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The Chronology page collects anything about Delia with a date, in order.

1937-1959

Wednesday, 5th May 1937: Delia is born in Coventry[1], the daughter of Ted and Emmie Derbyshire of Cedars Avenue, Coundon, Coventry.[2]

Radio had a very big influence over me. It was so important during the Second World War. Life was really very basic at that time and radio provided an essential escape and a greatly valued education.[3]

August 1940: The bombing of Coventry starts[4] and Delia is moved to stay with relatives in Preston, Lancashire.[5]

After the worst blitz I was shifted to Preston, where my parents came from. It's only today that I've realised that the sound of clogs on cobbles must have been such a big influence on me - that percussive sound of all the mill workers going to work at six o'clock in the morning.[6]

14 November 1940: Coventry's largest and most destructive bombing raid starts in the evening.[4]

8th/9th and 10th/11th April 1941: Coventry's second major air raid takes place on two nights apart.[4]

1941: At the age of four, she is teaching others in her class to read[7] and write.[5]

3rd August 1942: The final air raid falls on Coventry.[4]

1945: Aged 8, Delia starts playing piano,[8] Delia's parents buy her a piano and for several years she takes lessons outside school hours.[5]

Delia at school

1948: Delia starts at Barrs Hill School.[1]

At school I wasn't allowed to study music. I studied mathematics, theoretical mechanics and physics. The most exciting part of physics was acoustics, although unfortunately my teacher didn't share my enthusiasm! So I was forced to teach myself. I learnt about acoustics and indulged my passion for music away from school.[3]

1950: "At the age of thirteen she was an accomplished pianist, and played our piano faultlessly in spite of my picking out all the complicated bits I could find on the sheet music available."[9]

1951-53: Delia is Graham Harris' girlfriend, plays pianoforte well and tennis poorly.[9]

8th May 1953: Delia writes the English essay Wireless Programmes, deploring the dumbing down of BBC programmes caused by them moving away from music and towards variety.

1953-54: Delia wins many piano competitions.[9]

Delia in 1955

1956: Delia leaves Barrs Hill School and goes to to Girton College, Cambridge.[1]

I won a scholarship to Cambridge reading mathematics. That was a strange year, one third of my fellow students gave the course up and so I was given the opportunity of changing to another subject. Well I wanted to do music; to me that was a forbidden paradise. They eventually realised that I had a natural instinct for music and allowed me to enter the course.[3]

1957: Delia switches her degree from Mathematics to Music.[1]

There were only a few women at the University at that time and so we were treated terribly. But I had the solace of my music. The musicians hated acoustics and the theory of sound, but when we studied that I was in my element. I found myself drifting away from the syllabus to learn about mediaeval and modern music. That didn't go down too well with my tutors. They wanted me to study the period 1650 to 1900, but it bored me. So I didn't do too well there![3]

December 1958: During her final year at Girton College, Delia meets Graham Harris for the last time while doing Christmas holiday work at the Post Office and they go to a dance. "She was a really nice girl, but changed after she went to Cambridge."[10] "We were two different people inhabiting different planets, and a wide gulf had grown between us."[9]

1959: Delia graduates with an MA in Mathematics Part 1 and Music Part 1.[1]

After my degree I went to the careers office. I said I was interested in sound, music and acoustics, to which they recommended a career in either deaf aids or depth sounding. So I applied for a job at Decca Records. The boss was at Lords watching cricket the day I had my appointment, but his deputy told me they didn't employ women in the recording studio.[11]

[After I graduated, I] went straight abroad with the Pembroke University Players doing sound effects for Julius Caesar. I had such fun, I just didn't want to come back to England![3]

June-September 1959: Delia starts working as a tutor in music and mathematics in Geneva for the British Consul-General and others.[1]

September-December 1959: Delia starts working at the International Telecommunications Union, United Nations, Geneva, as Assistant to Gerald G. Gross,[5] the Head of Plenipotentiary and General Administrative Radio Conferences,[1] where she works for two years, all the time bombarding the B.B.C. with applications for a job.[2] [this "two years" conflicts with Clive Blackburn's biography[12]].

