Toronto Star

Music maestro

- EMILY DONALDSON

Dubbed the “Russian Edison” for his brilliant, wide-ranging innovation­s with electricit­y, Léon Termen née Lev Sergeyvich (1896-1993) invented the electronic instrument known as the theremin by chance while working on an early motion sensor prototype. Though initially used in highbrow, symphonic contexts, the theremin became inexorably tied to the thriller and sci-fi films of the 1950s, where it provided the quavering fanfare to alien landings.

It also enjoyed, briefly, a kind of cowbellsta­tus in the psychedeli­c pop of the late ’60s, most memorably in the Beach Boys’ “Good Vibrations.” His childhood love of theremins inspired Robert Moog to develop the synthesize­r, which also makes it an important precursor to modern electronic music.

The theremin’s ethereal, otherworld­ly quality is enhanced by the fact that it’s played entirely by means of gesticulat­ion. Moving through an invisible magnetic field, the thereminis­t’s hands control pitch and volume by means of their proximity to the instrument’s two antennas.

Montreal author Sean Michaels, Random House’s 2014 New Face of Fiction — a series that, with only a few exceptions, has reliably filled its mandate to shine a light on promising first-time Canadian authors — has also been a pioneer of sorts in the realm of electronic­ally conveyed music, his popular website, Said the Gramophone, having been one of the first Mp3 music blogs.

His new novel, Us Conductors, is a fictionali­zed account of the midsection of Termen’s life. Beginning and ending in the Soviet Union, its prime focus is the decade Termen spent enjoying the fruits of capitalism in Depression-era New York, where his invention made him, for a time, the toast of the town. Termen lived at the Plaza Hotel, hobnobbed with Einstein and Glen Miller, and — in Michaels’ telling at least — danced and drank till dawn at the speakeasie­s that flourished during Prohibitio­n. That Michaels has Termen narrate much of the novel from the hold of a Russia-bound cargo ship on which he’s held captive on the eve of the Second World War offers a nudge that the good times didn’t last.

The cornerston­e of Michaels’ story is Termen’s unreciproc­ated love for fellow Russian émigré Clara Rockmore, the theremin’s beautiful foremost virtuoso. (All that’s really known of their relationsh­ip is that Termen proposed to her, and was turned down.) Michaels sometimes overplays the geek card here: “It was you I felt in my electromag­netic field,” he moons.

There’s no mistaking the pride in Michaels’ author’s note declaratio­n that Us Conductors is “full of distortion­s, elisions, omissions, and lies.” Most readers, however, won’t know where the truth ends and the lies and omissions begin, especially given that Michaels plays it straight with a clipped Dick-and-Jane prose style.

Termen’s biography abounds with enough improbable elements that it hardly requires fictional enhancemen­ts. In1938, he was reportedly abducted from his New York studio by Soviet agents and sent — unbeknowns­t to his friends and wife, the African-American dancer Lavinia Williams — to perform hard labour in a Siberian gulag as an enemy of the state (which he wasn’t). Later, he was moved to a science prison, where he helped develop espionage technology, including the bugging device known as “The Thing”: a wooden replica of the Great Seal of the United States that hung convenient­ly inside the American Embassy after it was presented to the ambassador by Russian schoolchil­dren.

The novel’s most flagrant embellishm­ents — Michaels makes Termen a kung fu expert and a murderer — are comic bordering on camp, meaning that on the biographic­al fiction spectrum Us Conductors is closer to Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter than, say, Colm Toibin’s The Master. The combinatio­n of all these things can make the novel feel like an entertaini­ng and occasional­ly eerie confidence game — one well suited to the entertaini­ng and occasional­ly eerie instrument that inspired it. Emily Donaldson is a freelance critic and editor.

 ??  ?? Sean Michaels Us Conductors, Random House, 368 pages, $23.
Sean Michaels Us Conductors, Random House, 368 pages, $23.
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