Beethoven, Kubrick, and Wendy Carlos
How Wendy Carlos created a groundbreaking soundtrack for A Clockwork Orange
by Marshall Bowden
Electronic Music and the Moog Synthesizer
Electronic music and the instruments that generate it are so much a part of popular culture these days that we take it all for granted. In the digital age, pretty much anyone with some feel for modern music can generate a reasonable facsimile of it with a computer, Pro Tools, and an inexpensive keyboard. But electronic music has been around long enough that there is a sense of nostalgia for the days when synthesized sounds were generated via analog means, with oscillators.
Electronic music had been developed and defined by experiments in the classical avant-garde before Robert Moog came along. The theremin, invented by Professor Leon Theremin, is generally acknowledged as the first practical electronic instrument, and Robert Moog originally set himself up as a builder and seller of theremin kits. The 1940s and ‘50s were dominated by experiments with tape recorders, found sounds, and musique concrete, with composers such as Pierre Boulez and Karlheinz Stockhausen.
Moog began to experiment with electronic music production utilizing a keyboard as the controlling element. This gave the Moog a base with which most composers of popular music were familiar and helped push its popularity above the pure modular electronic box developed by Don Buchla.
Enter Wendy Carlos
One of the biggest breakthroughs for the Moog, which cannot be overemphasized, was the recording of Wendy Carlos’ Switched-On Bach. Carlos intended to highlight the Moog as a serious instrument and used Bach’s somewhat familiar music to do so, but no one could have predicted the unusual popularity of this recording and its successors, Switched-On Bach II, The Well Tempered Synthesizer, and Switched-On Brandenburgs.
But Wendy Carlos' most important influence may well have been her work on the soundtrack for Stanley Kubrick's adaptation of the Anthony Burgess novel A Clockwork Orange. Classical music, particularly Beethoven, is an important element in the narrative of Burgess' story. His protagonist, the young delinquent Alex, takes great pleasure and solace in the music of 'Ludwig van', but that is not the only classical music that Kubrick uses. He also uses the work of Henry Purcell and a few others to great affect. These classical pieces are presented both in synthesized form by Carlos and in symphonic recordings.
Wendy Carlos’ synthesizer version of Purcell’s “Funeral of Queen Mary” was utilized as the film’s theme music and underlines the opening sequence where Alex and his droogs are in the Korova Milk Bar. Carlos’ music is equal to the task of underscoring Kubrick’s bold and disorienting visuals while at the same time holding its own in drawing the viewer/listener in as seen in the following montage from the film:
“Timesteps” and A Clockwork Orange
After the success of the Switched On Bach albums, Carlos and her collaborator, Rachel Elkind, were experimenting with a device called a spectrum follower. The spectrum follower converts speech and vocals to electronic sounds and mirrors the overtones of the original input—in short an early vocoder. Their plan was to create a synthesized version of Beethoven's 9th Symphony, complete with the 'Ode to Joy' vocal chorus.
Elkind felt that the Beethoven piece needed something of an introduction, a piece that would ease listeners into the sonic palette of the electronics being used prior to hearing a familiar piece of music. Carlos began to work on what developed into a completely new composition called "Timesteps." Listening to the complete piece now, it's an amazing work of electronic composition and studio wizardry, and it tests incredulity to realize that it was created in 1971.
Wendy Carlos has described how she was perhaps three minutes into "Timesteps" when a friend loaned her a copy of A Clockwork Orange, which she immediately began to read. Like so many readers then and since, she fell deeply under the spell of Burgess' vision, and was struck by the fact that her nascent composition captured the book's opening scenes. Subconsciously, "Timesteps" became, for Carlos, a musical composition based on the book.
When Carlos and Elkind learned that Stanley Kubrick was filming his version of A Clockwork Orange, they were able to get in touch with his representatives, and submitted both "Timesteps" and the Choral Movement of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony for him to hear. Kubrick was suitably impressed and asked to meet with the duo. They discussed and began creating versions of music that Kubrick wanted for the film, including Purcell's "Music for the Funeral of Queen Mary" and Rossini's "The Thieving Magpie," and Carlos created some original background music such as "Country Lane."
Kubrick’s Soundtrack Approach
Kubrick's use of music in his films is as groundbreaking as the films themselves, but not always to the liking of the composer/performers. In 1967 he commissioned Alex North to compose the score for his film 2001: A Space Odyssey. During filming and initial editing the movie was overlaid with standard versions of some classical compositions. In the initial stages of editing the director began to appreciate the way the music already being used helped underline the story, which used few words. He decided not to use North's music, instead simply leaving recordings of "Thus Spake Zarathustra" and "The Blue Danube," as well as works by Gyorgy Ligeti, in place.
Kubrick's decision to not even re-record the pieces with an orchestra was unheard of at the time and it was controversial. Famed film composer Bernard Hermann (Psycho, Taxi Driver) felt it marked a low water mark for music in film: “It shows vulgarity, when a director uses music previously composed! I think that 2001: A Space Odyssey is the height of vulgarity in our time. To have outer space accompanied by ‘The Blue Danube’, and the piece not even recorded anew!”
Kubrick ended up using only parts of the music that Carlos and Elkind created and adapted for the film. Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, choral movement and scherzo as well as "Timesteps" were all used in the film, but they were very seriously edited, and only those edited sections appeared on the original film soundtrack. Columbia Records released an album, long out of print, of Carlos' music for the film that contained the complete "Timesteps" but it did not include the complete score.
Though Carlos was one of the first musicians to take the Moog synthesizer and its ability to create music seriously, along with Elkind, who was instrumental in assisting Wendy to create music using various studio techniques, neither has received anything like the credit they deserve. Most of the original albums were not released or digitally mastered from original masters by any of the record labels who had released them, so Wendy herself has undertaken a massive remastering and reissuing project. This includes the Bach recordings (Switched On I & II, Brandenbergs, and Well-Tempered Synthesizer), Beauty In the Beast, Sonic Seasonings, and Tales of Heaven and Hell.
Her complete score for A Clockwork Orange is available and I highly recommend it over the official film score. Carlos also did music for the original film Tron and worked again with Kubrick on a score for The Shining, although only minutes of her music out of the hours that was created was used. All part of the business of soundtracks, I suppose.
Bonus Tracks
You can listen to the complete version of “Timesteps” here, where it was previously uploaded as a video to the website Daily Motion. There is no video, just a photo of Wendy Carlos at the keyboard, but the audio is good. Once you hear this piece you’ll understand why Wendy Carlos and Rachel Elkind are the most shamefully ignored talents of electronic music, and truly the ‘mothers of the moog.’ Wendy’s music isn’t currently available for streaming or for legal download, so if you enjoy her work, please purchase it. You may have noticed that even some of the reissues are pricey. Search eBay and other online sites for possible better prices.
It was 40 years ago that the Sony Walkman first came on the market and changed the game of music listening forever. The Walkman played cassettes and made music both portable and private. It has survived through the introduction of the compact disc and the mini-disc, and paved the way for MP3 players and now, smart phones and streaming services, to be repositories of vast amounts of music at our fingertips.
I’ll be publishing NDIM’s first subscription content next month on the technology of portable music and how it’s changed our lives.
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