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Peter Zinovieff

Peter Zinovieff (26 January 1933 – 23 June 2021) was a British composer, musician and inventor. In the late 1960s, his company, Electronic Music Studios (EMS), made the VCS3, a synthesizer used by many early progressive rock bands such as Pink Floyd[3] and White Noise, and Krautrock groups[4] as well as more pop-orientated artists, including Todd Rundgren and David Bowie. In later life, he worked primarily as a composer of electronic music.

Peter Zinovieff
Born(1933-01-26)26 January 1933[1]
Fulham, London, England[2]
Died23 June 2021(2021-06-23) (aged 88)
EducationGuildford Royal Grammar School
Gordonstoun School
Alma materOxford University
Occupation(s)Composer, musician, inventor
Known forCo-founder, EMS
Spouses
Victoria Heber-Percy
(m. 1960)
Rose Verney
(m. 1978)
  • Tanya Richardson
  • Jenny Jardine
Children7, including Sofka Zinovieff
Parent(s)Leo Zinovieff
Sofka, née Princess Sophia Dolgorouky
RelativesRobert Heber-Percy (father-in-law)

Early life and education edit

Zinovieff was born on 26 January 1933;[5] his parents, Leo Zinovieff and Sofka, née Princess Sophia Dolgorouky, were both Russian aristocrats, who met in London after their families had emigrated to escape the Russian Revolution and soon divorced.[6] During World War II, he and his brother Ian lived with their grandparents in Guildford and then with their father in Sussex. He attended Guildford Royal Grammar School, Gordonstoun School and Oxford University, where he earned a doctorate in geology.[7][8]

Career in music and electronics edit

Zinovieff bought his first computer from the proceeds gained from auctioning his first wife's tiara. It raised £4,000 (equivalent to £80,000 in 2021). He used this computer to control an array of oscillators and amplifiers he had bought from an army surplus store. He claimed that "This was the first computer in the world in a private house".[9]

Zinovieff's work followed research at Bell Labs by Max Mathews and Jean-Claude Risset, and an MIT thesis (1963) by David Alan Luce.[10] In 1966–67, Zinovieff, Delia Derbyshire and Brian Hodgson ran Unit Delta Plus, an organisation to create and promote electronic music. It was based in the studio Zinovieff had built, in a shed at his house in Putney. (The house is near the Thames, and the studio was later partially destroyed by a flood).[11][12] EMS grew out of MUSYS, which was a performance controller operating as an analogue–digital hybrid.[13] It was a synthesiser system which Zinovieff developed with the help of David Cockerell and Peter Grogono, and used two DEC PDP-8 minicomputers and a piano keyboard.[14] It was marketed as being more portable than the huge Moog system, and at one point Robert Moog offered to sell out to EMS for one million dollars. Zinovieff turned down this deal.[9]

Unit Delta Plus ran a concert of electronic music at the Watermill Theatre in 1966, with a light show. In early 1967 they performed in concerts at The Roundhouse, at which the Carnival of Light was also played; they split up later in 1967.[12] Paul McCartney had visited the studio, but Zinovieff had little interest in popular music.[15]

In 1968, Zinovieff's computer music system featured in several pioneering events in London. In January, the First London concert of Electronic Music by British composers[16] event was held at the Queen Elizabeth Hall.[17] Alongside pieces by Delia Derbyshire and Tristram Cary, the concert included the premiere of Zinovieff's Partita for Unattended Computer, the first ever unaccompanied performance of live computer music,[18] with no human performer involved, and the piece read from paper tape. The programmes were covered in foil so the audience could participate by rustling them.[9] Later that year, as part of Cybernetic Serendipity, the first UK international exhibition devoted to the relationship between the arts and new technology at the Institute of Contemporary Arts,[19] Zinovieff and his team created a computer system, based on the PDP-8, which could analyse a tune whistled by a visitor to the show and improvise upon it.[20]

In the same year, part of the studio was also recreated at Connaught Hall, for a performance of pieces by Justin Connolly and David Lumsdaine.[21] At the IFIP congress that year, the composition ZASP by Zinovieff with Alan Sutcliffe took second prize in a contest, behind a piece by Iannis Xenakis.[22]

 
EMS Synthi AKS

In 1969, Zinovieff sought financing through an ad in The Times but received only one response, £50 on the mistaken premise it was the price of a synthesiser. Instead he formed EMS with Cockerell and Tristram Cary.[23] At the end of the 1960s, EMS Ltd. was one of four companies offering commercial synthesizers, the others being ARP, Buchla, and Moog.[24] In the 1970s Zinovieff became interested in the video synthesizer developed by Richard Monkhouse, and EMS produced it as the Spectron.[25]

Jon Lord of Deep Purple described Zinovieff as "a mad professor type": "I was ushered into his workshop and he was in there talking to a computer, trying to get it to answer back".[26] Trevor Pinch and Frank Trocco, in their history of the synthesizer revolution, see him rather as aristocratically averse to "trade".[27] In a 2019 interview Zinovieff commented on EMS as a business: "It's always been a problem with me because I don't like synthesizers. So this side of EMS was never interesting to me, it was always the studio. The basic purpose of EMS was to finance the studio, but unfortunately that's not what happened. EMS got bigger and bigger and we made more and more products and it took up more time. And instead of making money, it started to lose it. In the end, when EMS went bankrupt, it pulled the studio down."[28]

