Difference between revisions of "Michael Mason"

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{{Thumb|Michael Mason}}
 
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[[Michael Mason]] started as a BBC Radio Producer in 1965<ref name=torygraph>[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/10944209/Michael-Mason-obituary.html Michael mason's obituary in the ''Daily Telegraph''].</ref> and "collaborated extensively with the Radiophonic Workshop [producing a] series of epic, richly layered montage features, starting with ''A Bayeux Tapestry'' and ''Rus'' in the late 60s and ending with ''Sunken Treasure'' in 1983."<ref>[https://books.google.it/books?id=40QdBQAAQBAJ&pg=PA52&lpg=PA53 ''Public Service Broadcasting'' by David Hendy, pp.52-53].</ref>
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[[Michael Mason]] started as a BBC Radio Producer in 1965<ref name=torygraph>[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/10944209/Michael-Mason-obituary.html Michael Mason's obituary in the ''Daily Telegraph''].</ref> and "collaborated extensively with the Radiophonic Workshop [producing a] series of epic, richly layered montage features, starting with ''A Bayeux Tapestry'' and ''Rus'' in the late 60s and ending with ''Sunken Treasure'' in 1983."<ref>[https://books.google.it/books?id=40QdBQAAQBAJ&pg=PA52&lpg=PA53 ''Public Service Broadcasting'' by David Hendy, pp.52-53].</ref>
  
 
Delia worked on his milestone first radio production, [[A Bayeux Tapestry]].
 
Delia worked on his milestone first radio production, [[A Bayeux Tapestry]].

Revision as of 17:23, 4 May 2017

Michael Mason

Michael Mason started as a BBC Radio Producer in 1965[1] and "collaborated extensively with the Radiophonic Workshop [producing a] series of epic, richly layered montage features, starting with A Bayeux Tapestry and Rus in the late 60s and ending with Sunken Treasure in 1983."[2]

Delia worked on his milestone first radio production, A Bayeux Tapestry.

He also worked with the Radiophonic Workshop on other "characteristically multilayered productions"[3] but not with Delia.

  • Rus (a history of Russia) (1967, working with David Cain)[4]
  • The Long March (1970, working with David Cain and Dick Mills)[5]
  • Plain Tales from the Raj (1974)
  • The British Seafarer (1979-80)

By a strange coincidence, he was born in Maida Vale, home of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop.[3]

References