BBC Radiophonic Workshop
The BBC Radiophonic Workshop, one of the sound effects units of the BBC, was created in 1958 to produce effects and new music for radio. It was closed in March 1998, although much of its traditional work had already been outsourced by 1995.[1] The original Radiophonic Workshop was based in the BBC's Maida Vale Studios in Delaware Road, London.[1]
History
Creation
The Workshop was set up to satisfy the growing demand in the late 1950s for "radiophonic" sounds from a group of producers and studio managers at the BBC, including Desmond Briscoe and Daphne Oram[2]. For some time there had been much interest in producing innovative music and sounds to go with the pioneering programming of the era, in particular the dramatic output of the BBC Third Programme. Often the sounds required for the atmosphere that programme makers wished to create were unavailable or non-existent through traditional sources and so some, such as the musically trained Oram, would look to new techniques to produce effects and music for their pieces. Much of this interest drew them to musique concrète and tape manipulation techniques, since using these methods could allow them to create soundscapes suitable for the growing range of unconventional programming. When the BBC noticed the rising popularity of this method they established a Radiophonic Effects Committee, setting up the Workshop in rooms 13 & 14 of the BBC's Maida Vale studios with a budget of £2,000. The Workshop regularly released technical journals of their findings - leading to some of their techniques being borrowed by sixties producers and engineers such as Eddie Kramer.
Early days
In 1958, Desmond Briscoe was appointed the Senior Studio Manager with Dick Mills employed as a technical assistant. Much of The Radiophonic Workshop's early work was in effects for radio, in particular experimental drama and "radiophonic poems". Their significant early output included creating effects for the popular science-fiction serial Quatermass and the Pit and memorable comedy sounds for The Goon Show. In 1959, Daphne Oram left the workshop to set up her own studio, the Oramics Studios for Electronic Composition, where she eventually developed her "Oramics" technique of electronic sound creation. That year Maddalena Fagandini joined the workshop from the BBC's Italian Service.
From the early sixties the Workshop began creating television theme tunes and jingles, particularly for low budget schools programmes. The shift from the experimental nature of the late 50s dramas to theme tunes was noticeable enough for one radio presenter to have to remind listeners that the purpose of the Workshop was not pop music. In fact, in 1962 one of Fagandini's interval signals "Time Beat" was reworked with assistance from George Martin (in his pre-Beatles days) and commercially released as a single using the pseudonym Ray Cathode. During this early period the innovative electronic approaches to music in the Workshop began to attract some significant young talent including Delia Derbyshire, Brian Hodgson and John Baker, who was in fact a jazz pianist with an interest in reverse tape effects. Later, in 1967. they were joined by David Cain, a jazz bass player and mathematician.
In these early days, one criticism the Workshop attracted was its policy of not allowing musicians from outside the BBC to use its equipment, which was some of the most advanced in the country at that time not only because of its nature, but also because of the unique combinations and workflows which the Workshop afforded its composers. In later years this would become less important as more electronic equipment became readily available to a wider audience.
Doctor Who
In 1963 they were approached by composer Ron Grainer to record a theme tune for the upcoming BBC television series Doctor Who. Presented with the task of "realising" Grainer's score, complete with its descriptions of "sweeps", "swoops", "wind clouds" and "wind bubbles", Delia Derbyshire created a piece of electronic music which has become one of television's most recognisable themes. Over the next quarter-century the Workshop contributed greatly to the programme providing its vast range of unusual sound-effects, from the TARDIS dematerialisation to the Sonic screwdriver, as well as much of the programme's distinctive electronic incidental music, including every score from 1980 to 1985.
Changes
As the sixties drew to a close many of the techniques used by the Workshop changed as more electronic music began to be produced by synthesisers. Many of the old members of the Workshop were reluctant to use the new instruments, often because of the limitations and unreliable nature of many of the early synthesisers but also, for some, because of a dislike of the sounds they created. This led to many leaving the workshop making way for a new generation of musicians in the early 1970s including Malcolm Clarke, Paddy Kingsland, Roger Limb and Peter Howell. From the early days of a studio full of tape reels and electronic oscillators, the Workshop now found itself in possession of various synthesisers including the EMS VCS 3 and the EMS Synthi 100 nicknamed the "Delaware" by the members of the Workshop.
