Suzanne Ciani | Selector https://selector.news The Electronic Music Journal Tue, 21 Sep 2021 12:18:52 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.5 https://selector.news/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cropped-selectorIcon-32x32.png Suzanne Ciani | Selector https://selector.news 32 32 Suzanne Ciani to Release 2020 Buchla Synth Performance on Quadrophonic Vinyl https://selector.news/2021/09/21/suzanne-ciani-improvisation-four-sequences-festival-antigel/ https://selector.news/2021/09/21/suzanne-ciani-improvisation-four-sequences-festival-antigel/#respond Tue, 21 Sep 2021 12:18:52 +0000 https://selector.news/?p=9464 Early electronic musician Suzanne Ciani enjoyed renewed popularity before COVID-19 derailed the events industry in 2020. The “Diva of the Diode” has announced the quadrophonic vinyl release of one of her final performances during that time on her own label, Atmospheric.

Improvisation on Four Sequences at Festival Antigel was recorded in January 2020 when Ciani performed on a quadrophonic sound system at the Geneva, Switzerland event. She played on her trademark Buchla 200e synth as well as the Animoog iPad app.

“I didn’t know at the time that concert touring would disappear and that a pandemic would suddenly end my live Buchla performance era that had had a resurgence in 2016,” reads Ciani’s description. “For those years, I flew around the world, toting my Buchla 200e in checked baggage and prayed that it would survive the trip: Melbourne, Tokyo, London, Santiago, New York and on and on until this year when the world changed.”

Included with the album is a hardware decoder allowing playback of the quadrophonic vinyl. Ciani acknowledges that it may not be enough for everyday fans to enjoy the release, so it’s also available in 5.1, stereo and ambisonic formats – all at 44.1 and 88.2 kHz.

Improvisation on Four Sequences at Festival Antigel is available for purchase in digital format via Suzanne Ciani Bandcamp. Pre-order the quadrophonic vinyl album via Rush Hour.

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6 Key Women in Early Electronic Music https://selector.news/2021/03/08/6-women-early-electronic-music/ https://selector.news/2021/03/08/6-women-early-electronic-music/#respond Tue, 09 Mar 2021 00:26:40 +0000 https://selector.news/?p=7470 The electronic music community has made significant strides in gender equality over the years. Much work still remains to be done, to be sure. The perpetuation stigmas around female artists is less socially accepted than before, though, and the #MeToo movement has increased accountability in instances of harassment and abuse.

Aspiring female electronic musicians now have many more women role models to look up to. RebakahLouisahh and The Blessed Madonna are but a few artists famous not only for their music but as strong voices in the community. Although a 2019 study by L’Appel Du 8 Mars found women still significantly underrepresented in billings and releases, the authors nonetheless acknowledged that progress has been made to reduce the gender gap in several key markets.

It’s a welcome difference considering the obstacles faced by women decades ago. With the odds stacked against them, it bears mentioning that some of electronic music’s earliest and often overlooked pioneers were themselves female.

Despite heavier cultural pressures not to pursue interests in STEM fields – and, in some cases, music composition in general – women made landmark contributions to electronic music 40+ years ago that paved the way for today’s artists irrespective of gender. The below innovators are all the more worthy of recognition as their niche interest had yet to gain momentum as a youth culture movement at the times of their achievements.

6. Delia Derbyshire

Delia Derbyshire documentary still Zopf PR

Born in 1937 in Coventry, England, Delia Derbyshire was best known for her work with BBC Radiophonic Workshop starting in 1960. In particular, she played a key role in composing the iconic theme song for the television show Doctor Who, which first aired in 1963. Open Culture notes that her later recordings influenced the likes of Aphex Twin, The Chemical Brothers and Orbital.

Until she died of renal failure in 2001, Derbyshire’s full legacy was scarcely known. 267 reel-to-reel tapes and 1,000 papers were found in her attic after her death, spurring journalists and filmmakers to immortalize her contributions. Among them was the 2003 documentary BBC Radiophonic Workshop: The Alchemists Of Sound, and more recently Delia Derbyshire: The Myths And The Legendary Tapes as well as Sisters with Transistors.