Throughout his career, Zinovieff often worked in collaboration.[29]

Between 1969 and 1978 he collaborated with Harrison Birtwistle on a number of works.[30] These include Chronometer (1971–2) which features recordings of the ticking of Big Ben and the chimes of Wells Cathedral clock.[9] Chronometer was premiered at the Queen Elizabeth Hall on 24 April 1972 in a four-channel version.[30] Zinovieff claimed that he invented sampling in his work on Chronometer. Two years later, Pink Floyd used a similar effect on their album, The Dark Side of the Moon.[9]

The soundtrack for Sidney Lumet's film The Offence (1972) was composed by Birtwistle with 'electronic realization' by Zinovieff.[30]

As well as working with sound, Zinovieff also wrote the libretto for Birtwistle's opera The Mask of Orpheus,[31] and also the words for Nenia: The Death of Orpheus (1970).[32]

He also worked with Hans Werner Henze, and the section Tristan's Folly in Tristan (1975) included a tape by Zinovieff.[33]

After EMS ran into financial difficulties in the mid 1970s, Zinovieff closed his Putney studio, which was sold to the National Theatre, but never put back together as a working studio. His equipment was put into storage, and later destroyed in a flood.[9]

He then moved to the remote Scottish island of Raasay, (also the home of Birtwistle between 1975 and 1983[34]). His cottage had no mains electricity supply and he powered his remaining synth equipment from batteries hooked up to a windmill.[29]

He subsequently moved back to England, settling in Cambridge, and in the 1980s received two commissions from Clive Sinclair including a piano-sampling project[35] and consultations on sound support during the development of the Sinclair QL.[36]

Activity as a composer (2010–2021) edit

After a break of many years, in 2010 Zinovieff became active again publicly in music composition.[37]

 
"The Morning Line" Matthew Ritchie (Vienna, 2012)

This started with a commission from TBA21, instigated by Russell Haswell,[35] to create an audio work for the large-scale installation The Morning Line by artist Matthew Ritchie, which contains a 47-speaker spatial sound system. The result was Bridges from Somewhere and Another to Somewhere Else,[38] shown during its exhibition in Istanbul. A second piece Good Morning Ludwig was commissioned in 2012 when the installation moved permanently to ZKM, Karlsruhe.[39]

Following these projects, Zinovieff continued to work primarily as a composer for the remaining years of his life.[38][40] His work during this time combined sounds from live instrumentation and field recordings and continued his long-term interest in computer music and spatial multi-channel performance setups.[40][35] Embracing the power of modern computer technology allowed him to realise ways of working he had pursued throughout his career in music and electronics.[37][29]

He also continued to work mainly in collaboration during this time.[29] With violinist Aisha Orazbayeva, Zinovieff composed two concertos for violin and electronics: OUR (2010)[37] and Our Too, premiered at London Contemporary Music Festival in 2014.[40]

A series of works created from 2011 onwards in collaboration with poet Katrina Porteous combined her poetry with soundscapes created by Zinovieff using sound sources related to physics and astronomy.[41] The first piece, Horse (2011), was broadcast on BBC Radio 3. Subsequent works with Porteous were commissioned by the Centre for Life, Newcastle upon Tyne for live performance in its planetarium.[42] These pieces—Edge (2013),[43] Field (2015),[44] Sun (2016)[45]—are surround-sound works with live visuals created by planetarium supervisor Christopher Hudson.[44] A final work in the series, Under The Ice, a 30-minute piece based on recordings of Antarctic glaciers, premiered online on 23 June 2021.[46][47]

Zinovieff's collaboration with cellist Lucy Railton, entitled RFG,[40] was initially conceived as a live piece for a spatially configured loudspeaker system and performed between 2016 and 2017.[48][49] An album version was released as RFG Inventions for Cello and Computer on PAN in 2020.[50]

A retrospective compilation covering Zinovieff's work in the EMS era, including collaborations with Hans Werner Henze and Harrison Birtwistle, was compiled by musician Pete Kember and released in 2015.[51][52]

Between the years 2013–2017, Zinovieff composed an extended computer work, entitled South Pacific Migration Party, derived from hydrophone recordings of blue whales recorded by British oceanographer Susannah Buchan off the coast of Chile and originally proposed and then curated by Andrew Spyrou. As its premiere, a preliminary quadraphonic mix of the piece was played in Athens as part of documenta 14 in June 2017,[53] followed by a presentation of the piece during the UN Ocean Conference, at The Explorers Club, New York City, the same month. Subsequently, a full b-format rendering of the piece was commissioned by TBA21, and presented at the TBA21-Augarten ambisonic sound space in Vienna, during the exhibition Tidalectics.[54] An 8-track reduction, designed for two separate quadraphonic systems, was presented at the Hamburger Bahnhof Museum, Berlin, in October 2017.[55] The piece was released on the record label The Association for Depth Sound Recordings on 30 July 2021.[56]

Awards edit

In 2015 Zinovieff was awarded an honorary Doctor of Music degree by Anglia Ruskin University.[57]