In 1977, Workshop co-founder Desmond Briscoe retired from organisational duties with Brian Hodgson, returning after a five-year gap away from the Workshop, taking over.
By this point the output of the Workshop was vast with high demand for complete scores for programmes as well as the themes and sound effects for which it had made its name. By the end of the decade the workshop was contributing to over 300 programmes a year from all departments of the BBC and had long since expanded from its early two room setup. Its contributions included material for programmes such as The Body in Question, Blue Peter and Tomorrow's World as well as sound effects for popular science fiction programmes Blake's 7 and The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (in both its radio and television forms) by Richard Yeoman-Clark and Paddy Kingsland respectively.
BBC Radiophonic Workshop, "SoundHouse", Whale Theme excerpt
An excerpt from Whale Theme from the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy TV series (music only), BBC Radiophonic Workshop | |
Problems playing this file? See media help. |
Latter days
By the early 1990s, BBC Director General John Birt decided that departments were to charge each other and bid against each other for services and to close those which couldn't make enough revenue to cover their costs. In 1991 the Workshop was given five years in which to break even but the cost of keeping the department, which required a number of engineers as well as composers, proved too much and so they failed. Dick Mills, who had worked on Doctor Who since the very beginning, left in 1993, along with Ray White, Senior Engineer, and his assistant, Ray Riley. In 1995, despite being asked to continue, organiser Brian Hodgson left the Workshop, closely followed by Malcolm Clarke and Roger Limb. By the end, only one composer, Elizabeth Parker, remained and the Workshop closed in March 1998. Mark Ayres recalls the Workshop's tape archive being collected on April 1, exactly 40 years after the department had opened.
Legacy
Following the decision to close the Radiophonic Workshop, Mark Ayres and Brian Hodgson were commissioned to catalogue its extensive library of recordings.
In October 2003, Alchemists of Sound, an hour-long television documentary about the Radiophonic Workshop, was broadcast on BBC Four.
The Magnetic Fields titled the first track of their album Holiday, after the BBC Radiophonic Workshop.
Live reunions since 2009
In May 2009, Dick Mills reunited with former BBC Radiophonic Workshop composers Roger Limb, Paddy Kingsland and Peter Howell with archivist Mark Ayres for a live concert at The Roundhouse, Chalk Farm, London, performing as "The Radiophonic Workshop". The composers, backed by a small brass section and a live drummer, performed a large number of their BBC-commissioned musical works including sections of incidental music from The Hitch Hikers' Guide to the Galaxy and Doctor Who (including a medley of Mark Ayres's work) as well as some collaborative compositions written specifically for the Roundhouse concert.
The live performances were mixed in surround sound and interspersed with musical video montage tributes of deceased members of the Workshop including Daphne Oram, Delia Derbyshire and John Baker. The two and a half hour event climaxed with live performances of the Derbyshire and Peter Howell arrangements of Doctor Who, segueing into a new Radiophonic version of the theme tune. Celebrated attendees included actor/writer/composer Peter Serafinowicz and satirist/writer/broadcaster Victor Lewis-Smith. Multiple cameras recorded the event but it has yet to be broadcast or released in any form, although amateur footage of the event can be seen on YouTube.
