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Ondioline

The Ondioline is an electronic analog synthesizer, developed and built by Frenchman Georges Jenny.[1] Sometimes referred to as the "Jenny Ondioline," the instrument is considered a forerunner of the synthesizer. First conceived by Jenny in 1939, he continued refining and reconfiguring the device, producing dozens of variant models up until his death in 1975.

Ondioline (keyboard on speaker), exhibited at National Music Centre, Canada

Though monophonic, the Ondioline is capable of creating a wide variety of sounds. Its keyboard spans three octaves, but by adjusting a register knob a player can render up to eight octaves. The instrument's keyboard is suspended on custom-designed springs, which enables a natural vibrato if the player manipulates a key laterally (from side to side) as that key is depressed. The keyboard is pressure-sensitive, and volume is controlled by a knee lever.

The foremost exponent and popularizer of the instrument was Jean-Jacques Perrey, who performed and recorded with it, composed for it, and served as the instrument's first salesman on behalf of Jenny. Perrey even recorded under the pseudonym "Mr. Ondioline."[2]

It is estimated that around 1,200 Ondiolines were constructed between the mid-1940s and the late-1960s, most handmade by Jenny himself. According to Ondioline authority/historian Wally De Backer, "The instrument was also offered in 'kit' form, where Jenny recommended purchasing the more complex assemblies – such as the keyboard – as complete units. The schematics were made available for amateur engineers to construct their own custom instruments, and they were encouraged to experiment with the amplifier, tone circuits and cabinetry."[1]

Development of the instrument edit

Jenny began constructing a first prototype around 1939 (the instrument was as yet unnamed) while recovering from tuberculosis at a sanatorium in the south of France.[1] The instrument functioned on a valve-based system and contained a built-in amplifier.[3] In 1946, Jenny's working model took first prize in the inventions competition at the Foire de Paris (Paris Fair).[1]

By the time Jenny began to manufacture the device commercially in 1947[4] he had settled on the name "Ondioline."[1] As a cost-saving measure — in order to reduce the instrument's retail price — Jenny often used low quality parts; as a result, the instruments required regular maintenance or they would become unplayable.[4]

For decades Jenny redesigned and manufactured new versions of the instrument at his Paris company, Les Ondes Sonores Jenny (later known as La Musique Electronique). Later models offered such options as automatic vibrato and tremolo.[1] There is no single standard model of the instrument.

Jenny declined to license the instrument for mass production.

Works for Ondioline edit

Perrey claimed that serious works for the Ondioline were composed by Arthur Honegger and Darius Milhaud.[5] According to a 1957 promotional brochure published by Jenny, works had been composed for the instrument by Honneger, Milhaud, Georges Auric, Joseph Kosma, Wanda Landowska, and Marcel Delannoy.[6]

A 1958 LP from the French Broadcasting System featured six new works composed for the Ondioline: Maurice Bagot's Suite Op.59 (for 3 Ondiolines); Gustave Samazeuilh's Musette (for Ondioline); Darius Cittanova's Chants Pour Les Eternites Differentes (for Ondioline); Jacques Chailley's Angelique (for Ondioline) and Ballet Divertissement (for Ondioline); and Jacques Castérède's Eolus (for Ondioline).[7]

Comparison with the Ondes Martenot edit

The Ondioline's keyboard is modeled after another early electronic instrument from France, the Ondes Martenot, which was invented in 1928 by Maurice Martenot. Jenny conceived his instrument as a low-cost alternative to the Martenot, which was more sophisticated in construction and more expensive. The Martenot was used mostly in serious music, but Jenny devised the Ondioline for a broader consumer market, including pop music.[1]

Joseph A. Paradiso, writing in the publication New Music Box, said that both the Martenot and the Ondioline "were truly dexterous performance instruments, as they sported several continuous and discrete controllers that could be articulated by the left hand and knee while the right hand played a melody."[8]

The Ondioline is more sonically versatile than the Martenot, which is stylistically limited. The Ondioline has a filter panel, offering from 10 to 17 sliders (depending on the model — 10 on earlier models, 17 on later ones) to modify the tones. Used in combination, these switches can create sounds ranging from near-accurate recreations of symphonic instruments (e.g., oboe, French horn) to unique sounds which do not mimic existing instruments. While the Martenot has a ring (or ribbon) controller to control pitch, the Ondioline has a wire strip that when pressed provides percussion effects.

