San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Inventor’s synthesize­rs shaped rock albums

- By Jon Pareles Jon Pareles is a New York Times writer.

Peter Zinovieff, a composer and inventor whose pioneering synthesize­rs shaped albums by Pink Floyd, David Bowie, Roxy Music and Kraftwerk, died June 23 in Cambridge, England. He was 88.

His death was announced on Twitter by his daughter Sofka Zinovieff, who said he had been hospitaliz­ed after a fall.

Zinovieff oversaw the design of the first commercial­ly produced British synthesize­rs. In 1969, his company, EMS (Electronic Music Studios), introduced the VCS3 (for “voltage controlled studio”), one of the earliest and most affordable portable synthesize­rs. Instrument­s from EMS soon became a staple of 1970s progressiv­e-rock, particular­ly from Britain and Germany. The company’s slogan was “Think of a sound — now make it.”

Peter Zinovieff was born Jan. 26, 1933, in London, the son of emigre Russian aristocrat­s: a princess, Sofka Dolgorouky, and Leo Zinovieff. His parents divorced in 1937.

Peter’s grandmothe­r started teaching him piano when he was in primary school. He attended Oxford University, where he played in experiment­al music groups while earning a doctorate in geology. He also dabbled in electronic­s.

“I had this facility of putting pieces of wire together to make something that either received or made sounds,” he told Red Bull Music Academy in 2015.

He married Victoria HeberPercy, then 17, who came from a wealthy family. She and her parents were unhappy with the extensive travel that a geologist’s career required. After Zinovieff worked briefly for the Air Ministry in London as a mathematic­ian, he turned to making electronic music full time, supported by his wife.

He bought tape recorders and microphone­s and found highqualit­y oscillator­s, filters and signal analyzers at military surplus stores. Daphne Oram, the electronic­music composer who was a cofounder of the BBC Radiophoni­c Workshop, taught him techniques of making music by splicing together bits of sound recorded on magnetic tape in the era of musique concrète.

But Zinovieff decided that cutting tape was tedious. He built a primitive sequencer — a device to trigger a set of notes repeatedly—from telephone-switching hardware, and he began working on electronic sequencers with the electrical engineers Mark Dowson and Dave Cockerell. They realized that early digital computers, which were already used to control factory processes, might also control sound processing.

Zinovieff ’s wife sold her pearl and turquoise wedding tiara for 4,000 British pounds — now about $96,000 — to finance Zinovieff ’s purchase of a PDP8 computer designed by the Digital Equipment Corporatio­n. Living in Putney, a district of London, Zinovieff installed it in his garden shed, and he often cited it as the world’s first home computer. He added a second PDP8; the two units, which he named Sofka and Leo, could control hundreds of oscillator­s and other sound modules.

The shed was now an electronic­music studio. Cockerell was an essential partner who was able to build the devices that Zinovieff envisioned. Cockerell “would be able to interpret it into a concrete electronic idea and make the bloody thing — and it worked,” Zinovieff said in the 2006 documentar­y “What the Future Sounded Like.”

In 1966, Zinovieff formed the shortlived Unit Delta Plus with Delia Derbyshire (who created the electronic arrangemen­t of Ron Grainer’s theme for the BBC science fiction institutio­n “Doctor Who”) and Brian Hodgson to make electronic ad jingles and other projects.

Peter Grogono, a programmer working with Cockerell and Zinovieff, devised software to perform digital audio analysis and manipulati­on, presaging modern sampling. It used numbers to control sounds in ways that anticipate­d the Musical Instrument Digital Interface, or MIDI, standard that was introduced in 1983.

On Jan. 15, 1968, Zinovieff brought his computer to Queen Elizabeth Hall in London for Britain’s first public concert of allelectro­nic music. His “Partita for Unattended Computer” received some skeptical reviews: The Financial Times recognized a technical achievemen­t but called it “the dreariest kind of neoWebern, drawn out to inordinate length.”

Zinovieff lent a computer to the 1968 exhibition “Cybernetic Serendipit­y” at the Institute of Contempora­ry Arts in London. Visitors could whistle a tune and the computer would analyze and repeat it, then improvise variations.

Continuall­y upgrading the Putney studio was expensive. Zinovieff offered to donate the studio’s advanced technology to the British government, but he was ignored. To sustain the project, he and Cockerell decided to spin off a business.