1960

January-April 1960: Delia returns to Coventry and starts teaching general subjects in a primary school.[1]

May-October 1960: Delia works at Boosey & Hawkes music publishers, London as Assistant in the Promotion Dept dealing with advertising and publicity material.[1]

November 1960: Delia joins the BBC as a Programme Operations Assistant.[1]

There was a programme called Record Review, and they just played tiny extracts from records. And one of the music critics would say, “Look, it's on this side of the LP. I don't know where it is, but it's where the trombones come in.” And I'd just hold it up to the light and see the trombones and put the needle down exactly where it was. And they thought it was magic.[3]

1961

In 1961, Delia becomes a Studio Manager at the BBC.

Eventually the BBC wrote to me and I went along for an interview. I impressed the interviewers and eventually became a studio manager.[3]

It was very exciting, especially on the music shows. All the records had to be spun in by hand and split second timing was essential. When tapes came in I used to mark them with yellow markers to ensure that one followed another and that there were no embarrassing gaps in between.[2]

In 1961 or 1962, Delia takes up the double bass and takes lessons in Covent Garden once a week.[5]

1962

Delia (in 1962/63?)

In 1962, Delia creates music for BBC programmes Time On Our Hands, Science Serves the Arts and Arabic Science and Industry.

23rd March 1962: Delia is living at 45 Kensington Gardens Square in London and writes to the British Film Institute about her membership.[13]

2nd April 1962: Enid Law, Membership Officer of the British Film Institute, replies to Delia's letter of the 23rd, returning her membership card endorsed for free associate membership.[13]

April 1962: Delia starts a three-month attachment to the BBC Radiophonic Workshop, which is to last 11 years.

I was really happy as a studio manager until I realised that I could move to the Workshop and before I had even finished asking my boss for a transfer, he had his hand on the telephone. It turned out that I was the first person who had actually asked to go there. Previously people had been sent, usually unwillingly, for a six month attachment. I was allowed to stay longer and became the most junior person there, even though I was the most highly qualified.

I joined in 1962 and the first thing that I did was to go off and tour around our European colleagues' studios like the ORTF [Office de Radiodiffusion Télévision Française at Radio France] to see how they worked. I was so brave - just marching in like that!

It wasn't long until I returned and began work on Doctor Who. I had only done one other television programme before that called Time On Our Hands, using beautiful abstract electronic sounds.
[3]

The Doctor Who music was the only time in my whole career that I realised someone else's score for television. Thereafter I did my own scores for hundreds of television and radio programmes.[3]

July 1962: Delia writes the score for Science Serves the Arts.

10 August 1962: Delia submits a BBC stores requisition form for Dartington Hall.

11-25 August 1962: Delia assists Luciano Berio at the Dartington Hall summer course, bringing with her a ton of BBC equipment.[14]

25 August 1962: At 10.00 am a BBC van calls at Dartington Hall to recover the BBC equipment.

1963

26th April 1963: Delia is working on Francis Younghusband in Tibet.[15]

29th April 1963: Delia works on Francis Younghusband in Tibet from 3:30 to 9:30.[15]

30th April 1963: Delia works on Francis Younghusband in Tibet for an hour, and on Oliver Twist in the afternoon.[15]

1st May 1963: Delia works all day on Oliver Twist.[15]

2nd May 1963: Delia works on Speech.[15]

3rd May 1963: John Parry comes in the morning to listen to Delia's experiments for Speech, then she works on Oliver Twist for half an hour.[15]

6th May 1963: At 3pm Delia has an appointment with David Lyttler about Francis Younghusband in Tibet.[15]

7th May 1963: Richard Wortley comes to listen to Delia's sound for Oliver Twist.[15]

26th July 1963: Delia writes a memo mentioning her works Doctor Who (pending), RNR (to sort), Music to Midnight (outstanding), Anamorphosis and Gravel as well as preparation for the album Movement, Mime and Music III.[16]

16th August 1963: At 2:30 Delia has an appointment with Warris Hussein about Doctor Who.[16]

26th August 1963 (or shortly before): Delia sends tape TRW 5016 to "RPCurrent Library" for Movement, Mime and Music III.[16]

September 1963: Music to Midnight should be complete.[16]

1964

In 1964, Delia is interviewed for the BBC radio programme Information Please to answer the question "How is electronic music produced?"

