Difference between revisions of "Léon Theremin"

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==Literature==
 
==Literature==
 
* ''Sovetskiy Faust. Lev Termen, pioner elektronnogo iskusstva'' [Советский Фауст: Лев Термен, пионер электронного искусства], Kazan: Kazan magazine, 1995, 96 pp. Biography. {{ru}}
 
* ''Sovetskiy Faust. Lev Termen, pioner elektronnogo iskusstva'' [Советский Фауст: Лев Термен, пионер электронного искусства], Kazan: Kazan magazine, 1995, 96 pp. Biography. {{ru}}
** ''Soviet Faust: Leon Theremin, Pioneer of Electronic Art'', trans. Sally Brown, Sydney: ETT Imprint, 2010, 96 pp.
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** ''Soviet Faust: Leon Theremin, Pioneer of Electronic Art'', trans. Sally Brown, Sydney: ETT Imprint, 2010, 96 pp. [http://prometheus.kai.ru/sov-faustus_e.htm] {{en}}
 
* ''Leonardo Music Journal'' 6: "Leon Theremin, Pioneer of Electronic Art", 1996. Special section. [http://web.archive.org/web/20120208171919/http://leonardo.info/isast/journal/journal96/LMJ6/contentslmj6.html] {{en}}
 
* ''Leonardo Music Journal'' 6: "Leon Theremin, Pioneer of Electronic Art", 1996. Special section. [http://web.archive.org/web/20120208171919/http://leonardo.info/isast/journal/journal96/LMJ6/contentslmj6.html] {{en}}
 
** Bulat M. Galeyev, [http://web.archive.org/web/20120209023035/http://leonardo.info/isast/journal/journal96/LMJ6/galeyevintro.html "Light and Shadows of a Great Life: In Commemoration of the One-Hundredth Anniversary of the Birth of Leon Theremin, Pioneer of Electronic Art"].
 
** Bulat M. Galeyev, [http://web.archive.org/web/20120209023035/http://leonardo.info/isast/journal/journal96/LMJ6/galeyevintro.html "Light and Shadows of a Great Life: In Commemoration of the One-Hundredth Anniversary of the Birth of Leon Theremin, Pioneer of Electronic Art"].

Revision as of 23:14, 15 November 2017

Lev Sergeyevich Termen (Лев Сергеевич Термен; 27 August 1896 – 3 November 1993), or Léon Theremin in the United States, was a Russian and Soviet inventor, most famous for his invention of the theremin, one of the first electronic musical instruments and the first to be mass-produced. He also devised the interlace technique[1] for improving the quality of a video signal, still widely used in video and television technology. His listening device, "The Thing", hung for seven years in plain view in the United States Ambassador's Moscow office and enabled Soviet agents to eavesdrop on secret conversations.

Literature

See also

Links