BBC Radiophonic Workshop Pioneers Will Use Internet Latency to Create Music

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BBC's Radiophonic Workshop is the team behind the iconic themes from Doctor Who and The Hitchhiker's Guide To the Galaxy as well as the storied Beatles song "Carnival of Light," which was never released and remains in the possession of Paul McCartney

Now, the Radiophonic Workshop seeks to make history once again. They'll hold a special livestreamed performance of "Latency," a virtual performance inspired by Zoom meetings that uses latency to create musical loops and improvised performances. 

The brains behind the "Latency" concept, Bob Earland and Paddy Kingsland, were inspired by the struggle of playing in synchronicity during virtual musical performances during the global COVID-19 lockdown period. Rather than taking on the impossible task of correcting the latency issue, Earland and Kingsland instead opted to extend the delay from a few milliseconds to several seconds. This choice allows the musicians to create loops in real time and improvise musical sections one after another. 


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