A Sound British Adventure.

Comedian Stewart Lee presents an audio journey through a lost world of 
early British electronic music, revealing the characters and the music 
they created in the 50s and 60s.

Tristram Cary started the first electronic music studio in Britain but, 
while France, Germany, Italy and the USA had lavishly funded research 
centres, British electronic music remained the preserve of boffins on a 
budget.

As the programme reveals, this make do and mend approach prevailed long 
after austerity Britain had given way to the swinging 60s, with Peter 
Zinovieff developing EMS synthesizers from a shed at the bottom of his 
garden in Putney. (Paul McCartney put on his wellies and took a look). 
Zinovieff is interviewed about his experiments in sound.

Unsurprisingly, the electronic community in Britain was a small, 
intimate group and joining Cary and Zinovieff was Daphne Oram, who 
devoted decades to developing a 'drawn sound' electronic composition 
system that never really quite worked.

Brian Hodgson tells us about 1960s experimental and electronic 
festivals, including The Million Volt Light and Sound Rave (1967) at 
which The Beatles' electronic piece Carnival Of Light had its only 
public airing. We shall also hear how the radiophonic workshop broke new 
musical ground with Dr. Who.

Experts in the history of electronic music, including author and 
musician Mark Ayers and Goldsmith College lecturer in computer studies 
Dr. Michael Griegson give the boffins' view and Portishead's Adrian 
Utley explains why the early forays in electronics are still relevant today.

Produced by John Sugar A Sugar Production for BBC Radio 4.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b01lsyjg/A_Sound_British_Adventure/
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