5 Jan 1964: The Dreams is broadcast for the first time.

15 February 1964: The article Radiophonic `Scores' is published

17 May 1964: Anger of Achilles is broadcast for the first time.

15 July 1964: Delia writes the manuscript score for Science and Health.[17]

16 November 1964: Amor Dei is broadcast for the first time.

5 December 1964: Amor Dei is repeated.

Delia in 1964/65

1965

1965: Delia records two sequences of video for the BBC TV science programme "Tomorrow's World", explaining and demonstrating her techniques.

1965: Delia's father dies.[1]

21st March 1965: The article Square wave, hip sound, about the Radiophonic Workshop, appears in The Observer Weekend Review.[18]

Delia on 25th March 1965

25th March 1965: The press is invited to the Workshop for a “Day of Radiophonics[19] and Delia takes part in a group photograph subsequently published in Tatler magazine on 12th May 1965.[20] The Workshop staff consists of Desmond Briscoe (studio manager), John Baker, Delia, Brian Hodgson, Keith Salmon on a 3-month attachment and three engineers David Young, Dick Mills and John Harrison.[19]

March-April 1965: BBC TV crew are shooting footage for French Eyes on the Future.

1st April 1965: The Afterlife is broadcast for the first time.

12th May 1965: The group photograph from the 25th March is published in Tatlers magazine.

10th June 1965: The article Composers without Crochets appears in the Daily Express newspaper.

Delia in 1965

6th August 1965: Delia takes the first phone call for On The Level.[21]

2nd September 1965: Delia has 4 hours of discussion with Brian Hodgson and Ron Grainer about On The Level.[21]

9th or 15th September 1965: The Evenings of Certain Lives is broadcast for the first time.

Delia with keying unit in 1965

11th October 1965: 3 hours' "Studio p/b" with Ron Grainer and Brian Hodgson for On The Level.[21]

14-17,23-24,29-30 November 1965: Delia is working on On The Level.[21]

13-15 December 1965: Delia is working on On The Level.[21]

30th December 1965: An ABC in Sound is broadcast at 10:25pm on the Third programme.[22]

1966

20,24,28,31 January 1966: Delia is working on On The Level.[21]

1st February 1966: Delia is working with Brian, Ron and Diane Majue on On The Level.[21]

17-18 February 1966: Delia is working with Brian and Diane on On The Level.[21]

25th February 1966: Delia is at Martin Landau's party in Liverpool for the opening of On The Level.[23]

19th May 1966: Ape and Essence is broadcast as BBC TV's The Wednesday Play, series 1, episode 61.[24]

10th July 1966: A letter is posted in Hampstead to Delia at the BBCRW, Delaware Road, Maida Vale.[25]

2nd-11th August 1966: Delia is working on Moogies Bloogies.[26]

17th August 1966: Delia sends a memo to "A.H.C.P. Ops (S)" asking the BBC's permission to use a section of one of the Inventions for Radio at the Unit Delta Plus Concert of Electronic Music on 10th September.[27]

19th August 1966: "Edy"[?] replies to Delia's memo of the 17th saying that Delia should clear it with Barry Bermange and ask him to confirm in writing.[28]

22nd August 1966: Delia writes to Barry Bermange asking for his consenting letter and suggesting he word it "I personally have no objection to your using part of one of "inventions for radio" as an item in your concert of electronic music at Newbury on September 10th".[29]

23rd August 1966: Barry Bermange replies: "I personally have no objection to your using part of one of the 'inventions for radio' as an item in your concert of electronic music at Newbury on September the Tenth; unfortunately I shall not be able to attend but I wish you every success."[30]

1st September 1966: Delia checks out the tape for Out of the Unknown: Walks End II.

