Hugh Le Caine

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Dripsody 01:28 Tools
Short Presentation Of The 1948 Sackbut: The Sackbut Blues 03:30 Tools
Dripsody, 1955 00:00 Tools
Dripsody (1955) 01:28 Tools
Short Presentation of the 1948 Sackbut: The Sackbut Blues, Followed by a Noisome Pestilence 03:31 Tools
Ninety-Nine Generators 00:00 Tools
Invocation 00:00 Tools
Study No. 1 for Player Piano and Tape 00:00 Tools
Short Presentation of the 1948 Sackbut : the Sackbut Blues / A Noisome Pestilence 03:31 Tools
07 - Dripsody 00:00 Tools
A Noisome Pestilence 00:00 Tools
Music for Expo 00:00 Tools
Caine: Dripsody 01:28 Tools
Bird Spectrogram 00:00 Tools
Mobile: The Computer Laughed (Perpetual Motion) 00:00 Tools
Organ Experiment with Pitch Control 01:28 Tools
This Thing Called Key 00:00 Tools
Safari: Eine Kleine Klangfarbenmelodie 00:00 Tools
Arcane Presents Lulu 01:28 Tools
Paulution (Charnel Number Five) 00:00 Tools
Xmas Music: Organ Control for Automatic Light Display 00:00 Tools
Mal Clark Plays the Sackbut 00:00 Tools
Artificial Larynx, driven by Sackbut 00:00 Tools
Artificial Larynx 00:00 Tools
Sounds to Forget (excerpt) 01:28 Tools
Mouth Cavity Oscillator with MKI Touch Sensitive Organ 02:01 Tools
Dripsody - Hugh Le Caine 01:28 Tools
Improved Timbre Controls 00:00 Tools
Dripsody: An Etude For Variable Speed Recorder. Stereo Version (1957) 02:01 Tools
The Sackbut Blues 00:00 Tools
The Burning Deck (without words) (1958) 04:18 Tools
Coded Music Apparatus: Patterns on the Pitch Graph (automated Sackbut) (1955) 00:55 Tools
Nocturne 03:10 Tools
Rhapsody In Blue (G. Gershwin) 01:01 Tools
Attack and Volume 00:00 Tools
Textures 00:00 Tools
Dripsody: An Etude For Variable Speed Recorder (Mono Version) 01:33 Tools
Textures (1959) 01:26 Tools
Sugar Blues (C. McCoy) 01:06 Tools
Accents 00:00 Tools
Short Presentation of the 1948 Sackbut: The Sackbut Blues (1953) followed by A Noisome Pestilence (1958) 03:31 Tools
Repeated Notes 00:00 Tools
Nocturne (1962) 03:10 Tools
Attacks 00:00 Tools
Short Presentation Of The 1948 Sackbut 02:12 Tools
Hugh Le Caine - Dripsody, 1955 01:01 Tools
Independent Voicing 00:00 Tools
Sackbut String Quartet (C.W. Gluck, Arr. Le Caine) 02:12 Tools
Volume Changes 01:07 Tools
Dripsody (dj BC Remix) 02:59 Tools
The Burning Deck (Original Version, With Words) (1958) 04:38 Tools
Bill Farrow Plays The Sackbut (1946) 00:37 Tools
Bill Farrow Plays the Sackbut 04:08 Tools
The Burning Deck (Without Words) 04:08 Tools
Dripsody: An Etude for Variable Speed Recorder. Mono version (1955) 01:31 Tools
Dripsody Demonstration (1958) 05:43 Tools
Dripsody Demonstration 05:43 Tools
mobile 02:05 Tools
The Burning Deck (Original Version, With Words) 05:43 Tools
Dripsody: An Etude For Variable Speed Recorder, Mono Version. (1955) 01:31 Tools
Dripsody (Boundary Remix) 05:43 Tools
Mobile (1970) 02:05 Tools
1948 Sackbut Demonstration Tapes (1953): Rhapsody in Blue (G. Gershwin) 01:00 Tools
1948 Sackbut Demonstration Tapes (1953): Sackbut String Quartet (C.W. Gluck, arr. Le Caine) 02:14 Tools
Dripsody for variable speed tape recorder 01:28 Tools
Touch Sensitive Organ Demonstration Tapes (1955): Volume Changes 01:09 Tools
Touch Sensitive Organ Demonstration Tapes (1955): Repeated notes 00:57 Tools
1948 Sackbut Demonstration Tapes (1953): Sugar Blues (C. McCoy) 01:06 Tools
Touch Sensitive Organ Demonstration Tapes (1955): Attacks and Volume 02:07 Tools
Touch Sensitive Organ Demonstration Tapes (1955): Attacks 01:34 Tools
Touch Sensitive Organ Demonstration Tapes (1955): Accents 00:54 Tools
Short Presentation Of The 1948 Sackbut-The Sackbut Blues (1953) 03:31 Tools
Dripsody 1955 00:54 Tools
Touch Sensitive Organ Demonstration Tapes (1955): Independent Voicing 01:02 Tools
1948 Sackbut Demonstration Tapes (1953): The Sackbut Blues 01:21 Tools
Coded Music Apparatus: Patterns On The Pitch Graph (Automated Sacbut) (1955) 00:55 Tools
Short Presentation of the 1948 Sackbut: The Sackbut Blues/A ... 03:31 Tools
Short Presentation of the 1948 Sackbut: The Sackbut Blues / A Noisome Pestilence 03:31 Tools
short presentation of the 1948 sackbut: the sackbut blues followed by a noisome pestilence 03:31 Tools
