- Peter Mauzey
Peter Mauzey is an
electrical engineer associated with the development ofelectronic music in the 1950s and 1960s at theColumbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center . He served as an adjunct professor atColumbia University while employed as an engineer atBell Labs (nowLucent Technologies ) inNew Jersey .Mauzey began working with electronic music pioneer
Vladimir Ussachevsky while still a student at Columbia in 1951. He worked at the university radio stationWKCR , and introduced Ussachevsky to the use ofmagnetic tape feedback as a source and modifier ofsound effects which could be incorporated into music.He helped build the
RCA Mark II Sound Synthesizer and became the first director of engineering at the new center in 1959. Mauzey and his staff developed a large variety of customized equipment designed to solve the needs of the composers working at the center. These include early prototypes of tape delay machines, quadraphonic mixing consoles, and analog triggers designed to facilitate interoperability between other (often custom-made) synthesizer equipment.Robert Moog , who developed the music synthesizer into a practical instrument, learned his trade from Mauzey as a Columbia student in the early 1960s.
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