10th September 1966: At 7pm the Unit Delta Plus Concert of Electronic Music takes place at the Watermill Theatre at Bagnor[31] near Newbury, England, including Delia's Amor Dei, Moogies Bloogies and Pot-pourri, and a piece made jointly with Peter Zinovieff, Random Together 1.

21st September 1966: Delia finishes creating A Game of Chess and sends a "listening copy of the final tape" to its author Derek Bowskill.[32]

24th October 1966: Delia is creating Way Out in Piccadilly.[33]

10th November 1966: A draft programme is drawn up for the Brighton Festival.[34]

13th December 1966: The Brighton Festival is confirmed.[35]

22nd December 1966: Out of the Unknown: Walks End II is broadcast at 9:35pm on BBC2.

1967

In 1967, Delia creates electronic music for the film Work Is A Four Letter Word and with Unit Delta Plus works on Guy Woolfenden's score for Peter Hall's Royal Shakespeare Company production of Macbeth.[36]

28th January 1967: The first Million Volt Light and Sound Rave is held.

3rd February 1967: Delia writes the score for Philips, created at Unit Delta Plus.

4th February 1967: The second Million Volt Light and Sound Rave is held.

5th February 1967: A New View of Politics is broadcast at 9.30pm on BBC2.

23rd February 1967: Seems to be when Delia realized Chromophone Band.[37]

March 1967: Delia scores Happy Birthday.

14th-30th April 1967: Delia's music is played at the Brighton Festival.

27th April 1967: Mrs. H. Rapp of the BBC writes to Delia, apologising for having played Delia's music at the wrong speed.[38]

4th August 1967: Delia borrows the book Le Traité des Objects Musicaux by Pierre Schaffer from the library at Broadcasting House.[39]

15th August 1967: RSC Macbeth opens at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre in Stratford upon Avon.[40]

15th September 1967: Delia is living at 10 Clifton Road, London and receives a telegram about Tiger Talks: "Tiger puts on weight. Contact studio Saturday. Michael".[41]

1968

In 1968, Delia records Mattachin.[42]

In 1968, Delia gave a lecture with Brian Hodgson at Morley College, London, at which she first met David Vorhaus, which was a turning point in her life.[43] A week later, the three founded Kaleidophon.[44]

1st January 1968: Delia writes to "Barry" thanking him for arranging Kaleidophon's work on Work Is A Four Letter Word.[45]

15th January 1968: A concert of electronic music is given at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, which opens with Delia's piece Pot-pourri, followed by pieces by Peter Zinovieff, Tristram Cary and others.[46] Delia can be seen on film starting the computer that plays Zinovieff's Partita for Unattended Computer.[47]

16th January 1968: An article appears in The Times newspaper, reviewing Delia's music that was played at the Queen Elizabeth Hall.[48]

16th January 1968: Albert Chatterly writes to Delia: “Congratulations on your (far too) tiny bit at the Q.E. Hall last night. I agreed with the "Times" that you certainly produced gorgeous sounds.”[48]

March 1968: With Kaleidophon, Delia is busy creating the music for a Royal Shakespeare Company production of King Lear.[49]

26th March 1968: An Association of Electrical Engineers exhibition opens, using Kaleidophon's music for an exhibit called The Coloured Wall.

10th April 1968: King Lear has its press night.

30th April 1968: Happy Birthday is broadcast on the Pete Brady Show at 2.00p.m. on BBC Radio 1.

7th June 1968: The film Work Is A Four Letter Word, for which Delia created music, is released in the UK.[50]

8th July 1968: Delia starts work on The Living World.[51]

12th-16th August: Delia is working on Midnight.[52]

19th August - 6th September 1968: Delia is working on "Dreaming"[?].[52]

27th August 1968: I Think in Shapes is broadcast for the first time.

September 1968: Delia checks out the tape for Anything Goes.

9th-20th September 1968: Delia is working on "Who (gallery)"[?].[52]

25th September 1968: Delia is working on "Dreaming"[?].[52]

30th September-11th November 1968: Delia is working on "Who & Heaven"[?].[52]

30th October 1968: Delia is working on The Living World.[53]

5th December 1968: The Radiophonic Workshop celebrates its 10th anniversary with a party for all staff.[54]

22nd December 1968: Delia writes the manuscript for the piece Clothes.

