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Early Electronic Music

The Best Books About Synthesis History You’ll Ever (be unable to) Read

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I was recently at the excellent DOX center in Prague to see a mid-career retrospective of the Czech composer/artist Milan Gustar. Gustar could be described as a minimalist electronic composer.  His pieces seem concerned with the perception of sound and with systems of describing, organizing, and controlling sound.  One of the two pieces on display for actual playback (as opposed to simply a graphic score) was his TWIST; it was quite beautiful, and you can hear it here.  Anyhow, Gustar’s work has unsurprisingly also taken him into the realm of research, and at the DOX I was able to purchase the two above-depicted hardbound Czech-language volumes, approx. 400pp and 500pp respectively.  Although I can decipher very little of the text, these books are incredibly fascinating, with hundreds of photos and diagrams, and offer an extremely detailed account of the history of electro-mechanical instruments (vol. 1) and electronic instruments (vol. 2).  You can read detailed descriptions of both books at these English-language links  – VOLUME 1; VOLUME 2.  As far as I know, no texts with this degree of detail exist in the English language.  And remember, we always have Google Translate if you need to know roughly what’s being communicated – just type the Czech into the translation widget and cross yr fingers.

Anyhow, just a ton of stuff to dig into and use as a springboard for your own research and/or gear-hoarding activities.  The books are quite affordable, approx.  $30 US each, and you can purchase them by writing directly to the publisher at the email address here….

Tubon_1966 Stratosphere_Guitar_1958 Mixturtrautinium Kawai_EP_308_s EMS_KB1 Cullulophone_1927 ASYZ_2_1971

2 replies on “The Best Books About Synthesis History You’ll Ever (be unable to) Read”

The Czechs are a underrated bunch. Look at the bottom photo: it looks like those dials are off a Bruel and Kjaer heterodyne oscillator (similar to the WE 19C but a lot more precise).

I have a lot of foreign language electronics books. The Germans have a lot of great ones, and I have learned to read technical German to an extent because of this. German is the second most popular language in the Czech republic FWIW.

I have a lot of Japanese audio magazines, but mostly for the schematics and pictures. Learning Japanese is an epic process: I think even Alan Douglas, who wrote the seminal article “Tubes in Japan” that kicked off the whole single ended triode insanity in the US (Joe Roberts never heard of it before then, and the vacuum cleaner salesman hadn’t either) finally gave up on it.

Czech guitars were the best in the Eastern Bloc, but not up to US or British standards. Their beer sure was though. (American beers back then were all pisswater, so not much competition. )

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