5. Pauline Anna Strom

Pauline Anna Strom black and white

Blind since her birth in 1945, Pauline Anna Strom‘s unique experience of the world led her to an early interest in classical music. She married her husband, Robert, in 1970, and began composing music with synthesizers and a four-track recorder upon relocating to the Bay Area shortly thereafter.

Strom’s first and perhaps most famous album arrived in the form of Trans-Millenia Consort via Ether Ship Records in 1982. Over the next six years, she released six more albums via Consort Recordings that occupied a futuristic space between drone, ambient and experimental.

Financial difficulty led Strom to sell all of her music equipment after her 1988 album, Mach 3.04, and pursue work as a Reiki practitioner. Her recording career saw renewed attention when RVNG Intl. reissued Trans-Millenia Consort in 2017 and released her first album in 30 years, Angel Tears in Sunlight, in 2021. She passed away mere months before the latter.

4. Suzanne Ciani

Suzanne Ciani Black and White Photo

Suzanne Ciani – or the “Diva of the Diode,” as she came to be known – was born in 1946 in Indiana and raised in Quincy, Massachusetts. She studied composition at the University of California, Berkely in the late ’60s, where she met and began working for synthesizer pioneer Don Buchla.

Ciani first landed a gig as a composer for Macy’s advertisements in 1969 , but she released her debut album, Voices of Packaged Souls, the following year. Throughout the ’70s she was afforded numerous high-profile performance opportunities, and in the ’80s she appeared on The David Letterman Show in addition to releasing albums like Seven WavesThe Velocity of Love and Neverland.

To this day, Ciani continues to enjoy notoriety as an electronic musician. In 2020 she contributed a song for a short video advertisement accompanying the release of Mood Music‘s synthesizer The Subharmonicon, and the same year a 1973 film score she composed on her Buchla was rereleased as Music For Denali by Finders Keepers Records.

3. Laurie Spiegel

Laurie Spiegel synthesizer black and white

Born in Chicago in 1945, Laurie Spiegel is one of the artists most closely associated with the new-music scene of New York. In the late ’60s she studied at Shimer College before transferring to Oxford University and then studying at Juilliard School from 1969-1972.

Spiegel is perhaps best known for her use of algorithmic logic as a composer, as well as for developing the Music Mouse software in 1986. She also supported herself teaching music composition as well as additional teaching at Cooper Union and New York University.

“We women were especially drawn to electronic music when the possibility of a woman composing was in itself controversial,” said Spiegel ahead of the Sisters with Transistors premiere. “Electronics let us make music that could be heard by others without having to be taken seriously by the male-dominated establishment.”

2. Wendy Carlos

Wendy Carlos black and white

Wendy Carlos was born Walter Carlos in 1939 in Rhode Island and studied physics at Brown University before transferring to Columbia University to major in music composition. She played a key role in the development Bob Moog‘s flagship product, the Moog Synthesizer, after meeting him during her time at the latter school.

Carlos’ debut album was 1968’s Switched-On Bach, which comprised renditions of Johann Sebastian Bach songs performed on a Moog. Shortly thereafter, she scored films like Marooned in 1969 and A Clockwork Orange in 1971.

In addition to the obstacles facing female composers in the ’60s and ’70s, Wendy Carlos lived as a trans woman during that period. She publicly revealed in a 1979 Playboy interview conducted by Arthur Bell that she had identified as female since 1968 and underwent sex reassignment surgery in 1972.

1. Clara Rockmore

Clara Rockmore Theremin black and white

Born in Vilnius, Russia in 1911, Lithuanian Clara Rockmore boasts the earliest career of any electronic musician on this list by a wide margin. From early childhood she showed great promise as a violin prodigy, but tendonitis forced her to give up playing as a teenager after she relocated to Philadelphia to attend the Curtis Institute of Music.