1969

1969: Malcolm Clarke arrives at the Workshop and Delia collaborates with him as he finds his footing.[55]

15th February 1969: Kaleidophon have just moved to 281-283 Camden High Street and David Vorhaus writes to Miss Astrahan about her artwork for the An Electric Storm album cover.[56]

16th February 1969: Delia writes to Brian about plumbing and says that she and David are “working each night flat out on our record”.[57]

3rd-9th March 1969: Delia goes to see Peter Logan's Mechanical Ballet, for which Brian Hodgson had created music and effects.

31st March 1969: Delia, Brian and David, as Kaleidophon, send a £100 cheque to "John" who has just moved to America and they are about to buy their first car.[58]

24th May 1969: Delia orders a dark blue four-piece 'George Hayman' drumkit for Kaleidophon from Dallas Arbiter Ltd. of London for about £130.

3rd July 1969: Brian Jones dies and Delia "cried into my washing-up when I heard he'd died.".[59]

28th November 1969: The Dreams is broadcast on Bayerische Rundfunk.[60]

Delia in 1970

1970

1970: Delia creates Music of Spheres, Radio Solent, Petya's Dream and attends a Womens' Liberation rally in London with her friend Angela Rodaway.[61]

12th April 1970: Christine Edge's article Morse code musician appears in the Sunday Mercury newspaper, based on an interview with Delia.

28th April 1970: Delia's music for Petya's Dream is broadcast in episode 18 of War and Peace.

8th July 1970: M. Parotte (Administrative Assistant, Drama (Radio)) writes to Delia about division of Italia Prize money should The Bagman win, proposing 20% to Delia.[62]

17th July 1970: Delia replies to "A.A., Drama (Radio)" accepting their proposed distribution of Italia Prize money for The Bagman.[63]

26th August 1970: Delia replies to a letter and signs as "Organiser, Radiophonic Workshop (Acting)".[64]

3rd September 1970: Kirsten Cubitt's article Dial a tune appears in The Guardian newspaper and says that Delia is ‘monitoring’ the Workshop while Desmond Briscoe is on “extended leave” and that the BBC “has allowed her to build up her own studio with Brian Hodgson in Camden Town as Kaleidophon.”

6th December 1970: Delia's 1970 Macbeth is broadcast on Irish radio station RTÉ based in Dublin. "We were going to [go] over and have a great party. The Bankers Strike was on at the time and nobody could get any money out of Ireland for months. It took nearly a year to get paid... we never got (to Dublin) in the end”.[65]

1971

February 1971: Is the delivery date for the £5,400 “Delaware” synthesizer at the BBC Radiophonic Workshop.[66]

18th February 1971: Macbeth opens at the Greenwich Theatre with Delia and Brian's sound.

23rd March 1971: Ewan Hooper sends a note to Kaleidophon thanking them for their work on sound for Macbeth.[67]

April 1971: The “Delaware” is fully installed.[66]

18th May 1971: At night, Delia destroys the tapes of I.E.E.100, not knowing that Brian Hodgson had secretly had a backup copy made late that evening.[68]

19th May 1971: I.E.E.100 is played to the Queen at the Royal Festival Hall as part of the Radiophonic Workshop in Concert event.

28th October 1971: Dianne Forsyth sends a memo to Delia about reusing Delia's music for The Long Polar Walk in the documentary On The Rim - Spitzbergen.[69]

1972

Delian monogram from 1972

2nd April 1972: The first episode of Tutankhamun's Egypt is broadcast.

18th May 1972: Jeffery Boswall writes to Delia saying he is looking forward to meeting her 2pm Monday [the 22nd] to talk about Wildlife Safari to Argentina, show her the film, provide her with some sounds.[70]

19th May 1972: Jeffery Boswall writes to Delia sending her tapes of sounds for Wildlife Safari to the Argentine. In a footnote, JH sends passionate love to DD.[71]

22nd May 1972: Presumably, Delia meets with Jeffery Boswall in Stefan Pstrowski's office in TV Center.[70]

May 1972: Delia is given a six-month leave of absence from the BBC “to consider staying on at the BBC.”[72]

22nd June 1972: Delia plans an unidentified piece in 9 movements on the back of Tutankhamun's Egypt cue sheets.

