That's because there is nothing else produced in the same way. This is all analogue. Physically cutting & pasting endless reels of magnetic tape over & over to produce a few moments of sound.
Delia Derbyshire era la Giorgio Moroder de los 60s ya que ella pensaba en EDM con una electronica pura y fluida como la escuela de Berlín y no el Krautrock ni el estancado Düsseldorf...
@@coosoorlog as a huge fan of both, I definitely agree - even in their song 'the robots' they repeatedly use an oscillating sound four times - like the one at 0:15 here. both songs are about robots - surely not a coincidence!
She is such a genius! Her stuff sounds exactly like Stereolab and Broadcast, not to mention decades before their time. She influenced the people who influenced the creative music of today!
"The voices are reversed but actually say "Praise to the Master/His Wisdom and His Reason/Praise to the Master/Forever and OO-OO-OO-OO/His Wis.../His Wis.../OO-OO-OO-OO/" Delia Derbyshire, in the Surface interview, December 1999
Apology accepted. I am also sorry. I'm not proud of what I said but this is the internet. If you venture into the comments you need be ready to say some nasty shit because basic manners are typically abandoned.
Yeah she was a woman and everyone knows how much we men hate women, right? Poor middle class woman working for the BBC. Delia Derbyshire's entire team (mostly consisting of men) were treated like shit, not just her, so please resist the urge to march.
Delia is the summit of electronic music. Never equalled. Daphne Oram is quite something too! Damn BBC ruining so much sublime creativity in shutting down the Radiophonic Workshop, which they never really appreciated anyway. They never knew the absolute treasures they had!
@@vibratoryuniverse308 He sure is an incredible fountain of ideas but I find his work a bit abrasive in comparison after listening to a LOT of it over the past few days. Might be the substances used to inspire it?
Once in an interview, Ralf Hutter, spoke about the influence of arrangements futuristic jazz Disselvet, as well as intrudução effects exploited by Ray Scott in his música.Porém all hampered by the lack of an electronic rhythmic, and he and Florian They took a long time to develop, such as electronic beat and even inexistentes.Derbyshire instruments basically in the same period of emergence of the Organization (kraftwerk) faced the same problems.
Die Antwoord's use of this is rather special though imo. It's totally faithful to the original sound through the whole track. Oh, and just too 2nd, eat up The Residents. So much lovely sound.
It’s an unbelievable shame that the episode of “Out of the unknown” for which this song was written, is now (apparently) lost to humanity, forever. Thrown out by the Beeb because they needed the space. I know the story on which that episode was based, and having heard this song (and seen other episodes of that series) I would dearly have loved to see that one episode.
Same for the Doctor Who theme. Delia's rendition of it is more haunting than all the other ones. I think she even made the incidential music for one of the stories (I think that story was with Jon Pertwee, during his first season as the Doctor).
Can you imagine the amount of WTF'..ing that went on when this was played? it's kinda like the 4 minute mile. Once it's broken, it is no longer seen as impossible, so it inspires others. Did me.
I like Die Antwoord well enough but sampling Derbyshire isn't exactly novel, The Timelords/JAMs/KLF had a #1 hit with her back in 1988. Timbaland, Gangstarr and RJD2 have all sampled Perrey and/or Kingsley to good effect and there was that whole album of Pierre Henry remixes. Early electronic music has been done, my advice if you're fond of this would be to check out the Residents Mark of the Mole and Intermission albums, they've probably been mined too but might be cheaper.
She was a revolutionary woman in electronic music. But you know that because you are here...
Delia was a visionary in analog electronic music. At a time when the electronic synthesizer hadn't yet been invented.
revolutionary composer*
@@MecdiAn thank you for the completely unnecessary contribution
@@MecdiAn Revolutionary WOMAN is important here. SHE was unsung.
@@FrankNFurter1000 She specifically asked to be called a composer, not a woman composer, I'm singing her revolution.
This sounds ahead of time even now
That's because there is nothing else produced in the same way.
This is all analogue. Physically cutting & pasting endless reels of magnetic tape over & over to produce a few moments of sound.
Absolutely agree!!
4 years later and no sign of repent
It's always ahead of 'now'.
it's sideways of it's time
These people were true pioneers of Electronic Music. I bet even Kraftwerk and Tangerine Dream would have been in awe of them.
I think there's a decent chance those musicians were aware of Derbyshire, Carlos, Oliveros etc. and were influenced by their work.
