99% Invisible - 542- Player Piano
Episode Date: June 27, 2023This week we're featuring an episode of The Last ArchiveThe Last Archive is a history show. Our evidence is the evidence of history, the evidence of archives. Manuscripts, photographs, letters and dia...ries, government documents. Facebook posts, Youtube videos, DVDs. Oral histories. This stuff is known as the “historical record,” but of course it’s not a record, in the sense of an audio recording: It’s everything.On this episode of The Last Archive, the story of the composer Raymond Scott’s lifelong quest to build an automatic songwriting machine, and what it means for our own AI-addled, ChatGPT world.
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This is 99% Invisible. I'm Roman Mars.
Here at 99PI we are huge fans of the last archive. It's a show about the history of truth,
how we know what we know, how we used to know things, and why it seems lately as if we don't know
anything at all. The first three seasons were hosted by historian and author Jill LePore,
who's a friend of the show and frequent guest, for their just launched fourth season,
producer Ben Nottif-Haffrey has taken over hosting. There are stories about freelance wiretappers,
time travel, and invasive species panics, with beautiful sound design that makes you feel like
your inside of history itself. Today we're presenting the season premiere, which asks the question,
can machines automate creativity? And no, we're
not talking about AI, we're talking about the player piano. I also love this episode so much
because it features a personal favorite composer of mine, Raymond Scott, a guy whose music you have So let's step inside.
The last archive.
About 30 years ago, a man named Erwin Chuset encountered one of the strangest machines
almost nobody had ever heard of.
I was 40, I was broke, it was kind of a professional failure.
Chuset was a DJ for a small community radio station in New Jersey.
A friend of his had put him on to a musician named Raymond Scott, one of the most famous
musicians of the early 20th century, who had somehow been completely lost to history.
These were records that were 25 cents a pop
and used record stores back then,
and they didn't even, they didn't even have them in a bin,
they had them under the bins.
Choose it loved Scott's music,
and he began to get drawn into the mystery of it all.
Who was this guy?
He was obsessed, but his research kept dead ending.
I went to a library and went looking through music history books and there's almost no mention of Raymond Scott.
He wasn't in the jazz books, he wasn't in the classical books, he wasn't in the pop books.
I was going to mystify he was kind of a mystery man.
He was stuck until his friend found Scott in a phone book.
He was still alive living in California.
Jews had made a phone call and then he got on a plane and flew across the country.
By then Scott was in his 80s.
He'd had a few strokes and he couldn't speak.
He would rest in the back of a dingy old ranch house with the heat turned all the way up
and a humidifier on full blast,
so there was a kind of heavy fog all around. His wife was taking care of him,
but she also kept a lot of stray animals. There was a dog with paralyzed hind legs dragging
itself around, and a lifetime's worth of stuff piled everywhere.
They were old rusted tape decks, they were wires, they were wheels of tape, they were
tape decks, there were wires, there were reels of tape, there were 78 RPM discs, many of them broken, some of them on shelves, old magazines of electronic industry publications, parts catalogs,
some of them dating back to the 1940s and 50s.
I should say, this story, spooky as it is, it's kind of my dream.
I'm Ben out of Half-Re and I've produced this podcast for the last few years, and I'm
hosting a season of 6 episodes now, which, more on that later.
All my life, I've written about history and made music.
To find a secret hidden archive full of strange musical electronics, I can imagine almost
nothing better.
To know, through artifacts, what someone else once knew, something lost,
because the records and papers and magazines that choose it found told a story.
Scott had been one of the most famous musicians of the 20th century.
He'd been on TV every week for a long time, in all the big magazines and films with movie stars.
But almost nobody remembered him now.
And I saw Raymond's entire life's work
spread out between a leaky guest shed, a garage,
some outbuildings on the property and van nides.
How could somebody so famous be so forgotten?
But something else didn't make sense either.
There are all these old machines and tools strewn about with the rusty edges, and in the corner
of the guest shed, covered in dust, chews it saw a huge hunk of metal encased in wood.
Large dusty piece of furniture, a bit like a wooden console. of metal encased in wood. But it wasn't furniture.
It was a heavy machine with wires spilling out, hundreds of switches on a black metal front,
and wood paneling all around.
It looked like the cockpit of an airplane, except that some of the switches and buttons
said things like record and power, and others said things like do-ah.
I didn't know what it was. Later on, someone helping to sort through Scott's files
found a contract.
It was between Raymond Scott and Motown Records,
and it detailed a binding, confidential agreement
to build that machine that Shuse would be staring at.
A machine that was meant to write songs.
The Electronium.
Shuse'd had come out to write songs. The Electronium.
Choose it had come out to California because of these 25 cent records you've gotten obsessed
with. It was honestly pretty random, but somehow he'd stumbled on one of the strangest stories
in the history of technology. How did it work?
That's the voice of Brian Ki-Hoo, one-time keyboardist for the who, Fiona Apple producer,
Beatles Historem.
And one of the people for whom this machine has become now a kind of holy grail.
Because it makes no sense.
Raymond Scott began building this thing in the 1950s, and it was a kind of mechanical, early
artificial intelligence that actually worked.