25th August 1972: Delia's music for the Egypt item in Chronicle Magazine: Egypt, Rome and Britain is broadcast.

30th September 1972: Shadow of the Pharoah is broadcast.

November 1972: Delia checks out the last tape she will record for the BBC: TRW 7707 for Playback.

1973

Delia in the 1970s

In 1973, Delia left the BBC.

something serious happened around '72, '73, '74. The world went out of tune with itself and the BBC went out of tune with itself.[6]

I still haven't worked out why I left - self preservation, I think.[73]

I eventually left [because] I didn't want to compromise my integrity any further. I was fed up having my stuff turned down [by the BBC] because it was too sophisticated, and yet it was lapped up when I played it to anyone outside the BBC. The BBC was very wary, increasingly being run by committees and accountants, and they seemed to be dead scared of anything that was a bit unusual[74]

From this moment on, at least until 1995, "nobody spoke of Derbyshire at the Radiophonic workshop. She was never mentioned."[75]

Delia and Brian Hodgson both leave the BBC to set up their own musical studio Electrophon.[1] but she soon quits and moves to Cumbria to work as a radio operator during the laying of a gas pipeline, then working and living with Li Yuan-chia at his Cumbrian home and art gallery, and living a private life.[5]

“The idea was that we were going to leave together and set up Electrophon,... she started dragging her heels about leaving. I left [and] blew my pension on setting up Electrophon. And Delia was supposed to come with me... we did “the Legend of Hell House” together, but she was not mentally there much. She'd get enthusiastic for a minute or two and then lose interest. So that was a difficult time. At that point, Delia almost “disappeared”. That then led on to her leaving London and going up north to work on the pipeline”[76]

Delia as a radio operator

She applied for the job at Laings “as soon as she saw the word ‘radio’ [in the advertisement]”.[77]

I was the best radio operator Laing Pipelines ever had! I answered a job in the paper for a French speaking radio operator. I just had to sleep - everything was out of tune, so I went to the north of Cumbria. It was twelve miles south of the border. I had a lovely house built from stones from Hadrian's Wall. I was in charge of three transmitters in a disused quarry [delivering the weather forecast in French every night[5]]. I did not want to get involved in a big organisation again. I'd fled the BBC and I thought - oh, Laing's... a local family firm! Then I found this huge consortium between Laing's and these two French companies.”[6]

1974

30th November 1974: Delia marries David William Hunter, labourer, and son of Ernest Hunter, coalminer;[78][79]

‘She told me she did it to make her socially acceptable. The women were wary of her on her own and she wanted to join the darts team. 'To her, it was a marriage of convenience. She thought it would be a friendship.

‘But they quickly discovered they weren't compatible and had a huge row. That was the end of that but she never divorced him.’[80]

1976

In 1976, Delia stops working for Laing as a Radio Operator on the laying of a gas pipeline between Scotland and Cumbria.[81]

1st March 1976: Glynis Jones of the BBC writes to Delia about renaming five of her tracks, originally for Travelling in Winter, The Bagman and The Naked Sun, for their inclusion on a library record of sound effects Out Of This World.[82]

1978

Delia in 1978

In 1978, Delia Derbyshire leaves Cumbria and returns to London, where she meets Clive Blackburn.[5][1]

1980s

January 1980: Delia buys a house in Northampton.[1]

May 1980: Clive Blackburn moves up from London to Northampton to join her.[1]

1983: Brian Hodgson, now director of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop, persuades her to visit the Workshop again. She does nothing but cry.[83]

Delia in 1986

1990s

Delia in 1993

Early 1993: Delia is interviewed by Austen Atkinson-Broadbelt for the Soundhouse article published in Doctor Who magazine on 12th May.

