

In The Hall Of The Mountain Queen

Published on Jan 18, 2015 Raymond Scott - Topic

"Provided to YouTube by The Orchard Enterprises

In The Hall Of The Mountain Queen · Raymond Scott

Manhattan Research, Inc.

℗ 1999 Basta Audio-Visuals

Released on: 2009-01-19

Auto-generated by YouTube."

Thursday, September 06, 2018

FascinationMachine Promo


FascinationMachine Promo from Stan Warnow on Vimeo.

"Sample video of Rebel Technologies modern version of Raymond Scott's Fascination Machine--it's essentially a micro-Electronium, and it will be at --The Raymond Scott Festival, at the Colony Theatre in Burbank, CA., this Saturday, September 8th. More info at www.raymondscottfestival.com"

ScottWorks | The Raymond Scott Festival This Weekend


via The Bob Moog Foundation

"If you live in or around Los Angeles, don't miss ScottWorks | The Raymond Scott Festival, a very important one-day festival happening in your backyard on Saturday, September 8th. ScottWorks celebrates the work of composer, engineer, and electronic music pioneer Raymond Scott with a day of panels, discussions, and music, featuring archivists, historians, and the inventor's colleagues.

Included in the diverse lineup is an exploration of Raymond's collaboration and friendship with Bob Moog, tracing back to the mid-1950s, when he was still a college student and in the nascent stages of running his theremin company, R.A. Moog.

Read more about the festival and purchase tickets here.

You can read Bob's fascinating recollection about his work with Raymond here."

Thursday, August 30, 2018

Raymond Scott ‎- Soothing Sounds For Baby Vol. 3 (1962)

Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.
Published on Oct 4, 2014 Lobatschewski

You can find all three parts previously posted here.


via this auction

"VOL III. No booklet included.

Original 1964 pressing."

Monday, June 11, 2018

Brian Sharp at the Kawai T50 Japan 1978


Published on Apr 17, 2016 Mike Bracchi

"Recorded in Japan at a 1978 concert ... original 8-track tapes were sent to the UK and transferred to 16 track tape in Birmingham.

Brian then overdubbed the original recording by adding to the mix with a Kawai Grand Piano ...

I'm sorry about the 'popping, hissing and crackling' from my well worn record ... I keep meaning to replace it."

Another one spotted and sent my way via Conny. Based on the year, I'm guessing the Kawai T50 was analog. The following is some minimal info via organforum.com.

"Masato Akiyama was one of Kawai Japan's staff organists at the time, so would certainly have been heavily involved with the T50 project. A really nice guy and great player.I played my Japanese concerts with him and with another Kawai staff organist, Norio Goto, and our own Brian Sharp.The T50 strings were indeed superb, played from Manual IV (the top one in front of you), but available elsewhere via couplers. With eight, ten really, manuals, it took a few minutes to set up between numbers, but once started, you had enough pre-registered, and then plenty of sounds available pretty much instantly from the presets in front of you.

The T6 was a pre-production version of the T5. I have a picture of it from 1979, when it was in the museum at the Kawai/Teisco factory in Saitama Province."

If you know more, feel free to leave a comment.

Update: This is a follow-up this post on the Kawai DX800.

Sunday, July 02, 2017

Three Willow Park - Raymond Scott Electronium Release


Three Willow Park Promo from Stan Warnow on Vimeo.

Promo from Reckless Night Music for Basta Music's new release of Raymond Scott electronic music:Three Willow Park--Electronic Music from Inner Space 1961-1971



A new release featuring Raymond Scott's work on the Electronium, available on multiple formats via Amazon, digital on iTunes, and currently sold out at Dusty Groove.

via Raymondscott.net, where you'll find the full post.

"Three Willow Park: Electronic Music from Inner Space, 1961–1971, now available from Basta, represents the second anthology of pioneering electronica by Raymond Scott. The album contains 61 previously unissued gems, many featuring hypnotic rhythm tracks played by Scott’s Electronium — an invention which composed and performed using programmed intelligence. Three Willow Park reveals that Scott was producing beat-oriented proto-techno before the 1970s explosion of electronic music and rhythms on the pop charts, a significant achievement that should not be overlooked."

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Original Raymond Scott Clavivox Brochure from the 60s

Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.

via this auction

"This is your chance to own this vintage Clavivox Brochure with all the information about the vintage Raymond Scott Clavivox . This brochure has an original stamp of Thomas L Rhea on it. This brochure contains 2 pages.

