In 1963, the Radiophonic Workshop's Ron Grainer outlined his ideas for the theme to a new science fiction series being developed for television; a few weeks later, the completed track was produced by Delia Derbyshire, the end result -- the title theme for the cult classic #Doctor Who -- becoming perhaps the most popular piece in the BBC oeuvre. (Grainer also went on to author much of the incidental music heard in the groundbreaking series #The Prisoner.) In 1964, John Read combined flute and bass with electronic sounds, the first time musicians were employed in tandem with machines -- now a BBC trademark --and it's a convention that remains in place today. Still, the electronic resources at the Radiophonic staff's disposal were fairly primitive throughout much of the '60s, consisting primarily of sine and square waves as well as white noise; only at the end of the decade did they acquire their first Moog and VCS3 synthesizers.
By the mid-'70s, the Radiophonic arsenal also included a Roland Vocoder, its disembodied vocal textures first used by Malcolm Clarke in an award-winning adaptation of Ray Bradbury's #And There Shall Come Soft Rains. In 1977, Paddy Kingsland introduced polyphonic synths on his theme for Radio 4's PM show, and three years later he was the first to use a Fairlight CMI in his score for a TV adaptation of #The Hitch-Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy. By 1985, all of the Radiophonic's studios were equipped with samplers, with Apple Macs installed a year later; by the end of the decade, a totally automated studio was up and running, complete with MIDI routing, and by the '90s, hard-disk recording and sequencing were the norm. Throughout its long existence, the Radiophonic Workshop also released a number of albums, many of them sampled endlessly by contemporary electronica acts. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi