Manhattan Research, Inc.

Page 1

This music is completely electronic, and has been created and produced on equipment designed and manufactured by

MANHATTAN RESEARCH INC. est. 1946

Features Raymond Scott’s inventions, including:

New Plastic Sounds and Electronic Abstractions

Clavivox Circle Machine Bass Line Generator Rhythm Modulator Karloff Bandito the Bongo Artist Electronium plus: Electronic Audio Logos and other industrial projects

Previously unreleased: 1950s & ’60s

COMPOSED AND PERFORMED BY

R AYM O N D S C OTT i


ii



Manhattan Research, Inc.


More than a think factory— a dream center where the excitement of tomorrow is made available today.



Manhattan Research, Inc.


Gert-Jan Blom producer Jeff Winner associate producer Irwin Chusid editor


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Scott in his electronics workshop, North Hills, NY, c.1959


Introduction

Beware! Warped Genius at Work by Irwin Chusid Director, Raymond Scott Archives

F

or decades, Raymond Scott (1908–1994) was renowned as a bandleader, composer and pianist, who led a unique six-man “Quintette” and an orchestra during the Big Band heyday of the ’30s and ’40s. He had a penchant for quirky titles (e.g., “New Year’s Eve in a Haunted House”), and for rewiring classical motifs for jazz ensemble. In the 1950s, Scott led the house band on TV’s long-running Your Hit Parade. And his melodies, through their adaptation by Warner Bros. music director Carl Stalling, found their way into countless Bugs Bunny cartoons. Scott was admired for his popular music legacy—and dismissed for it, as well, by some purists. Throughout Scott’s career in the public

spotlight, there were occasional reports of an alter ego—the inventor, the engineer, the professor in the lab coat, the electronic music pioneer. But little of this work re­ceived public exposure. In 1997, Basta reissued Scott’s 3-volume Soothing Sounds for Baby, a series of electronic recordings for infants that was virtually ignored upon its original 1964 release. Suddenly, Scott was hailed as an avatar in the fields of electronica, minimalism, ambient, and proto-disco. Critics popped champagne corks: “Scott was a musical visionary ahead of his time, and even today his music sounds like it’s beamed down from another planet…. Far from being soothing, his electronic 9


lullabies are often skull-splitting, a mix­ture of high frequency easy listening and sonic space-pop that, cranked up, would keep not only the baby awake and bawling, but half the neighborhood, too. Beware—warped genius at work.” —Edwin Pouncey, Vox (UK) “Astoundingly ahead-of-their-time exam­ ples of inspired and impeccably recorded electronic music. Predating by more than a decade such innovators as Brian Eno and Kraftwerk, Scott’s work exhibits impres­ sive sophistication, both conceptually and in terms of the performances.” —Paul Verna, Billboard (US) “These minimalist electronic discs are at once instructive historical documents (pre­ figuring similarly minimalist electronic works by Fripp, Eno, Glass and Riley) and eerily sanguine lullabies that might turn even the sweetest babe into a little Damien.” —CMJ New Music Monthly (US) “A major find for Raymond Scott fans and for those ambient/drone fans interested in precursors to Eno and Neu.” —Tower Pulse (E-Pulse on-line)

These quotes reflect the surprise and shock of those familiar with Scott’s quintet and orchestral work upon discovering the “warpe­d genius” responsible for such “soothing sounds.” Yet—SSFB was just a warm-up. In this 10

album, prepare yourself for something be­yond the pleasant parameters of pop. Scott’s electronic experiments took him to un­chart­ed netherworlds. Since, for the most part, he wasn’t answerable to a boss, he was free to wander where his curiosity led. The results—rarely soothing—are intriguing, compelling, and occasionally downright demonic. Where SSFB offers relaxing ambience, the grotesqueries of Scott’s Manhattan Research, Inc. offer a sonic excursion to the realms of weightlessness, moon-craters, and six-armed aliens with twitter­ing antennae. Scott long seemed destined to trade in his baton for a socket wrench. From his teen semesters as an engineering student in Brooklyn; through his Quintette days (1937-’39), when much of his recording time was spent in the control booth, monitoring sounds picked up by the mic but missed by the human ear; on to the formation of Manhattan Research, Inc. (est. 1946), later billed as “Designers and Manufacturers of Electronic Music and Musique Concrète Devices and Systems”—Raymond and technology were a perfect pairing. For all his accomplishments, no one ever accused Scott of being a “people person.” Johnny Williams, the Quintette drummer, noted, “All he ever had was machines—only we had names.”


Scott’s business stationery from the 1940s (top) and 1960s (left)

Singer Anita O’Day called Scott “a martinet” who “reduced [musicians] to some­ thing like wind-up toys.” It was simply a matter of time before he dispensed with the human element. Scott was more comfortable around machines. He spoke their lan­ guage. Or taught them to speak his. The “personnel” on this album consists of existing sound devices (e.g., the Ondioline and tone generators), and Scott’s own inventions, such as the Clavivox, a portamento keyboard originally designed to simulate the eerie theremin, though Scott later rewired it to produce a wide array of sounds, similar to a synthesizer; the Electronium (a.k.a. Scottronium), an instanta-

neous composition-performance console; polyphonic sequencers, including his “Circle Machine;” the Rhythm Modulator; and the Bass-line Generator. The record­ings range from detergent jingles to decidedly non-commercial (uncommercial, even) experimental ventures into musique concrète. Aside from several examples of Scott re-tooling old vehicles (“The Toy Trumpet” and “Twilight in Turkey,” both written for his original Quintette, and the standard “Night and Day”), the remainder is new material. Also in­clud­ed, for the first time in commercial release, are mid-1960s collaborations between Scott and Muppet-master Jim Henson. 11


Although he was largely unrecognized as such during his years of electronic music re­search, Scott was a transitional pop fig­ure. Before him, during the infancy of electronic music and its wider development in the academic and “serious” music realms, electronic composition was roughly grouped in two categories: 1) abstract and/ or musique concrète, as far removed from Western tonal traditions as Jupiter is from Earth; and 2) interpretations of popular and classic­al standards. Particularly on Soothing Sounds for Baby, Scott proved to be one of the first composers to merge the Brave New World of electronic sounds with a rhythmic pop sensibility. Before him, most (certainly not all) electronic music tended to be either “difficult” or banal. Scott seemed determined to challenge the prevailing market concept that electronic music was inaccessible to the broader listen­ing public. Had he spent more time actually attempting to reach that market instead of hunkered down in the woodshed, he might have achieved recognition for his efforts during his lifetime. Certainly his (quasi-anonymous) success as one of the first composers of electronic TV commercial jingles—many included in this package—helped pave the way for broader public acceptance of these extraterrestrial noises. 12

Because Scott suffered a stroke in 1987 that left him largely unable to communicate verbally (he passed away in February, 1994), and because he rarely gave interviews during his reclusive years of electron­ ic exploration, we asked those who worked with Scott and those who knew him well to share their observations for this booklet. In the process, a remarkable paradox emerges. During his orchestral career, Scott had a reputation as a bully on the bandstand, someone who demanded perfection, fired musicians impulsively, and wouldn’t hesitate to insult players who failed to meet his exacting criteria. In contrast, those who worked with Scott during his electronic years recall him with affection, respect, and admiration. They occasionally view his ideas as quixotic, and his modus operandi as daffy as the cartoons that used his melodies. But they always saw method to his madness. And their anecdotes reveal a chapter of electronic music history you won’t find in most existing books on the subject. Welcome to Manhattan Research, Inc.

More background on Raymond Scott can be found in the liner notes of other Basta releases listed at the end of this booklet.


METRONOME, MARCH, 1950

“You can’t, incidentally, have too many relays. An electronic music studio wants to grow, and grow, and grow, and grow. And relays get used up very fast.” —Raymond Scott, from a 1962 lecture 13


Schematic from Scott’s U.S. Patent #2998939, filed October 16, 1959

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Gentlemen: I have a story that may be of interest to you. It is not widely known who invented the circuitry concept for the sequential perform­ ance of musical pitches—now well known as a “sequencer.” I, however, do know who the inventor was—for it was I who first conceived and built the electronic sequencer back in 1960. This concept for my musical pitch sequencer was triggered by the introduction in 1959 of the Wurlitzer Drum Machine called the Sideman—a rotating mechanical disc switching device that produced an electronically generated sequence of drum sounds. It immediately occurred to me—Why not build a device that would automatically sequence through a string of musical pitches? Using thyratron tubes and relays I constructed my first electronic“sequencer” by the spring of 1960. With the introduction of Unijunction Transistors about ’61, ’62 I built my second “sequencer” this time with UJTs and relays. Incidentally, I may have owned the first polyphonic synthesizer, built for me, but constructed by Bob Moog in ’63 or ’64. It was also about this time that Bob Moog, who visited me occasionally at my lab on Long Island, was among the first to see and witness the performance of my UJT-Relay sequencer. [over] —2— 15


Decided about this time that I should try to build a solid state version—no relays— but this was beyond me. I asked Moog to build it for me. He suggested that Dumont had a solid state electric switch—and that maybe I wanted something like that. When he showed me the schematic he had designed for me, he had labeled it “sequencer.” I believe he coined the word “sequencer” to describe this device. To digress for a bit: During these early 60s I was so secretive about my development activities—perhaps neurotically so—that I was always reminding Bob that he mustn’t copy or reveal my sequencer work to anyone. I understand, now, my personal need for secrecy at that time. Electronic music for commercials and films was my living then—and I thought I had this great advantage—because it was my sequencer. I did, however, show my sequencer to two members of the electronic music facility at Columbia University, Vladimir Ussachevsky and Mario Davidowsky, and Myron Schaeffer of Toronto University Music Department. Word naturally got around about the nature of what my device accomplished but Bob Moog continued to be loyal. I must say Bob Moog is a most honorable person. He stead­fastly refrained from embodying my sequencer in his equipment line until the sheer press­ure of so many manufacturers using the sequencer forced him to compete. Yet, he used the simplest version, though he knew about my most advanced sequencer. Quite a gentle­man, and a super talent besides. Now, with the passing of years, I guess I regret my secrecy and would like for people to know of what I accomplished.

Raymond Scott, c. 1980

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(unaddressed letter found among personal papers)


Raymond Scott: Inventor and Composer by Joel Chadabe Joel Chadabe is a composer, president of Electronic Music Foundation and director of the electronic music studio at Bennington College

music history is often por­ E xtrayed as a history of the art. The first milestones along that historical path lectro nic

in­clude Jean Cocteau and Eric Satie’s Parade in 1917, George Antheil’s Ballet Mécanique in 1926, John Cage’s use of found sounds in and after the late 1930s, and Pierre Schaeffer’s formulation of musique con­crète in 1948. All these milestones occurred in the pre-tape recorder age, and these works in­evitably led to the embrace of all sound as music. xxHowever, the concurrent development of electronic technology facilitated new artist­ ic explorations. The arrival of tape recorders in the marketplace around 1950 led to a new round of music by Karlheinz Stockhausen, Iannis Xenakis, Edgard Varèse, and others. The invention of computer music in

1957 made possible the early works of James Tenney, Jean-Claude Risset, and John Chowning. The easy availability of electronic components following 1960 made it possible for David Tudor, Pauline Olive­ ros, Alvin Lucier, and many others to as­semble their own instruments. And the introduction of the voltage-controlled synthesizer in the mid-1960s brought Morton Subotnick and Wendy Carlos to promi­ nence. This history, of course, continues to evolve. xxThe history of electronic musical instrument invention is every bit as important as the history of the art. Although there were portents of electronic instruments as early as 1759 with Jean-Baptiste de La Borde’s Clavecin Electrique in Paris, and many experiments with electricity and music in Europe and North America during the 19th century, the history of electronic instrument invention truly begins at the outset of the 20th century with Thaddeus Cahill’s Telharmonium. By today’s standards a large synthesizer (estimated at approxi­mately 200 17


tons), this remarkable invention was installed in New York’s Telharmonic Hall at 39th Street and Broadway in 1906. Ironically, Cahill was driven by a fundamentally entrepreneurial goal. He was aware that electronic instruments con­tained the potential to produce any sound, yet his focus was on the business concept of transmitting electronic sounds via tele­phone cables to private homes and such public spaces as restaurants and hotel lobbies. Cahill thus foreshadowed Muzak. There were other early-20th Century business-minded instrument inventors. These included Armand Givelet and Eloy Coupleux, who developed the Givelet/Coupleux Organ in France in the early 1930s; Georges Jenny, who developed the Ondioline in France in the late 1930s; and the immensely successful Laurens Hammond, whose Hammond Organ, developed in the U.S. and utilizing sound-generation techniques similar to the Telharmonium, was ubiquitous by the 1940s. xxThere were, of course, many early-20thcentury instrument inventors who were not businessmen. Although the theremin did enjoy brief commercial exposure with RCA in 1928, its inventor Leon Theremin was not market-savvy. Maurice Martenot, who presented his ondes Martenot in Paris in 1928, and Friedrich Trautwein, who unveiled his Trautonium in Berlin that same year, were compelled less by business than by curiosity 18

about sonic creation. Hugh Le Caine, who designed the Electronic Sackbut in Canada in 1946, was supported by the Canada Research Council to provide manufacturing opportunities for Canadian companies. But Le Caine was the quintessential engineer and businessman’s enemy, whose ongoing process of reconfiguring and upgrading his inventions made it impossible to freeze his designs long enough to build a product for commercial release. xxRaymond Scott not only invented electronic instruments; he invested considerable resources in doing so. Synthesizer pioneer Robert Moog recalled, in a phone interview with Scott archivist Irwin Chusid in 1993, that he and his father visited Scott at his four-story home in North Hills, Long Island, around 1955. As Moog described it, “[Scott] had room after room of fancy machines. It was a football field down there, half a dozen big rooms, impeccably set up. The floors were painted, like some high class industrial laboratory. He had nothing but the best and the biggest ma­chines. He had a whole room of metal­ work­ing equipment and a room full of wood­work­ing equipment, and this huge barn of a room for electronic stuff.” As Moog pointed out, no one puts together an extensive laboratory overnight. Scott had been at it for years, and he was familiar with electronic music machine originators like Trautwein, Theremin, and Le Caine.


1938 (Age 29)

“Scott used to rummage through the war-surplus electronic stuff on Canal Street in Manhattan at the close of WWII to nd parts for his electronic devices. He obtained a tape recorder that would only record for 1 minute. It was put to use by Scott before any commercial tape recorder was yet available.” N.L. Bates, RS orch. bassist Raymond Scott’s 1946 Patent disclosure: The Orchestra Machine

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xxBuilding on the work of his predecessors, and employing his own intuitive sense of what he called "primitive engineering," Scott developed the Clavivox, the Circle Machine sequencer, and the Electronium, which are discussed elsewhere in this booklet. xxThe Electronium, which Scott began to develop in 1959—and like Le Caine’s Sackbut never finished to the inventor’s ultimate satisfaction—was an electronic system that employed processes based on controlled randomness to generate rhythms, melodies, and timbres. Scott intended it to be a composing-performing machine, a very compelling idea that was in the air by the late 1960s and that was ex­plored independently by several people in different ways. Both the multi-sequencer CEMS (Coordinated Electronic Music Studio) System, which I designed with Robert Moog in the late 1960s for the State University of New York at Albany, and the SalMar Construction, a digitally-controlled instrument built by Salvatore Martirano at the University of Illinois, were based on interactive pseudorandom composition. xxFrom Moog’s verbal and Scott’s privately written recollections, and, for that matter, from Scott’s almost complete lack of published information about his instruments, one could observe that Scott’s unwillingness to disclose his inventions caused his business and historical-recognition indices to rate in 20

the negative numbers. How, after all, can you run a business inventing instruments if you don’t tell anyone about them? How can you get recognition for technological advances if you keep them secret? xxScott expressed his paranoia in other ways as well. In an unpublished 1980 letter, he mentioned that Vladimir Ussachevsky, Mario Davidowsky, Myron Schaeffer, Herb Deutsch, and Morton Gould had all seen his sequencer, and he observed, “Word naturally got around about the nature of what my device accomplished....” It was an interest­ ing statement that lends evidence of both Scott’s “paranoia” and a very egocentric view of progress, wherein technology is developed by one person and then stolen by others. xxIn fact, popular ideas often evolve at a particular time and are realized more or less simultaneously by different people. The idea of an electronic sequencer was prevalent in the 1960s, and technicians with different perspectives and histories, such as Donald Buchla, also realized the idea in hardware. xxInnovative, visionary, and deeply in­volved as he was, instrument invention was but one side of Scott’s professional life. The other side was music. And in music, Scott was a huge commercial success—from the Raymond Scott Quintet in the 1930s to the electronic commercial jingles he wrote for TV and radio in the 1960s. In 1964 he


c.1953

“The art of mag­netic tape record­ing has developed to an extent where a large number of channels or tracks can be applied to magnetic tape. The tracks are parallel to each other and are normally adapted for carrying independent signals.” —Raymond Scott,

1953 (from his US Patent #2783311)


Scott’s music speaks for itself and his in­struments speak through his music. His music is, indeed, so perfectly crafted, so lyrical and easy, so completely charming and good-natured, that it seems all the more wonderful, even mysterious, that much of it was created with the sophisti­­cat­ed and complex technology he invented. xxAnd that is really the point: Scott devel­ oped his instruments to make his music, and he did it so well that what you hear is the music. © 1999 Joel Chadabe

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© 1964 EPIC Records

re­leased Soothing Sounds for Baby, a series of electronic compositions aimed at different levels of infant development between one and 18 months. The recordings were not a commercial success, but it was a fascinat­­ing project in the minimalist quality of the music itself, in its assumptions about what babies could and should listen to, and in the business sense of targeting a particular market. It could be that Scott defined his public too narrowly. In the context of the minimalist music of the 1980s and 1990s, Soothing Sounds for Baby developed a second life in the 18-month to 90-year range.

3-album series “Soothing Sounds for Baby,” fea­­tur­­ ing Scott’s electronic music, was issued under auspices of Gesell Institute of Child Development xx


“Solenoid 47 is provided to withdraw armature 43 from contact 42 and to close a second circuit through contact 48. This establishes the high speed operation through wires 45 and 49, the spring 46 maintaining such high speed operation.” —Raymond Scott, 1953 (from his US Patent #2779826)

In the early 1950s, Scott installed tape components and a control panel on his piano, allowing him to electronically modify the piano’s sound while re­cord­ing the results.

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Facing page: Scott and wife (Dorothy Collins) at work in home studio. From the cover of The Jingle Workshop promotional LP, 1957 Right: Promo­tion­ al poster for Scott’s commercial music company, The Jin­gle Workshop Below: element from RS business stationery


MANHATTAN

RESEARCH INC.

ESTABLISHED

1946

A DIVISION OF RAYMOND SCOTT ENTERPRISES, INC.