That didn’t stop Rockmore from pursuing her craft. She met Russian inventor Léon Theremin, whose electronic instrument, the Theremin, did not require physical touch to be played. She would become widely considered the greatest Theremin virtuoso alive for her pitch control, and she aided Léon in refining the device as well as delivering performances that encouraged critics to take electronic and experimental more seriously. He proposed to her, but she married Robert Rockmore in 1933.

Although she played major venues since the ’30s, Rockmore did not officially release a recording until The Art of the Theremin in 1977. She died in 1998 after a rapid decline in health – only two days before the birth of her great grandniece, whom she declared she would live to meet.

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New Documentary, Sisters with Transistors, Highlights Female Pioneers of Electronic Music https://selector.news/2020/10/15/sisters-transistors-docn-roll-film-festival-debut/ https://selector.news/2020/10/15/sisters-transistors-docn-roll-film-festival-debut/#respond Thu, 15 Oct 2020 18:08:01 +0000 https://selector.news/?p=4647 A new documentary that highlights the contributions of electronic music’s female pioneers is set to debut next month. With a focus on some of the movement’s biggest contributors like Laurie SpiegelDelia Derbyshire, and Suzanne Ciani, the film – titled Sisters with Transistors – will premiere at The Barbican Theatre on the November 14th.

“We women were especially drawn to electronic music when the possibility of a woman composing was in itself controversial,” said Spiegel of the film. “Electronics let us make music that could be heard by others without having to be taken seriously by the male-dominated establishment.”

Sisters with Transistors aims to reveal an often overlooked aspect of electronic music history. While the movement may be portrayed as something that men had created and innovated, the documentary highlights integral inventors, contributors, and pioneers of the scene whose work shaped the evolving soundscapes of contemporary culture.

The documentary will premiere as a part of Doc’n Roll Film Festival‘s seventh annual event. That screening is already sold out, but a second screening will be held the following day and also include the Q&A session with director Lisa Rovner.

Tickets for the November 15th viewing of Sisters With Transistors are available beginning October 19th and can be found on the Doc’n Roll Film Festival website.

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Unheard Suzanne Ciani Songs from 1973 Released in New Album, Music For Denali https://selector.news/2020/07/24/suzanne-ciani-music-denali-finders-keepers/ https://selector.news/2020/07/24/suzanne-ciani-music-denali-finders-keepers/#respond Fri, 24 Jul 2020 20:02:25 +0000 https://selector.news/?p=3037 One of Suzanne Ciani‘s earliest movie scores will be released for the first time by Finders Keepers RecordsMusic For Denali comprises works commissioned in 1973 for a documentary about the mountain. It releases August 7th, 2020.

Ciani composed the music appearing on the album using only a Buchla synthesizer and piano. It followed her debut 1970 album, Voices of Packaged Souls, and preceded her first-ever Buchla concerts in 1974 and 1975. Finders Keepers have shared the title track of the album, which pairs the synthesizer’s undulating melodies with crisp piano keys.

“It was recorded at Rainbow Recording, which is the studio I found and shared with recording engineer Richard Beggs, who then sold it to Francis Ford Coppola after I fell in love and quickly moved to L.A.,” Ciani said in a quote obtained by Resident Advisor. “If I had stuck around I would have probably ended up doing sound for Coppola.”

Suzanne Ciani Revisited

Often called the “Diva of the Diode” or “America’s first female synth hero,” Suzanne Ciani’s career preceded electronic music’s breakthrough as a youth culture movement. Born in 1946, she found her first work composing music for advertisements in 1969.

By the ’80s, Ciani began to garner recognition beyond getting commissioned to write commercial jingles. Her musicianship landed her on PBS programs as well as The David Letterman Show. More recently, she was enlisted to soundtrack a short film to promote Moog‘s new synthesizer, the Subharmonicon.

Pre-order Music For Denali across platforms here.