We're freaked out about ChatGPT now.
This thing was built in secret at a major studio in the 1970s.
Michael Jackson used to watch it work.
And nobody now can figure out how to get it to work again.
In the years between Chusid stumbling upon the
electronic and that rundown ranch house and today,
a lot of people have gotten involved in preserving the machine
or bringing it back to life in some fashion.
Brian Ki-Hoo, but also Mark Mother's Baw,
the lead singer of Divo,
Gatye, the pop star,
and teams of engineers and programmers and musicians
from all around the world.
Because it turns out that the man behind it
knew how to make music like no one else,
and they want to hear it again.
Welcome to season 4 of The Last Archive.
The show about how we know what we know, how we're used to know things, and why it seems
sometimes lately is if we don't know anything at all.
This episode is about that machine and its inventor, Raymond Scott.
Not just because Scott is the most famous composer of the 20th century that most people have
never heard of, but because I think his life traces one of the biggest stories about truth
in our world today.
The attempt to define the difference between man and machine.
and machine.
Remarks before Harry sits down, he is now sitting down. There's another reason I want to spend some time with Scott.
He is making himself comfortable.
He recorded his whole life.
And for them again, there he goes.
Which made for some fun research.
Raymond Scott was born in Brooklyn in 1908. His parents named him Harry Warno.
His father had sailed from Russia to New York two years
earlier on a ship called America.
Sometime after Scott was born, his parents bought a music store in Brooklyn, in Brownsville,
a small Jewish neighborhood.
They lived in the two floor apartment above their shop, surrounded by music and sound machines.
Scott especially loved the phone.
Sometimes he'd make prank calls.
Scott was growing up in an in-between time.
A mishmash of the world we know now in the world of the 19th century.
The electrified subway was brand new then.
The year Scott was born, it had made its way out to Brooklyn, but the gas street lamps
in Brownsville were still lit every night by a lamp lighter.
There were chickens in the street, the smell of the sea out over Canarcy, candy shops and
tenements, hot spiced corn beef and the delis, and briny half-sour pickles of the Jewish
market, farms and saltwater.
It felt like the old country.
It felt like the ends of the Earth.
It was a, it was a like a little village. It felt like the ends of the earth.
It was a, it was a like a little village. It was a neighborhood.
Pearl's Imni Winters, one of the girls from the neighborhood.
Later on, she and Scott got married
and she's all over Scott's recordings.
She's a, who never got over his obsession
with Raymond Scott, interviewed her with a colleague,
just a little before she died.
I used to go into the music store, you know, to buy music when I was a kid. with Raymond Scott, interviewed her with a colleague, just a little before she died.
That music shop is where I think the dream of the songwriting machine began.
It was a snapshot of everything that was changing in music in the early 1900s.
For centuries, if you wanted to hear music in your house, someone in your family needed
to know how to play.
For a while, buying a song meant buying sheet music, bound together in little pamphlets.
But later in the 19th century, technologies that could capture and reproduce sound were invented.
And by the start of the 20th century, mechanical music was taking off.
Suddenly, you didn't need to know somebody who could play to listen to music.
You could listen on records, whacksilliners, the radio. Scott was obsessed with these
machines and the music that came out of them. He even started an amateur home radio station
so he could make broadcasts from his bedroom to the living room. Even as a kid, he was always working on something. He dangled microphones out the window to record I mean, that's recording now. Oh my God, what a fact now.
Even as a kid, he was always working on something.
He'd angle microphones out the window
to record conversations on the street
or the neighbor practicing piano.
He would hang around the music shop with his dad,
tinkering and watching not just how music was made,
but how it was sold, what sold, and how it got reproduced.
And there was one machine in particular that he became fascinated by.
He told me that he taught himself to play the piano with the play of piano, and I guess
that's how he first started.
The player piano.
You've probably seen one before in a saloon in an old western.
You know when someone gets shot, falls on the piano and it starts playing itself?
That's a player piano.
A piano that plays is if there were a ghost of the keyboard.
Songs were sold as scrolls of paper with little holes punched out for each note, a set
of mechanical instructions for the piano.
The result?
You could hear nearly any song in your home, even if you had no idea how to play it yourself.
Scott loved the piano in the shop.
He'd take a role and probably play it as slowly as possible, fitting his little fingers to
the keys as they press themselves down, learning by machine.
Most people these days think of the player piano as a novelty or gimmick.
But I want to spend a minute with it here, because it's a big part, not just of music
history, but of automation history.
We tend to think of automation as man vs robot, factory lines and coal mines, but the player
piano was a kind of robot too, one we often forget about, but an early, massively influential
one, that foreshadowed
so much of what was to come.
When Scott was a kid, people thought the player piano would be the future of music.
There were hundreds of thousands of them sold each year, and millions of song rolls.
By 1919, when Scott was 11, there were more player pianos being sold than regular pianos.
It wasn't just sales though. Copyright laws in the United States were built around the
player piano and the record player in equal part. You can draw a straight line from player
piano rolls to punch cards and the first computer programs. And people made all kinds of
player pianos. What you're listening to now
is a special kind of player piano role that could capture all the subtleties of human performance.