Personal life edit

In 1960, Zinovieff married Victoria Heber-Percy, daughter of Robert Heber-Percy and Jennifer Ross; in 1978, he married Rose Verney. He later married Tanya Richardson, and was survived by his fourth wife, Jenny Jardine.[58] He had seven children: Sofka, Leo, Kolinka, Freya, Katia, Eliena, and Kyril, who died in 2015.[58]

Zinovieff died on the night of 23 June 2021. He was 88, and had been hospitalised ten days earlier after falling at his home.[58][59]

Selected discography edit

Solo and collaborative works edit

with Harrison Birtwistle

with Harrison Birtwistle, Hans Werner Henze and others

  • 2015 Electronic Calendar – The EMS Tapes (Space Age Recordings)[51]

with Aisha Orazbayeva

  • 2011 5 Bagatelles From OUR Violin And Computer Concerto (on Aisha Orazbayeva Outside LP on Nonclassical)[61]

with Lucy Railton

  • 2020 RFG Inventions for Cello and Computer (PAN)[50]

Solo

  • 2021 South Pacific Migration Party (The Association for Depth Sound Recordings)[62][56]

Compilation appearances edit

  • 1968 Cybernetic Serendipity Music (ICA)[63]
  • 2008 Recovery/Discovery 40 years of surround electronic music in the UK (Sound And Music)[64]

