Soon after the loss of Don Buchla, another legend of synthesis has passed away. Jean-Jacques Perrey died last week.

Perrey was a master of whimsy and invention. He’s of course best known for his collaboration with Gershon Kingsley, “Baroque Hoedown,” featured in Disney’s Electric Light Parade. But that’s emblematic of a broader contribution: he’s one of the leading pioneers of the 20th Century in introducing the sounds of electronic synthesis to a mass audience, with noises heard from Sesame Street to TV ads.

Here’s the master composer playing his own best-known tune:

It’s also notable that, like Bob Moog, Perrey got his start long before the evolution of the synthesizer as we know it. For Moog, it was the Theremin; for Perrey, Georges Jenny’s vacuum-powered Ondioline – another instrument with an eerie, vocal-like sound. Here, Perrey demonstrates that wild instrument (which I think would elicit just as enthusiastic applause today):

But that’s not the only thing you might not know about Perrey.

He started out as an accordion player – and med school dropout.

Γ‰dith Piaf sponsored his demo tape – which in turn landed him a visa to the USA.

Before “Baroque Hoedown,” Perrey paired with Kinsgley on the wild record The In Sound From Way Out!, complete with imaginative use of tape loops.

And while Wendy Carlos’ cover record helped popularize the Moog (and shattered Classical sales records), Perrey contributed, too, with covers like the Perrey/Kinsgley Spotlight On The Moog. That album came some two years before Carlos’ outing.

Because Perrey/Kinsgley tunes often found their way into television, they helped shift the perception of synthesizers from “that scary thing that means aliens are about to attack” to something that could also be fun and friendly. And while I know that experimental music lovers sometimes deride the popularization of the Moog, my sense is that we wouldn’t have the synth community we have today had the instrument not proven its versatility.

The man rescored Rimsky-Korsakov’s Flight of the Bumblebee – with the sound of actual bees.

The tune “E.V.A.” is one of the most sampled tracks in hip hop and rap ever. (Dr. Dre even sampled it.)

Even if you think you don’t know it, you do. And it’s therefore an essential link between early European experimentalism, pop, and hip hop – a reminder that it’s almost impossible to confine musical influence in the modern age to any one place or person.

The Beastie Boys and Smashmouth sampled (or ripped off, respectively) Perrey.

Female irritable bowel system has also had a TV ad scored by a Perrey cut. (Seriously.) But so has a recent iPhone ad – sounding every bit like a TV ad score from 2016, not from decades ago.

Gotye (of “Somebody That I Used to Know” fame) is working on a tribute show to the composer – and to the Ondioline, working directly with Maestro Perrey to learn to play it. He has a tribute post to the composer.

Dana Countryman has collaborated extensively with Perrey – and written an exhaustive bio.

Perrey owned a circular keyboard.

jean-michel-jarre-circular-keyboard

But here’s the best quote of all, from Dana Countryman:

“If he were here today, there is nothing that Jean-Jacques would like more than to think that his fans were playing his crazy, funny, catchy Moog music right now β€” and smiling, instead of being sad.”

And the perfect epithet:

“He was the master of happiness.”

The Passing of an Electronic Music Legend [Facebook note]

More obituaries:

Electronic music pioneer Jean-Jacques Perrey, of Disneyland’s Main Street Electrical Parade fame, dies at 87 [L.A. Times]

Jean-Jacques Perrey, 1929–2016 [Boing Boing]

Jean-Jacques Perrey, Electronic Music Pioneer, Dies at 87

Photo: Randy Yau, via Barry Threw on Flickr.

Photo: Randy Yau, via Barry Threw on Flickr.

8 responses to “In memory of Jean-Jacques Perrey”

  1. Foosnark says:

    Oh man πŸ™ I saw the Main Street Electrical Parade so many times as a kid and it never failed to bring joy. Though I didn’t know who he was at the time, Perrey was one of the ones who made me love electronic music at a young age.

  2. Foosnark says:

    Oh man πŸ™ I saw the Main Street Electrical Parade so many times as a kid and it never failed to bring joy. Though I didn’t know who he was at the time, Perrey was one of the ones who made me love electronic music at a young age.

  3. A beautiful tribute, Peter.

    And who can forget the most literal interpretation of “Flight of the Bumblebee” β€” composed with real bees across the course of hundreds of slices of tape, a kind of proto-sampling which is challenging to do even with today’s tools? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AOfWPRzWpVE

    You point out what I adore most about JJP, of course, and that is his unfiltered and sunny optimism. Some electronic music has irrationally been phobic of melody, it tries to hide from our memories. Whereas, JJP and his collaborators went full force into tunes that were both wildly experimental yet so accessible. That’s a very difficult intent to achieve, and we know with the passing course of time that he was so very correct.

    And here’s another one that found its way into a recent iPhone ad: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AhtlvSQ6o38 The full track has alternating tonal color call-and-response shifts in the melody lines, that recall modern “complextro” or David Guetta’s “The Alphabeat”.

    I have been deeply moved and am creating a JJP tribute track.

  4. Graham Metcalfe says:

    That Ondioline was a pretty capable synthesizer. I love the vibrato using the side-to-side motion of the keybed. I was never really partial to his music, but this article makes me want to go back and listen to more of his recordings.

    • That’s a great point, and a fine example of an expressive technology that I wish was more mass-market. Even to this day, there are hardly any really elegant keyboard instruments that can do that β€” ROLI Seaboard and some other MPEs. Side-to-side vibrato is so powerfully nuanced, a lot more controllable than using a mod wheel for a fixed vibrato rate.

  5. Graham Metcalfe says:

    That Ondioline was a pretty capable synthesizer. I love the vibrato using the side-to-side motion of the keybed. I was never really partial to his music, but this article makes me want to go back and listen to more of his recordings.

  6. woodslanding says:

    “The in sounds from way out” was the very first LP I ever purchased with my own money! 1970, maybe? I was in 4th grade….

  7. woodslanding says:

    “The in sounds from way out” was the very first LP I ever purchased with my own money! 1970, maybe? I was in 4th grade….

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