Delia Derbyshire era la Giorgio Moroder de los 60s ya que ella pensaba en EDM con una electronica pura y fluida como la escuela de Berlín y no el Krautrock ni el estancado Düsseldorf...
@@coosoorlog as a huge fan of both, I definitely agree - even in their song 'the robots' they repeatedly use an oscillating sound four times - like the one at 0:15 here. both songs are about robots - surely not a coincidence!
Sounds like a hip hop tune from the 90's but it's from the 60's!
The BBC, supporting massive electronic bangers since 1966
If by supporting you mean using freely without credit.
dayuum.who knew they were makin beats in the 60s
she had the earliest copy of garage band known to man
This is superbly darker than dark. Wooooo
She is such a genius! Her stuff sounds exactly like Stereolab and Broadcast, not to mention decades before their time. She influenced the people who influenced the creative music of today!
"The voices are reversed but actually say "Praise to the Master/His Wisdom and His Reason/Praise to the Master/Forever and OO-OO-OO-OO/His Wis.../His Wis.../OO-OO-OO-OO/"
Delia Derbyshire, in the Surface interview, December 1999
She and Raymond Scott deserve to be as well known as their contemporaries
Daphne Oram as well
Raymond Scott's music turned up in several Ren & Stimpy episodes.
I was expecting someone to bust a rhyme after the intro
Man, No MPC, just tape manipulation, amazing track.
Delia Derbyshire. The Originator.
Yo dis beat iz phat doe
Lol xD
Hundo P ;)
This is like if aliens came to Earth and played their music for us. Amazing, and triply so for the time.
This is so unreal I thought it was a prank or something at first, I don't even know how I got here. Love it.
IDM before it was popularized in the 90s. Amazing.
Sends shivers through me every time. All hail Delia.
60 years ago Delia invented Trance. Incredible.
Now officially a Delia Derbyshire fan.
my life is now complete
Delia i love youuuu
It’s the combination of her music with her outfit for me
Delila turns everything I thought I knew about electronic music on its head. She was so far ahead of things.
This song is scary to me everytime I hear it. I wish she was my mom. All Hail Delia Derbyshire! Ziwzih Ziwzih OO-OO-OO!!! Ziwzih Ziwzih OO-OO-OO
[ DEFINETLY A MASTERMIND + PIONEER OF ELECTRONIC MUSIC ]
absolutely incredible
hypnotic mantra
Pure wildness with such a KoOl tone to it. The ultra high notes are super awesome!!
No way. This is just blowing my mind right now. This sounds like it could have been made in 2023.
Never heard of this, Electric Lucifer by Haack brought me here. This is fantastic!
#haackolyte gang
Wow. This sounds like 90s hip hop. Incredible.
I'm sure a hundred "artists" have stolen-I mean Sampled this music.
Apology accepted. I am also sorry. I'm not proud of what I said but this is the internet. If you venture into the comments you need be ready to say some nasty shit because basic manners are typically abandoned.
...his wiZ turned out to be HER wisdom:) so praise 4 her!
HOW IS SHE FORGOTTEN?! WHY ISN'T DELIA DERBYSHIRE A HOUSEHOLD NAME?!
+CatWithAnRPG the very same reason why many other influential women in music history aren't as famous as they should be
chill with that shit. No one who made this type of music is well known now
You know what? You're right. As much as I would love it if things were different, experimental shit rarely even gets mainstream recognition.
+Awefuh Awef not just women many men too. the problem is the new generation has a garbage tier taste in music.
Yeah she was a woman and everyone knows how much we men hate women, right? Poor middle class woman working for the BBC. Delia Derbyshire's entire team (mostly consisting of men) were treated like shit, not just her, so please resist the urge to march.
TIMELESS !
Delia is the summit of electronic music. Never equalled. Daphne Oram is quite something too! Damn BBC ruining so much sublime creativity in shutting down the Radiophonic Workshop, which they never really appreciated anyway. They never knew the absolute treasures they had!
You know that electroacoustics and a lot of other, even uncertain music is music, and how much has gone because music works directly with time ...
I think Richard James surpassed her in terms of skill and composition by a wide margin, but for her time she was an enigma for sure
@@imquantum8009 Tell me more about him please!!
Aphex Twin (Richard David James) is the only one on her level to my knowledge.