Both the Martenot and the Ondioline use vacuum tube circuitry. However, unlike the Martenot, whose oscillator is based on theremin principles (two ultra-high frequencies beating against each other, to produce a third audible frequency), the Ondioline uses a multivibrator oscillator circuit to produce its tone. This gives the Ondioline a tone with richer harmonics than the Martenot. Perrey explained the instrument's technical advantages.

The Ondioline is based on a multivibrator oscillator circuit, producing a pulse-like waveform that is fed through a series of discrete filters. These filters, the switching controls, and the continuous analog controllers are the key to the tremendous variety of timbres obtainable with the Ondioline. When I first saw the instrument, I knew immediately its potential in comparison with the Ondes Martenot, which offers only four or five timbres.[5]

Because the Ondioline was smaller than a Martenot, it was designed to be portable. Its retail price at the time was US$500 (US$8,561.42 in 2017 dollars), far less than the cost of the Martenot.

Use in popular music edit

 
Perrey playing the ondioline in 2006

In 1951, French composer/singer Charles Trenet heard about Perrey and the Ondioline,[9] and invited him to provide accompaniment on the recording of Trenet's song "L'ame des Poetes" ("The Soul of Poets").[10] The song became a commercial success, and Perrey accompanied Trenet at concerts.[11][12]

Composer Juan García Esquivel used an Ondioline in 1959 on the recording "Watchamacallit," from his album Exploring New Sounds in Hi-Fi (RCA).[13]

The first American hit record to feature the Ondioline was "More", by Kai Winding, in 1963. This instrumental version of the theme from the 1962 film Mondo Cane was arranged and conducted by Claus Ogerman, with the Ondioline played by Perrey (who had by then moved to New York).[14].

The instrument is used in a percussive fashion on the 1964 Terry Stafford hit "Suspicion." (The player was not identified.)

In the late 1960s, rock musician/keyboardist Al Kooper featured the Ondioline on several tracks he recorded with his bands the Blues Project and Blood, Sweat & Tears; he continued to perform and record with the instrument in his early solo career. Notable examples are "I Can't Keep from Crying Sometimes" and "Steve's Song" from the 1966 Blues Project album Projections, and "No Time Like the Right Time" (The Blues Project Live at Town Hall, 1967); "Meagan's Gypsy Eyes" from Blood Sweat & Tears' Child Is Father to the Man (1968); "His Holy Modal Majesty" with Mike Bloomfield on Super Session (1968); "Her Holy Modal Majesty" from the album The Live Adventures of Mike Bloomfield and Al Kooper (1968); and Kooper's first solo album, I Stand Alone (1969).

Tommy James and the Shondells' 1967 hits "I Think We're Alone Now" and "Mirage" featured Ondioline, played by session keyboardist Artie Butler.[15]

Motown Records used an Ondioline as part of their studio setup between 1959 and 1962, where it was mainly used in place of expensive string arrangements. The instrument is featured prominently on dozens of early Motown recordings by acts such as the Supremes, the Miracles, the Temptations and the Marvelettes, notably the songs "After All", "I Want a Guy", and "(You're My) Dream Come True", on which it was played by Raynoma Liles Gordy.

The first use of the instrument in a film was in 1959, when Perrey played it in the soundtrack of the French film La Vache et le Prisonnier (The Cow and the Prisoner). The Ondioline was also used in the soundtrack of the 1960 film Spartacus.

Ongoing legacy and preservation edit

English-French band Stereolab, known for their use of early analogue synthesizers, recorded a song titled "Jenny Ondioline", which was released on the 1993 album Transient Random-Noise Bursts with Announcements, as well as on the 1993 EP Jenny Ondioline. However, the song's lyrics have nothing to do with the Ondioline or Georges Jenny, and the band does not use an Ondioline on the track (or elsewhere on the album).