In 2013 the original members of the Workshop regrouped again for a more concerted program of live appearances. Performing as 'The Radiophonic Workshop' (dropping the BBC prefix) they were joined by drummer Kieron Pepper (The Prodigy, Dead Kids, OutPatient) and Bob Earland from Clor. They also embarked on a new recording project set for release in Autumn of 2014. This involves collaborations with contemporary electronic musicians, video artists, DJs, remixers, poets, writers and singers. Live appearances in 2013 included Festival Number 6 at Portmeirion, Wales in September 2013 and The London Electronic Arts Festival in November of the same year. The shows featured archive TV and visuals from many of the TV and film soundtracks that the Radiophonic Workshop contributed to between 1958 and 1998 when the unit was deactivated. The Radiophonic Workshop appeared on BBC television's The One Show on the 20th of November 2013 playing a unique version of the Doctor Who Theme that combined Delia Darbyshire's original source tapes and Peter Howell's 1980 realisation of the Ron Grainer composition. Radio 6 Music's Marc Riley played host a Radiophonic Workshop session where they delivered live versions of Roger Limb's Incubus, Paddy Kingsland's Vespucci, the Doctor Who Medley and a new composition - Electricity Language and Me (by American poet Peter Adam Salomon), featuring DJ Andrew Weatherall as the narrative voice for this classic piece of Radiophonic sound design. There were a number of radio, online and print interviews done at the time to coincide with the 50th anniversary of Doctor Who.
The Workshop's early archive recordings were also reissued on vinyl in November 2013 to accompany this renewed activity. In 2014, "The Radiophonic Workshop" appeared at festivals including End of the Road Festival, and the reissue programme of earlier work from their extensive catalogue continues along with a planned exploration of previously unheard or rare archive recordings.
2012 online revival
(See New Radiophonic Workshop) An entirely separate entity from the original unit the New Radiophonic Workshop was assembled by Mathew Herbert as an online collective of composers for The Space arts project. It should not be confused with the reactivated Radiophonic Workshop whose members are original BBC personnel.
In September 2012 Arts Council England and the BBC announced a joint venture whereby the concept of the Radiophonic Workshop would be revived as an online venture, with seven new, non-original composers and musicians. The new Workshop was based online at The Space, a joint venture between the BBC and Arts Council England. Composer Matthew Herbert was appointed the new Creative Director, and worked alongside Micachu, Yann Seznec, Max de Wardener, Patrick Bergel, James Mather, theatre director Lyndsey Turner and broadcast technologist Tony Churnside.[1]
Techniques
The techniques initially used by the Radiophonic Workshop were closely related to those used in musique concrète; new sounds for programs were created by using recordings of everyday sounds such as voices, bells or gravel as raw material for "radiophonic" manipulations. In these manipulations, audio tape could be played back at different speeds (altering a sound's pitch), reversed, cut and joined, or processed using reverb or equalisation. The most famous of the Workshop's creations using 'radiophonic' techniques include the Doctor Who theme music, which Delia Derbyshire created using a plucked string, 12 oscillators and a lot of tape manipulation; and the sound of the TARDIS (the Doctor's time machine) materialising and dematerialising, which was created by Brian Hodgson running his keys along the rusty bass strings of a broken piano, with the recording slowed down to make an even lower sound.
Much of the equipment used by the Workshop in the earlier years of its operation in the late 1950s was semi-professional and was passed down from other departments, though two giant professional tape-recorders (which appeared to lose all sound above 10 kHz) made an early centrepiece. Reverberation was obtained using an echo chamber, a basement room with bare painted walls empty except for loudspeakers and microphones. Due to the considerable technical challenges faced by the Workshop and BBC traditions, staff initially worked in pairs with one person assigned to the technical aspects of the work and the other to the artistic direction.
