The RCA Synthesiser was invented by the electronic engineers Harry Olsen and Hebert Belar, employed at RCA's Princeton Laboratories, as a way of electronically generating popular music. Although it never fulfilled its inventors expectations it's novel features were an inspiration for a number of electronic composers during the 1950's.
Harry F Olson in 1956 The publication of "A Mathematical Theory Of Music" (1949) inspired Belar and Olsen to create a machine to generate music based on a system of random probability. The theory being that random variations of already created popular songs could be used to create new marketeable songs.This flawed theory never came to fruition partly due to the lack of sufficient processing power available at the time and partly to the mistaken concept that the basis of composition could be gleaned from mathematical analysis of a muscial piece. The sound source was again the Vacuum Tube Oscillator (12 of them in the mkI and 24 in the mkII) but with a unique progammable sound contoller in the form of a punch-paper roll which allowed the composer to predefine a complex set of sound parameters. This allowed the mixing of generated sounds and shaping the sound with dividers, filters, envelope filters, modulators and resonators.
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