References edit

  1. ^ . BBC Music. Archived from the original on 19 December 2019. Retrieved 19 December 2019.
  2. ^ England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1916–2007
  3. ^ Notably on The Dark Side of the Moon: Pinch, Trevor; Trocco, Frank (2004). Analog Days. Harvard University Press. p. 293. ISBN 0-674-01617-3.
  4. ^ Pinch & Trocco 2004, p. 297.
  5. ^ Sofka Zinovieff, Red Princess: A Revolutionary Life, London: Granta, 2007, ISBN 978-1-86207-919-9, p. 185.
  6. ^ Pinch & Trocco 2004, pp. 276, 278.
  7. ^ Zinovieff, p. 295.
  8. ^ Pinch & Trocco 2004, p. 279.
  9. ^ a b c d e f "Peter Zinovieff Obituary". The Times. 28 June 2021.
  10. ^ Curtis Roads (January 1996). The Computer Music Tutorial. MIT Press. pp. 547–8. ISBN 978-0-262-68082-0.
  11. ^ Zinovieff, pp. 327–328:[incomplete short citation] "by the end of the 1960s, Peter had three children and ran an electronic music studio from a garden shed by the river in Putney".
  12. ^ a b Unit Delta Plus at delia-derbyshire.org, retrieved 6 January 2015.
  13. ^ "EMS Synthesisers, Peter Zinovieff, Tristram Cary, David Cockerell United Kingdom, 1969, 120 Years of Electronic Music". 30 January 2014. Retrieved 6 January 2015.
  14. ^ "Computer Orchestra". British Pathé. 15 September 1968. from the original on 20 January 2022. Retrieved 20 January 2022.
  15. ^ Mark Brend (6 December 2012). The Sound of Tomorrow: How Electronic Music Was Smuggled into the Mainstream. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 4–5. ISBN 978-1-62356-529-9.
  16. ^ "Appendix B – Four Electronic Music Concerts". Francis Routh. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
  17. ^ "Queen Elizabeth Hall & the evolution of electronic music | Southbank Centre". www.southbankcentre.co.uk. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
  18. ^ "Peter Zinovieff". 120 Years of Electronic Music. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
  19. ^ "Cybernetic Serendipity: A Documentation". archive.ica.art. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
  20. ^ "Computer World: Why Cybernetic Serendipity Music is the most important and neglected compilation in electronic music | Page 2 of 5". The Vinyl Factory. 15 October 2014. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
  21. ^ Anthony Gilbert, "SPNM Composers' Weekend", The Musical Times, vol. 109, no. 1508 (October 1968), p. 946. JSTOR 953598
  22. ^ Michael Kassler, "Report from Edinburgh", Perspectives of New Music, vol. 7, no. 2 (Spring–Summer 1969), pp. 175-177. JSTOR 832302
  23. ^ "All About EMS: Part 1", Musical Matrices, Sound on Sound November 2000, retrieved 19 April 2010.
  24. ^ Peter Manning (2004). Electronic and Computer Music. Oxford University Press. p. 201. ISBN 978-0-19-514484-0.
  25. ^ Chris Meigh-Andrews, "Peter Donebauer, Richard Monkhouse and the Development of the EMS Spectron and the Videokalos Image Processor", Leonardo, vol. 40, no. 5 (2007) pp. 463-467, 450-451, at p. 463. JSTOR 20206483
  26. ^ Pinch & Trocco 2004, p. 293.
  27. ^ Pinch & Trocco 2004, p. 300.
  28. ^ "Son[i]a #286. Peter Zinovieff". 2019.
  29. ^ a b c d Helliwell, Ian (2016). Tape leaders : a compendium of early British electronic music composers. Cambridge: Sound On Sound. ISBN 978-0-9954958-0-7. OCLC 962031940.
  30. ^ a b c Hall, Tom (2015), Beard, David; Gloag, Kenneth; Jones, Nicholas (eds.), "Before The Mask: Birtwistle's electronic music collaborations with Peter Zinovieff", Harrison Birtwistle Studies, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 63–94, doi:10.1017/cbo9781316145326.005, ISBN 978-1-316-14532-6, retrieved 8 January 2022
  31. ^ Michael Kennedy (22 April 2004). The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music. Oxford University Press. p. 459. ISBN 978-0-19-860884-4.
  32. ^ David Wright and Harrison Birtwistle, "Clicks, Clocks & Claques. David Wright Investigates Cliques and the Claques in the Music of Birtwistle, 60 This Month", The Musical Times, vol. 135, no. 1817 (July 1994), pp. 426-431, at p. 430. JSTOR 1003251
  33. ^ R. H. Bales, "Review, Tristan by Hans Werner Henze", Computer Music Journal, vol. 8, no. 2 (Summer 1984), p. 63. JSTOR 4617906
  34. ^ "Sir Harrison Birtwistle: Duets for Storab". www.universaledition.com. Retrieved 1 July 2021.
  35. ^ a b c Beaumont-Thomas, Ben (20 October 2015). "Interview: Peter Zinovieff: 'I taught Ringo to play synth. He wasn't very good – but neither was I'". The Guardian. London, UK. Retrieved 2 May 2020.
  36. ^ Ellis, David (March 1984). "Computer Musician – Rumblings". Electronics & Music Maker (Mar 1984): 62. Retrieved 1 July 2021.
  37. ^ a b c Hall, Tom (Spring 2013). "Peter Zinovieff and Cultures of Electronic Music" (PDF). PAGE: Bulletin of the Computer Arts Society. 69.
  38. ^ a b Neset, Anne Hilde (August 2010). "Cross Platform – The Morning Line". The Wire. 318: 26–27.
  39. ^ "Peter Zinovieff | Good Morning Ludwig, 2012". TBA21. 2012. Retrieved 2 May 2020.
  40. ^ a b c d Barry, Robert (17 August 2016). "Interview: Lucy Railton & Peter Zinovieff". The Quietus. Retrieved 2 May 2020.
  41. ^ Porteous, Katrina (2019). Edge. Hexham, Northumberland: Bloodaxe Books. ISBN 978-1-78037-490-1. OCLC 1090281455.
  42. ^ "Poetry Readings by BBC Broadcasters Julian May and Katrina Porteous". Lewis and Clark University. Retrieved 2 May 2020.
  43. ^ "Poetry Please Special: Edge". Poetry Please. 15 December 2013. BBC Radio 4.
  44. ^ a b "Interview: Katrina Porteous on Field". narcmagazine.com. Retrieved 5 September 2020.
  45. ^ "Imagining the Sun". NUSTEM. Retrieved 5 September 2020.
  46. ^ Alikivi, Gary (27 April 2019). "SOME KIND OF MAGIC with Northumberland poet, writer & broadcaster Katrina Porteous". ALIKIVI. Retrieved 5 September 2020.
  47. ^ "Northumbria brings Antarctica's unseen world to the screen". Mynewsdesk. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
  48. ^ "Peter Zinovieff and Lucy Railton: RFG". City, University of London. 22 November 2016. Retrieved 2 May 2020.
  49. ^ "Releases". PAN. 2020. Retrieved 2 May 2020.
  50. ^ a b Simpson, Paul. Lucy Railton at AllMusic
  51. ^ a b Peter Zinovieff – Album Discography at AllMusic
  52. ^ "Synth inventor Peter Zinovieff to release early years retrospective The EMS Tapes". Fact. 11 May 2015. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
  53. ^ "Listening Space". documenta 14. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  54. ^ "Thyssen-Bornemisza Art Contemporary". www.tba21.org. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  55. ^ "TBA21 Academy Fishing For Islands". www.tba21.org. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  56. ^ a b "South Pacific Migration Party, by Peter Zinovieff". The Association for Depth Sound Recordings. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  57. ^ . Anglia Ruskin University. 2015. Archived from the original on 18 August 2022. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  58. ^ a b c Beaumont-Thomas, Ben (26 June 2021). "Peter Zinovieff, British composer and synth pioneer, dies aged 88". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
  59. ^ Richards, Will (26 June 2021). "Synthesiser pioneer and composer Peter Zinovieff dies aged 88". New Musical Express. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
  60. ^ Pinsent, Ed (17 February 2009). "Chronometer Recovered – The Sound Projector". www.thesoundprojector.com. Retrieved 19 June 2020.
  61. ^ "Aisha Orazbayeva – Outside". Discogs. Retrieved 5 September 2020.
  62. ^ Hunter-Tilney, Ludovic (6 August 2021). "Peter Zinovieff: South Pacific Migration Party — whales meet electronic waves". Financial Times. Retrieved 5 December 2021.
  63. ^ "Cybernetic Serendipity Music". The Vinyl Factory. Retrieved 19 June 2020.
  64. ^ Recovery/Discovery 40 years of surround electronic music in the UK., London: Sound and Music, 2008, OCLC 638211038, retrieved 5 July 2020

Further reading edit

  • Sofka Skipwith. Sofka, the Autobiography of a Princess. London: Hart-Davis, 1968. OCLC 504549593. Autobiography by his mother.
  • Sofka Zinovieff. Red Princess: A Revolutionary Life. London: Granta, 2007. ISBN 978-1-86207-919-9. Biography of his mother by his daughter.