Influence on popular music
The Radiophonic Workshop regularly released free journals of its experiments to the public, complete with instructions and wiring diagrams. Pink Floyd made a memorable trip to the workshop in 1967. They had employed tape loops, sound effects, found sounds and the principles of musique concrete on their debut album The Piper At The Gates of Dawn from that same year. This radiophonic approach was extended once Syd Barrett had left the group and the band began to employ the studio as a compositional tool. Tape loops and found sounds, voices and sound design techniques pioneered at the workshop all found their way onto the group's 1973 album Dark Side of the Moon. Its follow up, Wish You Were Here, began life as an album that utilised household objects such as wine glasses and milk bottles to create music without traditional instrumentation. None of that experimental work has ever been heard except for the atmospheric introductory drone to the track Shine On You Crazy Diamond. Other fans of the Radiophonic Workshop included Rolling Stone Brian Jones - who visited in 1968 - and Roger Mayer, who supplied guitar pedals to Jeff Beck, Jimmy Page and Jimi Hendrix. In 1997 the electronic dance music magazine Mixmag described the Workshop as, "the unsung heroes of British electronica."[3] Phil Manzanera has also cited the Workshop as an influence on the sound of Roxy Music.[4]
Members of the Radiophonic Workshop
1958–1998
- Desmond Briscoe (1958–1983)
- Daphne Oram (1958–1959)
- Dick Mills (1958–1993)
- Maddalena Fagandini (1959–1966)
- Brian Hodgson (1962–1972), Organiser (1977–1995)
- Delia Derbyshire (1962–1973)
- John Baker (1963–1974)
- David Cain (1967–1973)
- Malcolm Clarke (1969–1995)
- Paddy Kingsland (1970–1981)
- Richard Yeoman-Clark (1970–1978)
- Roger Limb (1972–1995)
- Glynis Jones (1973–?)
- Peter Howell (1974–1997)
- Elizabeth Parker (1978–1998)
- Jonathan Gibbs (1983–1986)
- Richard Attree (1987–1998)
Discography
Albums
^a Reissued on CD in 1991 as Essential Science Fiction Sound Effects Vol. 2.
^b Reissued on CD in 1991 as Essential Science Fiction Sound Effects Vol. 1., reissued on CD under the original title in 2013.
In 1994, BBC Enterprises also licensed out material, by members of the Radiophonic Workshop, to the Cavendish Music Library for release on CD. Five themed compilations of material were released under the titles Poisoned Planet, Undersea World, Africa, Time And Space and Ethnic Impressions. They featured various works by Elizabeth Parker, Peter Howell, Roger Limb, Malcolm Clarke and Richard Attree. Vinyl reissues of the Radiophonic Workshop's original album releases were produced in 2013. They were remastered from the original source tapes.
Singles
Year | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
1962 | "Time Beat" / "Waltz in Orbit" | Ray Cathode (a pseudonym used by Maddalena Fagandini and George Martin) |
1964 | "Doctor Who" / "This Can't Be Love" | Original Arrangement by Delia Derbyshire / Brenda & Johnny |
1973 | "Doctor Who" / "Reg" | New Arrangement by Delia Derbyshire / Paddy Kingsland |
1978 | "The Astronauts" / "Magenta Court" | Peter Howell |
1980 | "Doctor Who" / "The Astronauts" | Peter Howell |
1982 | "K-9 & Company" / "Doctor Who" | Ian Levine and Fiachra Trench / Peter Howell |
Selected other works
Radio dramas
- The Foundation Trilogy (produced by David Cain) (1973)
- A Wall Walks Slowly (produced by Desmond Briscoe with music by Peter Howell) (1977)
- August 2026 (produced by Malcolm Clarke) (1977)
- Notes from Janáček's Diary (produced by Maxwell Steer) (1991)
- This was the only production ever to be realised at the Radiophonic Workshop completely by an external composer.
