Los Angeles Times

A synth pioneer with wide reach

Producer’s invention generated new sounds in pop music spurred on by Stevie Wonder.

- By Randall Roberts

Though he was hardly a household name, the musician, producer and analog synthesize­r expert Malcolm Cecil’s inventive currents helped charge the electronic­s revolution in popular music.

Cecil, whose death at 84 was announced by the Bob

Moog Foundation, collaborat­ed with hundreds of artists including Stevie Wonder, Quincy Jones, Randy Newman, the Isley Brothers, Van Dyke Parks and Joan Baez. He died Sunday after what the foundation described as “a long illness.”

Though known for his work with other humans, Cecil’s most frequent collaborat­or was the Original New Timbral Orchestra (TONTO), a cockpit-looking analog synthesize­r workstatio­n that he and musical partner Robert Margouleff started building in 1968. Fu

eled by an agreement to share gear and knowledge, the communion powered a buffet’s worth of gear and generated the sounds on “Zero Time,” the influentia­l 1971 debut synthesize­r album by the pair’s Tonto’s Expanding Head Band.

“Our talents complement­ed each other because we came from opposite sides of the spectrum,” Cecil said in a 2017 interview. “I’d be focusing on a bass line and he would go to the other end of the instrument to start with white noise. As for who came up with what, we don’t know. We just found a method that made sense.”

Combined, the pair advanced the argument that early synthesize­rs, which at that point were mostly used by furrow-browed academics or producers of novelty records, could generate musical forms that drew on popular song structures while harnessing the machines’ repetitive metronomic strengths. Margouleff understood: He had produced the debut album by Lothar and the Hand People (1968), a tripped-out group whose namesake, Lothar, wasn’t a lead singer but an early tone generator called the theremin.

Famously, after Motown Records superstar Wonder first heard TONTO on “Zero Time,” he located its creators at Margouleff ’s studio, Media Sound. Cecil was an engineer there at the time, he told the Red Bull Music Academy in 2014, when he heard the doorbell ring.

He looked out and saw “my friend Ronnie and a guy that turns out to be Stevie Wonder in a green-pistachio jumpsuit and what looks like my album under his arm. Ronnie says, ‘Hey, Malcolm, got somebody here who wants to see TONTO.’ ”

Wonder got a demonstrat­ion, was inspired and suggested a session. Across one weekend they set to tape 17 songs. At first Wonder asked Cecil to play upright bass. After a few takes, Cecil recalled in the 2014 Red Bull interview, he pitched Wonder

on the idea that the music “wanted a different bass sound. He said, ‘Can you get it?’ I said, ‘I can get it on the synthesize­r.’ ” By the time Wonder stepped into TONTO, Cecil had gathered enough musical and circuitgen­erated ideas to impress the best.

Born Jan. 9, 1937, in preWorld War II London, Cecil was a ham radio enthusiast by 9 and served as an engineer in the Royal Air Force while becoming an expert jazz player. In his 20s he joined saxophonis­t and radio personalit­y Ronnie Scott’s band before shifting styles and co-founding the electrifie­d proto-rock band Blues Incorporat­ed. A born explorer, Cecil jumped from England to South Africa before landing in San Francisco in the mid-1960s and, after a period in Los Angeles working at crooner-entreprene­ur Pat Boone’s recording studio, moved to New York and started modulating.

A 1971 review in Record World magazine captured the sense of wonder that TONTO could inspire during rare live performanc­es. Calling it “one

of the weirder combinatio­ns of talent and concert hall in recent memory,” writer Mike Sigman described an instrument that “seemed capable of making virtually any sound at any speed,” including “crashing, never-beforehear­d electronic sounds.”

The original TONTO had a kind of ignition switch, and that first weekend with Wonder accelerate­d TONTO’s use in contempora­ry music.

As Wonder told A&E’s “Biography” in 2008, “The reason that I got involved with the synthesize­r was because I had ideas in my head and I wanted those ideas to be heard, and I could have Bob and Malcolm and various programmer­s that I worked with” help manifest those ideas.

Those who have rocked at full volume to Wonder’s “Superstiti­on” have heard the three-man collaborat­ion at work. Though it’s tough to hear the synthetics behind all that funk, it’s driven by a Moog bass line, and other synths add color to some measures, most notably as the song is fading to a close. As with the entirety of “Talking

Book,” the song was produced by Wonder with Cecil and Margouleff. A more evident example of that collaborat­ion can be found on Wonder’s song “Evil,” which closes his classic 1972 album “Music of My Mind.”

Wonder’s 1973 album “Innervisio­ns” found him and his co-producers exploding TONTO’s funk potential, the evidence being “Higher Ground” and “Living for the City.” Cecil’s work with Margouleff and Wonder on the album earned them a Grammy in the engineered recording, nonclassic­al category.

The collaborat­ion came to an end in 1974. Cecil left after an in-session disagreeme­nt about having too many people in the studio, and his partner followed a few weeks later, but the frustratio­ns had been building.

Despite their collaborat­ions with Wonder, Margouleff said in a 2018 interview with Reverb that, financiall­y, the arrangemen­t didn’t favor Wonder’s collaborat­ors. “We really felt we should have been able to participat­e in the royalties on his records, and he did not feel the same way about it. The reality is that those four albums were produced by me, Malcolm, and Stevie, and that’s the truth.”

By then TONTO had become a circuitous beast that included machines made by Moog, ARP, Oberheim, Roland and Yamaha; drum controller­s, sequencers and, later, MIDI converters; and thick gauge wire procured from surplus supplies made for the Apollo mission and Boeing 747 manufactur­ing.

Those familiar with Brian De Palma’s cult classic film “Phantom of the Paradise” have seen TONTO in action. It provides the setting for a wild scene in which protagonis­t Winslow Leach, donning a silver owl’s mask, performs a surreally ridiculous song on the contraptio­n. (Cecil was said to be furious at TONTO’s unauthoriz­ed appearance in the film.)

Though Wonder’s work marked TONTO’s most prominent recorded appearance, Cecil earned synthesize­r or production credits on albums by artists as varied as James Taylor, Mandrill, the Isley Brothers, Gil Scott-Heron and Minnie Riperton. Most notably to many in the Wonder-loving community, Cecil and Margouleff co-produced, with Wonder, “Syreeta,” the essential soul-funk album by Syreeta Wright. The singer was married to Wonder when TONTO was inspiring his creativity, and Wright, her husband and TONTO used the album as an experiment­al playground.

“Syreeta” is far from Cecil and Margouleff ’s most popular work with Wonder, but it typifies their collective creativity. In the Reverb interview, Margouleff compared the trio of kindred creators to “three meteors in the sky and they’re all flying towards one other. And for one brief second there’s this huge bright light when all three meteors cross paths at the same time and there’s just this brilliant flash ... and it just goes away. That’s how it was with me, Steve, and Malcolm.”

 ?? Daniel Knighton WireImage ?? MUSIC INNOVATOR Malcolm Cecil plays a Moog synthesize­r at an Anaheim trade show in 2015. The synth expert helped lead an electronic­s revolution in pop music.
Daniel Knighton WireImage MUSIC INNOVATOR Malcolm Cecil plays a Moog synthesize­r at an Anaheim trade show in 2015. The synth expert helped lead an electronic­s revolution in pop music.

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