External links edit

  • Conversation with Peter Zinovieff – Podcast at Ràdio Web MACBA, 2019
  • Dr. Peter Zinovieff, 7 Deadly Synths – Lecture for the Red Bull Music Academy, London 2010
  • What the Future Sounded Like by Matthew Bate, documentary about EMS and personnel
  • Graham Hinton, The EMS Story, 2002
  • Peter Zinovieff and Cultures of Electronic Music by Tom Hall, Bulletin oftheComputer Arts Society, Spring 2013
  • Peter Zinovieff at IMDb
  • Peter Zinovieff discography at Discogs

peter, zinovieff, january, 1933, june, 2021, british, composer, musician, inventor, late, 1960s, company, electronic, music, studios, made, vcs3, synthesizer, used, many, early, progressive, rock, bands, such, pink, floyd, white, noise, krautrock, groups, well. Peter Zinovieff 26 January 1933 23 June 2021 was a British composer musician and inventor In the late 1960s his company Electronic Music Studios EMS made the VCS3 a synthesizer used by many early progressive rock bands such as Pink Floyd 3 and White Noise and Krautrock groups 4 as well as more pop orientated artists including Todd Rundgren and David Bowie In later life he worked primarily as a composer of electronic music Peter ZinovieffBorn 1933 01 26 26 January 1933 1 Fulham London England 2 Died23 June 2021 2021 06 23 aged 88 EducationGuildford Royal Grammar School Gordonstoun SchoolAlma materOxford UniversityOccupation s Composer musician inventorKnown forCo founder EMSSpousesVictoria Heber Percy m 1960 wbr Rose Verney m 1978 wbr Tanya Richardson Jenny JardineChildren7 including Sofka ZinovieffParent s Leo Zinovieff Sofka nee Princess Sophia DolgoroukyRelativesRobert Heber Percy father in law Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career in music and electronics 2 1 Activity as a composer 2010 2021 3 Awards 4 Personal life 5 Selected discography 5 1 Solo and collaborative works 5 2 Compilation appearances 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly life and education editZinovieff was born on 26 January 1933 5 his parents Leo Zinovieff and Sofka nee Princess Sophia Dolgorouky were both Russian aristocrats who met in London after their families had emigrated to escape the Russian Revolution and soon divorced 6 During World War II he and his brother Ian lived with their grandparents in Guildford and then with their father in Sussex He attended Guildford Royal Grammar School Gordonstoun School and Oxford University where he earned a doctorate in geology 7 8 Career in music and electronics editZinovieff bought his first computer from the proceeds gained from auctioning his first wife s tiara It raised 4 000 equivalent to 80 000 in 2021 He used this computer to control an array of oscillators and amplifiers he had bought from an army surplus store He claimed that This was the first computer in the world in a private house 9 Zinovieff s work followed research at Bell Labs by Max Mathews and Jean Claude Risset and an MIT thesis 1963 by David Alan Luce 10 In 1966 67 Zinovieff Delia Derbyshire and Brian Hodgson ran Unit Delta Plus an organisation to create and promote electronic music It was based in the studio Zinovieff had built in a shed at his house in Putney The house is near the Thames and the studio was later partially destroyed by a flood 11 12 EMS grew out of MUSYS which was a performance controller operating as an analogue digital hybrid 13 It was a synthesiser system which Zinovieff developed with the help of David Cockerell and Peter Grogono and used two DEC PDP 8 minicomputers and a piano keyboard 14 It was marketed as being more portable than the huge Moog system and at one point Robert Moog offered to sell out to EMS for one million dollars Zinovieff turned down this deal 9 Unit Delta Plus ran a concert of electronic music at the Watermill Theatre in 1966 with a light show In early 1967 they performed in concerts at The Roundhouse at which the Carnival of Light was also played they split up later in 1967 12 Paul McCartney had visited the studio but Zinovieff had little interest in popular music 15 In 1968 Zinovieff s computer music system featured in several pioneering events in London In January the First London concert of Electronic Music by British composers 16 event was held at the Queen Elizabeth Hall 17 Alongside pieces by Delia Derbyshire and Tristram Cary the concert included the premiere of Zinovieff s Partita for Unattended Computer the first ever unaccompanied performance of live computer music 18 with no human performer involved and the piece read from paper tape The programmes were covered in foil so the audience could participate by rustling them 9 Later that year as part of Cybernetic Serendipity the first UK international exhibition devoted to the relationship between the arts and new technology at the Institute of Contemporary Arts 19 Zinovieff and his team created a computer system based on the PDP 8 which could analyse a tune whistled by a visitor to the show and improvise upon it 20 In the same year part of the studio was also recreated at Connaught Hall for a performance of pieces by Justin Connolly and David Lumsdaine 21 At the IFIP congress