This is a must-have for any vintage synthesizer collector as these are getting very hard/impossible to find these days.

This brochure has no highlighting or underlining . This catalog is in very good condition , see the picture's for more detail."

Update: I originally tagged this as from the 70s. Make that the 60s, via @_Raymond_Scott of the Raymond Scott Archives (check out the Raymond Scott timeline here):

".Circa late-1960s"

Friday, February 24, 2017

Bob Moog on Raymond Scott


Bob Moog on Raymond Scott from Gramophone Records on Vimeo.

Thursday, August 04, 2016

Aural Films Working on Raymond Scott Tribute - Call for Submissions


via Aural Films

"The Aural Films Biography Series re-presents artists by featuring retrospective collections that re-introduce the public to those who have been working for decades in music and art. Following our initial Biography release featuring artist Thomas Park. Aural Films continues with volume 2 in the Biography Series with a special tribute to the work of Raymond Scott.

Born in 1908, Raymond Scott is the most famous American composer, inventor, innovator and visionary people didn't know they knew. From his near ubiquitous cartoon music. To his electronic instruments before their time. It took 50 years for the world to catch up with his ideas that are so prevalent in popular music today. Unfortunately, Raymond Scott left us in 1994 before he had a chance to hear the future he envisioned.

Aural Films is calling out to audio and video artists around the world to create their very own tribute to Raymond Scott's legacy and the many great things that were brought to life by Manhattan Research Inc."

You'll find additional details on the project on the Aural Films website here.

Monday, August 01, 2016

Radionics Radio - An Album of Musical Radionic Thought Frequencies - Delawarr Multi-Oscillator (c.1962)


Published on Aug 1, 2016 ashford daisyak

This one in via Daniel Wilson: the album "draws attention to one of the strangest sound-making devices ever made - the under-researched Delawarr Multi-Oscillator (c.1962), which was designed to convert thoughts into clusters of frequencies. My research into this oddity has culminated in this release."

Video Description:
"Advert for the new release: Radionics Radio - 'An Album of Musical Radionic Thought Frequencies' on Sub Rosa (due August 5th 2016).

Radionics Radio is an electroacoustic and musical exposition of alternative tuning systems derived from frequencies submitted via the Radionics Radio app. All the sounds strictly originate from respective thought-frequency submissions and octaves thereof.

Further background info on this research-based project can be viewed here: [embedded below]

From press release:
'Daniel Wilson's Radionics Radio draws upon the fringe-science of radionics, with its invisible forces and psychic resonances, to spawn electroacoustic and electronic compositions employing very alternative tuning systems. Radionics' idea that thoughts can be represented as frequencies is vigorously explored on this new release through microtonal compositions which range from mutating drones to electronic sambas, with nods to Raymond Scott and Daphne Oram along the way.'

Radionics Radio was made possible through Sound and Music's Embedded programme and Resonance 104.4FM.

www.miraculousagitations.com
www.subrosa.net
www.resonancefm.com
www.soundandmusic.org

RADIONICS RADIO
Sub Rosa CD SR423 digipack + 20 page booklet
File under: Electroacoustic Experimentation
Release date: Aug 5th 2016"

Radionics Radio - Radionics in Relation to Sound (Part One)

Radionics Radio - Radionics in Relation to Sound (Part One) from Sound and Music on Vimeo.

"Radionics Radio is a project by Resonance FM's Sound and Music Embedded Composer in Residence Daniel Wilson. It draws on the radionic idea that thoughts can be intuitively linked to clusters of frequencies. From this, it is possible to explore unusual alternative tuning systems supposedly embodying certain thoughts. The Radionics Radio EP will be released by Sub Rosa in the summer of 2016."

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Raymond Scott - 'Twilight in Turkey' - Electronium


Published on Mar 22, 2013 gopogator

Saturday, August 23, 2014

Electronium From New Deluxe DVD Edtion of Deconstructing Dad - The Raymond Scott Documentary


Electronium Progress Report Excerpt from the new Deluxe DVD edtion of Deconstructing Dad--The Raymond Scott Documentary from Stan Warnow on Vimeo.

"Just to give a taste of what's in this very special DVD extra which is an overall progress report on the ongoing restoration of the Electronium by Darren Davison. There's lots more on the new Deluxe Edition DVD itself."