Short Presentation of the 1948 Sackbut: the Sackbut Blues, a Noisome Pestilence 03:31 Tools
The Burning Deck 00:00 Tools
Dripsody: An Etude for Variable Speed Recorder 00:00 Tools
Short Presentation Of The 1948 Sackbut: The Sackbut Blues/A Noisome Pestilence 03:31 Tools
07 Textures (1959) 03:31 Tools
The Sackbut Blues (1953), Followed By A Noisome Pestilence (1958) 03:31 Tools
10 Music For Expo (1967) 03:31 Tools
08 Nocturne (1962) 03:31 Tools
Short Presentation Of The 1948 Sackbut : The Sackbut Blues (1953), Followed By A Noisome Pestilence (1958 ) 03:31 Tools
Hugh Le Caine - Dripsody (1955) 03:31 Tools
Short Presentation Of The 1948 Sackbutt : The sSackibutt Blues Followed By A Noisome Pestilence 03:31 Tools
Dripsody: An Etude For Variable Speed Recorder (Stereo Version) 03:31 Tools
Dripsody: An Étude for Variable Speed Recorder (mono version) 00:00 Tools
Artificial Larynx (1957) 00:00 Tools
Short Presentation of the 1948 Sackbut : The Sackbut Blues followed by A Noisome Pestilence 00:00 Tools
Happy Birthday 00:00 Tools
24 Coded Music Apparatus: Patterns On The Pitch Graph (Automated Sacbut) (1955) 00:00 Tools
36 Organ Experiment With Pitch Control (1956) 00:00 Tools
03 Invocation (1957) 00:00 Tools
20 Rhapsody In Blue (G. Gershwin) 00:00 Tools
Rhapsody in Blue 00:00 Tools
The Sackbut Blues / A Noisome Pestilence 00:00 Tools
Short presentation of the 1948 Sackbutt : The sackibutt blues followed by a noisome pestilence 03:31 Tools
18 Bill Farrow Plays The Sackbut (1946) 03:31 Tools
29 Accents 03:31 Tools
Bird Spectogram (1963) 03:31 Tools
Dripsody for Variable Speed Recorder (1955) 03:31 Tools
Improved Timbre Controls (1956 ca.) 03:31 Tools
Sackbut String Quartet 03:31 Tools
Artificial Larynx (1956 ca.) 00:00 Tools
Short Presentation of the 1948 00:00 Tools
02 Ninety-Nine Generators (1956) 00:00 Tools
05 The Burning Deck (Without Words) (1958) 00:00 Tools
Mal Clark Plays The Sackbut (n.d.) 00:00 Tools
12 Mobile: The Computer Laughed (Perpetual Motion) (1970) 00:00 Tools
22 Sackbut String Quartet (C.W. Gluck, Arr. Le Caine) 00:00 Tools
28 Volume Changes 00:00 Tools
Sackbut 00:00 Tools
Mobile-The Computer Laughed (1970) 00:00 Tools
17 Sounds To Forget (Excerpt) (1963) 00:00 Tools
01 Dripsody: An Etude For Variable Speed Recorder, Mono Version. (1955) 00:00 Tools
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Hugh Le Caine, a composer who studied music, particularly piano, and dreamed of applying scientific techniques to the invention of musical instruments. As early as 1937 Le Caine had designed an electronic free reed organ, and in 1945 he began to develop electronic instruments at his home studio in his spare time. His Electronic Sackbut, built at this time, is now recognized to have been the first synthesizer. It featured continuous controls for timbre and a keyboard that was sensitive to both vertical and horizontal pressure, affecting volume and pitch respectively. At least 20 years passed before similar instruments were available commercially. Le Caine was also developing a polyphonic touch sensitive organ and a device to play several tape recordings simultaneously. In 1954 he was permitted to develop these instruments through facilities at NRC. One of his first projects there was the development of the Multi-track (Special Purpose) Tape Recorder, capable of altering the playback speed of several recordings simultaneously, through a keyboard. In 1955 he composed his landmark piece Dripsody for this instrument, using only the sound of the fall of a single drop of water. Several different instruments followed, using varying techniques for generating and controlling sound. He co-operated in the installation of Canada's first electronic music studio (1959, University of Toronto) and another (1964) at McGill University and in 1966 gave the first of many seminars on his subject at these universities. In 1961 he developed equipment for the studio at Hebrew U, Jerusalem. Le Caine's works represent a duality of art and science: they extend the aesthetic field of electronic music while serving as clear demonstrations of the instruments he invented. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.