Our goal is to enhance the opportunity students receive in their school band program by allowing them to meet and perform with other students. At CU Honor Band, the students participate in master classes with faculty from the University of Colorado and rehearse as an ensemble for two days.
“With his dedication and creative energy, he became a one-man orchestra.Thank you for your interest in the CU High School Honor Band! The purpose of CU Honor Band is to provide a premier musical experience for students throughout Colorado. “His efforts in electronic music opened the field of subharmonics,” the Doodle adds in its description of Sala. In 1995, he donated his original mixture-trautonium to the German Museum for Contemporary Technology. Sala was given plenty of awards for his film scores – but he never won an Oscar.
Sala had worked with Gassmann a few years prior on Paean (1960), one of the first ballets set to electronic music. Once again using the mixture-trautonium, Gassmann and Sala created noises like bird calls, hammering and window slams.
Read more: Who was Amanda Aldridge? Google Doodle celebrates composer and opera singerĪfter the war, Sala went back to his recording studio in Berlin and moved into TV and film music, creating sound effects for productions including Alfred Hitchcock’s 1962 film The Birds, in collaboration with early electronic composer Remi Gassmann. In 1944, as the Second World War was raging, Sala was called on to join the German Army on the Eastern front, where he was injured.
In 1935 he built a portable model, the Concert Trautonium. He studied physics at the University of Berlin between 19, where he helped develop a new form of Trautonium – the Volkstrautonium. With this invention, the sound of Sala’s electronic music was set apart from his peers’. Inspired by Dr Friedrich’s work, Sala went on to develop his own instrument, the mixture-trautonium, which was capable of playing several musical lines simultaneously. “His life mission,” today’s Doodle explains, “became mastering the trautonium and developing it further which inspired his studies in physics and composition at school.” When Sala first heard the monophonic instrument – an instrument that can only produce one note at a time – he was fascinated by the technology. While at the conservatory, Sala closely followed the experiments of Dr Friedrich Trautwein, and learned to play his musical invention: the Trautonium. In 1929, he was accepted at the Berlin Conservatory to study piano and composition. As a child he studied piano and organ, and performed classical piano concerts. Sala was born in Greiz, Germany, in 1910. Today’s Google Doodle marks what would have been the 112th birthday of Oskar Sala, a brilliant musical mind known for developing his own instrument, the mixture-trautonium – an early electronic synthesiser. Oskar Sala was an innovative composer and physicist – classically trained, and later a pioneer in the world of electronic music…