that year the composition ZASP by Zinovieff with Alan Sutcliffe took second prize in a contest behind a piece by Iannis Xenakis 22 nbsp EMS Synthi AKS In 1969 Zinovieff sought financing through an ad in The Times but received only one response 50 on the mistaken premise it was the price of a synthesiser Instead he formed EMS with Cockerell and Tristram Cary 23 At the end of the 1960s EMS Ltd was one of four companies offering commercial synthesizers the others being ARP Buchla and Moog 24 In the 1970s Zinovieff became interested in the video synthesizer developed by Richard Monkhouse and EMS produced it as the Spectron 25 Jon Lord of Deep Purple described Zinovieff as a mad professor type I was ushered into his workshop and he was in there talking to a computer trying to get it to answer back 26 Trevor Pinch and Frank Trocco in their history of the synthesizer revolution see him rather as aristocratically averse to trade 27 In a 2019 interview Zinovieff commented on EMS as a business It s always been a problem with me because I don t like synthesizers So this side of EMS was never interesting to me it was always the studio The basic purpose of EMS was to finance the studio but unfortunately that s not what happened EMS got bigger and bigger and we made more and more products and it took up more time And instead of making money it started to lose it In the end when EMS went bankrupt it pulled the studio down 28 Throughout his career Zinovieff often worked in collaboration 29 Between 1969 and 1978 he collaborated with Harrison Birtwistle on a number of works 30 These include Chronometer 1971 2 which features recordings of the ticking of Big Ben and the chimes of Wells Cathedral clock 9 Chronometer was premiered at the Queen Elizabeth Hall on 24 April 1972 in a four channel version 30 Zinovieff claimed that he invented sampling in his work on Chronometer Two years later Pink Floyd used a similar effect on their album The Dark Side of the Moon 9 The soundtrack for Sidney Lumet s film The Offence 1972 was composed by Birtwistle with electronic realization by Zinovieff 30 As well as working with sound Zinovieff also wrote the libretto for Birtwistle s opera The Mask of Orpheus 31 and also the words for Nenia The Death of Orpheus 1970 32 He also worked with Hans Werner Henze and the section Tristan s Folly in Tristan 1975 included a tape by Zinovieff 33 After EMS ran into financial difficulties in the mid 1970s Zinovieff closed his Putney studio which was sold to the National Theatre but never put back together as a working studio His equipment was put into storage and later destroyed in a flood 9 He then moved to the remote Scottish island of Raasay also the home of Birtwistle between 1975 and 1983 34 His cottage had no mains electricity supply and he powered his remaining synth equipment from batteries hooked up to a windmill 29 He subsequently moved back to England settling in Cambridge and in the 1980s received two commissions from Clive Sinclair including a piano sampling project 35 and consultations on sound support during the development of the Sinclair QL 36 Activity as a composer 2010 2021 edit After a break of many years in 2010 Zinovieff became active again publicly in music composition 37 nbsp The Morning Line Matthew Ritchie Vienna 2012 This started with a commission from TBA21 instigated by Russell Haswell 35 to create an audio work for the large scale installation The Morning Line by artist Matthew Ritchie which contains a 47 speaker spatial sound system The result was Bridges from Somewhere and Another to Somewhere Else 38 shown during its exhibition in Istanbul A second piece Good Morning Ludwig was commissioned in 2012 when the installation moved permanently to ZKM Karlsruhe 39 Following these projects Zinovieff continued to work primarily as a composer for the remaining years of his life 38 40 His work during this time combined sounds from live instrumentation and field recordings and continued his long term interest in computer music and spatial multi channel performance setups 40 35 Embracing the power of modern computer technology allowed him to realise ways of working he had pursued throughout his career in music and electronics 37 29 He also continued to work mainly in collaboration during this time 29 With violinist Aisha Orazbayeva Zinovieff composed two concertos for violin and electronics OUR 2010 37 and Our Too premiered at London Contemporary Music Festival in 2014 40 A series of works created from 2011 onwards in collaboration with poet Katrina Porteous combined her poetry with soundscapes created by Zinovieff using sound sources related to physics and astronomy 41 The first piece Horse 2011 was broadcast on BBC Radio 3 Subsequent works with Porteous were commissioned by the Centre for Life Newcastle upon Tyne for live performance in its planetarium 42 These pieces Edge 2013 43 Field 2015 44 Sun 2016 45 are surround sound works with live visuals created by planetarium supervisor Christopher Hudson 44 A final work in the series Under The Ice a 30 minute piece based on recordings of Antarctic glaciers premiered online