Robert Moog “Scott was in the forefront of developing the technology, and he was in the forefront of using it commercially as a musician.” . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26

Herb Deutsch “I remember distinctly what he told me—he wanted to take the work out of being a composer. That used to get me really upset!” . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46

Jim Henson and Raymond Scott

by Karen Falk and Irwin Chusid . . . . . . . 52

Alan Entenman “The Electronium would never be finished. He was always changing and modifying it. What it did one day was not necessarily what it would do the next.”. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65

Thomas Rhea “The idea that he anticipated some artificial intelligence concepts and some compositional concepts that other people believe somebody else did, I think is very important.” . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80

Mitzi Scott “He would come in for lunch. I would put his lunch on the table and go back to the kitchen to get mine. By the time I’d get back to the table, he was gone—back in the lab.”. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86

Additionally… TRACK NOTES: 26

by Jeff Winner. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96

Mining the archives

by Gert-Jan Blom and Jeff Winner . . . . . . 100

Copyright © 2000 by BASTA Audio/Visuals, The Netherlands. All rights reserved.



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—Raymond Scott, 1949

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Robert Moog, inventor of the Moog Synthesizer and proprietor of Big Briar, Inc., was interviewed at his home in Leister, NC, via phone by Irwin Chusid on May 19, 1993.

Robert Moog 30

IC: When did you first meet Raymond Scott? Moog: Sometime around 1955. I lived with my parents, in Flushing, New York, and was selling theremins out of their basement. I was going to Columbia University and my father—an engineer—and I sometimes worke­d together on things. Scott wanted to obtain the electronic part of the theremin to incorporate it in something he was work­ ing on. So my father and I went out to Scott’s four-story house in North Hills, on Long Island. We had never seen anything like it. I remember Scott showing us around the place—the whole basement was like a wet dream for a handyman. Scott described what he wanted, al­though he didn’t tell us how he was gonna use it. He showed us his prototype of a keyboard instrument. There was a very light vane, about an inch wide and a foot and a half long, positioned across the backs of the


“Scott was in the forefront of developing the technology, and he was in the forefront of using it commercially as a musician.” key levers. The vane was pivoted at the high—the right-hand—end of the keyboard. When you pressed a key, the vane went up; the higher the key, the more the vane would rise. He’d attached a small metal electrode to the free end of the vane, and had wired in our theremin so that the vane electrode would ‘play’ the theremin. I think his prototype also had a weighted reed that vibrated about six times a second, thereby introducing vibrato into the tone. IC: Do you remember him asking you to help design a sequencer? Moog: No. I’m not saying that didn’t happen. My way of working back then, up until 1968 or so, was really a hobby. If somebody asked me to design something, I did it in a matter of hours or days. Often there was no documentation. IC: Scott credits you with coining the term “sequencer.” Is that true? Moog: I don’t think so. The first sequencer [by name] I can remember Buchla came out

with. I knew about it around 1967, but Buchla had developed it two or three years before. IC: One of Raymond’s first sequencers was called a “Circle Machine.” We have a videotape of filmed commercials for which Raymond did electronic soundtracks around ’60-’61. There’s a couple for Auto-Lite batteries that use what’s obviously a sequencer, with a series of pitches. Moog: That 30 feet of wall space that [Scott associate] Herb Deutsch talked about [in an article in Music, Computers and Software] seeing in 1965 did exist, and I can’t remember the first time I saw that much stuff. But you don’t go from having nothing one day to having 30 feet of equipment the next. Scott probably was fooling with that kind of stuff for years and years. And if you have something that has sequential sound from ’61, it could have been that Scott had begun this in 1956 or ’57 when I was first down there. 31


IC: Can you put Scott’s overall contribution to electronic music and studio recording and engineering in historical perspective? Moog: He had two careers. His Lucky Strik­e Hit Parade gig and the Raymond Scott quintet were what he did for money, for a living. But what really interested him was inventing. Unfortunately, he didn’t have that much in­fluence. Because of his paranoia, any in­fluence he had on other musical instrument designers resulted from information that leaked out. There are lots of people who publish. Publishing was the last thing Raymond Scott would have done. He knew all about [Friedrich] Trautwein [inventor of the Trautonium (1928)], he

POPULAR MECHANICS, SEPTEMBER, 1959

IC: It would put him in the forefront of developing this technology. Moog: Oh, definitely! No doubt about that. He was in the forefront of developing the technology, and he was in the forefront of using it commercially as a musician.

The Clavivox, one of Scott’s keyboard synthesizers (applied for 1956, granted 1959—see page 38/39)

“Scott was always very guarded about his current projects. I don’t believe he ever told me exactly what all the stuff we were designing and building for him was going to be used for.” 32


“For writing film scores, 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 record­ ing apparatus is hooked up to the Videola, as well, so that he can stop, play back, listen, rub out, and rewrite.”—POPULAR MECHANICS

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Scott, wife Dorothy and daughter Deborah relaxing in their North Hills (NY) home, 1957 (Radio/TV Mirror)

“I have been putting together an electronic laboratory for years — I guess about 20 years now, and I have a rather deep inter­est in things electronic and things electro-acoustical.” —Raymond Scott, mid-1960s


knew all about Theremin, he knew all about Harold Bojé [one of Stockhausen’s collaborators at the WDR studios in Cologne]. These people wrote articles, and there were few enough articles back then that if you wrote something, everybody knew about it. But Scott didn’t do that. It was word of mouth and very hard to substantiate.

that have been built since the turn of the century that you could call a synthesizer. For instance, there was something that used 15-kilowatt electrical generators, called a Telharmonium. It was built around the turn of the century.

IC: And Scott. Moog: Yeah.

IC: Anything which creates sound electron­ ic­ally could be considered a synthesizer? Moog: Well, anything that creates sound and has the capability of being reconfig­ ured. An instrument that you turn on and play, like a theremin, is not a synthesizer. But an instrument that you turn on, and you can turn this and turn that and flip this switch and put that patch cord in and actually change the quality of the sound—that’s a synthesizer.

IC: Scott credited him with inventing one of the first synthesizers. Someone said that Raymond had a synthesizer as early as 1949. Moog: Well, there are all sorts of things

IC: They weren’t calling it a synthesizer back then, were they? Moog: I can remember the word first being used consistently with respect to one invention—the RCA electronic sound synthesizer,

IC: Have you ever heard of Hugh Le Caine? Moog: Oh yeah! There’s a book on his life. Le Caine worked for the National Research Council in Canada, and everything of Hugh Le Caine’s was published. Hugh Le Caine had a profound influence on people like me.

“Raymond Scott had brilliant intuition—he once said to me, ‘The trouble with you is that you believe just because you think about something, then it's done.’ Back then I was having a hell of a problem managing my time—Raymond put his nger on part of the problem.”—Robert Moog

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in the late ’40s. Two of them were built. They were four-voice instruments. One of them still exists—or did until recently—at the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center. It’s been described in the Journal of the Audio Engineering Society. It was completely programmed from a paper roll, like a piano roll. To compose on it you would punch holes in the roll. IC: Scott had all these inventions—the Clavivox, the early sequencer, the Elec­tro­nium. Why weren’t these commercially developed? Why did Raymond never capitalize on them, other than using them in his music or commercials? Moog: Well, I think there was something irrational there. It’s like giving away your child. The last thing he needed was to make more money. The guy had this four-story house…. IC: 32 rooms… Moog: Yeah, it was a big place! It had an elevator going from one floor to the other. Dorothy Collins lived on one floor, he lived on another, and the basement was this incredible playground. Anyway, after 1957, when my father and I built this thing for the Scott Clavivox, Raymond contacted us every now and then. 36

He’d tell us about this, or ask us about that. But it was very infrequent, and I can’t remember actually doing anything for him throughout the early ’60s. Then, in 1964, when I set up shop upstate in Trumansburg, New York, somehow that interested him because that meant I could make special little things for him. We de­signed and built a lot of small circuits for him. He would call frequently, and it went beyond a business relationship. My wife and I became fairly friendly with him. He used to come up to Trumansburg periodic­ ally, to give me new assignments and check on how our work was coming. On one of those trips he told us about this wonderful woman he’d met, and on a later trip he brought Mitzi with him and they were married in Trumansburg by Dana Poyer, the local Justice of the Peace. But Scott was always very guarded about his current projects. I don’t believe he ever told me exactly what all the stuff we were designing and building for him was going to be used for. IC: You’re much younger than Raymond. Did you look up to him? Did he seem to you a figure who was larger than life, or a legendary character? Moog: ‘Legendary’ I wouldn’t give him,


because I think I saw him pretty accurately for what he was. But he was something larger than life. He lived on an economic plane that was several layers removed from what I was used to. IC: Did you respect what he was doing technologically? Did it make sense to you, or did it seem haphazard? Did he seem like an absent-minded genius-professor who couldn’t quite get focused? Moog: No, because I was a little bit like that myself. I remember my father and I were more or less making fun of him—that he had all this stuff and he didn’t have a workbench. Obviously he just liked ‘stuff’. You can’t imagine these rooms of tools, of big expensive milling machines. He had several lathes of the highest quality. We had one that my father picked up for $65, that went back to the turn of the century. And here Scott had all these brand new shiny high-tech tools, one after the other, and

none of them looked liked they’d ever been used. IC: Obviously he was working, because he developed the Clavivox, the Electronium, and the sequencer. Moog: Yeah, I figured that at some point he went off in the corner and got dirty. But my memory of him was of a guy who liked playing around—big time. IC: …Never spent much time marketing it. Moog: He wasn’t interested in marketing. He said he was, but I never got the feeling that he wanted to do anything more than fool around. IC: He’s a strange sort of fellow—paranoid, very stubborn… Moog: Yep. IC: …had to do it his own way. Moog: Yep.

“He had so much imagination, and so much intuition—this funny intuition that some people have— that he could sort of sh around and get something to work and do exactly what he wanted it to do.” —Robert Moog 37


“The combination of a gliding change in pitch with the vibrato of this invention produces musical effects of an unusual tonal quality.”—Raymond Scott, 1956 (from US Patent #2871745: “the Clavivox”)


2,871,745 KEYBOARD OPERATED ELECTRICAL MUSICAL INSTRUMENT Raymond Scott, Manhasset, N. Y. Application December 20, 1956, Serial No. 629,505 15 Claims. (Cl. 84—1.25) This invention relates to electronic musical instruments and more particularly to such an instrument oper­ ated by a keyboard of the piano type. The invention provides a keyboard instrument of sim­ ple and reliable operation where a melody may be pro­ duced which smoothly and accurately slides in pitch from any note on the keyboard to any other note on the keyboard, whether higher or lower, without having to press any intervening notes. In general, the present musical instrument combines a tunable oscillator device of the type known as a “Theremin,” as disclosed in U.S. patent No. 1,661,058, with a piano keyboard in such a way as to provide positive control of the pitch of the emitted note. The “Theremin” is played by slight variations in capacitanc­e produced by moving one hand of the oper­ ator toward and away from a control electrode. The other hand may be used for volume control. The “Theremi­n,” however, is extremely difficult to play. It is particularly difficult to obtain accurate pitch because extremely slight variations in the position of the hand of the operator will cause a particular note to sound off key. In fact, and although the “Theremin” has been known and greatly appreciated for more than 30 years, there are hardly more than about a half-dozen artists in the country who are capable of rendering satisfactory performances on the instrument. With the foregoing in mind, the present invention provide­s a form of piano keyboard for pitch control of

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a “Theremin” instrument which is arranged to effect mechanical variations of predetermined magnitudes, thus avoiding the inaccuracies of pitch which result when the instrument is played by body capacitance effects in­volving changes in the position of the hand of the artist. A particular advantage of my instrument is that each note is reached by smooth, sliding, predetermined ascents or descents, through predetermined increments of pitch, this action resulting in an extremely pleasing musical effect. Moreover, the gliding change from one note to another may be effected at varying rates at the will of the artist, although the final pitch of the note is always true regardless of any particular technique or expression employed by the artist. Adjustable means are further provided for individually mechanically tuning the particular note produced by each of the keys without affecting the over-all mechani­ cal action of the instrument. Additionally, means are provided for obtaining a con­ trollable vibrato effect, which is electro-mechanical, so as to simulate and derive the benefit of manual operation while obtaining the advantages of electrically con­ trolled precision. The combination of a gliding change in pitch with the vibrato of this invention produces musi­ cal effects of an unusual tonal quality. […] Referring to Figure 1, there is shown an oscillator 10 of fixed frequency which may be 500 kilocycles, for example. There is also a tunable oscillator 11 which normally emits a frequency of 500 kilocycles, this frequency being reducible by increasing the capacitance be­tween ground and a control terminal 12. The outputs of the oscillators 11 and 12 are connected to a hetero­ dyne mixer 13. A filter 14 is connected to the output of the mixer 13 and passes frequencies in the audible range, up to 20 kilocycles, for example. The beat frequency between oscillators 10 and 11 which is produced in

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Electronic Labyrinth JU LY 1 9 5 9 H I - FI • H A M   RA DI O • S W L • TE ST  GE A R 35 C EN T S

“The house where Raymond Scott and Dorothy Collins and their two children live is not a home — in any ordinary sense; it is a 32-room electronic labyrinth. A completely self-taught engi­n­eer, Raymond has lled many of the rooms with special electronic devices used in his composing and re­cord­ing chores that have con­founded experts in the eld. The exact worth of all the electronic installations is a mystery, even to Raymond, but he estimates that he has a ‘couple hundred thousand dollars’ invested in equipment. In his basement Raymond has all the machinery necessary for building his sound equipment. Most of the units in his sound recording studio were designed and built in this workshop. One complete room in the basement is lled with nothing but cabinets full of spare parts.” Alan D. Haas, “Raymond Scott: Electronics Enthusiast Par Excellence.’ Popular Electronics, July, 1959

“One complete room in the basement is filled with nothing but cabinets full of spare parts.”

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“In his well-equipped machine shop, Scott arranges the tools he uses in his electronics work and do-ityourself projects. Scott’s various electronic devices take up eight whole rooms in the house.” (1957)

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Raymond Scott’s legendary “Wall of Dazzle,” mid-1950s

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“Dorothy Collins makes test re­cord­ing in husband’s home recording studio as Scott adjusts equipment settings”

“Scott uses microscope to see that grooves are cut correctly on test record made in his studio”


Photos and captions from POPULAR ELECTRONICS (July, 1959) and POPULAR MECHANICS (September, 1959)

“Wife Dorothy and daughter Debbie listen as Scott explains the intricacy of the equipment which he developed for his own needs”

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New Electronic Sounds for Commercials column: Along Madison Avenue With Kaselow by Joseph Kaselow New York Herald Tribune, July 19, 1960

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few day s ago we journeyed out to music vcomposer Raymond’s Scott’s mansion in Manhasset on the trail of a device he invented that makes “new sounds” for radio and TV commercials. (You may think you’ve heard all there is, but you ain’t heard nothin’ yet.) Mr. Scott, a slight, soft-spoken, soft-eyed man, greeted us at the door in shorts and open-necked sports shirt, and led us into an enormous sitting room where we sat down. When he spoke he was accompanied by a beepswish sound coming from a room to the right that looked like it might be powering the Defense Department’s DEW radar network. xx“Writing a jingle or any lyric,” he said right off, “is like writing a letter—particularly a love letter.” (His wife is Dorothy Collins who is in Toronto doing “South Pacific.”) “You must say it simply and with feeling. And you might also say I don’t feel that writing jingles is cheapening. We’re proud to be said to be writing jingles. Perhaps if you’re just a jingle writer you might be a little embarrassed by it.” xxAs most people know, Mr. Scott is not just a jingle writer. He started many years ago developing new and distinctive sounds in popular music. If you’re pre-Presley you might recall “Twilight in

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Turkey,” “Power­house,” “Dinner Music for a Pack of Hungry Cannibals,” “The Toy Trumpet,” and a personal favorite for this section, “Business Man’s Bounce.” One Word Key He went on: “I can say, probably with a lot of bias—no, not with bias, because I believe it—that music develops what I call a satellite, or orbital, effect. It keeps going round and round in your mind and heart. The key to it all is in one word—love. People say, for instance, I love that tune.” The word crops up continually in his conversation. xxAs for the “new sound,” it developed this way. Mr. Scott and his partners in the Jingle Work Shop, at 140 W. 57th St., took to heart that most reiterated requested of ad agency men—“We don’t want just another jingle.” Mr. Scott, a creative electronic genius as well as a composer, considered this a challenge. (He’s got some $100,000 worth of electronics equipment stashed around the house and a full-time man turning his ideas into reality and keeping the stuff in shape.) Out of his imaginings came a device, as yet unnamed. (His sales mana­ger calls it the “Karloff,” which might give you an idea.)


Scott showing “Karloff” (left) and Clavivox (above), c. 1959

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ad v ertising age

On Sure Footing Mr. Scott led us into the beep-swish room to show us his brain-child, and we felt a certain sense of security only because we were wearing rubbersoled shoes. Heart of the unit is a control panel with some hundred or so buttons and dials from which Scott can get an infinite number of rhythms and sound combinations—treble, bass, beeping, swishing, honking—you name it and he’ll come up with a reasonable facsimile. Sometimes he’ll tie it 48

in with another invention of his, the Clavivox, which is supposed to approximate the human voice in some of its phases. xxAfter demonstrating the device, Mr. Scott showed us through his electronics and working rooms (about seven or eight of them) downstairs. It may have been our imagination, but as we were leaving we could have sworn the Clavivox, off in the distance, was saying, “Let’s stop spinning the wheels and get into high gear.”



Commercials Go Off the Beaten Sound Track unidentified magazine article [December, 1960]

• Inventor Raymond Scott produces a new machine for his radio/tv commercials rm, The Jingle Workshop • Innite musical-electronic combinations now give commercials production a brand new audio dimension

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or many years Raymond Scott was well-known xas the musical director of Your Hit Parade. But lately Scott has been attracting a good deal of attention as the inventor of electronic equipment for musical effects. One of his machines is capable of startling applications to radio/tv commercial production. xxSince October, commercials using Scott’s electronic and musical effects have gone on the air for Vicks, Lever Bros., Alcoa, and Hamm’s Beer. Commercials for other advertisers are now being de­vel­ oped and will be broadcast shortly. xxScott’s machine, actually a control console which selects, modifies, and combines sounds produced by electronic means, has 200 sound sources and is capable of quickly producing infinite and varied musical and electronic effects. Known affectionately as Karloff, the machine could only have been put together by a musician (such as Scott) who is also a devoted electronic inventor (such as Scott).