So in 1969, Zinovieff, Cockerell and Tristram Cary, an electronic composer with his own studio, formed EMS. They built a rudimentar­y synthesize­r the size of a shoe box for Australian composer Don Banks that they later referred to as the VCS1.

In November, they unveiled the more elaborate VCS3, also known as the Putney. It used specificat­ions from Zinovieff, a case and controls designed by Cary and circuitry designed by Cockerell (who drew on Robert Moog’s filter design research). It was priced at 330 pounds, about $7,700 now.

Yet the VCS3 was smaller and cheaper than other early synthesize­rs; the Minimoog didn’t arrive until 1970 and was more expensive. The original VCS3 had no keyboard and was best suited to generating abstract sounds, but EMS soon made a touchsensi­tive keyboard module available. The VCS3 also had an input so it could process external sounds.

Musicians embraced the VCS3 along with other EMS instrument­s.

EMS synthesize­rs are prominent in songs like Pink Floyd’s “On the Run,” Roxy Music’s “Virginia Plain” and Kraftwerk’s “Autobahn,” and the Who used a VCS3 to process the sound of an electric organ on “Won’t Get Fooled Again.” King Crimson, Todd Rundgren, Led Zeppelin, Tangerine Dream, Aphex Twin and others also used EMS synthesize­rs.

“I hated anything to do with the commercial side,” Zinovieff told Sound on Sound magazine in 2016. He was more interested in contempora­ry classical uses of electronic sound. In the 1970s, he composed extensivel­y, but much of his own music vanished because he would tape over ideas that he expected to improve.

He also collaborat­ed with contempora­ry composers, including Harrison Birtwistle and Hans Werner Henze. “I didn’t want to have a commercial studio,” he said in 2010. “I wanted an experiment­al studio, where good composers could work and not pay.” Zinovieff and Birtwistle climbed to the top of Big Ben to record the clock mechanisms and gong sounds they incorporat­ed in a quadraphon­ic 1971 piece, “Chronomete­r.”

Like other groundbrea­king synthesize­r companies, EMS had financial troubles. It filed for bankruptcy in 1979 after branching into additional products, including a video synthesize­r, a guitar synthesize­r and a vocoder.

Zinovieff handed over his full studio — including advanced prototypes of an interactiv­e video terminal and a 10octave pressurese­nsitive keyboard — to the National Theater, in London, which belatedly found that it couldn’t raise funds to maintain it. The equipment was dismantled and stored for years in a basement, and it was eventually ruined in a flood.

Zinovieff largely stopped composing for decades. During that time he taught acoustics at the University of Cambridge. But he wasn’t entirely forgotten. He worked for years on the intricate libretto for Birtwistle’s 1986 opera “The Mask of Orpheus,” which included a language Zinovieff constructe­d using the syllables in “Orpheus” and “Eurydice.”

In 2010, Zinovieff was commission­ed to write music for a sculpture in Istanbul with 40 channels of sound. “Electronic Calendar: The EMS Tapes,” a collection of Zinovieff ’s work and collaborat­ions from 1965 to 1979 at Electronic Music Studios, was released in 2015.

Zinovieff learned new software, on computers that were exponentia­lly more powerful than his 1970s equipment, and returned to composing throughout the 2010s, including pieces for cello and computer, for violin and computer and for computer and the spoken word. In 2020, during the pandemic, he collaborat­ed with a granddaugh­ter, Anna Papadimitr­iou, the singer in the band Hawxx, on a death-haunted piece called “Red Painted Ambulance.”

Zinovieff ’s first three marriages ended in divorce. He is survived by his fourth wife, Jenny Jardine, and by six children — Sofka, Leo, Kolinka, Freya, Kitty and Eliena — and nine grandchild­ren.

A former employee, Robin Wood, revived EMS in 1997, reproducin­g the vintage equipment designs. An iPad app emulating the VCS3 was released in 2014.

Even in the 21st century, Zinovieff sought better music technology. In 2016, he told Sound on Sound that he felt limited by unresponsi­ve interfaces — keyboards, touchpads, linear computer displays — and by playback through stationary, directiona­l loudspeake­rs. He longed, he said, for “threedimen­sional sound in the air around us.”

 ?? Evening Standard / Getty Images 1968 ?? Peter Zinovieff, shown with a DEC PDP8, oversaw the design of the first commercial­ly produced British synthesize­rs.
Evening Standard / Getty Images 1968 Peter Zinovieff, shown with a DEC PDP8, oversaw the design of the first commercial­ly produced British synthesize­rs.

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