Jean-Jacques Perrey continued to perform live shows with the Ondioline until his death in 2016; he featured the instrument on his collaborative albums with musician Dana Countryman, The Happy Electropop Music Machine (2006) and Destination Space (2008), both issued on the Oglio label.

Shortly after Perrey's death in November 2016, Australian musician Wally De Backer, also known as Gotye, launched a new record label, Forgotten Futures, whose first release, Jean-Jacques Perrey Et Son Ondioline, was an LP of previously unreleased recordings of Perrey playing Ondioline. De Backer had befriended Perrey during the artist's long terminal illness and acquired the recordings from Perrey's private collection.[16] "We got to know each other over a number of visits," said De Backer, "and through the time I spent with him in his apartment in Lausanne in Switzerland, he and his daughter Patricia started to produce all sorts of ... interesting early recordings that hadn’t been released — test pressings, alternative arrangements of things that are better known in his work. As I started to listen to these things, over time I realized this whole collection of stuff that he never really put out is amongst his best work."[16] Among the tracks were collaborations with Dick Hyman and Angelo Badalamenti.

De Backer began acquiring Ondiolines and having them restored to working condition.[16] In 2016 he assembled a group called the Ondioline Orchestra, with whom he performed on the instrument. The first such concert was a posthumous tribute to Perrey, at National Sawdust in Brooklyn, New York.[17]

In a 2018 interview with Australia's Broadsheet, Gotye said, “You can dial in an incredibly wide range of sounds on the ondioline, and the unique mechanics for playing it allows you to create sounds very sensitively and with a musical deftness I just feel isn't present on most other electronic instruments from the '40s – or decades since."[18]

In 2022, De Backer launched a comprehensive website, Ondioline.com, devoted to the instrument and its history.[1]

In October 2022, Spitfire Audio released a virtual recreation of the Ondioline, called Electronic Antique, as part of their free LABS plugin.[19]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Ondioline.com
  2. ^ Laner, Brad, "Jean-Jacques Perrey is Mr. Ondioline (1960)", Dangerous Minds, Aug. 31, 2010
  3. ^ "1950s French Monosynth," at Sonicouture.com
  4. ^ a b "The ‘Ondioline,’ Georges Jenny, France, 1940," at 120 Years of Electronic Music
  5. ^ a b Fourier, Laurent, "Jean-Jacques Perrey and the Ondioline", Computer Music Journal, Vol. 18, No. 4, Winter 1994, MIT Press
  6. ^ The Ondioline, 1957 brochure translated and reproduced at Ondioline.com
  7. ^ Gallery of Avant-Garde Rarities at Soundplant.org
  8. ^ Paradiso, Joseph A., "American Innovations in Electronic Musical Instruments: Keyboard and Tactile Interfaces", New Music Box, October 1, 1999
  9. ^ "L'âme des Poètes, by Charles Trenet et son Quartette Ondioline feat. Jean-Jacques Perrey". Jean-Jacques Perrey. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
  10. ^ Brend, Mark (6 December 2012). The Sound of Tomorrow: How Electronic Music Was Smuggled into the Mainstream. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. ISBN 978-1-62356-529-9.
  11. ^ "Jean Jacques Perrey's Autobiography, Part One". Dana Countryman. Retrieved 23 September 2021.
  12. ^ "The Fairy Tale Life of French Composer Jean-Jacques Perrey". Red Bull Music Academy Daily. Retrieved 19 February 2021.
  13. ^ Holmes, Joseph O. (1996). "Esquivel!". Space Age Bachelor Pad Music on the Web. Retrieved 1 June 2022.
  14. ^ jean-jacquesperrey.com, Perrey autobiography
  15. ^ Hurwitz, Matt (1 March 2008). . Mixoline. Archived from the original on 7 April 2014.
  16. ^ a b c Host, Vivian, "Wally De Backer on the Lasting Influence of Jean-Jacques Perrey and the Ondioline", Red Bull Music Academy, July 25, 2017
  17. ^ "Ondioline Orchestra Present a tribute to Jean-Jacques Perrey". Retrieved 30 December 2016.
  18. ^ Preston, Sammy, "Gotye Makes His Return with an Ondioline. Sorry, a What?", Broadsheet Sydney, 12 January 2018
  19. ^ "LABS LABS Electronic Antique". labs.spitfireaudio.com. Retrieved 2022-10-06.