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xxCarl Buffington, radio/tv director of Morse International, asked Scott to develop an unusual approach to a spot campaign in the spring of this year. Scott happens to have had a well-equipped electronic and machine shop in his Manhasset home for 12 years. xxThe electronic and musical equipment which Scott assembled became the core of his present machine, a machine that is still growing. That’s not all; Scott is ready to invent other musical-electronic machines or accessories as he needs them. His mechanical and electronic facilities, worth $100,000, are a plant right on the premises of his home which shop and studio operators can envy. xxHad Scott possessed only an electronic and mechanical talent, his invention might have passe­d unnoticed. But as a celebrated musician with so much experience in broadcasting and adver­tis­ing, Scott’s achievement as an inventor could not long be kept a secret. To date, representatives of 20 advertising agencies, three film producers, and one


station group have journeyed to Manhasset to visit Scott’s musical-electronic laboratory. xxA Canadian visitor, Henry Karplus, radio/tv director of Roynolds-Reynolds and Co., Ltd., of Toronto, described Scott’s achievement as “the commercial of the future.” xxScott is very reluctant to give his machine a name, since it is the musical talent using the machine as a tool, and not the machine itself, that really counts. xxThe machine uses several electronic tone gen­ era­tors, and others can be added if needed. A control panel directs pitch, timbre, intensity, tempo, accent, and repetition. It can select from an unlim­ it­ed number if sources and make up infinite combinations and permutations. xxThe Manhasset behemoth can do virtually any­ thing. It can sound like a group of bongo drums. It

can give impressions which suggest common noises­. It can create the mood of musical tonepoems. And it can also take the advertiser’s theme music and produce limitless emotional variations on it to suit a variety of musical styles — all, of course, if Scott is at the controls. xxCompared to other musical-electronics effects methods, which reply heavily on playing tape offspeed or backwards, Scott’s approach is far less time-consuming and produces a much wider range of results. Compared to music from conventional sources, it is slower in development but faster in production. It is also slightly cheaper than ordi­ nary music. xxIf Karloff doesn’t become the accepted name for a process which mixes so many musical and electronic elements together, perhaps someone might suggest that it be called Scott’s Emulsion.

RAYMOND SCOTT’S MUSIC MACHINE (1960) Where the sound comes from: a Clavivox (another Scott invention), an electric organ, and electronic tone generators which are capable of producing any pitch that is selected. What happens to the sound: it is given a basic rhythm continuity by a rotating scanning device in which 200 elements can be combined in innite permutations of pitch, tempo, meter, timbre, or special mood. What the result is like: anything from a set of bongos to a full orchestra, from a whimsical pop and squeak to an evocative emotional background setting the scene. Voices and other instruments which are used blend well in the nal delivered sound track. Who’s using it: Vicks (Morse International), Vim of Lever Bros. (OBM), Alcoa (KM&G), Hamm’s (C-M), and Coronet-Esquire station WQXI, Atlanta.

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Rack layout for rhythm machine, Sept. 1960 (See finished wall on page 60) Right: Shelves for orscillators

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Raymond Scott’s ‘Sounds Electronique’ Accents New Em­pha­sis on Audio by Harry W. McMahan Advertising Age – The National Newspaper of Marketing (Feature Section), April 16, 1962

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that the average American family is ex­­ xposed to more than 500 commercials a week (yep, that’s the figure), how do you ever get ’em to look up when yours comes on? xx“Grab ’em by the ears!” is Ray Scott’s answer. xxThe man may have something there. The industry has become more and more conscious of a need for a “new sound” to pique the curiosity of the viewer and give a distinctive mark to the advertiser. xxScott’s new “Sounds Electronique” is a big help in these two directions. Just possibly, it gives an audio edge to a number of commercials lately: Autolite (BBDO), Vim (Ogilvy), Thermo-Fax (EWRR), Parker Pen (Burnett) and Nescafé of Canada (Hayhurst, Toronto), for instance. xxElectronically manipulated sounds are not new, of course. Musically, they go back to the Hammond organ. Magnetic quarter-inch tape came along to add a new tool. Various engineers began tricks of slowing, speeding, re-recordings. Multi-tracking. Fil­ters. Reverse flipping of tape segments. “Woopweeping” with audio oscillators. Up to now, most of the trick tracks (the Maxwell House “Percolator” award-winner, for instance) have come out of these devices. xxScott’s newer approach begins with music, combines the effects, then explores the unending world of the electronics engin­eer. It’s like putting an IBM ow

computer to work on the potentials of a basic creative idea. xxScott, of course, is best known as a composer (“18th Century Drawing Room”), jingle writer (“Be Happy, Go Lucky” and the RAB award-winning Esso jingle) and conductor (“Hit Parade”). His excursion into engineering began “as a hob­ by,” now crowds eight rooms of his Long Island home with “something over $100,000” in equipment. Near $150,000, I’d say. xxBetimes, he is a philosopher and a phrase­-­ maker about our business. Over his grand piano is a placque with these words of advice to himself, as a jingle writer: xx“Ideally, the words should make sense.” xxHis term for what he believes an advertis­er must have to break through the TV viewers’ apathy is an “audio logo.” He speaks of “new plastic sounds” and “electronic abstractions.” xx(Ed. note: Mr. Scott will be a member of the faculty at the Advertising Age Creative Workshop in Chicago, July 31–Aug. 3—and we trust he uses some of this colorful language then.) xxBut, best of all, we like the avowed aim of his “Sounds Electronique.” Raymond Scott says: “Grab ’em by the ears.” 53


Herb Deutsch Herb Deutsch is Professor of Music at Hofstra University on Long Land, New York, where he directs the school’s electronic music and music business programs. He is the author of ElectroAcoustic Music: Its First Century (CPT/Belwin Music). Deutsch helped Robert Moog develop the rst Moog Synthesizer in 1964. He became friends with Raymond Scott during the mid1960s, and remained on good terms with Scott for years. He was interviewed via phone by Irwin Chusid on May 19, 1993.

IC: Raymond built the Clavivox, the Electronium, and developed the sequencer. How come he wasn’t able to commercially exploit these? Were these devices so one-of-a-kind that they couldn’t be duplicated? Bob Moog seems to feel that Scott was paranoid, was afraid people would steal his ideas, and he was so preoccupied with build­ing and inventing that he never pursued marketing his creations. Deutsch: My memory of Raymond at that time is very similar. Through Bob, I met Raymond, who lived near me on Long Island. I started to work with him as a kind of “go-fer.” I worked with Raymond in the 54

studio with his engineer—whose name I can’t remember. The thing about Raymond, without being negative—I was struck by his strangeness. He was an extremely proud man. He had no ego problems, but he was a little intimidated by the professional musical world. Not the commercial world, but the ‘serious’ music world. He was afraid of bringing out products, because he may have been a little paranoid about things getting ripped off. And I’m not sure how many of those things were really finished products. The Electronium never really got finished, although it was certainly 99 per cent finished. IC: Someone said they thought Raymond had a synthesizer in 1949. I have no documentation of Raymond saying that, al­though I know he was working with electronic instruments in the fifties. Deutsch: He certainly was working with electronic instruments back in the forties. IC: Raymond said he believed Moog coined the word ‘sequencer’. Deutsch: The term ‘sequencer’ was a concept in the literature of electronic music by 1965. Bob designed his first sequencer—and actually sold this first sequencer—around ’65’66. He built a unit for Raymond. I remem-


ber seeing it at Raymond’s studio. But the thing Bob had built for him was not a typical sequencer; it was a rather strange device. IC: The device that Raymond was using in commercials around ’60 or ’61 is a sequencer, no question. Deutsch: That’s the one with unijunction transistors and a bunch of relays. IC: Was the “Circle Machine” part of this? Deutsch: The Circle Machine was separate, but it was all kind of interrelated. The Circle Machine was a device he made with a circular series of lights in one of these panels, and that was the control area. I was not totally blown away by it, because it seeme­d to be an obvious extension of the ideas of the sequencer. The way he had designed the sequencer was much more impressive. It worked with hundreds and hundreds of relays, and was a fascinating device. I’ve talked to Bob about that, and he

said, ‘I never built that stuff for Raymond. I sold Raymond a lot of modules.’ IC: I got a good sense from talking to Moog about Raymond’s role in the history of electronic music. Moog feels that Raymond wasn’t that influential because he didn’t publish, didn’t publicize, never went public. Deutsch: He didn’t work in the circles that were developing electronic music. He worked kind of like his colleague, the Maxwell House Coffee theme guy, Eric Siday. They both were doing a lot of electronic music, but for commercials. They weren’t in academic circles. To Raymond’s credit, he knew what was going on in academic music. He knew enough to call Columbia University and talk to Vladimir Ussachev­sky and be familiar with what he was doing, and what Mario Davidowsky was doing—he was at that time a young student. But his own world was a different world, and a world that he was comfortable in. I think some of these academic types put him off. I think

“To Raymond’s credit, he knew what was going on in academic music. But his own world was a differ­­ent world, and a world that he was comfortable in. I think some of these academic types put him off.” 55


there was some lack of respect, and he was extremely sensitive. IC: This lack of respect—was he exaggerating it in his mind? Deutsch: Yes, I think very much. Raymond liked me because he knew I was a college teacher, but I’m also kind of a down-toearth musician who knew Raymond’s music. I played jazz—trumpet and piano. When I was a little kid, I played “The Toy Trumpet” solo in Junior High. I told Raymond, and he got a big kick out of it. So he didn’t feel paranoid around me. But he talke­d about it. I don’t know if he even thought it was the area that would get credit for developing electronic music. He was very proud of his own accomplishments. He was an extremely stubborn man, and a complex guy. IC: Probably not a very warm fellow, either. Deutsch: He was not a warm person. I liked him and he liked me. He was brusque, and at times quite standoffish. He could put you at a distance. Although as he became less healthy, he became much friendlier and warmer. IC: Did you ever work on commercial projects with Raymond? 56

Deutsch: I edited some tapes with him, some commercials. But when I was working with him, he was not getting a lot of work anymore. That would have been around ’68. Around the time he moved out to California, I was not in communication with him that much any more.


IC: That was ’72—because of the Electronium, which was a total preoccupation. Deutsch: What I recall about the Electronium is it grew out of the modules that Moog built for him. By the late ’60s, Scott had started to explore ways of making this into a kind of random-sequencing device. He could turn it on and it could generate sequences at random, based on parameters that he could control. That was the stuff that Bob had made. To me, it was certainly not a typical Moog sequencer. In fact, I don’t think it had a keyboard. IC: There were knobs and switches. Deutsch: Yeah, but most of the sounds were Moog modules—at first. Then, of course, he went to California and really developed it. That was something different. IC: The irony of random composition is that Raymond spent a lifetime in music trying to control the end product—trying to control the musicians, the microphone, the engin­ eer­ing, the mix. Deutsch: I remember distinctly what he told me—and he told me a lot of times. He wanted to take the work out of being a musician. That used to get me really upset! I think that may have been at the root of the things that upset a lot of musicians he talke­d to.

He said, ‘Look, I just want to sit here, and I’d like to turn this machine on, and whenever it does something good, I want to record it at that point.’ He was really one of the most unusual people I ever met. I guess a lot of people have said that. He had an absolutely amazing mind. I was always blown away by his imagination and by his unusual thought processes. Some­times I was really upset about things he said, like ‘It’s almost insulting to work as a composer. You shouldn’t have to do that. You should be able to sit there and have ideas come to you.’ On the other hand, the ability he had to conceive of things electronically was amazing. IC: This puts a different spin on his work. Because here you think, ‘Oh, he’s just trying to make better music.’ But on the other hand, he’s looking not so much at the end, but more at the means. Deutsch: It was always this kind of metaphysical thing, this almost magical thing about thinking things to the point where they would happen and you’d not have to work at it. He was not a lazy guy—far from it. He worked incredibly hard to take the work out of being a composer.

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Block diagram for “Bandito the Bongo artist,� 1968 Right: a mid-1960s brochure for Manhattan Research, Inc.

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Jim Henson AND  RAYMOND SCOTT

© T he J im H enson C o .

by Karen Falk and Irwin Chusid


Karen Falk is an historian in charge of The

Jim Henson Company Archives in New York

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Jim Henson’s career, music xwas extremely important to his work. His local Washington show, Sam and Friends (1955–1961), showcased well known artists’ work along with that of obscure composers and singers. Later, The Muppet Show featured an amazing array of music, and scores and songs by highly respected composers enhance all Muppet movies. Henson loved jazz in particular and used jazz tracks for many of his projects, often collaborating with musicians to compose the pieces. He kept up to date on innovations in electronic music and, in the mid1960s, purchased one of the early Moog synthesizers. In this context, a Jim Henson/ Raymond Scott collaboration was not surprising. In 1963, Jim Henson and his family moved from Maryland to New York where he set up an office/workshop on East 53rd Street that would serve as Muppet headquarters for five years. In this magical tworoom space, Henson showed concepts to potential backers, sketched out characters, and stayed up all night with staffers Frank Oz, Jerry Juhl and Jerry Nelson putting the h ro u g h ou t

finishing touches on the project du jour. During those years, while also making hundreds of commercials and performing the Muppets on variety shows, Henson developed numerous concepts for television, short films, and industrial presentations. Jerry Juhl remembers, “Jim and I would sit and think up anything—from hour-long things to five minute sketches for The Ed Sullivan Show.” Some of these projects were completed, but many never got much beyond the idea phase. Henson also loved experimenting with film and camera techniques. Before he developed a regular television series or major motion pictures, he created several short films with his Bolex camera and animation stand. He painted under the camera and moved cut paper to music, meticulously charting the soundtracks frame by frame. Henson and Juhl also wrote various parody scripts, and Henson filmed several philo­ sophical explorations, all with very exact music specifications. In 1966, Henson began working on a short film project that would take several forms over the next few years. Henson was intrigued by thought processes and the workings of the mind and attempted to visualize these on film. The first incarnations of this project were two combination 61


“THE ORGANIZED MIND”

puppetry and film crea­ film, and he pretions that aired on The sented it again on Mike Douglas Show in The Tonight Show July 1966. They starred in both 1968 and Limbo, a floating foam in 1974, each time rubber face, manipulausing Scott’s ted with strings to make soundtrack. the mouth move. Limbo xxClearly, Hen­son was superimposed over a was intrigued by filmed portrayal of the Limbo and eager inner workings of his to translate it to psyche. The first piece, “I other formats. He Know Who I Am,” took a made a Bufferin A “Muppet” representing Limbo’s fear humorous look at the pain-reliever identifying numbers commercial in assigned to people (passport, driver’s 1967, which he titled “Memories.” li­cense, etc.). The second piece, “The Orga­ It depicted a man’s pleasant thoughts being nized Mind,” was a tour of Limbo’s mind, interrupted by a headache; after taking showing how different thoughts were cateBufferin, of course, the pleasant thoughts gorized: plumbing images represented the return. This commercial also featured an physical workings; snapshots of family electronic score by Scott. were happy thoughts; voluptuous women Two additional Henson films utilizing an represented lust, and fears ap­peared as electronic score by Scott (and included on monsters. this album) were Ripples and Wheels That Henson and Raymond Scott became Go, both from 1967. According to Jon Stone acquainted around 1965 and began collabo(a collaborator and director/producer of rating on several projects. A 1966 version of Sesame Street), these films were created by “The Organized Mind” presented on The Henson for a short films contest at MontréMike Douglas Show featured a musique al’s “Expo67.” Shot in January, concrète soundtrack by Scott (included on Ripples featured Stone tossing pebbles into this album). Henson continued to revise the water—making ripples. Wheels That Go 62


Bufferin “Memories” JIM HENSON 1967 Jim Henson adapted his Limbo character and his “Organized Mind” concept for this Bufferin pain reliever TV commercial, entitled “Memories.” The narrator (Henson) describes how a headachealmost ruined a family outing.

P hotos b y J im H enson , 1 9 6 7 © T he J im H enson C o .

Henson combined still photographs with live action in “Memories.” Some of the stills, which zoom past the viewer in a fraction of a second, were shot in Scott’s studio (see hightligted example).

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Script for The Paperwork Explosion, typed on “Muppets” stationery. Above: Sequence from director’s story­board (illustrated with images from the finished film).


features Henson’s son Brian playing with things with wheels. Each are about oneminute in length; the 16mm films are owned by The Jim Henson Company. The Scott collection at the Marr Sound Archives holds an audio tape reel of the original recording session for Ripples. That same year, Henson was contracted by IBM to make a film extolling the virtues of their new product, the MT/ST, a primi­ tive word processor, and exploring how it would help control the overwhelming vol­ ume of documents that offices were generat­ ing. The film, titled The Paperwork Explosion and shot in October of 1967, is a quick cut collage of images and words depicting the intensity and pace of modern business. Once again, Henson collaborated with Scott on the electronic soundtrack. Henson wrote a proposal in 1969 for a one-hour program, Inside My Head, for NBC’s Experiment in Television. The show was to explore themes similar to his earlier Limbo efforts, to help the audience “gain new awareness and respect for the mind.” Unable to sell the show to NBC, Henson moved on to other projects. By this stage, he and Scott seem to have parted ways, as Scott became deeply immersed in develop­ ing his Electronium. In the Henson Archives, undated plans

The Henson/Scott film Wheels That Go depicted Henson’s son Brian amusing himself with wheeled toys. (Note misspelling of Scott’s first name. This occurred in two Henson/Scott productions; it is unknown whether this was intentional or not.)

were found for a project called The Musical Monsters of Turkey Hollow, a proposed Thanksgiving Day TV special with music (as Henson’s notes read) “to be written by Raymond Scott.” Unfortunately, this proj­ ect exists on paper only, and there is no evidence that Henson ever contacted Scott about the idea. Finally, at the Marr Archives, a reel marke­d “Muppet Master” was discovered. It includes various short musical themes, sound effects, and fragments created by Scott. The original purpose and usage (if any) of this material remains a mystery. 65


Scott in his electronics workshop, Farmingdale, NY Montage by Piet Schreuders / Photos by Jim Henson, 1967 Š The Jim Henson Co.



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­The Electronium Corporation of America presents

THE “FASCINATION SERIES” A Group of Electronic “Sound Happening” Devices

• FASCINATION – I an electronic “musical happenings” device – to provide a new, chic kind of background sound . . . ......you’re reading, studying, or talking with company.......instead of an LP, or the FM radio playing quiet background music – something much more exciting is happening in a quiet, background way ......it’s as though there’s a harp­ist in the room ...... very softly improvising sound patterns.......the notes are always shifting and the interest always changing – as though a very talented musician is performing softly.......beautiful electronic sounds are quietly and slowly forever changing.......the whole room is diffused with beautiful harp-like sound.......shifting and maintaining it’s interest – but very quiet and unobtrusive.......never repeat­ing the same phrase exactly.......it’s like watching a re – where the patterns are shifting and makes you feel something as you stand fascinated before the ames – but here you are fascinated by the everchanging, beautiful sounds.......innitely changing 70

sounds of FASCINATION ONE – the marvelous new electronic “musical sounds happen­ing maker” device that makes possible musical happenings in a very delicate, unobtru­sive, and moody way.......

• FASCINATION – II the sound of tuned bongo drums – softly playing, softly swinging . . . ......FASCINATION TWO is like a wonderfully talented phantom bongo drummer who is impro­ vising in a quiet way – you’re not specically listen­ ing yet you can feel this beautiful, relaxed, con­


• FASCINATION – III a ‘space sound happenings’ device . . .

.......FASCINATION THREE is designed for a more ‘knocked-out’ kind of clientele.......an outerspace addition to the Fascination series....... science ction sounds – strange, weird sounds from other planets that are – quietly, softly, and in a very relaxed way – making sounds that nobody has ever heard before – like people from another plan­et.......in fact, you might call this ‘background music for people from another planet.’

