It's fun to imagine the staff of the Â鶹ԼÅÄ Radiophonic Workshop, a sound effects unit, hidden from public view in a bunker under Broadcasting House, only coming up for air to hand over tapes of their work to unsuspecting drama producers.
In truth, they were happily ensconced at the Â鶹ԼÅÄ Maida Vale Studios and they often let photographers in to shoot them while they were going about their work, as these pictures prove. They're taken from the Â鶹ԼÅÄ archive and cover almost the entire history of the Workshop, which was closed in 1998.
We present them to celebrate Prom 13: Pioneers of Sound, a late-night concert which takes place on Monday 23 July (start time: 10:15pm) and features works from two of the Â鶹ԼÅÄ Radiophonic Workshop's most forward-thinking musicians - Delia Derbyshire and Daphne Oram.
Daphne Oram and Fredrick Bradnum, 1957
This photo was taken in 1957, a year before the formal creation of the Â鶹ԼÅÄ Radiophonic Workshop. It pictures Fredrick Bradnum, writer of the ground-breaking Private Dreams and Public Nightmares, an experimental 'radiophonic poem' about the creative use of effects. He's working with , who was first employed at the Â鶹ԼÅÄ as a sound engineer in 1943, aged 18. Daphne was one of the original Workshop studio managers, and she would go on to become something of a legend in electronic music circles.
Workshop suite at Maida Vale Studios, 1958
The suite - a studio and workshop - specialised in the construction of new sounds, which were derived from natural sounds (everyday noises), and other sources. They were treated by modern tape recording techniques, filters, and many other technical devices.
In this picture, Donald McWhinnie listens to a montage of electronic effects, with Desmond Briscoe operating filter units in association with particular oscillator sounds controlled by Daphne Oram. Artificial reverberation is being added to these sounds, and Richard Bird is at the machine adjusting the reverberation time.
Richard Bird and Daphne Oram, 1958
Daphne Oram is blowing a Mijwiz, an Arabic reed pipe, while Richard Bird records the sound on a tape machine. Richard, known as Dickie, was the Workshop's first engineer.
Donald McWhinnie directs a tricky operation, 1958
This scene shows an actor in the studio. Daphne Oram is mixing at the control panel, while Desmond Briscoe guides a loop of tape through a tape machine, and Richard Bird prepares to record the next sequence. Donald McWhinnie is the producer.
Dick Mills and John Harrison, 1960
Studio managers Dick Mills and John Harrison working on a tape loop. Many more loops hang on the hooks on the wall.
Diane Muir-Jones, 1960
Diane Muir-Jones is playing a 45 on a Â鶹ԼÅÄ DRD/5, which was based on the Garrard 301 - a very collectable and highly regarded 'idler wheel' turntable.
Thursday Roundabout in rehearsal, 1960
Rehearsing radio programme Thursday Roundabout. Producer Jack Singleton is pictured on the right.
Desmond Briscoe at work, 1960
Desmond puts a 'shape' on the third-octave filter in the Radiophonic Workshop.
The workshop in 1961
This is one of the few shots in the archive where you can see the studio at rest. The managers and engineers certainly kept it tidy.
Maddalena Fagandini, 1962
Maddalena Fagandini was at the Workshop from 1959 to 1966. A transplant from the Â鶹ԼÅÄ's Italian Service, her work involved creating jingles and interval signals, using musique concrète techniques. In the year this picture was taken, one of Fagandini's interval signals, Time Beat, was reworked and commercially released by Ray Cathode, or George Martin as he was really called. He met The Beatles soon after.
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Time Beat
Using all instruments, 1962
There's the double-horned Arabic reed pipe again - clearly a favourite to bring out when there's a photographer visiting the Workshop.
Delia Derbyshire, 1965
Perhaps the Workshop's best-known employee was Delia Derbyshire, who became famous for reimagining Australian composer Ron Grainer's idea for a Doctor Who theme tune. With the assistance of Dick Mills, Derbyshire created a legendary and hugely influential piece of electronic music. Many of her other works are highly celebrated too, including Blue Veils and Golden Sands, and The Delian Mode.
Delia Derbyshire is pictured here two years after realising the theme. She's editing a musical note on tape, with Desmond Briscoe in the background.
Desmond Briscoe, 1965
Portrait of Desmond Briscoe, photographer unknown. Desmond was the Workshop's co-founder and original manager. In 1983, with Roy Curtis-Bramwell, he wrote a retrospective of the Workshop entitled The First 25 Years: The Â鶹ԼÅÄ Radiophonic Workshop.
John Baker, 1965
John Baker re-directs a sound. John was a jazz pianist who educated at the Royal Academy of Music. He was a Workshop employee from 1963 to 1974.
Malcolm Clarke, 1974
Workshop assistant Malcolm Clarke programming a large voltage controlled electronic music synthesiser called The Delaware.
John Baker, 1974
Here's John during his last year at the Workshop. The photograph was taken by Dave Edwards in March, 1974, hence the heavy, and very 70s, knitwear.
Recording a mbira, 1982
In their search for unusual sounds to record, the Workshop technicians would use any instrument that looked interesting. Here's a staff member playing a mbira, or thumb piano.
Heavy-duty machines of sound, 1982
This photograph looks like it could have been shot in the 1960s. It's actually from 1982. The Radiophonic Workshop: where formal studio dress and the side-parting survived.
Building circuit boards, 1982
The history of the Workshop mirrored dramatic changes in technology in the second half of the 20th century. By the 1980s, the opportunities for composers had vastly increased.
Elizabeth Parker, 1982
Elizabeth Parker started at the Workshop in 1978 and is perhaps best-known for providing special sound for the Â鶹ԼÅÄ science fiction series Blake's 7, Doctor Who and David Attenborough's 1984 ground-breaking 12-part series, The Living Planet.
Elizabeth Parker, 1989
Elizabeth Parker in Studio F (Room 21) in 1989. She was an employee for 20 years, and was there when the Workshop was closed in 1998.