on 23 June 2021 46 47 Zinovieff s collaboration with cellist Lucy Railton entitled RFG 40 was initially conceived as a live piece for a spatially configured loudspeaker system and performed between 2016 and 2017 48 49 An album version was released as RFG Inventions for Cello and Computer on PAN in 2020 50 A retrospective compilation covering Zinovieff s work in the EMS era including collaborations with Hans Werner Henze and Harrison Birtwistle was compiled by musician Pete Kember and released in 2015 51 52 Between the years 2013 2017 Zinovieff composed an extended computer work entitled South Pacific Migration Party derived from hydrophone recordings of blue whales recorded by British oceanographer Susannah Buchan off the coast of Chile and originally proposed and then curated by Andrew Spyrou As its premiere a preliminary quadraphonic mix of the piece was played in Athens as part of documenta 14 in June 2017 53 followed by a presentation of the piece during the UN Ocean Conference at The Explorers Club New York City the same month Subsequently a full b format rendering of the piece was commissioned by TBA21 and presented at the TBA21 Augarten ambisonic sound space in Vienna during the exhibition Tidalectics 54 An 8 track reduction designed for two separate quadraphonic systems was presented at the Hamburger Bahnhof Museum Berlin in October 2017 55 The piece was released on the record label The Association for Depth Sound Recordings on 30 July 2021 56 Awards editIn 2015 Zinovieff was awarded an honorary Doctor of Music degree by Anglia Ruskin University 57 Personal life editIn 1960 Zinovieff married Victoria Heber Percy daughter of Robert Heber Percy and Jennifer Ross in 1978 he married Rose Verney He later married Tanya Richardson and was survived by his fourth wife Jenny Jardine 58 He had seven children Sofka Leo Kolinka Freya Katia Eliena and Kyril who died in 2015 58 Zinovieff died on the night of 23 June 2021 He was 88 and had been hospitalised ten days earlier after falling at his home 58 59 Selected discography editSolo and collaborative works edit with Harrison Birtwistle 1975 Chronometer Argo 60 with Harrison Birtwistle Hans Werner Henze and others 2015 Electronic Calendar The EMS Tapes Space Age Recordings 51 with Aisha Orazbayeva 2011 5 Bagatelles From OUR Violin And Computer Concerto on Aisha Orazbayeva Outside LP on Nonclassical 61 with Lucy Railton 2020 RFG Inventions for Cello and Computer PAN 50 Solo 2021 South Pacific Migration Party The Association for Depth Sound Recordings 62 56 Compilation appearances edit 1968 Cybernetic Serendipity Music ICA 63 2008 Recovery Discovery 40 years of surround electronic music in the UK Sound And Music 64 References edit Peter Zinovieff New Songs Playlists amp Latest News BBC Music Archived from the original on 19 December 2019 Retrieved 19 December 2019 England amp Wales Civil Registration Birth Index 1916 2007 Notably on The Dark Side of the Moon Pinch Trevor Trocco Frank 2004 Analog Days Harvard University Press p 293 ISBN 0 674 01617 3 Pinch amp Trocco 2004 p 297 Sofka Zinovieff Red Princess A Revolutionary Life London Granta 2007 ISBN 978 1 86207 919 9 p 185 Pinch amp Trocco 2004 pp 276 278 Zinovieff p 295 Pinch amp Trocco 2004 p 279 a b c d e f Peter Zinovieff Obituary The Times 28 June 2021 Curtis Roads January 1996 The Computer Music Tutorial MIT Press pp 547 8 ISBN 978 0 262 68082 0 Zinovieff pp 327 328 incomplete short citation by the end of the 1960s Peter had three children and ran an electronic music studio from a garden shed by the river in Putney a b Unit Delta Plus at delia derbyshire org retrieved 6 January 2015 EMS Synthesisers Peter Zinovieff Tristram Cary David Cockerell United Kingdom 1969 120 Years of Electronic Music 30 January 2014 Retrieved 6 January 2015 Computer Orchestra British Pathe 15 September 1968 Archived from the original on 20 January 2022 Retrieved 20 January 2022 Mark Brend 6 December 2012 The Sound of Tomorrow How Electronic Music Was Smuggled into the Mainstream Bloomsbury Publishing pp 4 5 ISBN 978 1 62356 529 9 Appendix B Four Electronic Music Concerts Francis Routh Retrieved 26 June 2021 Queen Elizabeth Hall amp the evolution of electronic music Southbank Centre www southbankcentre co uk Retrieved 26 June 2021 Peter Zinovieff 120 Years of Electronic Music Retrieved 26 June 2021 Cybernetic Serendipity A Documentation archive ica art Retrieved 26 June 2021 Computer World Why Cybernetic Serendipity Music is the most important and neglected compilation in electronic music Page 2 of 5 The Vinyl Factory 15 October 2014 Retrieved 26 June 2021 Anthony Gilbert SPNM Composers Weekend The Musical Times vol 109 no 1508 October 1968 p 946 JSTOR 953598 Michael Kassler Report from Edinburgh Perspectives of New Music vol 7 no 2 Spring Summer 1969 pp 175 177 JSTOR 832302 All About EMS Part 1 Musical Matrices Sound on Sound November 2000 retrieved 19 April 2010 Peter Manning 2004 Electronic and Computer Music Oxford University Press p 201 ISBN 978 0 19 514484 0 Chris Meigh Andrews Peter Donebauer Richard Monkhouse and the Development of the EMS Spectron and the Videokalos