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From
the beginning, composer and synthesist Wendy Carlos has not
followed a conventional music course. Born in Pawtucket,
R.I., she started piano lessons at age 6 and exhibited
talents for graphic arts and the sciences, winning a
Westinghouse Science Fair scholarship for a home built
computer. After pursuing a hybrid major in music and physics
at Brown
University, she
earned an M.A. in music composition at Columbia
University,
studying with pioneers Otto Luening and Vladimir Ussachevsky
at the first electronic music center in the U.S.A. Upon
graduation, Carlos worked as a recording engineer and
befriended Robert Moog (who currently manufactures many
instruments at Big
Briar,) becoming
one of his first clients.
In collaboration with
Rachel Elkind, who served as her producer for a dozen years,
Carlos hit platinum sales status with her 1968 recording
Switched-On
Bach, which
propelled the Moog synthesizer into the public consciousness
and won three Grammy Awards. She refined her techniques in
The Well-Tempered
Synthesizer,
and introduced the use of vocoders for synthesized singing
in her score for Stanley Kubrick's film, A Clockwork Orange,
long before space war movies made synthetic voices common.
Her haunting Sonic Seasonings in 1972 predated the now
popular environmental-ambient forms of New Age music by over
a decade.
After recording several
more albums in a classical vein, Carlos wrote horror music
for Kubrick's The
Shining, and
composed the score for the 1982 Disney film Tron.
The latter score established a continuous blend between
symphonic orchestra and digital and analog synthesizers, an
often imitated combination. Digital
Moonscapes
followed in 1984, introducing the "LSI Philharmonic
Orchestra," a digital replica of orchestral timbres
virtually indistinguishable from their acoustic instrumental
counterparts.
In 1986, Carlos turned
to a lifelong interest in alternate scales and musical
tunings, combining music from old world cultures with new
ideas in Beauty
In The Beast,.
She next collaborated with (Weird) Al Yankovic on a humorous
musical album, coupling a parody of Prokofiev's
Peter
and the Wolf
with a whimsical extension of a Saint-Saens classic, called
Carnival of the Animals - Part Two. This tongue-in-cheek
blend of verbal and musical parody continued her LSI
Philharmonic timbres and orchestral recreation, was
performed directly into a Macintosh computer, using all the
latest MIDI and SMPTE technology, allowing both precision
and human feel in the instrumental ensembles.
With 1992's
Switched-On
Bach 2000.
Carlos came full circle by applying modern techniques and
equipment to look back at her early classic, this time using
the non-equal temperaments Bach himself preferred. It
provides listeners with an opportunity to experience how far
the new medium progressed in 25 years, and contains a
performance of the much-requested Toccata & Fugue in d
minor.
Over 1992-1995, in
collaboration with synthesist and friend Larry
Fast, Carlos
developed a state-of-the-art digital process of soundtrack
restoration and surround stereo conversion called:
Digi-Surround Stereo Sound. The novel techniques have proven
invaluable on recent film and music projects, and in the
remasterings of older works.
The latest works by
Wendy Carlos are Tales
of Heaven & Hell,
an unusual musical dramatic work which combines themes from
A Clockwork Orange with a dark and forbidding gothic Mass,
and the score to the British film, Woundings. She is
also remastering most of her back catalog for reissue on
East Side Digital, with many albums available on CD for the
first time. The first two of these were Clockwork
Orange, the
Complete Carlos Score, and the constantly requested
Sonic
Seasonings. The
most extensive album project is the definitive
boxed
set collection of her pioneering Bach & Baroque
albums. More recent
remasterings include Beauty
in the Beast, and
Digital
Moonscapes.
The latest remasterings
have included all of the unbundled Bach and Baroque albums
in new editions just as you remembered them:
Switched-On
Bach,
The
Well-Tempered Synthesizer,
Switched-On
Bach II, and the
2-CD set, Switched-On
Brandenburgs. A
definitive edition of the score to Disney's
TRON has also been
released. All of these Hi-D 20-bit ESD albums are
Enhanced-CDs, containing expanded historical notes as well
as previously unreleased bonus material. Further re-releases
and new albums have continued, including By
Request and
Secrets
of Synthesis, a new
edition of Switched-On
Bach 2000, and two
brand new albums of Rediscovered
Lost Scores,
filmscore music never before available.
Among her other recent
projects is the year long design and construction of a
custom hybrid musical assembly, the four manual
WurliTzer
II. This combines
the finest of pipe organ technology with the latest digital
synths in one convenient package, allowing the spontaneity
of a live instrument. She has been continuing to develop the
skills to play the instrument, as it evolves and is expanded
continually, while at the same time composing new music for
it. It is likely to appear on her next album project, in one
way or another.
In April of 2005, Wendy
was presented with the SEAMUS
2005 Life Achievement Award,
in recognition of her groundbreaking work in the electro
acoustic world since the '60s. She has delivered papers at
New York University, the Audio Engineering Society's Digital
Audio Conference, Dolby's NYC Surround Sound demonstration
and panel, and other music/audio conferences. Carlos is a
member of the Audio
Engineering Society,
the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers, and
the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences. Carlos
consults for several Macintosh developers including
Mark
of the Unicorn,
Opcode, and Coda,
has designed PostScript music fonts for Casady & Greene,
and has developed libraries and tunings for Kurzweil/Young
Chang. Other interests include solar
eclipse chasing,
surround
sound, astronomy,
color
vision,
photography
and other visual
arts,
map
making, reading,
gourmet food, film, and a love of animals.
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