1993: Mark Ayres first gets in touch with Delia.[5]

January 1994: Delia's mother dies.[1]

1996: Drew Mulholland first makes contact with Delia.[84]

7 February 1997: John Baker dies. Shortly after, Delia goes to visit the companion of his final years, Daphne, at their home on the Isle of Wight and "became obsessed about the fire" that had damaged their home a year of two before.[85]

1997: Delia records the Radio Scotland interview from Northampton over an ISDN telephone link to John Cavanagh.

1997: Delia is diagnosed with breast cancer is later operated on.[5]

Delia in 1998

September 1998: Delia meets Sonic Boom for the first time.[86]

2-4 October 1998: Delia is a guest at the television memorabilia conference Panopticon '98 in Conventry, where she proudly sports a pink ribbon in support of breast cancer awareness.[5]

“She really enjoyed herself although... she was very nervous and very tearful,... slightly fragile”[87] “...when she got attention at the “Dr. Who” convention, she enjoyed it, after years of neglect”[88]

October 1998: A week before recording the Boazine interview, Delia is on the BBC programme Woman's Hour, speaking about her experience with breast cancer.[7]

October 1998: Delia is interviewed over the telephone by John Cavanagh for the Boazine interview.

December 1999: Delia is interviewed by Sonic Boom for Surface magazine.

2000s

In 2000 and 2001 she works with Sonic Boom as advisor/co-producer on the EAR LPs Vibrations and Continuum by long nightly phone calls 5 nights a week and visits to Rugby every Weds or Thurs on her 'private train', having realised that some trains went from Rugby to Northampton which were just returning and not scheduled.[89]

24 February 2000: She is interviewed by Jo Hutton for an article entitled Radiophonic Ladies.

Summer 2000: Delia records the track Synchrondipity Machine with Pete Kember at New Atlantis Studios in Rugby, England.[90]

Early 2001: Delia is working with Sonic Boom on MESMA (Multi-sensory Electronic Sounds, Music, and Art), an organization with the aim to hold workshops and festivals in order to increase knowledge of electronic music.[91]

Early 2001: Delia starts on a project to investigate the musical possibilities of shapeshifting alloys.[92]

10th June 2001: deliaderbyshire.com exists.

3rd July 2001: Delia dies at Northampton General Hospital of renal failure.[92]