External links edit

ondioline, electronic, analog, synthesizer, developed, built, frenchman, georges, jenny, sometimes, referred, jenny, instrument, considered, forerunner, synthesizer, first, conceived, jenny, 1939, continued, refining, reconfiguring, device, producing, dozens, . The Ondioline is an electronic analog synthesizer developed and built by Frenchman Georges Jenny 1 Sometimes referred to as the Jenny Ondioline the instrument is considered a forerunner of the synthesizer First conceived by Jenny in 1939 he continued refining and reconfiguring the device producing dozens of variant models up until his death in 1975 Ondioline keyboard on speaker exhibited at National Music Centre CanadaThough monophonic the Ondioline is capable of creating a wide variety of sounds Its keyboard spans three octaves but by adjusting a register knob a player can render up to eight octaves The instrument s keyboard is suspended on custom designed springs which enables a natural vibrato if the player manipulates a key laterally from side to side as that key is depressed The keyboard is pressure sensitive and volume is controlled by a knee lever The foremost exponent and popularizer of the instrument was Jean Jacques Perrey who performed and recorded with it composed for it and served as the instrument s first salesman on behalf of Jenny Perrey even recorded under the pseudonym Mr Ondioline 2 It is estimated that around 1 200 Ondiolines were constructed between the mid 1940s and the late 1960s most handmade by Jenny himself According to Ondioline authority historian Wally De Backer The instrument was also offered in kit form where Jenny recommended purchasing the more complex assemblies such as the keyboard as complete units The schematics were made available for amateur engineers to construct their own custom instruments and they were encouraged to experiment with the amplifier tone circuits and cabinetry 1 Contents 1 Development of the instrument 2 Works for Ondioline 3 Comparison with the Ondes Martenot 4 Use in popular music 5 Ongoing legacy and preservation 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksDevelopment of the instrument editJenny began constructing a first prototype around 1939 the instrument was as yet unnamed while recovering from tuberculosis at a sanatorium in the south of France 1 The instrument functioned on a valve based system and contained a built in amplifier 3 In 1946 Jenny s working model took first prize in the inventions competition at the Foire de Paris Paris Fair 1 By the time Jenny began to manufacture the device commercially in 1947 4 he had settled on the name Ondioline 1 As a cost saving measure in order to reduce the instrument s retail price Jenny often used low quality parts as a result the instruments required regular maintenance or they would become unplayable 4 For decades Jenny redesigned and manufactured new versions of the instrument at his Paris company Les Ondes Sonores Jenny later known as La Musique Electronique Later models offered such options as automatic vibrato and tremolo 1 There is no single standard model of the instrument Jenny declined to license the instrument for mass production Works for Ondioline editPerrey claimed that serious works for the Ondioline were composed by Arthur Honegger and Darius Milhaud 5 According to a 1957 promotional brochure published by Jenny works had been composed for the instrument by Honneger Milhaud Georges Auric Joseph Kosma Wanda Landowska and Marcel Delannoy 6 A 1958 LP from the French Broadcasting System featured six new works composed for the Ondioline Maurice Bagot s Suite Op 59 for 3 Ondiolines Gustave Samazeuilh s Musette for Ondioline Darius Cittanova s Chants Pour Les Eternites Differentes for Ondioline Jacques Chailley s Angelique for Ondioline and Ballet Divertissement for Ondioline and Jacques Casterede s Eolus for Ondioline 7 Comparison with the Ondes Martenot editThe Ondioline s keyboard is modeled after another early electronic instrument from France the Ondes Martenot which was invented in 1928 by Maurice Martenot Jenny conceived his instrument as a low cost alternative to the Martenot which was more sophisticated in construction and more expensive The Martenot was used mostly in serious music but Jenny devised the Ondioline for a broader consumer market including pop music 1 Joseph A Paradiso writing in the publication New Music Box said that both the Martenot and the Ondioline were truly dexterous performance instruments as they sported several continuous