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KORG Shares Quarantine Cookbook with Recipes by Objekt, Suzanne Ciani and Others https://selector.news/2020/05/20/korg-germany-pyjama-cookbook-objekt-suzanne-ciani/ https://selector.news/2020/05/20/korg-germany-pyjama-cookbook-objekt-suzanne-ciani/#respond Wed, 20 May 2020 22:24:45 +0000 https://selector.news/?p=2314 An unlikely publisher has sought to lighten the mood with acollaboration between notable electronic musicians. KORG Germany has shared The Pyjama Cookbook: A guide to self-feeding for free as an off-brand distraction during COVID-19 quarantines.

Each recipe in the cookbook has been offered up by a different producer. Among the more notable contributors are ObjektSuzanne CianiAlva Noto, and Interstellar Funk. KORG Germany CEO Tatsuya Takahashi wrote the foreword and delivered a recipe of his own.

 

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Introducing The Pyjama Cookbook – a free digital cookbook from the Korg Germany team where we share the favourite food and drink concoctions of our friends from all parts of music, in the hope of instilling solidarity and encouraging friendship during these extraordinary times. View and download the cookbook via http://korg.berlin – link in bio. Enjoy! Design: #DanSolbach Music via www.bensound.com Featuring recipes from @alisontavel @alvanoto @afrorack @caryshuws #DaveSmith @deradoom @dorian_concept #FumioMieda #GirtsOzolins #GudrunGut @hielehiele @interstellarfunk @loopopmusic @lydissee @marco_passarani @markverbos @donmatiasaguayo #MaxemilianRest #MortonSubotnick @joanlabarbara @pkirn #PiotraRaczynski #SolitaryDancer @sevwave @audiopotato @thomas_fehlmann @objekttt @vasek_matejovsky @verenagl_p @bastlinstruments @ericasynths @madeinpolyend @sequential_llc @verboselectronics

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“As our small team of Verena, Lydia, Max and I clamber to get KORG Germany off the ground, we occasionally swap cooking recipes,” Takahashi wrote. “What a lifesaver. Because who isn’t tired of their own cooking by now? And why not collect more and share? The aim of The Pyjama Cookbook is to share the favorite concoctions from our friends from all parts of music, in the hope of instilling solidarity and encouraging friendship during these extraordinary times. Well. It’s also just for laughs. Have fun.”

The Pyjama Cookbook: A guide to self-feeding is available on the KORG Germany website.

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Suzanne Ciani Scores Short Film with New Moog Synthesizer, The Subharmonicon https://selector.news/2020/05/13/suzanne-ciani-moog-subharmonicon-music-living-matter/ https://selector.news/2020/05/13/suzanne-ciani-moog-subharmonicon-music-living-matter/#respond Wed, 13 May 2020 01:26:00 +0000 https://selector.news/?p=2189 Moog Music enlisted the help of an innovator from early electronic music for help promoting their newest piece of equipment. Suzanne Ciani contributed the music for a short film titled Music as Living Matter using their semi-modular analogue synthesizer, The Subharmonicon.

Accompanying retrofuturistic visuals by Scott Kiernan for the duration of the video is a tranquil soundscape composed by Ciani using the instrument. A female spoken-word vocal sample touches on philosophical matters around music as gentle plucks turn to bright undulations, warping into a series of different waveforms by the end of the song.

Diva of the Diode

Suzanne Ciani’s career in electronic music extends back since before it took hold as a youth culture phenomenon in several countries. Born in Indiana in 1946, she first her first work as a composer for advertisements in 1969.

Ciani released her debut album, Voices of Packaged Souls, in 1970, and she worked both as a session musician and in commercial jingles throughout the rest of the ’70s. In the ’80s she earned considerable recognition appearing on PBS programs as well as The David Letterman Show, earning her the nicknames “Diva of the Diode” and “America’s first female synth hero.”

More information on The Subharmonicon can be found on the Moog Music website.

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