References

  1. 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 Clive Blackburn's About Delia
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 The 1970 newspaper article Morse code musician
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 The Soundhouse interview
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Coventry Blitz on wikipedia.org
  5. 5.00 5.01 5.02 5.03 5.04 5.05 5.06 5.07 5.08 5.09 5.10 Breege Brennan's thesis
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Delia in the Boazine interview.
  7. 7.0 7.1 The Boazine interview.
  8. 7 Inch Cinema's Delia Archive Gallery, photo caption to Notes on Music
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 Graham Harris: Delia_Derbyshire:_A_Personal_Tribute.
  10. Graham Harris, personal email.
  11. Delia in the Surface interview
  12. Clive Blackburn's About Delia.
  13. 13.0 13.1 DD073220
  14. Dartington Hall
  15. 15.0 15.1 15.2 15.3 15.4 15.5 15.6 15.7 DD074527
  16. 16.0 16.1 16.2 16.3 DD074230
  17. DD113144: Manuscript for Science and Health.
  18. DD110042 DD110056
  19. 19.0 19.1 Special Sound, "day+of+radiophonics" p.110.
  20. Brian Hodgson, personal communication: "'The Magazine was Tatler, 12th May 1965. The article was by J. Roger Baker and photograph by Richard Swayne. I still have a copy of the magazine."
  21. 21.0 21.1 21.2 21.3 21.4 21.5 21.6 21.7 DD094630
  22. DD110122 DD110130
  23. On The Level.
  24. The Wednesday Play: Ape and Essence on imdb.com
  25. Envelope_toDD1
  26. DD083450
  27. DD074801
  28. DD074812
  29. DD075926
  30. DD075824
  31. DD154505: Unit Delta Plus Concert of Electronic Music programme
  32. A Game of Chess - listening copy of final tape
  33. DD091236: An envelope dated 24th Oct 1966.
  34. DD082729: Draft program for the Brighton Festival, 10th Nov 1966.
  35. DD082346: Letter from Michael Leonard of Hornsey College of Art confirming the Brighton Festival, Dec 13th 1966.
  36. Brian Hodgson in the Guardian obituary.
  37. The Tape Library List's notes to TRW 6604.
  38. Apologies: Letter from Mrs. H. Rapp of the BBC.
  39. DD080054
  40. DD084312
  41. DD100734: Telegram about Tiger Talks
  42. Radio Scotland interview
  43. Brian Hodgson interviewed for Breege Brennan's thesis.
  44. David Vorhaus in the Sound On Sound article "David Vorhaus", February 2002
  45. DD080404
  46. DD111508
  47. Zinovieff's Red Bull Academy interview
  48. 48.0 48.1 DD111508
  49. DD100908
  50. Work Is A 4-Letter Word on imdb.com
  51. DD081013
  52. 52.0 52.1 52.2 52.3 52.4 DD074113
  53. DD081333: Delia's notes for The Living World dated 30.10.68 "ROUGH MIX / NAKED SUN TAPE".
  54. Special Sound, p.124.
  55. Special Sound, p.143
  56. DD164714
  57. DD165533
  58. DD165316
  59. The Surface interview
  60. DD141714
  61. Nicola McCartney cited in Breege Brennan's thesis.
  62. DD141636
  63. DD141601
  64. DD141844
  65. Brian Hodgson interviewed for Breege Brennan's thesis
  66. 66.0 66.1 Special Sound, p.113.
  67. DD135529: Letter from Ewan Hooper to Kaleidophon thanking them for their work on [Macbeth (1971)|Macbeth].
  68. Special Sound, p.134-5.
  69. DD134239
  70. 70.0 70.1 DD145728
  71. DD145530
  72. Programme notes to Standing Wave by Nicola McCartney, cited in Breege Brennan's thesis.
  73. Delia in the Radiophonic Ladies interview.
  74. Delia in the Surface interview, December 1999.
  75. Elizabeth Parker's email to Johann Merrich in the audio lecture Le Pioniere della Musica Elettronica on arwiki.org at 20:30.
  76. Brian Hodgson interviewed for Breege Brennan's thesis.
  77. John Cavanagh cited in Breege Brennan's thesis
  78. Delia's Oxford Dictionary of National Biography entry.
  79. The General Register Office for England and Wales' Register of Marriages, Northumberland West 1, Oct-Dec 1974, p.1761. (according to Wikipedia)
  80. Clive Blackburn in the Mail on Sunday article.
  81. Comment by user Tagginglaong on 19 Jul 2008: "I worked at Laing Pipelines during 1976 on the radio communications. What has this to do with Delia? Well she had been the previous incumbent of the job and I have to tell you she was mightily respected by all the engineers and crew from Scotland to Cumbria, both French and English. Everyone knew her as the woman who had been in the Radiophonic Workshop and most said she had written the Dr Who theme. I was told she took the job with Laings because she wanted a little space in her life. I can't vouch for her reasons, but I can vouch for how much her workmates thought of her. I'm sorry I never met her, but apparently she was pretty formidable."
  82. DD073013
  83. “I managed to get her onto a composer's desktop programme. But she couldn’t cope with it and spent most of the weekend in tears.”: Brian Hodgson interviewed for Breege Brennan's thesis.
  84. Variations on the Dr Who theme
  85. The John Baker Biography by Richard Anthony Baker at trunkrecords.com
  86. Delia in the Surface interview
  87. Mark Ayres interviewed for Breege Brennan's thesis.
  88. Brian Hodgson interviewed for Breege Brennan's thesis.
  89. Sonic Boom, personal communication
  90. delia-derbyshire.org's News for 4th September 2003: New Delia Derbyshire Collaboration Released
  91. Andy Kellman's Artist Biography on www.allmusic.com
  92. 92.0 92.1 Delia's Oxford_Dictionary_of_National_Biography_entry.