No, but she is one of the 'acts' pictured (though not pictured herself), well spotted.Blank_Frank wrote:Is it Anne Dudley?
Actually, she may have done work for the second group too... intriguing.
Clues?
No, but she is one of the 'acts' pictured (though not pictured herself), well spotted.Blank_Frank wrote:Is it Anne Dudley?
WTF?GaryG wrote:she is one of the 'acts' pictured (though not pictured herself)
Yes, please.GaryG wrote:Clues?
OK, so I've successfully identified 2 and 3, ruled out the most likely connection, and spotted one you didn't know about. Maybe I should be asking a question about 1. Is it purely representational, or something specific?GaryG wrote:No, but she is one of the 'acts' pictured (though not pictured herself), well spotted.Blank_Frank wrote:Is it Anne Dudley?
Actually, she may have done work for the second group too... intriguing.
Clues?
You think?Blank_Frank wrote:The question's still unanswered, so you could still be right!
Is it Gottfried Leibniz?GaryG wrote:connection?
I spy, with my tiny eye...Blank_Frank wrote:Maybe I should be asking a question about 1. Is it purely representational, or something specific?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferranti_Mark_1Included in the Ferranti Mark 1's instruction set was a hoot command, which enabled the machine to give auditory feedback to its operators. The sound generated could be altered in pitch, a feature which was exploited when the Mark 1 made the earliest known recording of computer music, playing a medley which included "God Save the King", "Baa Baa Black Sheep", and "In the Mood". The recording was made by the BBC towards the end of 1951, and the programming was done by Christopher Strachey, a maths teacher at Harrow and a friend of Alan Turing. It was not however the first computer to have played music - CSIRAC, Australia's first digital computer, achieved that with a rendition of Colonel Bogey.
Well done, thought I'd have to be pretty explicit about the 'puter but you've id'ed it perfectly.The Fex wrote:I spy, with my tiny eye...
Not the connection I'm after but you've got all the right acts.robojam wrote:The Ferranti recorded the first computer music, I think Art of Noise were the first to sample another act's drums, and Rush did a lot of sampling in the 80s, but not sure what they did first.
In The Mood!GaryG wrote:In fact someone has mentioned the answer in a post already...
sorry, been busy.Blank_Frank wrote:In The Mood!GaryG wrote:In fact someone has mentioned the answer in a post already...

I'm ded clevver.GaryG wrote:Well done, thought I'd have to be pretty explicit about the 'puter but you've id'ed it perfectly.
Is it Gottfried Leibniz?Blank_Frank wrote:Now watch as someone gets the answer in five minutes flat...
No. Is that going to be your answer to every question from here on in?The Fex wrote:Is it Gottfried Leibniz?
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