@@vibratoryuniverse308 He sure is an incredible fountain of ideas but I find his work a bit abrasive in comparison after listening to a LOT of it over the past few days. Might be the substances used to inspire it?
she sound so blooming modern!
A Goddess of sound's shape!!!
Amazing
This is the greatest song man
Once in an interview, Ralf Hutter, spoke about the influence of arrangements futuristic jazz Disselvet, as well as intrudução effects exploited by Ray Scott in his música.Porém all hampered by the lack of an electronic rhythmic, and he and Florian They took a long time to develop, such as electronic beat and even inexistentes.Derbyshire instruments basically in the same period of emergence of the Organization (kraftwerk) faced the same problems.
that makes the track so much better. thanks.
Wuau 😱❤
I think Delia is who George Lucas should have gotten to write the Max Rebo Band song in the Cantina scene
Here via Second Captains.
This sounds like a hip hop song. Even the title of the song sounds hip hop.
Straight up Dilla-ready-to-sample.
PRAISE PRAISE PRAISE PRAISE PRAISE PRAISE PRAISE PRAISE PRAISE PRAISE PRAISE
also reminds me of Crystal Castles
Haha glad it's not just me.
Doesn’t even compare
isn't it other way around?
DIE ANTWOORD!
!! AwEsOmE !!
🎉
I got this on repeat, it's got me suck in.
DJ Derbyshire FTW. The Original Mixmiester
HYPER- TOTAL -FORWARD
Die Antwoord's use of this is rather special though imo. It's totally faithful to the original sound through the whole track.
Oh, and just too 2nd, eat up The Residents. So much lovely sound.
odinswolf1969 "Hail to the master, his wisdom and his reason. Hail to the master, forever and-..."
Genialisssime!! Real looping
Planet Delia
First techno!
Kraftwerk suppose inspiration by Miss Delia Derbyshire
I love this!
Absolutely brilliant. I thought The Residents were the first to do stuff like this.
I agree whole-heartedly
Genius!
It's true. Add drum and bass beat and this is The Prodigy.
Smack my bitch up type beat
@@sau7710 YES
musik musik oo oo oo oo
yes master
so classic
what a banger
what a perfect LO-FI stuff
Very nice track!
cool works clever lady
greatttttttt
this is really good
And she did it the best.
thank you dr who for introducing me to this rad bitch and her dank beats
Sweetpea Chickpea Series 10 Episode 11
Respect!
The Residents avant la lettre.
Yeah boy
Ewa !
sickest track
Holy shit this is from 1967!
De. 10. Maestra !!
Wow!!
this is HIP HOP AF!!!
Sounds better than the Residents 10 yrs earlier :)
It’s an unbelievable shame that the episode of “Out of the unknown” for which this song was written, is now (apparently) lost to humanity, forever. Thrown out by the Beeb because they needed the space. I know the story on which that episode was based, and having heard this song (and seen other episodes of that series) I would dearly have loved to see that one episode.
gr8est
felt i've just discovered fire
Utterly alien…
ps Enter the Ninja...one of my faves
Same for the Doctor Who theme. Delia's rendition of it is more haunting than all the other ones. I think she even made the incidential music for one of the stories (I think that story was with Jon Pertwee, during his first season as the Doctor).
I don't need drugs, I want them. And they're awesome.
yooooooooooooo
@Bass5el agreed .. i was afraid to use samps at first but now make all sound very diff from the orig form it found it in
It sounds like a Final Fantasy boss music
Can you imagine the amount of WTF'..ing that went on when this was played?
it's kinda like the 4 minute mile. Once it's broken, it is no longer seen as impossible, so it inspires others.
Did me.
@Seej1982 I opened this in a tab, and stepped away from my pc. I immediately thought the same thought when I heard the audio. But it will be found.
MEGA BABE
this is some Burial shit
Whoa! Like a proto-Hip-Hop sample right there. Something I imagine MF Doom would use on a track.
I like Die Antwoord well enough but sampling Derbyshire isn't exactly novel, The Timelords/JAMs/KLF had a #1 hit with her back in 1988. Timbaland, Gangstarr and RJD2 have all sampled Perrey and/or Kingsley to good effect and there was that whole album of Pierre Henry remixes. Early electronic music has been done, my advice if you're fond of this would be to check out the Residents Mark of the Mole and Intermission albums, they've probably been mined too but might be cheaper.