Sound effects and music contributions
- Radio
- The Goon Show
- The Hobbit (effects and music composed by David Cain) (1968)
- The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (effects by Paddy Kingsland with additional effects by Dick Mills. Music (except theme music) for second series by Paddy Kingsland)
- The Lord of the Rings (effects by Elizabeth Parker) (1981)
- Doctor Who: Slipback (BBC Radio) (music by Jonathan Gibbs) (1985)
- Doctor Who: The Paradise of Death (BBC Radio) (music by Peter Howell) (1993)
- Doctor Who: The Ghosts of N-Space (BBC Radio) (music by Peter Howell) (1996)
- Television
- Quatermass and the Pit (effects by Desmond Briscoe & (uncredited) Dick Mills) (1958)
- Doctor Who (effects by Brian Hodgson (1963–1972) & Dick Mills (1972–1989). Some additional effects provided by various Workshop members)
- Penda's Fen (Paddy Kingsland) (1974)
- Blake's 7 (effects by Richard Yeoman-Clark & Elizabeth Parker)
- The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (music and effects by Paddy Kingsland except theme music)
Doctor Who incidental music
The Doctor Who theme music was provided by the BBC Radiophonic Workshop from 1963 to 1985. From 1986 to the programme's demise the theme was provided by freelance musicians. Between 1980 and 1985 the complete incidental scores for the programme were provided in-house by the Workshop. Below is a complete list of incidental music provided by the Radiophonic Workshop for the programme.
Programmes about Radiophonic Workshop
- Radio
- The Sound Makers (1963)
- The Electric Tunesmiths (1971)
- Repeated as part of Selected Radiophonic Works in 2008.[7]
- The Space Between (4 Oct 1973)[8]
- Wee Have Also Sound-Houses (1979)
- The title to this programme is a reference to Francis Bacon's 1626 novel "New Atlantis".
- Sound in Mind (1979)
- Late Junction: 12 February 2008[9][10]
- Sunday Feature: Wee Have Also Sound-Houses (2008)[11][12]
- Stuart Maconie's Freak Zone: 26 October 2008[13]
- Selected Radiophonic Works (2008)[14]
- Jonny Trunk's OST Show - 2 Hours With Paddy Kingsland
- Jonny Trunk's OST Show - David Cain Interview
- Television
- The Same Trade as Mozart (1969)
- The New Sound of Music (1979)
- The Electric Music Machine, Five Days at the BBC Radiophonic Workshop (1988)
- Alchemists of Sound (2003)[15]
- What the Future Sounds Like (2009)
References
- 1 2 3 "BBC Radiophonic Workshop revived online". BBC News. 12 September 2012.
- ↑ Reynolds, Simon. "For 40 Years, the BBC's Radiophonic Workshop Created "Special Sound' for Programmes from Doctor Who to Woman's Hour". The Guardian.
- ↑ Mixmag, March 1997.
- ↑ http://www.theguardian.com/music/2013/nov/23/radiophonic-workshop-bbc-doctor-who
- ↑ "New Classic Who Release:The Krotons". Doctor Who Music. Retrieved 2013-03-28.
- ↑ "Radiophonic Workshop". Bowers & Wilkins / Society of Sound. Retrieved 2015-01-30.
- ↑ "BBC Radio 4 Extra - Selected Radiophonic Works". BBC. 2012-07-14. Retrieved 2012-09-14.
- ↑ "mb21's page for ''The Space Between''". Mb21.co.uk. 1973-10-04. Retrieved 2012-09-14.
- ↑ "BBC Radio 3 - Late Junction, 12/02/2008". BBC. 2008-02-12. Retrieved 2012-09-14.
- ↑ "Radio 3 - Late Junction - 50 years of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop". BBC. Retrieved 2012-09-14.
- ↑ Miranda Sawyer (2008-08-10). "Radio review: Miranda Sawyer on the week's best listening | Television & radio | The Observer". London: Guardian. Retrieved 2012-09-14.
- ↑ Culture Reviews (2008-08-05). "On radio: Alvin Hall's World Of Money". London: Telegraph. Retrieved 2012-09-14.
- ↑ http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00f5zv0
- ↑ http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00g15x3
- ↑ "Alchemists of Sound". BBC. 20 October 2003. Archived from the original on 2003-10-20. Retrieved 2012-09-14.
External links
- Documentary on the Radiophonic Workshop from BBC
- BBC Engineering Division Monograph #51 (November 1963) "Radiophonics in the BBC" (PDF)
- BBC Radiophonic Workshop: An Engineering Perspective
- Radiophonic Gallery
- Ray White's Radiophonic Home Page
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