Image Processor Leonardo vol 40 no 5 2007 pp 463 467 450 451 at p 463 JSTOR 20206483 Pinch amp Trocco 2004 p 293 Pinch amp Trocco 2004 p 300 Son i a 286 Peter Zinovieff 2019 a b c d Helliwell Ian 2016 Tape leaders a compendium of early British electronic music composers Cambridge Sound On Sound ISBN 978 0 9954958 0 7 OCLC 962031940 a b c Hall Tom 2015 Beard David Gloag Kenneth Jones Nicholas eds Before The Mask Birtwistle s electronic music collaborations with Peter Zinovieff Harrison Birtwistle Studies Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 63 94 doi 10 1017 cbo9781316145326 005 ISBN 978 1 316 14532 6 retrieved 8 January 2022 Michael Kennedy 22 April 2004 The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music Oxford University Press p 459 ISBN 978 0 19 860884 4 David Wright and Harrison Birtwistle Clicks Clocks amp Claques David Wright Investigates Cliques and the Claques in the Music of Birtwistle 60 This Month The Musical Times vol 135 no 1817 July 1994 pp 426 431 at p 430 JSTOR 1003251 R H Bales Review Tristan by Hans Werner Henze Computer Music Journal vol 8 no 2 Summer 1984 p 63 JSTOR 4617906 Sir Harrison Birtwistle Duets for Storab www universaledition com Retrieved 1 July 2021 a b c Beaumont Thomas Ben 20 October 2015 Interview Peter Zinovieff I taught Ringo to play synth He wasn t very good but neither was I The Guardian London UK Retrieved 2 May 2020 Ellis David March 1984 Computer Musician Rumblings Electronics amp Music Maker Mar 1984 62 Retrieved 1 July 2021 a b c Hall Tom Spring 2013 Peter Zinovieff and Cultures of Electronic Music PDF PAGE Bulletin of the Computer Arts Society 69 a b Neset Anne Hilde August 2010 Cross Platform The Morning Line The Wire 318 26 27 Peter Zinovieff Good Morning Ludwig 2012 TBA21 2012 Retrieved 2 May 2020 a b c d Barry Robert 17 August 2016 Interview Lucy Railton amp Peter Zinovieff The Quietus Retrieved 2 May 2020 Porteous Katrina 2019 Edge Hexham Northumberland Bloodaxe Books ISBN 978 1 78037 490 1 OCLC 1090281455 Poetry Readings by BBC Broadcasters Julian May and Katrina Porteous Lewis and Clark University Retrieved 2 May 2020 Poetry Please Special Edge Poetry Please 15 December 2013 BBC Radio 4 a b Interview Katrina Porteous on Field narcmagazine com Retrieved 5 September 2020 Imagining the Sun NUSTEM Retrieved 5 September 2020 Alikivi Gary 27 April 2019 SOME KIND OF MAGIC with Northumberland poet writer amp broadcaster Katrina Porteous ALIKIVI Retrieved 5 September 2020 Northumbria brings Antarctica s unseen world to the screen Mynewsdesk Retrieved 26 June 2021 Peter Zinovieff and Lucy Railton RFG City University of London 22 November 2016 Retrieved 2 May 2020 Releases PAN 2020 Retrieved 2 May 2020 a b Simpson Paul Lucy Railton at AllMusic a b Peter Zinovieff Album Discography at AllMusic Synth inventor Peter Zinovieff to release early years retrospective The EMS Tapes Fact 11 May 2015 Retrieved 26 June 2021 Listening Space documenta 14 Retrieved 6 July 2021 Thyssen Bornemisza Art Contemporary www tba21 org Retrieved 6 July 2021 TBA21 Academy Fishing For Islands www tba21 org Retrieved 6 July 2021 a b South Pacific Migration Party by Peter Zinovieff The Association for Depth Sound Recordings Retrieved 6 July 2021 Home Alumni and supporters Honorary award holders Peter Zinovieff Anglia Ruskin University 2015 Archived from the original on 18 August 2022 Retrieved 1 May 2020 a b c Beaumont Thomas Ben 26 June 2021 Peter Zinovieff British composer and synth pioneer dies aged 88 The Guardian London Retrieved 26 June 2021 Richards Will 26 June 2021 Synthesiser pioneer and composer Peter Zinovieff dies aged 88 New Musical Express Retrieved 26 June 2021 Pinsent Ed 17 February 2009 Chronometer Recovered The Sound Projector www thesoundprojector com Retrieved 19 June 2020 Aisha Orazbayeva Outside Discogs Retrieved 5 September 2020 Hunter Tilney Ludovic 6 August 2021 Peter Zinovieff South Pacific Migration Party whales meet electronic waves Financial Times Retrieved 5 December 2021 Cybernetic Serendipity Music The Vinyl Factory Retrieved 19 June 2020 Recovery Discovery 40 years of surround electronic music in the UK London Sound and Music 2008 OCLC 638211038 retrieved 5 July 2020Further reading editSofka Skipwith Sofka the Autobiography of a Princess London Hart Davis 1968 OCLC 504549593 Autobiography by his mother Sofka Zinovieff Red Princess A Revolutionary Life London Granta 2007 ISBN 978 1 86207 919 9 Biography of his mother by his daughter External links editConversation with Peter Zinovieff Podcast at Radio Web MACBA 2019 Dr Peter Zinovieff 7 Deadly Synths Lecture for the Red Bull Music Academy London 2010 What the Future Sounded Like by Matthew Bate documentary about EMS and personnel Graham Hinton The EMS Story 2002 Peter Zinovieff and Cultures of Electronic Music by Tom Hall Bulletin oftheComputer Arts Society Spring 2013 Peter Zinovieff at IMDb Peter Zinovieff discography at Discogs Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peter Zinovieff amp oldid 1219889092, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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