• FASCINATION – IV puzzlingly beautiful sounds – strangely confus­ing,

yet lovely harmonies – slowly mixing and emerging from each other . . . ......FASCINATION FOUR is the harmony unit ......a great big beautiful chord softly starts and comes up a little bit in volume.......as it starts to recede, another chord softly emerges from the previous chord.......becomes a little louder....... takes its place.......then, as it recedes, another beautiful chord comes up.......this is a more sophisticated version of the Fascination unit – and again provides an extraordinary kind of back­ground – utterly original and fantastically pro­voc­ative because of the blending and crossing...... con­tinually dynamic, rising and receding of strange, beautiful harmonies.

• FASCINATION – V nature-like “sound happenings” . . . water . . . birds . . . wind . . . insects . . .

. . . FASCINATION FIVE provides nature-like sound environments.......sounds of the forest . . . the sound of a breeze – the wind in the trees . . . or jungle sounds.......or the surf at the ocean . . . always quiet – always relaxed – always elec­tronic ......a constant array of little drops of water dropping into a brook.......in different patterns....... as though a gurgling brook is present in the room ......very quietly providing a happy, peaceful, ever-changing spectrum of sound.

tex t written b y Ray mond Scott

tinually changing musical sound atmosphere . . . imagine a drummer – a very swinging drummer – who’s playing 18, 24, or 36 tuned bongo drums ......very softly improvising on very rhythmic, quiet bongo drums.......the room is being ooded with marvelously rhythmic, tuned bongo drums that are never playing the same rhythms twice....... provides a new kind of musical happening....... strange, wonderful electronic bongo sounds con­tinue....... while people are going about – while the cocktail party is in progress – when reading the newspaper – writing checks.......the very relaxing, continually fascinating sound is quietly going on in the background.

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THE PARTICIPATOR

The PARTICIPATOR series adds interactive abilities to the original FASCINATION devices. With the addition of 26 controls, you can modify the fascinating sounds that are being auto­ matically created. Hence the name: PARTICIPATOR. And with the selfperforming feature, a person can perform a duet, so to speak, with the sound pattern invention circuitry. 72

The 26 controls for THE PARTICIPATOR arelabeledAthruZ.Thefunctionsofthesecontrolsisas follows:

A – Pitch Separation B – Volume C – AC Power Indicator D – Tone No. 1 E – Tone No. 2 F – Pitch Tessitura G – Decay H – Vibrato I – Glide 1 J – Glide 2 K – Continuous Pulse L – Speed 1 M – Speed 2 N – Attack O – Momentary Pulse P – Pitch Range Q – Power Switch R – Programmed Rhythm S – Pulse 1 T – Pulse 2 U – Random Sequencing Rhythm V – Master Tempo W – Submaster 1 X – Submaster 2 Y – Submaster 3 Z – Submaster 4


Alan Entenman Alan Entenman, an engineer who worked with Raymond Scott on the Electronium, was inter­ viewed at his home in East Setauket, NY, on Sunday, December 28, 1997, by Irwin Chusid and Gert-Jan Blom

IC: When did you first meet Raymond? AE: Around late 1969, or 1970. I had just started an engineering company called Thunderbolt Consultants. I’m not entirely sure how we were introduced. IC: He and Mitzi were both living at 3 Willow Park? AE: They were living in a furnished, rented room in this factory. It was a bedroom, living room—like one giant studio apartment, except in a factory building. I said, ‘Ray, you could buy a house around here.’ And he said, ‘No, people wouldn’t understand.’ I guess if you had lived in a 30-room

mansion, he thought people would think him merely eccentric for living in this factory, because he clearly didn’t have a lot of money at that point. He had talent, but making money was not one of them—like many of us. Anyway, he had this Electronium, which was an evolving concept. Ray recognized that music has repetitions and patterns, and he envisioned a machine that would incorporate those patterns. He thought of an orchestra with a thousand voices. He had plug-in modules, and each module was a synthesizer—of his own design—that was capable of making a wide variety of sounds. Each synthesizer was identical, but the electronic controls for each one were dif­ferent. It was all solid-state. No tubes. IC: But not digital. AE: It was digital. Well, the oscillators and such were analog, but the controls were digital. When the synthesizer modules were plugged into the Electronium backplane, it was all digital controls coming in, voltages and such—like a computer backplane, but

“He had advisors who managed his money. He’d say they just managed it and managed it, and after they were through, he managed to not have any.” 73


So you want $50,000 to build a sample Electronium? Yes, I want $50,000 because I feel that it will help me and the people associated with me to make millions. A remarkable thing is happening in the music business—a wedding of music and electronics is about to take place —the ceremony hasn’t been per­formed yet. And I want to perform the ceremony. $50,000 will enable me to build a second generation version of an instrument I call the Electronium. At present it is a gigantic room-full of equipment. I want to build a second generation version that is miniature in size, no larger than a home electronic organ. With $50,000 I can complete a second model, and complete it in a way that would provide us with a close-toproduction version—and so enable us to

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get the nancing necessary to really get in—and get out in front of this coming revolution in the eld of musical instruments. My general background and talent is such that I consider myself equipped better than anybody around to lead, in the musical technical area, a business group that could make millions by being rst—rst with the best idea—the Electronium. With a sample Electronium— beautiful to look at—exciting to listen to— private showings to nancial people would get us all the money we will need to start production—and lead the renaissance in the eld of musical instrument design and manufacture. —Raymond Scott, from a typewritten, undated page, c. 1964


specialized for his applications. Ray told me that if you listen to music, it’s repetition. You would repeat notes in a different tone, and put that together. Being a composer, he knew how to construct music from these things. And it really worke­d. Ray and [his friend] Bruce Haack made some incredible music. All it needed was somebody to arrange it and put it together and make a finished piece. IC: You don’t have a musical background? AE: Virtually none. My parents had a piano and played, but I have no musical talent. IC: Was the Electronium in its cabinetry at the time? AE: He made lovely finished cabinetry— the cockpit. In the big laboratory room where he had this thing set up, he had five or six big speakers. This had to be in 1970, or ’71. IC: He was working on it for years before it had a cabinet. There’s pictures where it

just looks like a wallful of noodles. AE: Gradually, he cleaned things up. He made modules with finished circuit cards, and he did a lot of experiments. He had a little box he called the ‘Hong Kong Gong.’ It was a doorbell. All that was in it were three little oscillators, and when you hit the button, the oscillators would key on in different attack and decay strokes. The frequencies were roughly harmonically relat­ ed. It sounded like someone banging on a huge brass gong. It had a wonderful tonal quality. There was a cheap little speaker inside, but he said it was the wood—a very thin piece of wood—and the shape of the box and the position of the speaker in it—a 29-cent Lafayette radio speaker—that made the sound. It sounded monstrous! He had a knack for taking electronic analog parts and making them sound good. Then, once they were under digital control—which I helped him do; although I didn’t know the musical aspect, I knew how to make circuitry work—he’d tell me what he wanted to do, and I’d design a circuit, hook it up with all the right grounds

“The Electronium would never be nished. He was always changing and modifying it. What it did one day was not necessarily what it would do the next.” 75


and bypass caps. Otherwise, he’d meddle for hours, but he’d leave a wire off someplace and never notice. I would immediately know the wire was missing and save him a lot of time. But I can’t really say I contribut­ed to the technology. He knew what he wanted to do. Understand—this machine would never be finished. He was always changing and modifying it. What it did one day was not necessarily what it would do the next. The thing I contributed was making it consistent. When you pushed a button, it worked. It wasn’t something you had to rattle a certain way. GJB: You probably heard him experiment a lot. AE: Oh, many, many times. One time he had this real sexy, raunchy jazz coming out of this thing. He and Bruce Haack were in heaven. I don’t know if they taped it or not. Another time I came in and it was playing what sounded like a little opera singer in the background. You could swear you were hearing somebody singing, but it wasn’t—it was all electronic. I understand the secret, to some extent. If you look at most electronic things, the waveforms are repetitious. The harmonics are precise mathematical multiples. When 76

something vibrates, there are overtones. The way you blend these overtones, and the amount of offset they have with one an­other, gives it warmth. That’s what he would do: he would tune these little things and put little resistors and caps and get it to sound rich. He’d couple that with the melodious, rhythmic patterns he built into it, which were basically the same piece played over and over, but at different scales, and maybe he’d pump the tempo a little bit. It’s like patch-panel programming, where he would set up the different cyclical music patterns—where he’ll say, ‘Take a “da-DaDA”,’ and repeat it four times. He would program how it was repeated, and in what key it would be repeated. Then he would have that piece repeated, so it was like gears within gears. IC: Were all parts played simultaneously? Or did he record one track and then an­other? AE: Oh, no! Everything was played simultaneously. This was his orchestra. He had each thing set up as an instrument, with oddball names for them. He’d have a rhythm section, a brass and a woodwind section. He said, ‘I could have a thousandpiece orchestra.’ Sometimes it would sound just awful. But most of the time, it would


Photo by Jim Henson, 1967 © The Jim Henson Co.

Beginning in the late 1950s, Scott built several, very different versions of his Electronium (“instantaneous composition-performance machine”). In the background of this photograph (see circle) is the 1966-67 incarnation. The lower rack contained modules specially made for Scott by colleague Robert Moog.

77


The Electronium Mk1 in 1970. Lower left: note digital data storage cassette recorder.

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sort of drift into something very pleasing. It had a natural penchant for making rea­ son­ably good music. This machine could make any kind of music you could imagine. It could be very mysterious—I don’t know what you would call it in those days— psychedelic? That’s not really the word for it, though. GJB: When he recorded, was it done directly onto cassette, or reel-to-reel? AE: Reel-to-reel. GJB: There’s pictures of the Electronium with an internal cassette machine. AE: That was not a cassette. That was a digital control. IC: I thought there was a cassette transport in it so you could record? AE: Yeah, but it was all recorded digitally. Maybe he added an analog recorder later on. But what I designed for him was a digital cassette recorder that stored the music he created. IC: Same size and configuration as a regular cassette? AE: A Phillips cassette, but digital quality, so it was a better-made cassette. IC: It wouldn’t play on an analog deck?

AE: It would just sound like buzzing and clicks. It would play, but you wouldn’t hear music. The Electronium also had a keyboard attachment, that he hooked up. IC: Which makes it kind of a MIDI system, right? AE: Yeah—before MIDI. Actually, maybe it was around the same time MIDI was evolv­ing. IC: In the late ’60s? AE: Yeah. When I designed the keyboard attachment to the Electronium, I was used to scanning keys at a certain rate. I figured 20, 30 times a second was adequate. Bruce Haack tried to play it, and said, ‘This sounds awful, the keys are stuck.’ When I would tap ‘Mary Had A Little Lamb,’ or ‘Twinkle Twinkle Little Star’—that was my speed—the keyboard sounded great. But Bruce would start to play, and say, ‘There’s something wrong with the keys.’ So I jacked it up to a hundred scans a second, but he still complained. So we made it a thousand scans a second, and then he was happy. IC: I’m curious about Bruce Haack, who died in 1988. AE: He was mystical. He would go to sleep 79


IC: When was that? AE: This must have been during the period I was working for him. Ray described lots of things mystically, and he said he had a sense that this was right. Bruce was wild about electronic music. © 1 9 7 0 N Y D aily N ews

IC: Did Haack and Raymond record together? AE: They must have, be­cause they collaborated for a long time, making “I spent 11 years and close to a million dollars developing my Elec­ music, and Bruce certainly tronium,” stated Raymond Scott in 1970. “From General Electric alone, was taping it. What they I bought more than $200,000 worth of test equipment.” did with it, I don’t know. I thought they had an in a lotus position on a concrete floor, and ar­rangement with Columbia. sit there for four hours straight. Then he would get up and start working. He record­ IC: Did Bruce help develop the Electro­ ed for Columbia Records. nium? AE: He was more the musician. He would IC: He did the Electric Lucifer album. execute things. He was not an electronics There’s no Electronium of Clavivox on it, is expert, but he knew how to use a keyboard there? and had a musical ear. AE: No. But Ray once described meeting Ray taught Bruce how to mix the music. Bruce. He said they just clicked. He said, Bruce was sitting there with the music ‘You’re the guy!’ It’s like God told them, turned quite loud. Ray mentioned the ‘You two should work together!’ ‘mountain-valley effect.’ He says you turn it 80


way down, make it just a little above audibility—then you balance it. When you turn it up, everything sounds the same. IC: Were you on salary with Ray? AE: No, I was sort of consulting, maybe a little money today, maybe not. It wasn’t the kind of thing you made a living at. It’s just that I truly enjoyed collaborating with Ray. Just being involved was to me a new, inter­ esting thing. GJB: So you know the inside of the Electronium pretty well? AE: I would say so, yeah. GJB: Would you be able to restore it? AE: If I had it here, sure. GJB: Mitzi Scott sold the instrument to a musician in Hollywood named Mark Moth­ ers­baugh, from the band Devo. For years, it was in Mitzi’s guest-house. I visited once, and they were doing repairs, putting plaster on the ceiling and walls, and the casing was off, so the machine was open and there was dust and lumps of plaster had fallen in it. It looked terrible. Then she sold it to Mothersbaugh. Now it’s in Hollywood, in a safe place, but it’s uncertain whether it’ll be restored.

AE: I remember the electronic stuff. But I guess it’s like an instrument maker who can’t play. I can fix it, but I couldn’t make it play. It was Ray who made it make music by setting up the different chords and patterns. GJB: We have tapes of him interacting with the machine. Every now and then he grabs the mic and says, ‘I did such and such, and pushed the yellow button,’ and ‘This is number 7 and number 3,’ and he gives the notes one by one and then in sequence. AE: At that time he was using electronic instruments to make advertisements. He made money that way. IC: He did a lot of commercials. This goes back to the ’50s. He was building electronic instruments back then. Did you know about his background, Your Hit Parade and all? AE: Oh yeah. I knew about it, though I was not a television watcher, so I never followed the show. IC: He hated Your Hit Parade. AE: He said that. IC: It was a rent gig. He made a lot of money, but didn’t like being on camera, didn’t like the music, it was just schlock, bloated orchestrations of pop hits of the day. He would take his paycheck, go home and work 81


on his electronics. AE: He was devoted to it. He loved that stuff. Constantly puttered with it. Ray was interested in his music and the Electronium. That was his focus, and there was not a lot of interest in other things. Apparently he had a bunch of advisors and different people that managed his money. He’d say they just managed it and managed it, and after they were through, he managed to not have any. He was very jealous about his ideas.

no choice but to go commercial and got all the credit. Ray stressed that Moog was an honorable man, who didn’t steal his ideas; they were just working on things simultaneously. It was very diplomatically expressed. AE: He wasn’t angry at Moog. But he did feel that Moog had capitalized on some of his ideas. He was jealous of these concepts and I think what made his Electronium successful was his knowledge of composition. He could put these patterns together be­cause he knew what he was doing.

IC: In terms of protecting and being paranoid? AE: Yeah. I introduced a friend to Ray, an engineer who ran his own company making educational equipment. This guy made an educational music synthesizer. It had textbook oscillators—meaning, it’s a real piece of junk. Ray was convinced this fellow had stolen his ideas. I said, ‘Ray, you have no idea. It’s a school project thing. It’s utterly incapable of making any sensible music.’

IC: Moog is not a musician? AE: I’ve never met the man.

IC: He wrote something once in which he said Moog—I’m paraphrasing—capitalized on what he [Raymond] developed, but was forced to do so by the pressures of the marketplace, since so many people had started developing these things, and that Moog had 82

IC: I’ve never known him to compose any­ thing, or perform. AE: I know the musicians I met were annoyed at Moog [getting credit for the music, instead of the artist] when Switched-On Bach was released. IC: The unions must’ve been outraged. AE: I heard a lot about that. Ray said, ‘I’ll never make that mistake.’ IC: Do you remember when Berry Gordy arrived? AE: Yeah. I wasn’t there, but Ray talked about it. He mentioned Gordy was coming,


Heritage: Father died at 52, heart disease.Brother died at 49, heart disease. Had difculty getting insurance due to heart irregularities, starting in my twenties. Cardiac history: Age 50 (1958)—had many dead spots around my body, cardiac specialist gave me 1 year to live. Fell into daily use of glanular lecithin. My situation reversed itself. Age 59 (1967)—Had severe chest pain. Doctor recommended a 3 month rest in Florida. Returned OK. Age 64 (1972)—Walked around pool 80 times daily for exercise. Would absentmind­edly speed up to shorten time spent exercising. Got so fast one night, I developed very severe chest pain. An angiogram was taken. A bypass was decided upon. Operation was postponed for 6 months till I was on Medicare. Age 69 (1977)—Had heart attack. Angiogram showed no signicant additional block­age. Attack was attributed perhaps to stress. Age 71 (1979)—Went to Hospital Emergency Room for chest pain, stayed 4 days, had tests. When released, joined recommended Rehabilitation Exercise Group—took 3 months—therapy worked well. Age 74 (1983)—Have an electronic lab at home—got involved in an exciting project—for 3 months I slept an average of about 50 hours weekly. Felt high and happy through­out this period. Then I folded (about 2/1/83). Symptoms of folding: extreme fatigue, wobbly walking, accumulation of chest pains, zero energy output capability. Doctor called it ‘burnout’. —Raymond Scott, June, 1983 83


and told me not to come that day ’cause they’d be meeting. I came the next day, and he told me all about it. It was quite an entourage. He was very impressed with Gordy, and very excited. He felt Berry Gordy was very talented, and he told him that. And Berry had said to him, ‘I think you are, too.’ IC: And he looked forward to working with him? AE: Yeah, yeah. It continued on, and event­ ually he went to California. IC: Around this time, was he not getting much attention from the media or the press? People weren’t coming to interview him? AE: No, but he was known, ’cause we’d go to a restaurant and people would walk up and say, ‘Mr. Scott…’ and they’d ask for autographs. IC: You were working with him for hours at a stretch? AE: Oh yeah. I had another job at the time. We were putting together a company called Industrial Technology. In the afternoon I’d stop by with Ray, and we would work. We spent a lot of time together.

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IC: Was Ray a chatty kind of guy? AE: Very chatty, very engaging, and I enjoyed working with him because he was brilliant. He would explain what he was doing, and he would explain music, because I was not a music expert, just a listener. Ray would also tell mystical stories, ghost stories. We got on the subject of spirits. There’s a road called Swamp Hollow Road, with an Indian burial ground—right here on Long Island—and he said he was there one night and had some spiritual experience, he saw some kind of an apparition. Another time, he talked about the Astor family. They were very interested in—and often had as company— mystics, spiritualists, whatever. I guess they call them channelers nowadays. Anyway, he said that the Astor house—with all these characters—was haunted. All kinds of horrible things would happen there. He advised me, ‘Don’t get involved with that stuff. It’s very dangerous.’ IC: What was his state of mind? Was he happy? Was he depressed? Was he confused? AE: He was absorbed in what he was doing. He was in his sixties and knew his health was failing in some ways. So he was concerned about his physical and his mental health. But was he depressed? No, I can honestly say he wasn’t.