and discrete controllers that could be articulated by the left hand and knee while the right hand played a melody 8 The Ondioline is more sonically versatile than the Martenot which is stylistically limited The Ondioline has a filter panel offering from 10 to 17 sliders depending on the model 10 on earlier models 17 on later ones to modify the tones Used in combination these switches can create sounds ranging from near accurate recreations of symphonic instruments e g oboe French horn to unique sounds which do not mimic existing instruments While the Martenot has a ring or ribbon controller to control pitch the Ondioline has a wire strip that when pressed provides percussion effects Both the Martenot and the Ondioline use vacuum tube circuitry However unlike the Martenot whose oscillator is based on theremin principles two ultra high frequencies beating against each other to produce a third audible frequency the Ondioline uses a multivibrator oscillator circuit to produce its tone This gives the Ondioline a tone with richer harmonics than the Martenot Perrey explained the instrument s technical advantages The Ondioline is based on a multivibrator oscillator circuit producing a pulse like waveform that is fed through a series of discrete filters These filters the switching controls and the continuous analog controllers are the key to the tremendous variety of timbres obtainable with the Ondioline When I first saw the instrument I knew immediately its potential in comparison with the Ondes Martenot which offers only four or five timbres 5 Because the Ondioline was smaller than a Martenot it was designed to be portable Its retail price at the time was US 500 US 8 561 42 in 2017 dollars far less than the cost of the Martenot Use in popular music edit nbsp Perrey playing the ondioline in 2006In 1951 French composer singer Charles Trenet heard about Perrey and the Ondioline 9 and invited him to provide accompaniment on the recording of Trenet s song L ame des Poetes The Soul of Poets 10 The song became a commercial success and Perrey accompanied Trenet at concerts 11 12 Composer Juan Garcia Esquivel used an Ondioline in 1959 on the recording Watchamacallit from his album Exploring New Sounds in Hi Fi RCA 13 The first American hit record to feature the Ondioline was More by Kai Winding in 1963 This instrumental version of the theme from the 1962 film Mondo Cane was arranged and conducted by Claus Ogerman with the Ondioline played by Perrey who had by then moved to New York 14 The instrument is used in a percussive fashion on the 1964 Terry Stafford hit Suspicion The player was not identified In the late 1960s rock musician keyboardist Al Kooper featured the Ondioline on several tracks he recorded with his bands the Blues Project and Blood Sweat amp Tears he continued to perform and record with the instrument in his early solo career Notable examples are I Can t Keep from Crying Sometimes and Steve s Song from the 1966 Blues Project album Projections and No Time Like the Right Time The Blues Project Live at Town Hall 1967 Meagan s Gypsy Eyes from Blood Sweat amp Tears Child Is Father to the Man 1968 His Holy Modal Majesty with Mike Bloomfield on Super Session 1968 Her Holy Modal Majesty from the album The Live Adventures of Mike Bloomfield and Al Kooper 1968 and Kooper s first solo album I Stand Alone 1969 Tommy James and the Shondells 1967 hits I Think We re Alone Now and Mirage featured Ondioline played by session keyboardist Artie Butler 15 Motown Records used an Ondioline as part of their studio setup between 1959 and 1962 where it was mainly used in place of expensive string arrangements The instrument is featured prominently on dozens of early Motown recordings by acts such as the Supremes the Miracles the Temptations and the Marvelettes notably the songs After All I Want a Guy and You re My Dream Come True on which it was played by Raynoma Liles Gordy The first use of the instrument in a film was in 1959 when Perrey played it in the soundtrack of the French film La Vache et le Prisonnier The Cow and the Prisoner The Ondioline was also used in the soundtrack of the 1960 film Spartacus Ongoing legacy and preservation editEnglish French band Stereolab known for their use of early analogue synthesizers recorded a song titled Jenny Ondioline which was released on the 1993 album Transient Random Noise Bursts with Announcements as well as on the 1993 EP Jenny Ondioline However the song s lyrics have nothing to do with the Ondioline or Georges Jenny and the