This one was recorded by the composer WC and reproduced decades after his death by machine.
That's what Scott was learning in his family's music shop, Role by Role. Not just to play like a
machine, but to wonder at all the magical
things machines suddenly could do.
When I was trying to understand how Scott grew up, I read up on his neighborhood, and in
one memoir, I found a particular detail that snapped it all into view. The drugstore
just down the street from Scott had a poster in the window.
It was titled The Human Factory, and it imagined a person as if they were a kind of complex
machine with all these little engineers inside.
Scott must have passed that poster plenty of times.
He had dreams of becoming like a machine himself, attaching motors to his hands so he could
play the piano faster, the kind of way only a player piano could.
Everywhere, that line between man and machine was beginning to blur.
But there was one place where the difference was unmistakable.
The machine never made mistakes.
The song sounded the same every single time.
And to Scott, that was the ideal.
The struggle between being a musician and an engineer
was very real for him.
He just loved equipment.
Mark was the one insistent that he go to Riyadh.
I don't think he wanted to.
That choice, music Music or engineering.
It's set the course for Scott's entire life,
because Scott never could give up on engineering.
But his brother, who was a rising star in music,
saw that he had a gift for composing
that almost no one else did.
He got Scott a job as the pianist
for the CBS radio orchestra,
and immediately Scott began to get noticed.
He was anxious that people would think he only had the job because of his brother, so
Harry Warno flipped through the phone book to Lee found a name he liked, Raymond Scott.
A name he also chose because it sounded less Jewish, and he was always anxious about that.
He played his piano, he wrote his songs, and he kept his engineering passion more as a hobby.
CBS was a good situation, except for one thing.
He was always playing standards, songs that people knew they liked and had heard a million
times already.
He said that he wanted to write music that people would like the first time they heard
it.
He asked his brother Mark if he could put together a band.
He wanted to put together a six piece band
with himself in it.
Mark said yes.
Scott started hunting for five musicians
who could do exactly what he wanted.
What he wanted was music with a spark
that could form a connection with a listener immediately
out of nowhere.
He had a couple songs ready, so he found his guys rehearsed, and then he got an audience
together in CBS's Studio B. They dimmed the lights all the way, and they began to play.
A journalist wrote about it a year later.
Nobody who attended that premiere 18 months ago was likely to forget it. Out of the darkness, there came a thin, wailing note, barely masking a slow, suggestive thumping
on the drums.
When it was over, the audience rose to its feet and cheered, the fan mail poured in.
Who was this man's god?
Where was he from?
Where had he been all these years? They created such a...generated, such an amazing listener reaction that they immediately
got a recording contract with the master label, which was owned by Irving Mills, who was Duke
Ellington's manager.
The response was unprecedented.
In a minute, I'm going to take you right on in, but we're going to have a very entertaining
visit with one of the year's sensational musical groups only get in there.
Scott was trying to sell a perfect musical package.
He said he went out to clubs to track which tempos made people get up and dance.
He had a whole thing about names.
He called his band of six people, a quintet, not a sex tip.
He even renamed his saxophone player.
And he is the youngest of all groups.
His name was originally Dave Harris, but now it's Eric Tullet.
Eric Tullet, very much an interesting name.
Yeah, that's very much the idea of a name.
He wouldn't write his music down.
He'd just play it at the piano for his quintet,
and then have them play their parts back to like a do-it-right.
Note for note.
And we call the fellow that marvelous years and memories. They never forget a composition
when they find it.
Once they had it down, it rarely changed. And that was just how Scott wanted it. If he could
have replaced each of his musician's minds with a swirl of music, he probably would have.
He didn't know how to handle human relationships too well.
They called him a bully. They called him a b well. They called him a bully.
They called him something.
Bastard.
They called him all kinds of names, because he was trying
to make them play better.
One of his musicians once said, nobody worked with Raymond.
Everybody worked under Raymond.
Johnny Williams, the drummer, said, we hated every minute of it
because we were being told what to play.
He said at the same time that we hated it, we were making more money than anybody in town.
The music was like jazz, but without the improvisation or the looseness,
tightly managed, the price of mechanical perfection.
I want to pay again for my career.
He rehearsed...
I want to cut that problem in his face.
And he rehearsed?
I keep on cutting clean the hands of the clock.
He rehearsed. He wasn on cutting clean the empty cup.
He rehearsed.
He put him getting active at the same time.
He looked that way without pushing him out of the way.
He was driving his musicians crazy,
because they would say nobody needs to rehearse this much.
Scott held his musicians to an impossible standard.
He wanted them to play like machines,
but it's hard to argue with the results.
His rise was stratospheric.
Stravinsky, cab Calloway, Duke Ellington, they were all Raymond Scott fans.
In the 1940s, he had his own radio show, The Raymond Scotchow.
He became the music director of CBS Radio, where he led a racially integrated radio orchestra.
This I think not because he was especially progressive,
but because all he cared about was the music.
This, in so many ways, explains why he was working
with machines like life.
