Difference between revisions of "Queen Elizabeth Hall"

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On 15th January 1968 Delia participated in a concert of electronic music at the Queen Elizabeth Hall in London.
 
On 15th January 1968 Delia participated in a concert of electronic music at the Queen Elizabeth Hall in London.
  
The concert opened with her piece [[Pot Pourri]] and there is film of her on stage, starting the machinery that plays [[Peter Zinovieff]]'s &lsquo;''Partita for Unattended Computer''&rsquo;.<ref name=RedBull> [http://www.redbullmusicacademy.com/lectures/dr-peter-zinovieff-the-original-tectonic-sounds Red Bull Academy interview with Peter Zinovieff]</ref>
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The concert opened with her piece [[Pot Pourri]] and there is [[Queen Elizabeth Hall video|film of her on stage]] starting the machinery that plays [[Peter Zinovieff]]'s &lsquo;''Partita for Unattended Computer''&rsquo;.<ref name=RedBull> [http://www.redbullmusicacademy.com/lectures/dr-peter-zinovieff-the-original-tectonic-sounds Red Bull Academy interview with Peter Zinovieff]</ref>
  
The following day, "Jack" ([[Albert Chatterly]]) writes to her<ref>[[DD111508]]</ref> saying:
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<BLOCKQUOTE>
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At the Queen Elizabeth Hall in London there was a full house of thirteen hundred people [with] three hundred people turned away, in 1967.<ref>Peter Zinovieff in [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_RSXsZMtL8Y ''These Machines Haven't Finished'' on youtube] at 39:56.</ref>
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</BLOCKQUOTE>
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The following day, "Jack" ([[Albert Chatterly]]) wrote to Delia<ref>[[DD111508]]</ref> saying:
 
<PRE>
 
<PRE>
 
Congratulations on your (far too) tiny bit at
 
Congratulations on your (far too) tiny bit at
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* ''Agnus Dei'' - Peter Zinovieff
 
* ''Agnus Dei'' - Peter Zinovieff
 
* ''March probabilistic'' - Peter Zinovieff and Alan Sutcliffe.
 
* ''March probabilistic'' - Peter Zinovieff and Alan Sutcliffe.
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 +
=Availability=
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* A few bars of the ''Partita for Unattended Computer'' can be heard just after &frac34; of the way through the BBC documentary ''The New Sound of Music''.
  
 
=See also=
 
=See also=

Latest revision as of 18:09, 30 March 2021

A Concert of Electronic Music playbill

On 15th January 1968 Delia participated in a concert of electronic music at the Queen Elizabeth Hall in London.

The concert opened with her piece Pot Pourri and there is film of her on stage starting the machinery that plays Peter Zinovieff's ‘Partita for Unattended Computer’.[1]

At the Queen Elizabeth Hall in London there was a full house of thirteen hundred people [with] three hundred people turned away, in 1967.[2]

The following day, "Jack" (Albert Chatterly) wrote to Delia[3] saying:

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.

Programme[4]

  • Potpourri - Delia Derbyshire
  • Diversed mind - Ernest Berk
  • 3 4 5 - Tristram Cary
  • Birth is life is power is death is God is... - Tristram Cary
  • December Quartet - Peter Zinovieff
  • Contrasts Essconic (for piano and tape) - Daphne Oram and Ivor Walsworth

Interval

  • Partita for unattended computer - Peter Zinovieff
  • Silent Spring - George Newson
  • Syntheses 8, 9 and 12 - Jacob Meyerowitz
  • Agnus Dei - Peter Zinovieff
  • March probabilistic - Peter Zinovieff and Alan Sutcliffe.

Availability

  • A few bars of the Partita for Unattended Computer can be heard just after ¾ of the way through the BBC documentary The New Sound of Music.

See also

References

  1. Red Bull Academy interview with Peter Zinovieff
  2. Peter Zinovieff in These Machines Haven't Finished on youtube at 39:56.
  3. DD111508
  4. Francis Routh, Contemporary British Music: The Twenty-Five Years from 1945 to 1970 (1972), Chapter 20: Electronic music and the Avant-garde: Electronic Music