Historical EM
2000-03-31 by Tkacs, Ken
I have a great two-album (vinyl) set of music and talks by Hugh LeCaine. His name doesn't seem to come up often in discussions of Moog, Pearlman, Buchla, etc. But like Raymond Scott, here was a wild man doing some cool stuff before his time up in Canada. You may have heard the classic piece "Dripsody" which is a whole work based around the recorded sound of one drop of water. He recorded this on a multi-reel monstrosity of a tape recorder he invented whose motor speeds were under keyboard control. Can anyone say "Mellotron" decades before the Mellotron? He also created a Theremin-like continuous sweep instrument that was keyboard controlled called the "Electronic Sackbut" And a rack-mounted sequencer. Much of this stuff was done back in the Forties. He had a weird idea for making his electronics talk to each other called "Voltage Control." I always read about people arguing whether Buchla or Moog should be credited with this invention, but here's a quiet guy who was putting it to practical use decades before the other two started work on their modulars. Worth looking into Mr. LeCain's work if you're into EM history.