Oh, yeah.
Right, that musician.
That was his best friend.
The machines were his best friends.
To me, when I heard this story,
I kept thinking about Scott as a kid at the player piano.
When that machine was invented, it scared people. Two years before Raymond Scott was born, John Philip Susa, the famous composer, wrote an essay called The Menace of Mechanical Music.
The whole course of music has been the expression of soul states, he wrote.
And now in this 20th century come these talking and playing machines to reduce the expression
to a mathematical system of megaphones, wheels, cogs, discs, cylinders, and all manner
of revolving things.
The player piano became a dark symbol of modern life.
When Kurt Vonnegut wrote his first novel about a dystopian America run by engineers in their
automatic machinery, he called it player piano.
By the time Raymond Scott was getting famous, those fears about mechanical music were everywhere.
Same story everywhere. New machines, high speed production, fewer jobs, and ten men for
every job it can be had.
Scott was fighting a classic battle, mechanical perfection against human error.
What was at stake were free will, agency, the human soul.
That conflict was one of the main rhythms of 20th century history,
and Scott was like a leading melody.
And then, he hit a wrong note.
That story, after the break.
In the 1940s, Raymond Scott was properly famous.
He and his wife Pearl packed up their kids in his equipment and moved to a big house out
in Tuckahoe, New York.
He had a wonderful apartment and study, but we moved from there, because he was a ham radio operator. He wanted to be
where he'd have good reception. I kind of love that. He finally had enough money to buy a big house,
but actually the only reason he was moving out of the city was so that he could have better ham
radio reception. He was tinkering with his machines again. Not just microphones and high-fi
equipment, but new sorts of instruments.
Problem was, electronics was not a casual hobby in the late 1930s and early 40s.
He saw an electronic parts catalog and he wanted to order every part in the catalog.
Stan Warno is Raymond Scott and Pearl's Emny Wintersson. He made a great documentary about
his father called Deconstructing dad. I visited him last winter
And he thought the only way he's gonna make enough money to do that is to form a big band and so he did form a big band
I went out on the road
It's more 30 in New York and time for CBS to present the Raymond Scotch show
Across the continent and later to the whole world by shortwave come song hits of the day Starring America's number one composer with a band In the 1930s, Scots hit seemed to have been about the music first, but in the 40s, his
focus seems to have shifted from writing great songs to making as much money from his
music as possible so he could fuel his mechanical hobby.
He was like his own version of his dad's music shop.
Music sold any way you like, but a big band needed a singer.
He was always churning through them, always on the lookout for someone perfect.
And that's how he met Marjorie Chandler.
We went to Chicago and we took an apartment there.
Scott heard through one of the band's managers that there was a young girl from Canada he
should meet.
She'd sung in a big radio contest in one first place.
She was about 13 years old and her voice was amazing.
Scott decided to take her on as a student, full time. He thought she had real potential, and so she came to live with us.
Marjory's family sent her to live at the house in Tukaho.
According to Pearl, she and Scott were like surrogate parents,
except Scott and Marjory spent endless hours practicing. It was like with his quintet,
except Chandler was a kid,
away from her parents. This tape is likely from later I don't even know what you're saying.
You think coughs are better.
I think it's a heart.
You know, I'm okay.
I'm okay.
Scott gave her a new name, Dorothy Collins.
She'd go to school.
She'd wander around the big house and write her name, Marjorie, over and over again.
Then she'd go back to practicing.
It was a backbreaking regimen, but she was an incredible talent.
And as she got older and better, she began featuring her in his band.
She grew up with the family. When she was a bit older, she sang with the band
for the first time on the air.
After Scott started hosting the Lucky Strike Hit Parade,
a popular TV show, she became the featured singer.
She was 24.
And at some point along the way,
they got romantically involved.
And then I have seen some letters
where my mother was writing to him saying, it's really
I'm not really comfortable with her and who knows what was going on because again that
they eventually got involved with each other and he divorced my mom and married her.
Scott and Marjorie, now Dorothy Collins, were married when she was 25.
I don't want to dramatize this or speculate on how
and when they got together, because no matter what,
it's a dark turn.
She had been like an adopted daughter to them
away from her own parents.
It was the culmination, I think,
of the most dangerous strain in Scott's thinking
about musicians and people.
What he must have seen in Marjorie Chandler in the beginning was Dorothy Collins,
the chance to make his own musician, his own person, as if he were building a machine.
Every week they appeared on TV together. Collins became a kind of American darling,
achieving a level of celebrity he even Scott had never had,
a star.
The money came pouring in.
They moved into a mansion on Long Island.
It had 32 rooms and four stories.
That's Deb Studebaker, Raymond Scott and Dorothy Collins' daughter.
She's a teacher and a poet, which you can hear
by the way she describes her childhood home. The house was at the end of a long gravel driveway.
It had a forest behind it. It was very grand. There was a library with a secret door, you pull it out, there was a bathroom behind it.
We would go on these explorations in the forest.
There was wisteria hanging over an archway that was always filled with bees.
Inside the house, Scott had begun to amass all the electronic parts he wanted.