Thursday, January 31, 2013

almost raymond scott


Published on Jan 31, 2013 cray56·145 videos

"Just another fun day patching the Buchla and euro modular synths"

Like Raymond Scott's "Circle Machine"
See: Bob Moog on Raymond Scott and the History of the Sequencer

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Motown's Raymond Scott Electronium Breaths New Life

You might remember the Electronium Restoration Project from this previous video post.

Jeff E. Winner, one of the men behind the critically acclaimend documentary film on Raymond Scott's life, Deconstructing Dad, wrote in on The MATRIXSYNTH Lounge that they have made progress on the restoration and the Electronium is now producing sound!


A little history via wikipedia: "The Electronium, created by Raymond Scott, is an early combined electronic synthesizer and algorithmic composition / generative music machine.

Its place in history is unusual, because while in intention it is analogous to the digital algorithmic composition systems that would follow it, it was implemented entirely as an analog electronic machine.
The exact time for the beginning of Scott's efforts in making the machine is not known, but it is estimated to the late 1950s or early 1960s, with a workable unit by 1969. Scott, however, never ceased to modify and further develop the device by the time of his death in 1994.[1]

It was one of the very few electronic creations of Scott to be sold to a customer, as he was normally highly secretive about his devices[1]. A single Electronium machine was sold to Motown records, following a 1969 meeting between Scott and Motown’s Berry Gordy. The initial contract required that Scott visited Motown for three months to teach staff how the machine is used. This culminated in the 1971 hiring of Scott to serve as director of Motown's electronic music and research department in Los Angeles, a position Scott held until 1977.[1][2] No Motown recordings using Scott's electronic inventions have yet been publicly identified."

via Jeff E. Winner on The MATRIXSYNTH Lounge:

"It's Alive! Yesterday I received this email from Darren Davidson, who is attempting to restore the Motown Electronium:

On Nov 28, 2012, at 1:18 PM, Darren Davison wrote:

Good Morning!

Last night a few Electrical/Egineering freinds of mine and I were trying to get to the bottom of why the Electronium would still not utter a sound. After about an hour of tinkering and following the initial setup procedure Raymond wrote up, the machine began to make very simple and crude sounds. We recorded the sounds and although they are hardly musical, it is a fantastic milestone.

Most of the tone generators, but of course, there are more questions than answers. The voltages delivered by the power supplies are still not quite right and many of the pot switches are so sticky, that adjusting them is like steering a car in ice with a flat tire. The recording and "Auto-composing" portion is still not working and my feelings were "just get it to make some kind of controllable sound" first, then work on getting fancy.

I am sure this will accelerate things, and I have been in contact with Alan Entenman and am sending him photos of the internals of the Electronium in hopes of refreshing his memory of how some of it should work on the recording and keyboard side.

Anyway, I am hoping that by March, even if it is not recording or auto composing, the sounds are less harsh and that some of the other features such as the "Bass generators, "counterpoints", and other features are working.

I will send a copy of the sound files as soon as I can, most likely this evening. It's on the Engineering guys phone and he is having trouble sending vide for some reason. The whole thing was recorded on an Iphone and there is a 4 min? video of me adjusting knobs and such. In all fairness to their help, their names are Guy Lewis and Pete Levno.

Now I think we will start picking up steam!

—Darren"

Also on http://raymondscott.blogspot.com/2012/11/electronium-restoration-update.html - you can track the site for updates on everything Raymond Scott.

You can also see the Electronium and Raymond Scott labels directly below, at the bottom of this post, for all posts here on MATRIXSYNTH.

Friday, November 16, 2012

Roger Linn + Carl Craig - Dubspot Workshop Recap

Roger Linn + Carl Craig - Dubspot Workshop Recap @ Decibel: 'Evolution of Drum Machines'

Published on Nov 16, 2012 by DubSpot

"More info: http://bit.ly/TIfQZj
During Dubspot's recent trip to Seattle's Decibel Festival, our video team caught up with Roger Linn, the godfather of the modern drum machine, Carl Craig, one of Detroit's most talented producers, for a lecture/discussion about the history and evolution of the rhythm machines that have shaped our musical world.

One of the most inspiring elements of Seattle's annual Decibel Festival is the conversations that transpire between some of the world's most talented musical thinkers. Decibel acts as a catalyst for these moments, with lectures and demonstrations taking place throughout the festival. We were especially excited to catch a workshop where drum machine creator and pioneer Roger Linn joined Detroit techno innovator Carl Craig for a talk on the evolution of drum machines and the future of electronic rhythm.