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Raymond Scott Composes With ‘Electronium’ Long Island Press, 1970

I

the 1940s and 50s bandleader Ray­mond Scott xwas a familiar face in American households, performing with his quintet and broadcasting the weekly radio-TV “Hit Parade” show. Now a Long Island resident, he’s hoping to earn a reputation by pressing buttons. xxScott hasn’t abandoned show business. The buttons he presses are part of an electronic instrument he’s been developing for 10 years that can perform and “compose” those increasingly popular collections of unearthly sounds known as electronic music. xxThe instrument is called an electronium, and although it produces music, it looks more like the instrument panel of a space capsule than anything else. Scott flicks switches on rows of buttons as lights flash and the entire panel glows with an orange light. xxHe does all this in a studio in Farmingdale. Scott is an East Meadow resident. xxIt’s unlike any other musical instrument, according to Scott. It can’t be used to play any existing piece of music. “It will perform its own creations only,” he explains. n

*** A MACHINE WITH a built-in ego? That’s not the case, says Scott. His device was built not only to perform but to “compose” music, guided by a human being. The electronium has no keyboard, unlike most electronic musicmakers; it consists of buttons and switches that produce, with the aid of 86

assorted transistors, wires and other electronic components, either a sound or a progression of sounds or a beat. xxThere’s no way to prepare music for the electronium, and know how it will sound so the “musician” familiarizes himself with the effects of each button and presses them in a pattern that produces something resembling a melody. Unless the musician remembers the buttons he’s pushed, he can’t reproduce the music. xx“It’ll never take the place of traditional composing,” admits Scott, but the Electronium does have its advantages. “Instead of spending three months composing a ballet you can do it in two hours,” he claims. A composer can sit down and hear instantly the music he is creating, changing it when he pleases with little effort.” *** SCOTT SAYS THE instrument could be a boon to the movie industry. Scores that take months normally to compose could be done in days, he be­lieves, and the results would be comparable to a traditional score. xxThe music “is not necessarily melodic in a traditional way,” notes Scott. It consists of a melange of simple sounds and beats, electronically super­ imposed upon each other to create the effect of an orchestra or band performing. xxAfter 10 years of working to develop the device, Scott has begun to concentrate his efforts now on composing electronic music for—and with—it. He


also is in the early stages of planning a commercial model of the device which could be used either professionally, or in a simpler model, as a home instrument. xxThe home model probably would sell for roughly $1,000, or around the price paid for a good home organ. xxScott thinks the electronium will be widely used in rock circles as well.

Scott with his electric musicmaker, the Electronium

Variet 1970 y J ul y

*** DEVELOPING ELECTRONIC equipment and composing music that is partially created by a machine is a departure from Scott’s past. xxIn addition to hosting the Hit Pa­rade show, which achieved immense popularity, he led the Ray Scott Quintet for a number of years during the Big Band era. He composed the score for a 1946 Broadway show, “Lute Song” starring Mary Martin. xxHis ex-wife, singer Dorothy Collins, regularly joined him on the Hit Parade show. xxIn the 30s he and his quintet played the music for, and appeared in, several Hollywood films, including Shirley Temple’s “Re­­becca of Sunnybrook Farm” and “Ali Baba Goes to Town.” In the late 30s he composed a ballet for the American Ballet Co. xxBut for the past 10 years it’s been no­thing but transistors and tape recorders for Scott. xxThe ex-bandleader says that electronic music is going to be something big in the future, and he’s happy to be involved in some­thing he says is “going to fit every­where” before long.


Thomas Rhea Thomas Rhea, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Music Synthesis Department, at Berklee College of Music in Boston, spent countless hours with Scott in the early 1970s and was head of the Nashville division of Manhattan Research Incor­ porated, marketing the Clavivox. He later became head of sales for Moog for 18 years. Irwin Chusid interviewed Rhea by telephone on March 27 and 29, 1997. IC: Did you have a trusting relationship with Raymond Scott? Rhea: I originally wanted to interview him. At first he did not want me to tape any­ thing, ’cause he was so concerned—he want­ed me to sign a release, a disclosure. Which I did. What was I going to say to anybody? He was almost paranoid. He was so concerned that people were going to rip him off—you know, he recognized that his ideas were way ahead of their time. For these reasons, he might have appeared to people as guarded or secretive, but he really didn’t know how to exploit those ideas, and he wouldn’t take a lot of people into his confidence. He was so secretive, even with me, whom I think he really trusted. He also didn’t 88

want to talk about the past, even though I was an historian, because he was so inter­ est­ed in the future. It was very difficult to get details from him about the exact lineage of his equipment. It wasn’t just that he was protective of it—he didn’t want to talk about it. He was all about Berry Gordy, what he was going to do with the new version of the Electronium, and stuff like that. So it was extremely difficult for me to find out a lot of things I would have liked to have found out. IC: How old were you then? Rhea: Late 20s. I was finishing dissertation research for my Ph.D., coming out of graduate school. It was about 1970 or ’71. I had to be about 26 then. And from my historical research, I knew what he had done. By the time I got there, a lot of the “wall of sound” was in disrepair. He wasn’t really using it. He was pretty much stuck on the idea of the Electronium. He thought of that other stuff as vestigial, like, “Well, it’s there, but this is the answer right here.” I watched Raymond demo the Electronium. I know how he interacted with it, and I understand what his ideas were about the collaboration between man and machine— which to me is the most important thing that Raymond did, in terms of electronics


“The idea of collaborat­ing with a machine, and allow­ing the machine to make certain decisions—not exactly knowing what you were going to get—that was a pretty avant-garde idea.” and music. The Clavivox is not an important instrument. It’s an off-shoot, it’s a minor instrument. It’s novel, but it’s not like it had a big influence or anything. On the other hand, the idea that he anticipated some artificial intelligence concepts and some compositional concepts that other people believe somebody else did, I think is very important. I don’t know how early Raymond had done any of this, because it was difficult to find out. But I do know that the idea of collaborating with a machine, and allowing the machine to make certain decisions and then editing—not exactly knowing what you were going to get—that was a pretty avant-garde idea. And it’s an idea whose time is not completely over. We’ve had latter-day manifestations of that in things like Jam Factory, and M. I really have a very warm spot in my heart for Raymond, since he was one of the characters of my life. I’m trying to get together a history of electronic musical

in­struments, and Raymond has a very important spot in it. In essence, the industry that has grown up around electric instruments has done nothing to preserve its own history. We’ve only been making electric instruments, in practical terms, for less than a hundred years. So it’s new, it’s being ig­nored, and I’m trying to do something about it. But I don’t have an academic viewpoint. I’m interested in the fact that Raymond Scott did silent, mimed playing before John Cage did 4’33”. And I’m afraid the academic canon, they just don’t really care about anything except the personalities they have decided are the pioneers. I mean, I appreciate everything Cage did, and Stockhausen, and I know that music. But there’s a whole tradition here that’s being ignored, and Raymond Scott is one of those people.

89


“Additionally, means are provided for obtaining a controllable vibrato effect which is electromechanical so as to simulate and derive the benet of manual operation while obtaining the advantages of electrically controlled precision.” —Raymond Scott, 1956 (from his US Patent #2871745: the Clavivox)

90


91


A Cockpit of Dreams by Michele Wood Excerpted from: The Swing Era: Vintage Years of Humor, Time-Life Records, 1971 [Raymond] Scott said: “I want the Electronium to be a beautiful instrument, to have a special sort of feeling, like a Steinway. Not to look like a Steinway, of course, but to have that sense of elegance and beauty. And I want it to have the feeling of driv­ing, a steering machine, a cockpit of dreams.” xxThe home of the Electronium is Raymond Scott Enterprises, located in a long, one story cement block building in an industrial park in Farmingdale, Long Island. xxAt the reception desk is Scott’s pert, redheaded third wife Mitzi, a former dancer and pianist. In the next room, girls at long tables thread circuitboards with colored wires, humming to Muzak as they work. xxA second room is a heavy-duty ma­chine shop. In the third room sits the Electronium. xxSmall colored lights blink silently. Scott says the machine is thinking. If you can believe that, you can believe Scott’s assert­ion that, together with a human operator, the machine composes music which can then be recorded on tape. xx“It’s like inventing the typewriter,” says Scott, “only the typewriter fur­ 92

nishes the plot and reads the result in its own voice. You specify the form and structure, but the details are the ma­chine’s. If you like what the machine does but want a different key or tempo, you push the appro­priate button. For the talented and trained per­son, the Electronium will give a most com­prehensive performance.” xxScott already has an order for a $100,000 version of the machine from a buyer who wishes to remain anonymous. (“Which is a shame,” says Scott, “I was hoping to get some publicity from it.”)* xxEventually he hopes to market $1200 versions for private enjoyment or public performance. He feels it will be excellent for TV and film scoring. xxMeanwhile, he and the Electronium (Scott always gives the machine equal billing) have composed numerous pieces including a “classical” Iceberg Theme, The Wild Piece—aka String Piece (“my super Stravinsky”) and Take Me to Your Violin Teacher. xxThis last one is about the arrival on earth of beings from another world where violin playing is the supreme art. xxIt shows, if anything, that the Electronium picks up styles adroitly. * Ed. note: This anonymous buyer was Berry Gordy.


93


collection mitzi scott

Mitzi and Raymond Scott, 1971 94


Mitzi Scott Mitzi (Mathilde Curtis) Scott was Raymond Scott’s third wife. They met in July, 1966, and were married on January 18, 1967. She currently lives in Santa Clarita, CA. IC: Was Raymond living at Willow Park when you first met? Mitzi: Yes. I met him on a Saturday, and Monday morning he took me to the beach. On the way home, we stopped at Willow Park and he showed me the studio. I thought it was fantastic!—something like 6,000 square feet. When you came in, there was an office. To the left, half of that side of the building was a machine shop and a woodworking shop, with a music studio in back, and on the right side was this huge living quarters—living room, kitchen and bathroom. At the back was a photography darkroom. There was an upper story

library over part of it. You had to use a ladder to go up. The ceilings were 50 feet high. IC: Was Raymond the only one living in this “industrial park”? Mitzi: Yes. The others were offices and factories. IC: There was no zoning restriction pre­ vent­ing him from living there? Mitzi: Well, Raymond wasn’t supposed to be living there. IC: When you met, did he have employees? Mitzi: He had a secretary who had been [Raymond’s brother] Mark [Warnow]’s secretary, Bob Briody. When Mark died [in 1949], Raymond took him on, I think mainly out of kindheartedness so he could keep working. The fellow in charge of the machine shop was Joe Cusato. Alan [Entenman] came when Raymond needed help with engineer­ ing, and he would spend a day, or four

“He would come in for lunch. I would put his lunch on the table and go back to the kitchen to get mine. By the time I’d get back to the table, he was gone— back in the lab.” 95


hours. But he was never on payroll. Even before we got married, he had me wiring. He taught me soldering [laughs], and to attach the red wire to the blue wire, and the yellow wire to the green wire. I didn’t like doing it, but I got pretty good at it.

Hills, and royalties. At that time his music was still quite well-known. He was getting about $50,000 a year in royalties. Except he was spending it. He paid Briody $7,500 a year, he paid Cusato $7,500, he had to pay taxes, and rent on the building, which was $6,000 a year.

IC: He didn’t have to pay you. Mitzi: That’s right.

IC: And if he needed a spare part or some tools, he would just go out and spend? Mitzi: Oh yes.

IC: You weren’t working at this time? Mitzi: Until we got married, I was a district manager for Avon Cosmetics. I stopped—at his insistence. IC: Was Raymond no longer working with live musicians? Mitzi: The only time was in 1969. He got a job from an advertising agency to write an industrial musical for Kentucky Bourbon. He wrote the music and hired a lyricist. IC: Was Raymond still doing commercial jingles, electronic or otherwise? Mitzi: He didn’t have a lot of work doing jingles, but he would get an occasional job. IC: He wasn’t doing much in the way of paid work? Mitzi: No. I think he was living off proceeds of the sale of the house in North 96

IC: So he was racking up debt and not concentrating on the fact that more was going out than was coming in. Mitzi: No. [laughs] That was my job! When Bob Briody left, I took over the office. It was very difficult. In fact, I think the second month we were married, I sold my car so we could pay the rent. IC: Did you try to explain this to him? Mitzi: No. I was very much in awe of him. Don’t forget, he was a famous man, he was older than I was. At that time, I would never have said to him, ‘Look, you can’t spend money like this, there isn’t that much coming in.’ I just couldn’t have done it. Later on—yes. But not then.


“His fun was inventing stuff—and then he would drop it and get involved with something else.” IC: How famous was he at that time? Mitzi: Famous enough that when we went to the airport, people asked him for his autograph. He was still getting letters for autographed pictures in 1988, ’89, ’90.

IC: Did you ever think Raymond was a little crazy when he would talk about the Electronium, this “composing-performance machine”? Mitzi: No. Uh-uh.

IC: What were his work habits? Did he seem obsessed, always in the lab? Mitzi: He would come into the living quarters for lunch. I would put his lunch on the table and go back to the kitchen to get mine. By the time I’d get back to the table, he was gone—back in the lab.

IC: Did you think it was impractical, that ‘This will never make money.’ Or were you thinking this could be the most amazing project of the late 20th century? Mitzi: I thought it was a wonderful instrument! We would be having lunch, with the Electronium on in the next room, and it would play something very pretty. I would say, “Oh my, isn’t that a pretty phrase!” And it would repeat it as though it had heard me and said, ‘Well, if you like it that much, I’ll play it again!’

IC: Did he keep an irregular schedule? Mitzi: Always! If he awoke at 4 in the morning and had a great idea, he would get up. Then he might work until 7 or 8 or 9 in the morning, and then go back to bed. IC: Did you understand what he was doing? Did he take the time to explain things to you? Mitzi: Oh, he explained everything. That didn’t mean I necessarily understood it.

IC: Was he operating it by remote control? Mitzi: No, he would just leave it on. It was a self-working machine. It composed and performed at the same time. It was so outof-this-world. 97


IC: Was it in a cabinet? Mitzi: At first, no. IC: Just circuit boards? Mitzi: Lots of wiring. IC: Do you have any idea when he started working on it, when he first conceived the idea? Mitzi: No. Probably in the early ’60s—maybe even before. IC: Were people other than Berry Gordy coming by, who were interested in the Electronium? Mitzi: No, not really. He was very secretive about what he was doing. It was one of his failings, because if he had been out there promoting himself—well, he did send publicity notices to newspapers. But he would never, say, go to a college and explain what he was doing. IC: When did Berry Gordy first visit? Mitzi: It was the Fall of 1970. He saw an article [about the Electronium] from the Long Island Press which was carried in a Los Angeles paper. He came to New York, called up, and said he would like to see the Electronium. He came out to Farmingdale in three cars—a whole big mess of people. 98

He was very impressed with the Electronium and ordered one. His attorney drew up contracts on how much money was to be paid for parts and labor. But he did not give Raymond a job. He expected to buy an Electronium, and Raymond was to deliver it to California and spend six weeks instruct­ing Gordy’s staff how to use it. The delivery was supposed to be in six months, but it wasn’t delivered until August, 1971. IC: While he was working on it, was there contact with Gordy and his staff? Mitzi: Oh, constantly! I think a lot with Gordy, but not necessarily. I used to worry because Raymond was constantly running over the budget. He would send them a note on how much he’d spent and how much more money he needed, and I would be practically hysterical thinking, “Oh my God—you can’t do that! You made this agreement that you would do it for this amount of money!” And he said, “Don’t worry. This is the way it works. People do this all the time.” Obviously it worked, because Berry Gordy never complained, and whenever Raymond needed more money, they sent it. He had a lot of people working for him at that time, because he had the Motown money to go into production. He had people


that did the wiring, and he had people in the woodworking shop to build the cabinet, which he designed. Alan Entenman was working with him at that time. IC: By now he was focused on the Electronium. Mitzi: Yes. The Clavivox was finished. He invented a Chinese Gong [1968]—it was electronic, but it had the fullness of sound of a Chinese gong. He had me going out to Chinese restaurants trying to get orders for it. And he invented a doorbell, I think called the Psychedelic Doorbell. It would electronically play whatever tune you want­ed. People heard it and said, “Oh, that’s wonderful! I want one!” We had orders for it. But he never got around to making any. His fun was inventing stuff— and then he would drop it and get involved with something else. IC: How did he ship the Electronium to L.A.? Mitzi: [Motown executive ] Guy Costa arranged for movers to ship it out by van line. It was delivered to Berry Gordy’s home.

Motown’s first official letter to Scott, written by company attorney Allen Klein, October 7, 1970

IC: And Raymond flew out? Mitzi: I flew too. 99


IC: You went for six weeks—that turned into six months? Mitzi: That’s right. He was coming out alone for six weeks, and I said, ‘No way! You’re going to California, I’m going too, or else I will not be here when you come back.’ It’s a good thing, because he would’ve been out here for six months and I would’ve been stuck [on Long Island] alone. When we got here, Berry Gordy decided he would like to have the Electronium do something it didn’t do, then he thought of something else he would like it to do. He kept wanting changes and additions, and Raymond kept working and working, and then Gordy thought it would be nice to have Raymond in charge of electronic research and development. So he hired him. IC: Was Raymond working out of Gordy’s home? Mitzi: At first. IC: Guy Costa said that there was a laboratory of sorts over Gordy’s garage. Mitzi: Yes. He had beautiful estate in Bel Air. I would drive Raymond and drop him off, ’cause we rented a car. We rented a furnished apartment in Westwood. When he was ready to come home, he would call and I would pick him up. 100

IC: Would he work long hours, or 9-to-5? Mitzi: When he was at Gordy’s home, it was pretty much 9-to-5. At night we’d go out to dinner, and then drive around, maybe to the beach, or to Ports of Call. We used to take drives up and down the coast, investigating different areas. Or we’d go to the movies. We ate out every night for weeks, until I finally got so tired, I said, ‘Please let me cook a meal. I want to eat at home.’ When he got the Motown job in February 1972, we went back to New York for three months to settle things, then we came back to California in June. I went house-hunting, and found a house in Van Nuys in September. We moved in October 1st. On October 2nd, I went back to New York alone to close down Willow Park. It took me five months. I had to get rid of tons of stuff. I sold the whole music studio, and two-thirds of the books in the library. I sold nearly every­thing in the machine shop and the wood­working shop. Even with all the stuff I sold, when I shipped the balance to California, we shipped 50,000 pounds. We had an en­tire moving van. IC: So then Raymond was on salary at Motown. What was he paid? Mitzi: Three hundred dollars a week. Don’t forget this was the early 1970s. Three-hun-


dred dollars was better than it is now. He eventually worked out a deal with Berry Gordy to have the lab in our house. He hired two wiring girls, and he didn’t have to go to Motown. The Electronium was moved to the guesthouse. That became his lab, and he set up a workshop. IC: Would he work seven days a week? Mitzi: Yes. [laughs] Pretty much. I mean, he took a day off here and there. We would go out on trips, or occasionally go away for a weekend. IC: Did Raymond talk much about the job? Mitzi: No. He never discussed it with me. IC: Were you not interested, or did you fig­ure it wasn’t any of your business? Mitzi: Both. [laughs] He would tell me if he was having problems, like, ‘I have to figure out how to do this.’ I did the bookkeeping— I had to keep track of the wiring girls’ hours and send it to Motown so we could pay them. I also did all the [patent] diagrams for the Electronium. If you look at the diagrams, it says: ‘Conceived by Raymond Scott and drawn by Mathilde Scott.’ IC: How did his Motown tenure end after five years?