He was at one secretive and proud to show it off. Let me take you downstairs and show you these technical facilities and I
take it we're supposed to have home maybe a half million separate items I saw
an electronic music studio wants to grow and grow and grow and grow. The room was
full of gear switches meters welders of furnace. But now I'd like to take
upstairs to show you what we've been building with all this equipment.
Upstairs was a 30-foot wall of obscure electronic musical machinery.
Alongside his other musical work, Scott had begun writing and recording music for commercials.
I have for several months now been unable to get this jingle for sprite out of my head.
Over the course of the 1950s, Scott wrote jingles for a lot of big companies, Schlitz Beer,
RCA Victor, Vicks Ford Chrysler, and a lot of the time it was Dorothy Collins singing them.
He had a plaque over his piano at that red, ideally the word should make sense. These companies were selling the future, and they needed a sound to match it.
In the 1950s, Americans were drunk on the post-war promise of consumer technology.
It was the age of automatic, of being able to buy all sorts of machines that would make
your life easier.
To make reality of imagination, this is Bendix, the Tomorrow People.
Scott and Collins seemed at the time to have a happy life together as the Tomorrow People,
throwing parties at their mansion, making music in the machine rooms and listening to it in the listening room.
They were in many ways the sound of that post-war dream world.
They made music meant to push the button that sent consumers marching off to make a purchase.
During those years, Scott was creating the kinds of machines his music helped to sell,
whirling spinning devices that seemed as if they came from the future.
Just keep in mind how different what you're hearing is from popular music in the 50s.
I mean, this was the top song of 1959.
With iron icons and the British kept becoming, there wasn't as many as there was a while ago.
With iron once slower and they begin to run it, on down the Mississippi to the Gulf of Mexico.
Music like Scots just didn't exist in the mainstream, but he was sneaking it in there
through commercials.
He saw his machines as a way to push the envelope, and thought that because the sounds they made
were new, they'd catch the ear and away jingles made with old instruments couldn't.
Scots seems to have created one of the first, if not the first, musical sequencer.
A device that is the foundation for much of modern pop.
In a weird historical twist, one of the ways he had financed all this experimentation
was by selling his early hits to Warner Brothers, where they became a lot of the music soundtracking
the loony tunes.
Literally, this man put the tunes in loony tunes.
But then he started to get sick. His brother and his father had died of heart disease,
and Scott had his first heart attack in 1958.
I don't think it's a coincidence that within a year
he began to work on the first version of the electronic him,
his songwriting machine.
I remember him telling me, you know, about this machine.
I'm working on a machine that's going to compose and perform at the same time.
This was the stuff of science fiction.
A dream a few people had had, but nobody went for it quite like Scott.
A machine, not just for playing music, but for composing it.
Scott began to work harder and harder on a machine, not just for playing music, but for composing it.
Scott began to work harder and harder on the machine, and at the same time, his marriage to Dorothy Collins
unraveled.
She's discovered that she loved acting and the theater,
and my dad didn't travel with her or us.
He was always working on his own stuff,
but I think there was a certain lightness,
I think, that she probably found being
respected now, you know, for something new that was hers.
Acting was hers.
He had nothing to do with that.
Collins left, and then they were divorced.
She testified in court that he was such a perfectionist,
so intensely critical that he gave her asthma,
and she couldn't sing when he was around.
It's my mother used to say it was like Frankenstein's monster and the monster kind of woke up and decided, you know,
that she could be her own person.
But Scott was bereft, and he took a bunch of sleeping pills, thinking he was going to kill
himself, but he just went to sleep for a long time.
He moved out of the house into an industrial space, in a big office park on Long Island.
His TV show was off the air.
He didn't have a hit band anymore, and he was alone.
But he had one thing left, the electronic.
I have very clear memories of being out there and the electronic was in the very next
room iterating away, which is what it did.
You had to kind of set it up up and then it would go through these iterations
We would be listening to it and he would hear something he really liked and he jumped off and go in there and record it on the cassette
In the 1960s Raymond Scott was living in a long low-light cement warehouse surrounded by machines
He had to seriously downgrade his life.
Jeff winner.
He works with Chuse that radio DJ who went out to visit Scott.
And together with Scott's family, they're preserving, managing, and sharing his archives.
He went from a massive mansion of his own design to living on Long Island in a warehouse
that wasn't even zoned for residential.
That didn't have a kitchen who was not supposed to be living there.
He'd gotten married for the third time to a woman named Mitsy Curtis.
And this time it stuck, but money was tight.
Popular music was moving on.
He was still composing the occasional jingle, but now really it was all
machines and not just in his warehouse. He was still composing the occasional jingle, but now really it was all machines.
And not just in his warehouse.
The concern over automation was reaching a fever pitch in the United States.
In 1960, John F. Kennedy even ran for president against the machine threat.
Because the problem that West Virginia is facing is the problem that all America is going
to face.
That is the problem of what happens to men when machines take their place.
Meanwhile, Raymond Scott seems to have been trying to replace as much of himself as possible with machine.
Everything he had ever done up into that point in one way or another would become part of Electronium.