In this video, Linn explains that our assumption of drum machines appearing in the early 80s is incorrect, and he takes us on a tour of early electronic rhythm devices such as Leon Thermin's Rhythmicon (1930), the Chamberlin Rhythmate (1957), Raymond Scott's Bandito the Bongo Artist (1963), Seeburg's Select-A-Rhythm (1964), the PAiA Programmable Drum Set (1975) and the CompuRhythm CR-78 (1978). Craig probes with questions regarding interface design for musicians vs. engineers, discusses the development of drum interfaces, and talks about how the Akai MPC changed his production and composition techniques."

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Raymond Scott Radio Special Featuring Jeff E. Winner, Thom Rhea & More

"To celebrate the 75th anniversary of Raymond Scott's music, Brian Carpenter will host a live 3-hour WZBC radio special on Friday, November 16th, at 7pm EST. Co-hosted by Jeff E. Winner (me) of the RS Archives, and Tom Rhea (Berklee, MOOG Music), with special guests: J.G. Thirlwell (FOETUS, STEROID MAXIMUS), DJ SPOOKY, Stu Brown, Will Friedwald, Daniel Goldmark, Irwin Chusid, David Harrington (KRONOS QUARTET), and more. LISTEN HERE: http://wzbc.org/ -or- tune your boombox to 90.3 FM.

http://raymondscott.blogspot.com/2012/10/live-wzbc-radio-special-with-irwin.html"

via Jeff E. Winner on Facebook

Update via Jeff E. Winner in the comments: "• LISTEN HERE: The show can now be streamed from its permanent home: http://briancarpenter.net/content/radio-webcasts-imaginationandinnovation.html"

Thursday, August 30, 2012

Raymond Scott in Self-Built Studio - 1950s

via Jeff E. Winner on
The MATRIXSYNTH Lounge

http://raymondscott.com/
"Raymond Scott in his self-built recording studio, early-1950s, New York City."

Note this is where Bob Moog and his father first visited Raymond Scott. See this post. Don't miss Raymond Scott's machine shop in the linked article.

Update: A family photo of the exterior and a few pics of the studio via Jeff:

143110645699013
143110739032337
143110722365672
143110795698998
143110725699005

Note the last two added below:

"Raymond Scott's self-built electronic music equipment, including The Karloff"

and

"Raymond demonstrates his video/audio invention, The Videola.

From a 1950s POPULAR MECHANICS article:

'For writing film scores, Raymond Scott has developed an instrument which he calls the 'VIDEOLA.' The mechanism operates a movie film in a projection room in another part of the house by remote control. The movie is flashed on a television screen, so that Scott can watch the film as he composes appropriate music. A recording apparatus is hooked up to the VIDEOLA, as well, so that he can stop, play back, listen, rub out, and rewrite.'"

You can find more images on Facebook here.

For those that do not know there is a critically acclaimed documentary on Raymond Scott titled "Deconstructing Dad". You can find it on http://raymondscott.com/.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Moog Celebrates Leon Theremin on 115th Birthday

In case you didn't know it, today would have been Leon Theremin's (Lev Sergeyevich Termen) 115th birthday. He of course brought us the theremin which Bob Moog built as kits when he was younger with his father, and that led to Bob Moog building synthesizers.

via Wikipedia: "In 1953 at age 19, Moog founded his first company, R.A. Moog Co., to manufacture theremin kits. During the 1950s, composer and electronic music pioneer Raymond Scott approached Moog, asking him to design circuits for him. Moog later acknowledged Scott as an important influence. Later, in the 1960s, the company was employed to build modular synthesizers based on Moog's designs..."

And via Moog Music where you'll find the full post:

"Today marks the 116th birthday of Russian physicist Leon Theremin, inventor of the musical instrument that bears his name and inspiration to Bob Moog.

Born Lev Sergeivich Teremen, Leon Theremin had an unusual educational background, holding both a degree in physics and a degree in cello performance, it was this unique combination of skills that was the impetus for the invention of the Theremin. The Theremin was born in a scientific laboratory. Leon was working with a device that measured the density of gas and had modified it to not only give a visual readout of the value, but an auditory representation as well. The device would emit a tone that would change pitch as the gas density changed, and Theremin discovered that his body’s proximity to the device would interfere and affect the tone. Using the control learned as a cello player Theremin managed to play a simple tune with the device and based on the delight of his coworkers, decided to develop it into a full-fledged instrument..."
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