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Electric Sounds -- Telharmonium to Moog Music

7/22/2014

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One of the very first electronic musical instruments was the Telharmonium,  invented in 1898 through 1901 by Thaddeus Cahill.  "Tel" is for telephone lines, that carried the electronic signals for this enormous instrument.  The first version weighed 7 tons, and  later models were close to 200 tons!  The idea was to use large generators to produce music electronically, and transmit it to local restaurants, hotels, and  even private homes, by subscription.   This was a precursor to the electric organ, and had the ability to create sounds similar to common orchestral instruments: flute, bassoon, clarinet, and cello.  However, it was expensive to run (and to subscribe to), and although it experienced success in the early 1900's in New York City, soon other inventions -- electric organs and radio -- would overtake it's popularity.

One of these was the Ondes Martenot, created in France by Maurice Martenot, and first presented in 1928.  This instrument could make an ethereal sliding sound, as well as sounds for individual notes.  It was played in orchestras, and is still in use today--in classical music as well as by pop musicians such as Radiohead.  Here is a video that demonstrates the Ondes Martenot, played by Thomas Bloch:

In 1964,  Robert Moog (Moog rhymes with "vogue") along with collaborator Herbert Deutch invented modules for synthesizing music electronically -- a performer could design and create his own sounds by connecting modules with electric wires and by turning knobs.  This invention is known as the "Moog Synthesizer."  When classical music by Bach was played using this system, by music engineer Wendy Carlos (who also helped tweak and improve the system), her record album Switched-On Bach took the music world by storm, reaching the top 10 of the Billboard 200 pop charts, and staying in the top 40 for 17 weeks during 1969.  It received three grammy awards in 1969-- for Best Classical Album, Best Classical Performance (for an instrumental soloist), and Best Engineered Classical Recording.   

Here is "Allegro," from Brandenburg Concerto number three, by J.S. Bach-- played with the Moog Synthesizer (and accompanied by wonderful coloful graphics!); this video was created and put on YouTube by "Puhzz;" the audio is not the original  Switched-On Bach recording by Wendy, but one he made in 2013 as a tribute to her earlier work.
The following year (1970), the "Mini Moog" was available for sale.  This was one compact instrument, not a series of modules patched together-- much easier for musicians to work with, and this new synthesizer also added some aspects to the music making, such as "variable glide" for gliding one note into another.

Soon, other companies became major competitors in producing sythesizers, but Robert Moog Music was where this type of electronic instrument began.
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Tenori-On!  "Kakariko Village", by Krapo

9/24/2012

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At the "Rock U" music pavilion at Oregon State fair this year, my husband Michael and I got to try out some really interesting modern musical instruments. One of these amazing wonders was the electronic instrument, the Tenori-on.

This is a square screen that can either be held in your hands or set on a table to play. It has a 16 x 16 grid of LED switches, which can be activated to make sounds. A dial and buttons alter the type of sound and the tempo.

"Tenori-On" means "Sound on your Palm" in Japanese. It was created by Yu Nishibori and Toshio Iwai, at Yamaha Center for Advanced Sound Technology in Japan, and became available as a Yamaha instrument in 2007.

In trying out this instrument at the fair, it was a lot of fun to push on individual dots to activate them, and see what the resulting pattern would sound like. Michael is a techie person, and though he has never pursued learning to play music, he said THIS is the instrument for him!

I looked at some different internet videos, to find one that would be a good example of what the Tenori-on can do, and found a really nice rendition of "Kakariko Village" (composed by Koji Kondo) from the video game Zelda- Ocarina of Time. This one also has a simple guitar accompaniment in the background. The artist is Krapo, from Paris, France.

Video (or live performance) is needed to fully enjoy this instrument, as it is interesting to watch all the light patterns that appear on the screen when it is played. Here's Krapo's YouTube video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KxGGpBCyPEM&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1

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    Author - Diane Hurst
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