Even if he hadn't even declared to himself that that was his goal yet.
It's like everything's under that one roof.
His baseline generator, his drum pattern generator, the melody sequencer, all of it tied together
with thick wires hidden behind the concrete walls of the factory.
And when Raymond came to the door, the first thing I encountered was, well, I want you to
write a sign this disclosure agreement. Tom Ray. He used to work at Moog, probably the
most famous synthesizer company of all time. He's taught electronic music
history at the Berkeley College of Music, where he was a professor. But at the
time he met Scott in the summer of 1970, he was a graduate student,
working on his dissertation for a PhD in music.
I mean, I'm not an industrial spy,
I'm a graduate student.
Ray had heard that Scott was touched with genius,
and he wanted to see what he'd been inventing.
What did I see?
I saw everything.
Oh my gosh, you know, what is this thing over here?
And I said,
it doesn't seem to have a keyboard or any kind of an interface. He said, well, it does.
It had one little micro switch. And so he goes over, and he flips some of these many, many knobs and
switches and things on the panel of the thing. He said, I'm going to have it suggest a theme,
and it gives out with a little melody.
And then he says, I think I will ask it to make the intervals,
the musical intervals wider, and he flips a couple of switches,
and they're wider.
You know, and he put together, as I said there,
a rather lush composition with not only accompaniment,
but counterpoint and the whole thing.
Scott was inventing madly during those years.
The Ectronium combined a lot of different gizmos he'd created
and it was a constantly changing set of modules. You controlled the music the machine made by means of switches.
He called the composer guidance control. One of the major x-factors of the ELECTRONIUM is that it
seems to have had some way of generating randomness within the preset patterns. They would change
on their own over time, but it's not clear to anyone how. This was a crazy idea, but you can get a clue to why Scott was after it from an ad he
made around then, with Jim Henson, the Muppets guy, for IBM.
They were pitching a new word processor, but the ad is all about modern life.
It's a kind of crazy montage of vacant looking people, machines, and explosions. There always seem to be enough time to do the paperwork.
What? Today? There isn't.
Today, there isn't enough time.
Today, there aren't enough people.
Machines should do their work. That's what their best path is.
People should do the thinking. That's what their best path is.
But what about a machine that did the work and the thinking?
When Scott was born, machines were being created mostly to help people do road physical labor.
In the first half of the 20th century, they began to do those things automatically at the push of a button.
And by the age of the electronic, machines began automatically to do things that looked a lot like intellectual labor.
This robot manipulator can be easily taught because of its electronic brain. Things began automatically to do things that looked a lot like intellectual labor.
In that light, Scott was reaching for the brass ring.
A machine capable of making art, of helping people make art, that expressed a human soul,
and stirred human emotions. But he needed money to do it. So he started doing a little press,
small articles here and there. It's like inventing the typewriter, he told a journalist, only the
typewriter furnishes the plot and reads the result. I've always told people that I consider Raymond Scott one of the pioneers
of artificial intelligence in music. But if you wanted to buy an electronium from Raymond Scott,
it was going to cost you an arm and a leg. And it was a crazy idea. So it was by a stroke of luck
that the head of Motown Records, Barry Gordy, heard about it. It's not a one man old innovation,
or two man old innovation, but it is an over-the-vation of teamwork.
I mean, it's unseen heroes, sort of speak.
Barry Gordy founded Motown in 1959 in Detroit.
Before founding the company, he had worked at a car factory.
During the years when there was lots of hubbub over plants that had achieved near-full automation.
It was on the assembly line that Gordy started to think
about doing music differently.
In his autobiography, he wrote,
at the plant,
the cars started out as just a frame,
pulled along on conveyor belts
until they emerged at the end of the line.
I wanted the same concept for my company,
only with artists and songs and records.
If we had,
if we hadn't gone any year without, hit records would have been out of business. Motown was a black-owned business, with artists and songs and records.
Motown was a black-owned business, selling music by black artists to everyone in America.
Like everything in the music business, it was precarious economically, because hit records
deal in matters of taste, and taste is subject to biases and whims.
Gordy, with his assembly line passed, wasn't having that.
He wanted to systematize as much as possible.
They'd A.B. test songs with different artists
until something stuck, like R&D.
They had a house band, the funk brothers,
providing iron-clad rhythm section arrangements
across Motown songs, as if they were the engine department.
The only thing missing was the automation.
And that's why it makes sense to me that one day in the early 1970s, Barry Gordy pulled
up to Raymond Scott's warehouse with a string of limos to see the automatic songwriting
machine for himself.
And by the way, Barry Gordy knew who Raymond Scott was like anybody of his generation. Raymond
Scott was a famous person. So Gordy also knew he Scott was, like anybody of his generation. Raymond Scott was a famous person.
So Gordy also knew he was getting that in the deal.
Someone who was a musical mind who has already written hits.
Scott showed Gordy and his crew the warehouse.
And then he fired up the electronic, just like he did with Ray.
He must have shown Gordy how you flipped the switches to set a pattern.
