SIGNALS60—69 / RADIO LAB
PL/EN

WORLD TRANSMISSION · 1960—1969

The workshop
became
the instrument.

Tape, oscillators, early modular systems, radiophonic studios and computers opened a decade of new listening methods.

Open the index
artists lawful previews release-group MBIDs10 years

01 / CONTEXT

Not a “retro sound.”
A network of laboratories.

1960s electronics emerged in radio studios, academic centres, private workshops and increasingly compact modular systems. The index connects only people with dated release evidence and an explicit qualification decision.

RADIO

Radiophonic workshops

The BBC Radiophonic Workshop, WDR and GRM turned tape, filters and reverberation into a language of transmission.

VOLTAGE

Modular systems

Buchla and Moog separated synthesis into patchable functions, changing performance and composition.

CODE

Computer music

Synthesis and control programs moved part of composition into code, conversion and machine time.

SPACE

Spatial listening

Multichannel diffusion, acoustics and moving sound expanded the work beyond a single loudspeaker.

02 / CHRONOLOGY

A decade in pulses

03 / SOURCED INDEX

Archive of qualified signals

Every card connects to release evidence, an artist record and a versioned qualification decision. No preview is better than the wrong recording.

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04 / METHOD & RIGHTS

Evidence before nostalgia.

Discovery

MusicBrainz is queried separately for every year from 1960 to 1969. Release groups and artists are deduplicated by stable MBID, not name.

Qualification

A release tag is a lead, not a verdict. The gate separates artist and release tags, rejects contradictions and does not admit one generic tag.

Profiles

Polish and English evidence profiles describe only the cited artist record, date and qualifying release. MusicBrainz core data: CC0.

Audio & artwork

No recording is stored. Players use remote Apple previews only after strict matching. SVG artwork is original and deterministic.