sixty seconds of trippy theremin complete with public domain antigravity courtesy of archive.org
Gordon's adventures on the theremin, the original electronic instrument. A very occasional series, supplementing his occasional diary at ThereminWorld.com
What do you keep in your shed?
Experimental theremin music, featuring use of the twangulator, the frothatrill and isophasic trochoids!
18 Theremins, 9 Singers and a Dalek called Kevin, recorded separately and then mixed together. And a video track featuring Vincent Price. What more could you ask for in a birthday surprise! ( secretsurprise.blogspot.com )
sixty seconds of trippy theremin complete with public domain antigravity courtesy of archive.org
sixty seconds of unrelenting old style Industrial Play it LOUD
Odd theremin music and a healthy young couple dancing with appliances. The title is in homage to The Clangers - a classic UK childrens animation. The music is by Beat Frequency, which is me. The footage is "Frigidaire Finale 1957" and is in the public domain. Details here: http://www.archive.org/details/Frigidai1957
Some noodling I called Ocean Deep. The lack of synchronisation is partly caused by the latency of the software I am feeding it through (Apple's GarageBand) and partly by my sloppy pasting in Quicktime.
A slideshow of some of my pictures with a soundtrack by thereminist Kevin Sinnott, to whom my immense thanks for permission to use his work. No, there is no part 1. The title is from the music.
What is a Theremin? How did they make those spooky woo-eee-ooo-ooh sounds on The Day The Earth Stood Still and other classic sci-fi movies?
Comments