Then watched as the machine iterated, changing notes repeating phrases, rifling through ideas
semi-randomly.
Scott was selling an idea at that point.
The potential of a songwriting machine that could hit on an idea that a person alone
never would.
If it came up with a hook that sparked in the way a hit does, you'd know it when you heard
it, and you could bottle it up and sell it to millions of people.
This idea, I think, came straight from Scott's Quintet days, finding that sound that you like the first time you hear it.
It's a tricky balancing act, because it has to be new enough that it catches your attention,
but a hit also has to sound familiar enough that you kind of know what you're gonna get as soon as you hear it.
It's like an elevator pitch to the listener, and Gordy was uncompromising about it.
Here's Smokey Robinson, in a 2019 documentary,
remembering that process.
He was to say that all the time,
we got to get him in the first 10 seconds.
We wish he'd got to go to his fabulous intros.
You know, something that would catch your attention immediately.
So, in that light, the electronic makes perfect sense to me.
What if you could take a machine that had baked into it
all of the patterns and intuitive musical sense
of a proven hitmaker like Scott? but then this crazy X-factor of proto-art officially intelligent randomness.
That dream was Scott's life's work.
He needed it to work.
Everything was riding on it.
So, Gordy was so impressed that you wrote a check on the spot for $10,000 to get started.
And that was a lot of money back then.
It was a huge windfall.
Scott was overjoyed.
Gordy wanted the instrument remade to suit Motown's needs, so Scott began work immediately.
The machine would be a culmination of everything he'd worked on up to that point, including
the player piano from his childhood.
Here's a call from a couple years earlier between Scott and Bob Mogue, the synthesizer legend
who'd worked with him.
And this knocked me out when I first heard it in the archives, but he was still thinking
about the player piano.
You can hear the ideas just bursting out of him. I have some things that I think have left me slip you.
And this is hardly secret stuff.
But, well, he often does play with you when I see it.
Okay.
But the program here isn't evidentable.
I mean, it's a computing machine to program me things.
The program here is programming things.
And all the automated tools to program me things. The play piano is programming things and all the automated tools are programming things.
Yeah. And so the programming is, it's going to be the way it's done.
A player piano for the space age.
Scott, of course, quickly blew through the Motown down payment and ran out of time,
but Gordy didn't seem to mind. Scott moved out to Motown's offices in Los Angeles
to work on the Electronium in a room
above Barry Gordy's garage.
He became the director of electronic music, research,
and development.
Eventually, he started to work on the machine
in the Motown Studios.
People were in awe of him.
I'm thinking of a couple different engineers
who were up there who would just come out
and be like shaking their heads, kind of like you know what is going on kind of thing.
Scott's daughter, Deb Studebaker again. According to a former engineer at Motown, Michael
Jackson would come by Scott's studio, a small room on the second floor, and watch the
electronic work. He made music unlike anything they'd heard. The idea wasn't that the machine
would write a complete song structure, verse chorus bridge, but that it would iterate on combinations of rhythm,
chord and melody, in search of that spark. It was a way of automating the part of songwriting
Scott excelled at, the thing that caught your ear, and made you like something the first time you
heard it. It was meant as a collaboration between man and machine, one that took the hard work out of the most crucial part
of the songwriting process.
The inspiration.
But over time, the extreme cost weighed the project down,
but also the fact that Scott was never satisfied,
refused to be finished.
The electronic worked.
It just was always opened up being redesigned, refined, changed.
At one point, that same engineer tried to get Motown's famous session musicians to play along with the machine,
as part of a drive to use the instrument on a recording, but they revolted.
They didn't like it. They didn't like the idea of it. They didn't like the concept, they didn't like what it theoretically represented.
And these guys were great musicians. They didn't want to be replaced by a machine.
It's not known whether the electronic ever suggested an idea that made it into a Motown song,
but I think it's unlikely. Gordy, let's go take the electronic home with him eventually,
the tinker with it around the house.
He'd stay up all night and work on it all day in his pajamas, building new bits and pieces,
taking it apart, and building it again.
Then his health got worse.
The music industry moved on, started to forget about him.
He had several strokes, and the electronic him sat, and the guest shed out back, gathering
dust, waiting to be found.
Well, it's Dr. Frankenstein's monster, isn't it? Brian Ki-Hue again,
synthesizer wizard, former keyboardist for the who, Fiona Apple producer, and the second person
this episode to bring up Frankenstein's monster, more happily in this case, about a machine
rather than a person. He's working now to bring the electronic back to life.
We spoke last winter.
And so, electronic might be literally just a piece of inspiration.
If I play piano or if I play guitar and write songs,
my fingers are even limiting because I tend to play a certain chord shape
where I'm jazzier and he's more country.
But if the electronic was not confined by those things, it might come up with ideas that
are beautiful hybrids.
Maybe Lil Jazzy but Lil Pocca.
And who knows what it would come up with.
But that's an idea to say that the human creativity is limited.
It's a beautiful thing when it works, but as we know, you can't just write great musical
day, otherwise everybody would.