Mitzi: They retired him. The problem was that he never completed anything they could use. By that time, he had destroyed the Electronium by vandalizing it for parts for other things he was working on. And new electronics had come so far, that they could do with one little chip what he had tons of wiring doing on the Electronium. It didn’t pay to keep working on it. IC: When he got laid off, he kept working on other things? Mitzi: Yeah. Just for himself. Don’t forget—when they retired him in 1977, he was 69, past retirement age. He was able to collect social security. IC: And a Musician’s Union pension? Mitzi: Yeah. But it was nothing. Probably for later musicians it would be more, but when he started getting the Musician’s Union pension, it was $43 a month. [laughs] It went up to maybe $68 a month. IC: And the royalties were going down? Mitzi: From the time we got married, the royalties went down. His music was being played less. He kept getting new ideas. He was going to write a book on how to score music for films, so he bought $500 worth of tapes. 101


Wiring diagram for the Pychedelic Door Bell (1969) shows Mathilde (Mitzi) Scott’s drawing and signature

He would videotape old movies at three o’clock in the morning so he could analyze them. Of course he never wrote the book. IC: But he got a lot of old films on tape. Mitzi: Yeah. I watch them now. [laughs] 102

IC: Did Raymond continue to play piano? Mitzi: Oh yes! Anytime we went to a party and there was a piano and they asked him to play, he would. But he never played anything he had written. He improvised beautiful new stuff, and I would think, ‘What a shame, because it’s gonna be lost. He’s not


gonna go home and write this down.’ And he never did. He could make up beautiful music I had never heard before—and I knew I was never gonna hear it again, because the next time he’d just make up new stuff. IC: Did he exercise much? Mitzi: He was not a physically active man, no. IC: He would sit and work, and it would never occur to him to lift weights or jog or go swimming? Mitzi: Never. Although he’d go swimming in the summer. IC: He didn’t smoke cigarettes? Mitzi: Never smoked in his life. IC: And never dabbled in any kind of drugs—prescription or otherwise? Mitzi: He took uppers and downers. I guess you could call him “nervous” in public. He had a hard time in a crowd. It was extremely difficult for him to go to a party where there were 15 or 30 people. When he was leading the Hit Parade Orchestra, he had to have somebody stand in back of the camera­man making faces at him, so he could smile for the camera. He hated being

on camera. He was shy. But on a one-to-one basis, he was absolutely wonderful. He was relaxed, he enjoyed talking—particularly if it was about music or engineering, ’cause that’s what he really liked to talk about. IC: When did he have a heart attack? Mitzi: He had a mild heart attack in 1968. And he had single bypass surgery in, I think, ’75 or ’76. And then he had triple bypass surgery in 1983. IC: Did it slow him down? Mitzi: Not really. He kept working. IC: Was Raymond always bringing stuff home—magazines, equipment, records, and… just odds and ends? Mitzi: From where?! He never left home! [laughs] IC: He didn’t go out much? Mitzi: No! We would go out for dinner, and we’d go out to a movie, but he did not go out shopping by himself. In fact, if he want­ed to go someplace that sold a lot of electronic stuff, I would always have to go along, and I would be bored out of my skull—you know, standing around while he could spend hours picking through all this little wiring stuff. 103


Additionally,… by Jeff Winner, associate producer

I

1940s—Among Scott’s inventions during the Atomic Age was his Talking Alarm Clock, which would automatically play back messages at a pre-set time. You simply presse­d the “Push to Talk” button, spoke into a built-in microphone, and your mes­sage was recorded onto a wire loop housed inside the clock. Scott described some uses in his US patent disclosure (March 8, 1946): “Record information before retiring and have such information reproduced as a reminder upon awakening the next morning. A pre-recorded music may precede or follow. May be used for business pur­poses where spoken information may be desirable at a certain pre-fixed time such as a reminder.” 1950s—Popular Mechanics magazine reported: “Scott also holds a patent on an 104

P O P U L A R M E C H A N I C S , S E P T E M B E R , 19 5 9

n addition to his “family of completely xorig­in­al, new sound entertainment devi­ ces,” Ray­mond Scott also developed product ideas that would, in his words, “electronic­ ally up­date the many sound de­vic­es around us—the functional sounds.”

Scott hears nation’s hit tunes with automatic scanning radio that picks up stations around country xxx

automatic scanning radio, which tunes in on stations around the country and chang­es frequency by itself at any given interval, en­abling you to catch most of the nation’s disc-jockey shows in a brief span and find out what tunes are being played.” Scott invented electronic versions of tele­phone ringers, burglar alarms, door bells/chimes, and fire/police/ambulance sirens. In Raymond Scott’s “World of Sound,” there was something for everyone...


1960s—Scott hoped his Electronic Music Box, Flower Vase, and Jewel Case would appeal to the ladies, along with his com­plete line of Electronic Jewelry—bracelets, earrings, and necklaces embedded with tiny, light emitting diodes (LEDs) instead of diamonds or pearls. Scott asserted: “The at­tract­ive sparkling ruby light generated by these diodes will make possible a degree of radiance in jewelry not before available.” For the working man at the office, there was the Electronic Desk Set, complete with electronic inkwell, nameplate, and calendar. In the lobby, America’s corporate execs could buy a pack of cigarettes from a Vend­ing Machine with Electronic Music Score. (“The customer deposits change for a pack of cigarettes—above the customary clatter of the machine, a bit of electronic music takes place—intriguing to the cus­tom­er—serves as an advertising sound for cigarette manufacturer...”) At home, the man of the house could relax with a drink from his Electronic Cocktail Glass, and he could enjoy a smoke from his Electronic Cigarette Case while casually flicking the cinders in his Ash Tray With Accompanying Electronic Music Score. And for junior? Scott explains: “The in­fant probably couldn’t care less, but proud parents will get a big charge from the Electronic Baby Rattle, since instead of pebbles,

it contains micro-miniature parts just about the size of the pebbles they replace—cute little sounds for baby that change and change as the rattle is handled.” When the kiddies were a little older, they could enjoy the electronic game Raymond called Spin-A-Tune. “Your child spins a top on a shallow dish about 18 inches across. The travel pattern of the top spins out a changing tune. Each time a different tune.” Utilizing his Touch-Controlled Variable Pitch Mechanism, Scott devel­oped an­other electronic game that was definitely not for babies: “An adult game—a figure of a girl— the sensitive parts of the body—an adult toy. Another variation: One human being holds one contact, and another human being holds the other. When two people touch each other a sound is produced, the sound is varied by the way in which people touch each other, pressure, parts of body, etc.” 1970s—Raymond expected special versions of his Electronium to have wide appeal. Scott noted: “Waiting could be made more pleasant—even exciting—with an Electronium available. Airports, wait­ing rooms, restaurants, theater lounges, schools, amusement parks, fairs, off-beat night clubs, and other public gathering places would find the Electronium a fascinating attraction.” 105


Electronic Audible Signalling Devices

Another US patent awarded to Raymond Scott (filed June 7, 1968). Scott included variations of its circuitry in several of his inventions, including some versions of the Electronium.

106

Operation of the device is initiat­ed by closing a switch, such as momentary pushbutton 13, connected to trigger monostable switch 14 which applies, for a predetermined period of time (depending on the constraints of the monostable switch), energiz­ing volt­ age to the system render­ing all the other blocks operative for this period of time. When the system has thus been energized, the sequence of operation de­scribed below is started. FIG. 1 then operates with a voltage controlled oscillator (10) producing a tone which is applied to keyer 8 over line 9. Pulser 4, rate controlled by a suitable rate control device 5 con­nect­ ed over line 6, turns keyer 8 on and off over line 7. Keyer 8 in going on passes tone signals from oscillator 10 over line 16 to audio amplifier 15 and the amplified tones are ap­plied over line 18 to a suitable transducer such as loudspeaker 17. At the same time, random voltage generator 1 is activated and starts generat­ing a varying voltage such as, for example, a series of ramp voltages. These varying voltages are applied over line 2 to gate 3. Gate 3, when opened by a pulse from trigger 12 over line 17, applies a momentary voltage to sample-andhold 19 over line 24. Trigger 12 is activated by pulses from pulser 4 over line 11. Sample-and-hold 19 receives a volt­age from gate 3 which depends on the point in the cycle of random generator 1 at which gate 3 is opened by trigger pulses from trigger 12. This received voltage is held until the next sample is taken through gate 3. This


3 5 8 7 0 9 4

held voltage is applied to voltage driver 21 over line 23, where a corresponding driver voltage is produced suit足able for controlling voltage controlled oscillator 10 over line 20. This voltage applied from driver 21 causes the frequency or tone of oscillator 10 to assume a new value which in turn is emitted over loudspeaker 17. Thus, at each pulse from pulser 4, a new tone is produced and emitted and this new tone is randomly determined by the instantaneous voltage gate by gate

3 from random voltage generator 1. The rate at which the tones are changed and emitted is determined by the pulse rate of pulser 4 which, in turn, is determined by the setting of pulse rate control 5. The number of pulses of tone emitted or the length of time during which they are emitted for each closure of pushbutton switch 13 depends on the time constants of monostable switch 22, since when switch 22 opens, the system stops all activity.

107


T RACK  NO TE S : Mining the archives

by Gert-Jan Blom & Jeff Winner

R

aymond Scott was obsessed with the xsound of everything—song titles; the names of his bands, his companies, and his invent­ions; his stage name (chosen, he claimed, from the Manhattan phone book because it had “good rhythm”), and—of course—the sound of his music. xxDuring his early years at CBS radio in the 1930s, he spent much time in the control booth rehearsing his ensembles through the “ear” of the microphone, with historic results (as his Quintette recordings prove). Scott sought to master all aspects of sound capture and manipulation. His special inter­est in the technical aspects of record­ing, combined with the state-of-theart facilities at his disposal, provided him with enormous hands-on experience as an engin­­eer. xxDuring the 1950s, as Music Director of the Your Hit Parade TV series, Scott pioneered the practice of having the orchestra play along live with a pre-recorded per­ form­ance to produce a “thicker” sound emanating from tinny tele­vision speakers. His album, The Unexpected, by “Raymond

Scott and the Secret 7” (1960) was another landmark of Scott’s immaculate production skills. xxManhattan Research, Inc., estab­lished 1946, was the pinnacle of Scott’s lifelong interest in the fine art of “musical en­gi­ neer­ing.” Although these activities were not widely publicized, Scott’s art flour­ished throughout the 1950s and ’60s, as this compilation indicates. xxWhile researching the archives, we were impressed continually by the sonic fidelity of the tapes—some over 40 years old. They were so well-recorded that almost no audio correction was necessary during the mas­ ter­ing of this album. Many of the tracks were recorded by Scott binaurally (dis­ cretely separated left and right channels), and are presented here in such format. xxAlthough much of this material was never intended for commercial release, we felt this legacy was a neglected story that deserved exposure. We hope this collection illustrates Scott’s strategic role in the history and development of 20th century electron­ic music.


CD

1

109


CD1 1 MANHATTAN RESEARCH, INC. COPYRIGHT 0:11 c. 1959 “The music you are listening to is complete-

ly electronic, and has been created and produced on equipment designed and manufactured by Manhattan Research, a division of Raymond Scott Enterprises Incorporated.” One of Scott’s slogans for Manhattan Research, In. was “more than a think factory—a dream center where the excitement of tomorrow is made available today.” When Manhattan Research, Inc. sent out demos to potential customers, audio copy­­ right lines like this were used to protect the recording from unauthorized use.

An application can be heard on CD 2, #33.

2 BALTIMORE GAS & ELECTRIC CO. (INSTR., take 4 ) 1:14

c. 1960-’62

Instrumental variation of the BG&E commercial (CD 2, #19), early example of push-button electron­ic gadgets combined with keyboard accompaniment. 110

3 BENDIX 1: “THE TOMORROW PEOPLE”

1963 1:06

Bendix Aviation Crea­tive Engineering was active in “elec­tron­ ics, magnetics, electromechanics, aerology, optics, carburetion and hydraul­ics.” Its products included automotive brakes, carburetors, landing gear, radio, radar, tele­ vision, and marine controls. The Bendix Corporation was purchased by Allied Signal in the mid-1980s. Raymond Scott produced two commercials for the company.

The other can be found on CD 2, #32.

4 LIGHTWORKS 1:52

c. 1960–’63 vocal by Dorothy Collins

The tape on which we found this song was marked Electronic FX & Lightworks, ca. 1960-’63. Raymond Scott must have been quite fond of the Lightworks jingle. He made several variations and even reused the breezy theme in a spot for Awake Frozen Orange Juice (CD 1, #27). Lightworks was a line of cosmetics that featured blush, eye shadow, and lipstick.

See CD 1, #27 and CD 2, #30.


5 THE BASS-LINE GENERATOR

3:10

c. 1966-’67

A good example of how the Bass-line Generator could build a musical pattern on a simple 10-tone row. It’s easy to see how Motown’s Berry Gordy became interested in such possibilities.

6 “DON’T BEAT YOUR WIFE EVERY NIGHT!” 1:44

c. 1961

Scott believed that the Audio Logo use of electronic music would be its first import­ ant and widely used contribution to radio and TV commercials. He established Electronic Audio Logos, Inc. especially for this pur­pose [CD 2, #33]. The sounds on this track are not fragments of musical compositions—they are “stings” and accents created in Manhattan Research Inc.’s electronic music studio. Scott explained: “After we put together the tape, we called in an announcer-friend of ours, ‘Bucky’ Coslow. We said: ‘Listen to these electronic effects, we’ll play them one at a time and what­ever they make you think of—commercial-style—say it real sponta­ neous-like. We’ll record them, then later, we’ll have a mix and see what happens.’ We did just that, with one difference: The an­nounce tape was edit­ed but before we’d

got a chance to sync it with the effects tape, it was run purely by accident at random against the effects tape. The effect was startling. Words and phrases that had no business showing up where they did against certain electronical effects took on a wonderfully convincing and attractive quality and seemed to indicate that electronic music for this purpose may turn out to have unusual vitality, conviction and atmosphere plus a rather shocking flexibility.” (from: Lecture on Electronic Music in Radio & Television, Advertising Age Convention, Chicago, July 31, 1962)

7 “B.C. 1675” 3:16 (THE “GILLETTE” CONGA DRUM JINGLE)

1957

A 1959 article in Popular Mechanics report­ ed, "Among the instruments which Scott has developed is a device that automatically finds a selection in a particular recording tape and continues to repeat it as long as he wants." [US Pat.#2998939] This track illustrates the wide variety of styles Scott was experimenting with in the late ’50s.

8 VIM

0:59

1960

Scott (from lecture tape, 1962): “Products 111


VIM

(Lever Bros.)

OBM / Newt Mitzman

1960

A scientific process (with electronic soundtrack by Scott) brings forth a washday miracle

that have an interesting technical back­ ground to talk about, or are in themselves of a technical nature, are es­pecially suited to electronic scoring. Take, for instance, a project we were engaged in some time ago. We were asked to develop for VIM a laboratory sound to be used as background in a scene depicting the development of their famous tablet detergent. The sound had to reflect the atmo­sphere of their scientific resources, but most of all had to have the feeling of sparkling white, crystal clear, clean as a whistle. Here are the effects we arrived at during this project.” 112

9 AUTO-LITE: STA-FUL (INSTR.)

0:47

1961

Commercial created for BBDO. One of Scott’s early devices was his “Circle Ma­chine.” Scott explained: “The intensity of each light in this circle is individually adjust­able. At the tip of the arm, there is a photo cell. This cell is a part of an electron­ic sound generating system, so adjusted that the more light the cell sees the higher the pitch of the sound produced. The cell also moves around in a circle at adjustable speed. One of the controls above the circle of lights changes the pitch center of the


12 “WHEELS THAT GO”

0:50

1967

A Jim Henson short film with Raymond Scott’s electronic score. The film, one of two short pieces Henson created for “Expo67” in Montréal, depicts his son Brian explor­ing toys with wheels.

The Circle Machine

13 “LIMBO: THE ORGANIZED MIND” July 1, 1966

complete cycle when required.” Here the Circle Machine gives an impress­ion of a dying car battery, end­ing in a short circuit. To keep the sound generic in this commercial, the Circle Machine was used in a punctuational manner.

See CD 2, #29.

10 SPRITE: “MELONBALL BOUNCE” (INSTR.) 1963 1:01

Scott’s tasteful use of “Sounds Electro­ nique” in a jingle for a popular beverage.

11 SPRITE: “MELONBALL BOUNCE”

1963

Same jingle—this time with vocals.

0:59

4:33

Narration by Jim Henson

Scott’s Musique Con­crète score for a Henson film starring the character Limbo, a foam-rubber face that was manipulated with strings to move the mouth. The film’s narrator guides us around inside his own head, while explain­ing how he organizes his thoughts, personal memories and fears. This track provides a fine example of Scott’s musical engineering in a professionally produced and original soundtrack.

14 “PORTOFINO” 1

2:13

January 16, 1962

We found three different arrangements of this tune.

An alternate version is on CD 2, #4. 113


Found graphics in The Organized Mind JIM HENSON 1966


Oh where, oh where is my County Fair?

15 COUNTY FAIR

1:01

1962

Popular myth has it that Raymond Scott was a “cartoon composer.” In fact, this is the only animated cartoon for which Scott ever composed music. County Fair Bread was popular in the Wash­ington D.C. area. Thanks to this zany animated spot produced by the advertising firm Ferro, Mogubgub & Schwartz, the bread’s popularity rapidly spread.

Instrumental parts: CD 2, #11.

16 LADY GAYLORD

1:02

1964

Gaylord and Lady Gaylord were part of

Ideal Toy’s 1963 battery-oper­ated animal series. These mechanical basset hounds walked forward when their leashes were tugged upwards. They were even designed to walk up shallow steps. A small magnet in their mouths allowed them to pick up their bones. The merchandise packaging was designed to resemble a dog house complete with a cut-out side panel. A Consumer Re­ports “scientist” (note the lab-coat) 115


Gaaaaaaylord!

Gaaaaaaaaylord! — He looks kinda crazy — Moves kinda lazy — See what he'll do!

Gaaaaylord! When you pull his leash he’ll walkity-walkity-walk with you, Arf! Arf!

is not happy with the results on his voltage meter, as he follows the dog down an outdoor path. This photo accompanied Consumer Reports investigation into a reader’s complaint about Gaylord’s rate of battery consumption in which they determine (quot­ing the 1963 article) “…This mechanical basset is one hungry hound. It eats up a set of four ‘D’ batteries in about two hours. In six months of regular play, we estimate, 116

the cost of batteries will exceed the cost of the toy itself.” This Jingle Workshop production of a swing­ing, catchy arrangement was scored for a line-up of trumpet, flute, bass clarinet, organ, bass, drums, piano, and Clavivox. Scott’s scoring was reminiscent of his 1960 album The Unexpected (Top Rank RM 335), recorded by a group of eight (sic) anonymous jazz session aces, “The Secret 7.”