band does not use an Ondioline on the track or elsewhere on the album Jean Jacques Perrey continued to perform live shows with the Ondioline until his death in 2016 he featured the instrument on his collaborative albums with musician Dana Countryman The Happy Electropop Music Machine 2006 and Destination Space 2008 both issued on the Oglio label Shortly after Perrey s death in November 2016 Australian musician Wally De Backer also known as Gotye launched a new record label Forgotten Futures whose first release Jean Jacques Perrey Et Son Ondioline was an LP of previously unreleased recordings of Perrey playing Ondioline De Backer had befriended Perrey during the artist s long terminal illness and acquired the recordings from Perrey s private collection 16 We got to know each other over a number of visits said De Backer and through the time I spent with him in his apartment in Lausanne in Switzerland he and his daughter Patricia started to produce all sorts of interesting early recordings that hadn t been released test pressings alternative arrangements of things that are better known in his work As I started to listen to these things over time I realized this whole collection of stuff that he never really put out is amongst his best work 16 Among the tracks were collaborations with Dick Hyman and Angelo Badalamenti De Backer began acquiring Ondiolines and having them restored to working condition 16 In 2016 he assembled a group called the Ondioline Orchestra with whom he performed on the instrument The first such concert was a posthumous tribute to Perrey at National Sawdust in Brooklyn New York 17 In a 2018 interview with Australia s Broadsheet Gotye said You can dial in an incredibly wide range of sounds on the ondioline and the unique mechanics for playing it allows you to create sounds very sensitively and with a musical deftness I just feel isn t present on most other electronic instruments from the 40s or decades since 18 In 2022 De Backer launched a comprehensive website Ondioline com devoted to the instrument and its history 1 In October 2022 Spitfire Audio released a virtual recreation of the Ondioline called Electronic Antique as part of their free LABS plugin 19 See also editClavioline List of electronic instruments Synthesizer Monophonic electronic keyboardsReferences edit a b c d e f g h Ondioline com Laner Brad Jean Jacques Perrey is Mr Ondioline 1960 Dangerous Minds Aug 31 2010 1950s French Monosynth at Sonicouture com a b The Ondioline Georges Jenny France 1940 at 120 Years of Electronic Music a b Fourier Laurent Jean Jacques Perrey and the Ondioline Computer Music Journal Vol 18 No 4 Winter 1994 MIT Press The Ondioline 1957 brochure translated and reproduced at Ondioline com Gallery of Avant Garde Rarities at Soundplant org Paradiso Joseph A American Innovations in Electronic Musical Instruments Keyboard and Tactile Interfaces New Music Box October 1 1999 L ame des Poetes by Charles Trenet et son Quartette Ondioline feat Jean Jacques Perrey Jean Jacques Perrey Retrieved 19 May 2021 Brend Mark 6 December 2012 The Sound of Tomorrow How Electronic Music Was Smuggled into the Mainstream Bloomsbury Publishing USA ISBN 978 1 62356 529 9 Jean Jacques Perrey s Autobiography Part One Dana Countryman Retrieved 23 September 2021 The Fairy Tale Life of French Composer Jean Jacques Perrey Red Bull Music Academy Daily Retrieved 19 February 2021 Holmes Joseph O 1996 Esquivel Space Age Bachelor Pad Music on the Web Retrieved 1 June 2022 jean jacquesperrey com Perrey autobiography Hurwitz Matt 1 March 2008 Classic Tracks Tommy James amp The Shondells I Think We re Alone Now Mixoline Archived from the original on 7 April 2014 a b c Host Vivian Wally De Backer on the Lasting Influence of Jean Jacques Perrey and the Ondioline Red Bull Music Academy July 25 2017 Ondioline Orchestra Present a tribute to Jean Jacques Perrey Retrieved 30 December 2016 Preston Sammy Gotye Makes His Return with an Ondioline Sorry a What Broadsheet Sydney 12 January 2018 LABS LABS Electronic Antique labs spitfireaudio com Retrieved 2022 10 06 External links editOndioline com an informational clearinghouse created by Wally De Backer Ondioline at Space Age Pop A playlist of videos about the Ondioline at YouTube Kai Winding More Theme From Mondo Cane Video Provided to YouTube by Universal Music Group Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ondioline amp oldid 1181611032, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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