I guess part of the problem is like in a creative line of work, your business, especially when you're
a Motown, which is an empire at that point, is totally dependent on this fundamentally unknowable,
unreliable thing, which is human creativity. Like you never really know when the music is going
to strike. And so, especially with the kind of assembly line, Motown idea,
if you could just make that predictable and automate it, the aha moment,
then that would take a lot of the uncertainty out of the business.
I think you pointed out something that most people don't want to
ever mention, which is that creativity is unreliable.
You might be Paul McCartney and able to write
some of the world's greatest songs, but if I brought him in the room right now and gave him an
hour said, write me a great song, it doesn't work that way. It doesn't work that way, but you can
understand why someone who devoted his whole life to making perfect music, wish that it did. Raymond Scott died in 1994 in obscurity and relative poverty in a nursing home near
that faded house in Van Nies.
Choose a winner, a slew of fellow enthusiasts, and the Scott family started to comb through
his archives to piece the whole crazy story together. They shipped boxes and boxes of tapes and records and papers to the
Mar Sound Archives at the University of Missouri Kansas City. Then they released his music
in compilations. Scott had always kept his machines mostly secret in case anyone wanted
to steal them. But when they finally released Scott's electronic music in the early 2000s, he suddenly had a
new set of posthumous hits.
You probably don't even realize you've heard a raiment Scott's song before, but he's
been sampled all over the place.
Gorillas, Jay Dilla, Lizzo, they've all sampled Scott.
His music is in the Simpsons, Rennon Stimpy, HBO shows.
The song you're hearing now is called Portofino, and it was unreleased in his lifetime.
But there are all these recordings of it, each trying it a different way.
All electronics, with vocals, with saxophone.
When the archivists found it, choose it thought the melody was so classic, it must have
been a cover.
And I went into various databases looking for Portofino, like just like 80 or 100 things
called Portofino.
And I would go through iTunes and listen to every goddamn one of them and not one of them
was Raymond's Melody.
But to this date, I mean, that thing's been out for 21 years.
No one has come to us and said, hmm, that's cover version, or someone else wrote that,
or it's a traditional melody.
A true original. Meanwhile, Mark Mothersbaugh, the lead singer of Divo,
bought the ELECTRONIUM and dragged it from the shed
to his studios.
Brian Ki-Hoo is trying now to assemble a team of engineers
to bring it back online in digital or physical form.
Even with all the schematics, they're still mystified.
You know, it's somebody said it's still a black box,
and that's true.
We still don't know what it did, and I feel like we're looking through a keyhole at a room, and we can barely see it until we get through the door a bit more.
There are Scott cover bands and Scott festivals. Somehow his music still resonates. Whatever Sparky-Cott is still catching.
What I think is strange is most of the musicians who knew Scott earlier in his life seemed
to have hated him, but the engineers who knew him at the end of his life loved him.
A lot of his early jazz hits were aggressive, frantic firecrackers of song, but the electronic
stuff is often sweet, guileless, innocent.
Some of that stuff was written in partnership with the electronic him. His melody, its patterns.
And it sounds like a songwriter at peace with himself.
At one point he'd resisted human control of it, but then he took one of the voice cards and adapted it to a keyboard input.
As he found before when he would put a Hammond organ or a mostly an Ande lane on top of the electronic him,
it really needed somebody doing a nice melody in order to sell the package.
There is, I think, a lesson in Scott's life.
One that's kind of a morality tale for our own AI-addled chat GPT world.
He walked from automatic pianos to the first computers.
He sought perfection. He sought
industrial scale creativity. But the trade-offs he made were the relationships around him.
The failure to see the humanity of the people he was trying to control. People would sometimes
talk about Scott as if he were a machine. But I think there's something in his music that
testifies to a soul, that
ghost at the keys of the player piano.
Those recorded phone calls to his family, federally string of hits, all the musical machines.
What they have in common is the goal of each song, to connect people through sound.
Scott prized perfection in that end, above everything else, and it ruined him.
Someday soon someone might be able to bring the electronic back to life, and here again
the inside of Scott's mind.
But still, I think he must have known.
The electronic could never write a Raymond Scott song.
For that, you needed Raymond Scott.
The last archive is written and hosted by me, Ben Nadefafri.
It's produced by me and Lucy Sullivan, and edited by Sophie Crane. Jake Gorsky is our engineer.
Fact checking on this episode by Arthur Gomperts and Lucy Sullivan.
Sound design by Jake Gorsky and Lucy Sullivan.
Our executive producers are Sophie Crane and Jill LePore.
Thanks also to Julia Barton, Pushkin's executive editor, Original Music by Matthias Bossy and John Evans of Stellwagen Symphonet.
Additional Music by Corn Tooth. Our foolproof player is Becca A. Lewis. Many of our
sound effects are from Harry Jeanette Jr. in the Star Jeanette Foundation. Special
thanks on this episode to Alan W. Entenment, Jack Hertz, Carl Miller and the
Pyrean Recording Society, and Byron Werner. For a bibliography further reading and
a transcript and teaching guide to this episode, head to thelastarchive.com.
The Last Archive is a production of Pushkin Industries. I'm Ben Nathafri.
free.