17 GOOD AIR (Take 7)

0:38

1953

An early example of a conventional-style recording from The Jingle Workshop. Vocal group and piano, touched up with some electronic “grab ’em by the ears” effects. Introduces the word “Odorosis.”

18 IBM MT/ST: “THE PAPERWORK EXPLOSION” 4:31

October, 1967

This industrial film, produced by Henson Associates, Inc. for IBM Office Products Division with soundtrack by Raymond Scott, sings the praises of one of the world’s first word processors, the IBM MT/ST (Magnetic Tape Selectric Typewriter), intro­

duced in 1964, “turns rough draft into errorfree copy.” A prestigious project for Manhattan Research, Inc.—a musique concrète and electronics soundtrack. Another good exam­ple of Scott’s­musical engineering. Of special interest is Jim Henson’s contribution to the announce copy: “Used systematically throughout an office, these two pieces of IBM equipment alone have in­creased people’s productivity by 50%.”

Instrumental parts on CD 2, #21

19 DOMINO

0:33

c. 1960-’63

This instrumental track utilizes a gadget developed

Still frame from The Paperwork Explosion

117


Consider the problems solved by magnetically re-typing whenever changes have to be made. No longer willl the typist have to type complete pages over for just a few corrections. The IBM Magnetic Tape “Selectric” Typewriter will automatically retype all copy but the changes, freeing typist for other duties. © 1964 International Business Machine Corporation, 545 Madison Avenue, New York 10022 118


by Raymond Scott in the 60s: Bandito the Bongo artist, a “device that automatically creates and performs bongo-like drum improvisations, an infinite variety of pitches, rhythms and colors, comparable to, and frequently more exciting than the most brilliant bongo artist anywhere.” (Disclosure, May 15, 1968)

More ‘Bandito’ can be heard on CD 1, #30

20 SUPER CHEER

0:34

c. 1963

Electronic jingle including a fragment of the rhythm track of “Nursery Rhyme” from Soothing Sounds for Baby Volume 1 (1963). In the context of this album it becomes ap­parent that SSFB must have been a piece of cake for Raymond Scott, compared to other works that emerged from his studio during that period.

21 CHEER: REVISION 3 (NEW BACKGROUNDS)

0:39

September 16, 1963

Interesting combination of keyboard performances and electronic abstractions.

22 “TWILIGHT IN TURKEY”

1:32

Electronium with keyboard, c. 1968-’69

Updated version of Raymond Scott Quin­ tette hit from 1937.

23 RAYMOND SCOTT QUOTE / VICKS: MEDICATED COUGH DROPS

1:34

1960 - Vocal by Dorothy Collins

In Spring 1960 Raymond Scott was asked by Carl Buffington, radio & TV director for Morse International, to develop an “unusual approach” to a spot campaign for Vicks medicated coughdrops and tablets. Thus, Scott made use of his first electronic music machine, a device affectio­nately known as “Karloff,” which he had been developing since 1948. Scott described this device as “a control console which se­lects, modifies and com­bines sounds produced by the Hammond organ or the Clavivox, by other electronic instruments and by electronic means, has 200 sound sources and is capable of quickly producing infinite and varied musical and electronic effects. A control panel directs pitch, timbre, intensity, tempo, accent and repetition. It can select from an unlimited number of sources and make up infinite combinations and permutations.” Scott was reluctant to give the machine a name, but Charles “Chuck” Barclay, manager of Scott’s music commercials company, The Jingle Workshop, suggested that it be called “The Audimation,” since it did for audio what animation does for pictures. Because of possible confusion with the word automation, the name was rejected 119


Copyright registration for the musical composition “Vicks”, 1960 Left: Advertisement for Vicks Formula 44 cough mixture, 1965

120


Auto-Lite Spark Plugs

and Karloff remained its “official” nick­ name. During the 1960s this console devel­ oped into the impressive “wall of dazzle,” which in turn developed into the heart of the Electronium Mk1 by 1969/’70.

24 VICKS: FORMULA 44

0:46

1964

The opening notes of this commercial, produced for the Puerto Rico market, echo Scott’s “Two Young Lads in Saxophone School,” a tune he composed for and re­cord­ed with the Raymond Scott Orchestra in 1940.

25 AUTO-LITE: SPARK PLUGS

c. 1961

1:00

A TV commercial soundtrack produced for BBDO. In Scott’s own words: “An example of an electronic swing­ing background with­ out the use of any percussion-like instruments, by the way, electronic or otherwise. Electronic effects, but this time with a vocal group. No an­nounce copy at all!”

26 NESCAFÉ

1:06

1960

Produced for Hayhurst, Toronto, Canada. “These are roasted coffee beans. All good coffees are roasted, but today one coffee announces the step beyond roasting. The new Nescafé: now toast­ed before it’s roast­ed! Watch: see how Nescafé is toasted to bring out all the tempting aroma, then 121


The instrumental parts represent: • the sound of beans pouring out of a bag; • the sound of dancing flames and a coffeetoasting machine; • the sound of toasting; • the sound of roasting; • and, tying the effects together, an overall blanket of rhythm.

27 AWAKE

roast­ed to give you all the rich, robust flavor of forty-three choice coffee beans for every satisfying cup… Only a coffee that is toast­ ed be­fore it is roasted can ever hope to have the tempting aroma and rich, robust flavor of New Nescafé. Get New Nescafé Instant Coffee, now toasted for aroma, roast­ed for flavor. New Nescafé!” This text is audible in a version used by Scott during a rehearsal for a 1962 lecture. The sound quality of the tape prevented us from using it here, however, and no master tape of the complete version has surfaced. We did find a reel containing the un­edited instrumental parts and, with the recording from the lect­ure as a guide, re-created the instrumental soundtrack. 122

0:35

c. 1960-’63

Commercial for frozen orange juice concentrate; re-uses a theme from Lightworks (CD 1, #4). Assembled from a work tape.

28 “BACKWARDS OVERLOAD”

6:04

c. 1968

In 1962 Raymond Scott concurred with public opinion that electronic music “… sounded like nuclear war and at its tamest like ‘outer space’ music. If that was all you could do with electronic music, I’d say it had no place at all to speak of in TV back­ground scoring.” Scott aimed to create a lighter, more appealing electron­ic music that would titillate the public’s ear instead of frighten. The various applications and the high quality of his electronic sounds in the commercial jingles on this album illustrate his pioneering achieve­ ments in the field.


However, in the late 1960s and through­out the ’70s when he worked for Motown, Raymond Scott composed longer pieces with the Electronium: Electronium Suite #1, Electronium Movie Score, Iceberg, The Tone Stepper, Cat Concerto, Night on a Calm Sea and several others. Backwards Overload combines the Electronium with a musique concrète tape collage of orchestral fragments and noises. Robert Moog: “Raymond Scott was a very creative guy but an absolute madman. He wasn’t schooled as an engineer, he was a successful musician. He had the idea of a) building all this funny electronic and electro-mechanical stuff, and b) using it to make all kinds of sounds. Raymond Scott got a lot of his stuff into radio and TV commercials, but he went much farther out in experimenting and actually did pieces of music with all this equipment he built.” (A CD package of Scott’s Electronium compo­sitions and experiments on Basta follows this collection)

29 BUFFERIN: “MEMORIES” (original) 0:59

October, 1967 Narration by Jim Henson

Jim Henson translated his “Limbo” character and the concept from his “Organized Mind” projects into this Bufferin pain

re­liever TV commercial titled “Memories.” The narrator (Henson) describes how a headache almost ruined his day. Scott’s score contains sonic quotes from “The Organized Mind,” and “The Paper­ work Explosion,” and the rhythm track from “Sleepy Time” (on Soothing Sounds for Baby Vol. 1).

See also the demo version on CD 2, #25

30 BANDITO THE BONGO ARTIST

1:30

c. 1960-’63

Fragment from a longer improvisation on the rhythm track of the Domino Sugar Co. jingle (CD1, #19), with some spectacular soloing by Bandito.

31 “NIGHT AND DAY” (C. Porter)

1:45

c. 1968

Scott was eager to demonstrate the endless possibilities and remarkable versatility of his machines: in commercials, in serious compositions like The Pygmy Taxi Corp., Backwards Overload or The Wild Piece and Electronium adaptations of popular tunes like his own hits The Toy Trumpet and Twilight in Turkey or, as in this case, the chord sequence of Cole Porter’s Night and Day. Possibly this was intend­ed as a backing track to be combined later with keyboard performance. 123


35 GMGM 1A

32 BALTIMORE GAS & ELECTRIC CO. (“395”)

c. 1960–’62 1:07

Electronics and keyboard soundtrack of a TV commercial with a “carefree living” combo part inserted.

Other BG&E tracks: CD 1, #2; CD 2, #18; CD 2, #19

33 K2r

0:19

c. 1963-’64

Scott: “Writing a jingle is like writing a love letter: you must say it simply and with feeling.”

34 IBM PROBE

1:56

c. 1963-’64 From a reel marked IBM Probe - Improvisations, Rhythmic Repeating Fragments & Useful Fx

Groove excerpt from the IBM work tapes which contain longer improvisations of the fragments used in the IBM MT/ST soundtrack.

See CD 1, #18; CD 2, #21

124

1:49

1963

This was found on a tape labeled GMGM 1A / Fan­ fares from 1963, prob­ably part of the work tapes for the GM Futurama commercial (CD 2, #3).

Souvenir clip, 1964

36 THE RHYTHM modulatOR

3:37

c. 1955-’57

Robert Moog, recalling his first (1955) visit to Scott’s electronic studios: “He had rack upon rack of these stepping relays that were used by the telephone company. You’d dial it and the relay would step through all the positions. He had these things hooked up to turn sounds on and off. This was a huge, electro-mechanical sequencer! And he had it programmed to produce all sorts of rhythmic patterns. This whole room would go ‘clack-clack-clack-clack, clack-clackclack-clack’ and the sounds would come out all over the place. Obviously not everybody could do this. It took a huge amount of money, and a huge amount of imagination. And an impressive amount of craziness, too!”


CD

2


CD2 1 OHIO PLUS

0:17

November 27, 1967

P O P U L A R M E C H A N I C S , S E P T E M B E R , 19 5 9

In his jingle-writing days, Raymond Scott kept a plaque hanging over his grand piano with this reminder: “Ideally, all the words should make sense.” When we discovered this demo for Ohio Plus, the words pronounced by Scott did seem to make sense, in a prophetic way, within the frame­work of this album.

2 “IN THE HALL OF THE MOUNTAIN QUEEN” c. 1968-’69 0:49

Electronium with keyboard. The title para­ phrases Edvard Grieg’s “In the Hall of the Mountain King,” from the Peer Gynt Suite.

3 GENERAL MOTORS: FUTURAMA

1964

The 1964 New York World’s Fair at Flush­ing Meadow in Queens, New York had a twoyear run: from April 22 to October 18, 1964 and from April 21 to October 17, 1965— a total of 360 days… Featured 126

1:04

140 pavilions on 646 acres… It was the dawn of the space age and the fair’s theme was “Man in a Shrinking Globe in an Expanding Universe.” xxGM’s “Futurama” was the largest struct­ure at the Fair (320,000 sq. ft. floor area). The follow­ing was taken from the


official New York World’s Fair guidebook: • A trip in armchairs provides a fascinating look at the future, including a foretaste of lunar commuting, Antarctic ports, jungle cities and resorts on the ocean’s floor. • In a trip to the moon, see a weird land­scape of craters and spaceships. • Visiting the jungle, spectators see trees felled by searing laser beams. A monster road-building machine follows, leaving in its path an elevated superhighway. • In the desert, crops thrive in soil irrigated by desalted sea water. Machines operated by remote control plant and harvest crops. • Life under sea is depicted by an all-weather port cut deep into the Antarctic ice shelf. • Another underwater scene shows the ocean floor being tapped for oil and vacationers relaxing at a resort beneath the surface. • Tomorrow’s city is shown with midtown airports, high-speed bus-trains, super-sky­ scrapers, moving sidewalks and under­ground freight conveyor belts. • Avenue of Progress: Among the displays are a cosmic chamber, fuel-cell developments and a turbine engine.

4 “PORTOFINO” 2

2:14

January 16, 1962

Alternate arrangement of this composition.

See also CD 1, #14.

127


128


5 “THE WILD PIECE” (a.k.a. “STRING PIECE”)

Electronium – December 16, 1969 - 4:07

Scott: “My super Stravinsky.”

6 “TAKE ME TO YOUR VIOLIN TEACHER” 1:40

Electronium – December 16, 1969

A piece about the arrival on earth of beings from another world where violin playing is the supreme art. Scott: “The sound of things—the sound of reproduced music—the sound of words—the sound of anything— has always been im­portant to me. If I needed a title for a piece of music, I’d first decide what the piece of music was really about. But, when I finally decided on a title, the sound of it had to be attractive.”

7 “RIPPLES” (original soundtrack)

excellent tape c. 1960-’63. The reel contains sam­ples of grooves, atmo­spheres and experiments from various work tapes that Scott label­ed “interesting cyclic bits.”

9 “RIPPLES” (MONTAGE)

4:06

Late 1966

An edited version of samples from the “Ripples” work tape, containing electronic sounds, experiments and long silences. The first 1:44 of this track is called “Seven Sugar Plop Sounds;” it is followed by our choice of the more appealing sound bites from the tape.

0:59

January, 1967

In 1967, Jim Henson and Raymond Scott collaborated on a one-minute film called Ripples. The film depicts an architect who, while searching for inspiration, makes ripples dropping sugar cubes into his coffee and tossing pebbles in a pond.

8 CYCLIC BIT

1:04

c. 1960-’63

This fragment was found on an excellent tape labeled Electronic FX and Light­works, 129


10 THE WING THING

1:00

1963

Edited from a tape that contained the announce copy followed by sound effects of the same length. It was obvious how they fit together. xxThe Wing Thing, part of Gilbert Toys’a “Ameri­can Flyer” series, came with differ­ ent parts and accessories, including a gasoline motor which made it fly. xxGilbert also marketed a smaller, less expensive version which they named “The Son of Wing Thing.” 130

11 COUNTY FAIR (INSTR.) 1962

1:00

Scott: “We were invited to do an electronic music score for an animated TV spot on behalf of County Fair Bread. [CD 1, #15]. The problem: to create an electronic musical impression of a calliope playing: ‘Where, oh where (in this case) is my County Fair Bread?’ Compose a ‘man in a white suit’type theme, for the central character, a slightly knocked-out magician. Put to­gether a group of electronic impressions of typical animated cartoon sound effects.


Here are the sounds we came up with: • Sound of the calliope; • Magician/‘man in a white suit’ theme; • Cartoon effects.”

a lot of diddling with it. Some of the sounds are not the same sounds that you can get with an analog synthesizer, but they’re close.”

12 “CINDY ELECTRONIUM”

13 “DON’T BEAT YOUR WIFE EVERY NIGHT!” (INSTr.) 1:45

1:59

Electronium and Clavivox – 1960–’63

Variations of this track (including a vocal demo) were found on the same tape that contained the Rhythm Modulator Demo (CD 1, #36) and the Audio Logos Demo (CD 2, #33). Robert Moog: “Over the years, from time to time, Raymond would ask us to design a circuit for him. Then he’d come up from New York City and pick it up, or tell us what else he’d want. This happened often, every couple of months. We began building synthesizers…. And we’d be talking on the phone about what he wanted, and how we were doing. It turns out those circuits that we were designing for Raymond—we didn’t know what they were going in. Raymond was always very protective of his ideas. And he wasn’t ashamed of it. He said, ‘It’s none of your business. Just build this circuit and I’ll take it from there.’ Well, it turns out that they were for the Clavivox. And a lot of the sound producing circuitry resembles very closely the first analog synthesizer my company made in the mid-sixties. Raymond did

c. 1961

Instrumental parts from a fake jingle montage used by Scott in his lecture of July 31, 1962. Scott: “Maybe the reason these effects are as attractive as they seem is because we are as yet not preconditioned to a species of electronic music, and consequently our ears are ready to accept a more abstract marriage between the spoken word and electronic musical effects. But regardless, we believe that possibilities are most exciting.”

See also CD 1, #6

14 HOSTESS: TWINKIES

0:32

c. 1963

Another futuristic Raymond Scott soundtrack from the Space Age. xxA standard Twinkie is de­fined as a “Golden Sponge Cake with Creamy Filling created by the Hostess Company, baked by Conti­nent­al 131


15 HOSTESS: TWINKIES (INSTr.)

0:32

c. 1963

The same commercial, this time without an­nounce copy. Some of the effects originat­ ed from the same “Space mystery” tape that was used for GM Futurama (CD 2, #3) and Space Mystery Montage (CD 2, #26), both from 1963. 132

P hoto b y B ob F oster © 19 9 9

Baking Co, and marketed under the brand name ‘Twinkie,’ and containing enriched flour (niacin, iron [ferrous sulfate], thiamin mononitrate, riboflavin), water, sugar, corn syrup, high fructose corn syrup, partially hydrogenated vegetable and/or animal shortening (contains one or more of: canola oil, corn oil, cottonseed oil, soybean oil, beef fat), eggs, and dextrose, and also containing no more than 2% of modified food starch, whey, leavenings (sodium acid pyrophosphate, baking soda, monocalcium phosphate), salt, starch, yellow corn flour, corn syrup solids, mono and diglycerides, dextrin, calcium, caseinate, sodium stearoyl, lactylate, cellulose gum, polysorbate 60, wheat gluten, lecithin, flavors (artificial, natural), artificial colors (yellow 5, red 40), caramel color, preservatives (sorbic acid).”

16 OHIO BELL: THERMO FAX

0:24

1961-’62

This alarming spot, produced for EWRR, was found on a tape marked “Thermo Fax Work Reel.”

17 “THE PYGMY TAXI CORPORATION”

7:11

Electronium, December 16, 1969

Scott: “The Electronium is the natural result of my interest in musical electronics. For many years I thought that technology could be used to aid both the composition and performance of music. Incidentally, this


goes back a long time. Even when I was ten years old I had dreams that it was possible to use technological assistance to be able to perform better. For instance, when I was studying piano as a kid I didn’t play octaves very well and I had a dream that if I fastened one of these barber shop-type massage things to my wrist and it vibrated the wrist up and down, then all I had to do was hold it on the piano and I could play octaves like mad. I guess, in a way the Electronium is the fulfillment of a concept started many years ago. The thrill and love that I’ve always had for this field is such that I hope to spend the rest of my life deeply involved in it.”

18 BALTIMORE GAS & ELECTRIC Co. (ANNOUNCE COPY, take 1) 0:29

0:44

1960-’62

See CD 1, #2 and CD 1, #32

20 LIGHTWORKS (SLOW)

21 “THE PAPERWORK EXPLOSION” (INSTR.) 3:39

1963-’64

Instrumental parts from the MT/ST industrial film, The Paperwork Explosion. These work tapes contain interest­ing materials. Scott selected various grooves, themes and effects from his machines and improvised with these while recording. From these “jams,” only a few seconds ended up in the soundtrack.

The complete version of the BG&E commercial, featuring keyboard performance com­bined with “sounds electronique.”

See also CD 1, #4 & #27, and CD2, #30.

See CD 1, #34 for a more elaborate version and CD 1, #18 for the original soundtrack.

22 AUTO-LITE: FORD FAMILY

1960-’62

19 BALTIMORE GAS & ELECTRIC CO.

instrumental end theme.

1:40

1960-’63

A half-speed variation of the Light­works

1:03

1961

Auto-Lite spark plugs were standard equipment in Ford automobiles in the early 1960s. Raymond Scott produced a series of five electronic spots for the Ford Motor Company: Auto-Lite Sta-Ful - CD 1, #9 and CD 2, #29; Auto-Lite spark plugs - CD 1, #25; Ford Family Car - CD 2, #22 + 23; City Traffic (not available); Wheels - CD 2, #24 These soundtracks were made with the Cir­cle Machine, Clavivox and various sound 133


The Ford Motor Company switches to Auto-Lite!

Ford Falcon…

Ford Galaxy…

… now specify

Ford Thunderbird… Mercury Comet…

Lincoln Conrtinental

Power-Tip batteries

No matter what make of car you own, next time you need new spark plugs, ask for them by name: Auto-Lite.

134


generating systems designed by Scott. Scott: “Auto-Lite is another example of the Audio Logos idea. Every time you saw the Auto-Lite spark plug, you saw it spark and the explosion that follow­ed. We were able to create a distinctive sound that was some­what realistic, somewhat impressionistic and you not only saw the spark and the explosion, but the attractive nature of the accompanying sound made a fine part of audio identification with that high-point in the video part of this commercial. Effect­ing an impressionistic interpretation of situations can frequently make possible a stunningly attractive effect to go with a certain moment in a TV commercial where, some­ thing that hasn’t got a sound can have a sound riding ‘piggy back,’ so to speak, on the general action—which, with exposure, becomes the audio-frequency memory of the ‘spot’ in question.”

23 AUTO-LITE: FORD FAMILY (INSTR.)

0:54

1961

Scott: “To me, electronic music is the music that is generated solely by electronic means —meaning all the sounds that you hear are not performed on instruments we know, but are either performed or automatically performed—by that I mean programmed—on equipment that makes use for its sound-

generating of purely electron­ic devices. “Electronic music takes electronic sound-generating systems to provide the raw materials, the basic sound materials. Now, the more of these you have, the greater the number of basic sound sources you have. “Some of the generators we use are classic, vacuum tube and transistor-operated audio generators or audio oscillators, but the great­er part of the generating systems we have so far are original ones. “I do believe that the most striking things we’ve achieved to date have prob­ ably been with the aid of some original developments in the area of electronic sound generating mechanisms. “Now, the next thing, in addition to the generating systems, is the switching system or memory device’s programming set-ups. The programming set-ups can be really quite endless in the amount of facilities one would like to add to be able to make one’s equipment do more things. “One of the very fascinating things about electronic music is that the combination of events possible are so ridiculously infinite that there’s just no stopping with it. Now in addition to the generating systems and the programming systems, in the processing systems you can take electronic 135


sounds and do many things to it. By pro­ cess­ing I mean the addition of things that most of us are familiar with; here, too, some of the devices are very classic electron­ic engineering type. “Tape reverberation, for instance, is a big class electronic processing scheme. The use of filters and equalizers is another normal part of recording technique which is used in the electronic music process. “Then there are modulating schemes— from this point on there are original devices that we have created of a rather complex nature which, I guess, would require about several thousand words to explain.”

24 Raymond Scott Quote / AUTO-LITE: “WHEELS” 1:50

1961

Scott: “I do believe that electronic music can be used in a light way, and in many mood-provoking ways, where instead of frightening the audience it will entertain them and help put over points and create memory images that are much more strik­ing than could be done with conventional instruments or even with an unconventional handling of conventional instruments. Electronic background scoring is not in­tend­ed as a replacement for conventional orches­tral ensembles, but for certain 136

moments of freshness, for certain kinds of products, and especially for an Audio Logos idea where a very special sound appears together with the appear­ance on screen of the product, or the sound or punctuation or some kind of audible underlining of a video moment, an announce moment or a combination of both has extremely powerful possibilities. “I do believe that we have licked the problem of lightness in electronic music and that I wouldn’t be at all surprised as these months go by that the various things that we can do with it will become so wide in scope that there’s a good chance that we would be hard put to find something that electronics couldn’t do something for.”

25 BUFFERIN: “MEMORIES” (DEMO)

0:44

October, 1967 Narration by Jim Henson

Soundtrack with Jim Henson narration against a romantic electronic backdrop. This is an earlier version of the finished commercial soundtrack.

See CD 1, #29.

26 “SPACE MYSTERY” (MONTAGE)

5:11

1963

The tape marked Electronic FX – Space Mystery contains several effects used in the


A resort beneath the sea is a feature of the future, as foreseen in GM’s 1964/1965 Futurama; guests enjoy submarine views and trips in aquascooters. Cities, farms, schools and houses of tomorrow are on view. xxx

GM Futurama soundtrack (CD 2, #3). At first this seemed to be just another work tape from which Scott spliced to­gether the soundtrack, but we suspect that this tape could in fact be the soundtrack to the actual “Futurama Ride” in GM’s pavilion at the 1964 New York World’s Fair. On this tape, in

between the sounds and effects, were long silences where a narrator may have provided information about the various views on the ride. Since we were unable to confirm this, we chose to edit the tape’s contents into a listenable format.

137


Auto-Lite batteries

27 “THE TOY TRUMPET”

Written and originally performed by Raymond Scott with his Quintette in 1936, this reconfiguration is a particularly good example of the Electronium’s pop possi­ bilities and intricate polyrhythms.

28 “BACKWARD BEEPS” “Watch: this is a car battery dying. It can happen to any battery—even yours.”

“To prevent this, AutoLite built its Sta-Ful battery!”

2:15

Electronium and keyboard, c. 1968-’69

1:05

1967

Raymond Scott loved backwards sounds. His work reels are scattered with tape-reverse experiments. This fragment was found on one of the “Ripples” reels.

29 Raymond Scott QUOTE / AUTO-LITE: STA-FUL 1:36 “The water level drops below the plates—the exposed plates ake.”

“An AutoLite Sta-Ful has up to three times more water above the plates...”

c. 1961

With this commercial, Raymond Scott illus­ trates a practical use of his Circle Machine (see page 112).

See instrumental version on CD 1, #9.

30 LIGHTWORKS (INSTR.)

1:29

c. 1960-’63

Alternate instrumental version of the Lightworks commercial. “In time, a short circuit— a dead battery!”

See CD 1, #4.

“An AutoLite Sta-Ful battery needs water only one third as often to keep everything going strong.” O R I G I N A L   L E A D E R   TA p E

138


31 “WHEN WILL IT END?”

3:14

c. 1968-’69

Throughout the 1960s Scott designed several modules—some built for him by Robert Moog—that would do one specific thing. Over the years he integrated these modules into one larger machine in which they could be interconnected. By 1968-’69 this contraption had grown into the heart of the Electronium Mk1, the composing machine that attracted Berry Gordy’s attention in 1970. Scott: “The entire system is based on the concept of ‘Artistic Collaboration Between Man and Machine.’ The circuit is such that the new structures being directed into the machine are unpredictable in their details, and hence the results are a kind of duet between the composer and the machine.” (From supplement to a 1969 disclosure titled: Electronic Musical Instrument for the Generation of Polyphonic Rhythm Structures, Automatically Performed— Plus the Automatic Performance of a Preset Program—With Provision for the Instant Aural Examination of Different Sequential Juxtapositions and Parallel Groupings of the Programmed Events.)

32 BENDIX 2: “THE TOMORROW PEOPLE” 1963 1:03

Second commercial for the Bendix Aviation Corporation.

See CD 1, #3.

33 ELECTRONIC AUDIO LOGOS, INC.

5:23

c. 1959

Raymond Scott believed that an advertiser needed an “Audio Logo” to break through the TV viewers’ apathy and “grab ’em by the ears” with what he called “New Plastic Sounds” and “Electronic Abstractions.” This demo contains the type of sounds to which he referred. It also illus­trates the use of a copyright line similar to the one on CD 1, #1. “The music you are listening to is com­­plete­ly electronic and has been created and produced by Electronic Audio Logos Incorp­orated, a Division of Raymond Scott Enter­prises.” all music performed by Raymond Scott all titles © Gateway Music/ASCAP, except: “The Toy Trumpet” © Warner-Chappell Music “Twilight in Turkey” © Warner-Chappell Music “Night and Day” © 1932 Harms, Inc. “Portono” copyright control

139


Raymond Scott’s MANHATTAN RESEARCH, Inc.

Archives). The Raymond Scott archive (over 2700 discs and

Compiled and Produced by Gert-Jan Blom

memorabilia) is stored at the UMKC Library.

Associate Producer  Jeff Winner

For info on the Marr Sound Archives, contact

Researched by Gert-Jan Blom & Jeff Winner

Director Chuck Haddix <HaddixC@umkc.edu>

500 tapes, along with literature and

Design and Research  Piet Schreuders Book Editor  Irwin Chusid

For additional details about Scott’s music, life, and career,

Additional Photos Mitzi Scott; The Jim Henson

explore these CDs of his original recordings:

TheMusicofRaymondScott:RecklessNightsandTurkishTwi-

Company Archives

Executive Producers

lights (Basta 90732; non-electronic)

Soothing Sounds for Baby, Vols. 1-3 (Basta 90642, 90652,

Theo van der Schaaf, Jeroen van der Schaaf

Reel to DAT Transfers Scott Middleton /

90662; completely electronic)

and these CDs of Raymond Scott tunes by the

Marr Sound Archives

Ampex 3-Track Reel to DAT Transfers

Beau Hunks Sextette:

Celebration on the Planet Mars: A Tribute to

Bob Foster

Assemblage Engineers Emile Elsen, Sytze

Raymond Scott (Basta 90562)

Manhattan Minuet: The Works of Raymond Scott (Basta

Gardenier / Vintage 71 Studios, Weesp

Mastering Studio Jules, Hilversum

90362)

Engineer Hay Zeelen

and this album by the Metropole Orchestra featuring the Beau Hunks Saxtette:

Thanks to Mitzi Scott, Robert Moog, Tom Rhea, Alan Enten-

The Chesterfield Arrangements 1937-38

man, Herb Deutsch, Bill Smith,

(Basta 90972)

Karen Falk / The Jim Henson Company Archives,

Sequel to Manhattan Research, Inc.:

Janelle Courts / Jim Henson Company,

RAYMOND SCOTT: THE ELECTRONIUM YEARS

Jane Henson, Jim Rosberg, Uncle Dave Lewis, Rutgers Institute of Jazz Studies, IBM Archives, Michelle

For further info on Raymond Scott:

Boulé, Byron Werner, Doug Trubey

Irwin Chusid, PO Box 6258, Hoboken NJ 07030

Much material in this compilation was provided by

RS on the web: www.RaymondScott.com

the University of Missouri-Kansas City Libraries

created and maintained by Jeff Winner

(Special Collections Department and the Marr Sound

E-mail: info@RaymondScott.com

140


The producers wish to express their gratitude to: Chuck Haddix, the director of the Marr Sound Archives, and Teresa L. Gipson of UMKC Special Collections, for their assistance. Their cooperation and patience with our endless re­quests was exemplary—often beyond the call of duty—and essential to this project. Irwin D. Chusid, on whose initiative the Raymond Scott collection was transferred from Scotts’ leaky guest house to the safe environment of the UMKC in 1994. None of our re­search would have been possible without Mr. Chusid’s concern for Scott’s legacy. The world owes Irwin a great debt for preserving Raymond’s work. Theo van der Schaaf, Basta’s owner and Managing Director, for enabling us to realize this project, and for maintaining this extraordinary label.

“Auto-Lite” and “Sta-Ful” are registered trademarks of Ford Motor Company. “Auto-Lite Batteries” commercial film produced by Sarra, Inc. (New York, Chicago, Hollywood). “Awake” is a trademark of the Seneca Foods Corporation. “Bendix” is a registered trademark of Allied Signal Corporation. “BGE” and “Baltimore Gas & Electric” are trademarks owned by Consolidated Gas Electric Light and Power Company of Baltimore. “Bufferin” is a registered trademark of the Bristol-Myers Squibb Company. “Cheer” is owned by the Procter & Gamble Company. “Domino Sugar” is a registered trademark owned by Tate & Lyle North American Sugars, Inc., New York. “Expo67” © 1963 by the Canadian Corporation for the 1967 World Exhibition. “Gilbert Toys” is a registered trademark of Lionel L.L.C. “Gillette” is a regis­tered trademark of The Gillette Co. “GM” is a registered trademark of General Motors Corporation. “Hostess Twinkies” is a registered trademark of ITT Continental Baking Company. “IBM” and “MT/ST” are trademarks owned by International Business Machines Corporation, Office Products Division, New York. “Ideal Toys” is a registered trademark of Ideal Toy Corporation. “K2r” is a registered trademark of Gallen Switzerland Corporation. “Muppets,” etc. are © Henson / The Jim Henson Company. “Nescafé” is a registered trademark of The Nestlé Company, Inc. “Ohio Bell” is a registered trademark of Ameritech Corp. “Popular Mechanics” and “Popular Electronics” are Copyright © Ziff-Davis Publishing Company. “Sprite” is a registered trademark of the Coca-Cola Company. “Vicks Medicated Cough Drops” and “Vicks Formula 44” are registered trademarks of Richardson-Vicks, Incorporated. “Vim” is a registered trademark of Lever Bros. “Wrigley’s” is a registered trademark of William Wrigley Jr. Company xxxxxxx

All commercial films made under jurisdiction of I.A.T.S.E. Affiliated with American Federation of Labor

front cover photo Raymond Scott in his electronics workshop, North Hills, NY, May 3rd, 1957


CD1 1 MANHATTAN RESEARCH, INC. COPYRIGHT 0:11 2 BALTIMORE GAS & ELECTRIC CO. 1:14 3 BENDIX: “THE TOMORROW PEOPLE” 1:06 4 LIGHTWORKS 1:52 5 THE BASS-LINE GENERATOR 3:10 6 “DON’T BEAT YOUR WIFE EVERY NIGHT!” 1:44 7 “B.C. 1675” 3:16 8 VIM 0:59 9 AUTO-LITE: STA-FUL (INSTR.) 0:47 10 SPRITE “MELONBALL BOUNCE” 1:01 11 SPRITE “MELONBALL BOUNCE” 0:59 12 “WHEELS THAT GO” 0:50 13 “LIMBO: THE ORGANIZED MIND” 4:33 14 “PORTOFINO” #1 2:13 15 COUNTY FAIR 1:01 16 LADY GAYLORD 1:02 17 GOOD AIR 0:38 18 IBM MT/ST: “THE PAPERWORK EXPLOSION” 4:31 19 DOMINO 0:33 20 SUPER CHEER 0:34

21 CHEER: REVISION 3 0:39 22 “TWILIGHT IN TURKEY” 1:32 23 VICKS: MEDICATED COUGH DROPS 1:34 24 VICKS: FORMULA 44 0:46 25 AUTO-LITE: SPARK PLUGS 1:00 26 NESCAFÉ 1:06 27 AWAKE 0:35 28 BACKWARDS OVERLOAD 6:04 29 BUFFERIN: “MEMORIES” (original) 0:59 30 BANDITO THE BONGO ARTIST 1:30 31 “NIGHT AND DAY” 1:45 32 BALTIMORE GAS & ELECTRIC CO. (“395”) 1:07 33 K2r 0:19 34 IBM PROBE 1:56 35 GMGM 1A 1:49 36 THE RHYTHM modulatOR 3:37 CD 2 1 OHIO PLUS 0:17 2 “IN THE HALL OF THE MOUNTAIN QUEEN” 0:49 3 GENERAL MOTORS: FUTURAMA 4 “PORTOFINO” 2 2:14

1:04


5 “THE WILD PIECE” (a.k.a. “STRING PIECE”) 4:07 6 “TAKE ME TO YOUR VIOLIN TEACHER” 1:40 7 “RIPPLES” (Original soundtrack) 0:59 8 CYCLIC BIT 1:04 9 “RIPPLES” (MONTAGE) 4:06 10 THE WING THING 1:00 11 COUNTY FAIR (INSTRUMENTAL) 1:00 12 “CINDY ELECTRONIUM” 1:59

13 “DON’T BEAT YOUR WIFE EVERY NIGHT!” (INSTr.) 1:45 14 HOSTESS: TWINKIES 0:32 15 HOSTESS: TWINKIES (INSTr.) 0:32 16 OHIO BELL: THERMO FAX 0:24 17 “THE PYGMY TAXI CORPORATION” 7:11 18 BALTIMORE GAS & ELECTRIC Co. (ANNOUNCE COPY, take 1) 0:29 19 BALTIMORE GAS & ELECTRIC CO. 0:44 20 LIGHTWORKS (SLOW) 1:40 21 IBM MT/ST: “THE PAPERWORK EXPLOSION” (INSTR.) 3:39 22 AUTO-LITE: “FORD FAMILY” 1:03 23 AUTO-LITE: “FORD FAMILY” (INSTR.) 0:54 24 AUTO-LITE: “WHEELS” 1:50 25 BUFFERIN: “MEMORIES” (DEMO) 0:44 26 “SPACE MYSTERY” (MONTAGE) 5:11 27 “THE TOY TRUMPET” 2:15 28 “BACKWARD BEEPS” 1:05 29 AUTO-LITE: STA-FUL 1:36 30 LIGHTWORKS (INSTR.) 1:29 31 “WHEN WILL IT END?” 3:14 32 BENDIX 2: “THE TOMORROW PEOPLE” 33 ELECTRONIC AUDIO LOGOS, INC. 5:23



iii


Composed and performed by

R AYM O N D S C OTT Welcome to MANHATTAN RESEARCH, INC. Prepare yourself for something beyond the parameters of Pop. This 2-CD set of RAYMOND SCOTT’s electronic music is your ticket to uncharted realms. These never-before commercially avail able 1950s-’60s recordings range from advertising jingles to bold experiments in musique concrète, performed on pioneering electronic equipment designed and built by Scott. Also included are soundtracks of Scott’s film collaborations with Muppet™-master JIM HENSON. A 144-page book features interviews with Scott colleagues, including synthesizer inventor ROBERT MOOG, along with previously unpublished photographs, lab notes, schematics, and original US patents. zzz

Scott in his laboratory, c. 1959 Produced by GERT-JAN BLOM Associate Producer: Jeff Winner Book Editor: Irwin Chusid Art Director: Piet Schreuders Executive Producers: Theo & Jeroen van der Schaaf

MANHATTAN RESEARCH INC. A DIVISION OF RAYMOND SCOTT ENT. INC. iv p and © 2000 BASTA Audio/Visuals, Holland www.bastamusic.com basta@xs4all.nl www.RaymondScott.com


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