The Alan R. Pearlman Foundation
William Bond, via InMusic
Young adult Alan Pearlman (1943) by ARP FoundationThe Alan R. Pearlman Foundation
Alan R. Pearlman 1948
“The electronic instrument’s value is chiefly as a novelty. With greater attention on the part of the engineer to the needs of the musician, the day may not be too remote when the electronic instrument may take its place … as a versatile, powerful, and expressive instrument.”
"Quite a foresight that early on, 20 years before commercial electronic instruments hit the market." ~ Mark Vail
Before ARP: A Short Biography of the Long Life of Alan R. Pearlman
Early Family
Alan Pearlman was destined to be an engineer since the day he was born. His father designed movie theater projectors and his grandfather made parts for phonograph machines. A fascination with sound occupied his interest from an early age. (Hayim Kobi)
Ada, Julius, Alan and Donald Pearlman (1927) by unknownThe Alan R. Pearlman Foundation
Early Life
Pearlman was born in New York City on June 7, 1925. His father was a movie theatre projector designer and his grandfather made parts for phonograph machines.
Top row, unknown relatives
Bottom row: Ada Pearlman né Jacobs with Donald Pearlman on her lap, and Julius Pearlman with Alan Pearlman on his lap, New York, New York about 1926
As a child he built amateur radios and in 1948, as a student at Worcester Polytechnic Institute, he wrote a paper on electronic music in which he said: “The electronic instrument’s value is chiefly as a novelty. With greater attention on the part of the engineer to the needs of the musician, the day may not be too remote when the electronic instrument may take its place as a versatile, powerful, and expressive instrument.” (Hayim Kobi)
Quite a foresight that early on, 20 years before commercial electronic instruments hit the market. (Hayim Kobi)
Alan was in the military and then attended Worcester PolyTechnical Institute (WPI). Besides music and technology, he was passionate about cycling.
In 1969, after spending the first part of his career developing amplifiers for purposes unrelated to the music industry, he heard Wendy Carlos’ Switched on Bach, the influential album that overdubbed multiple tracks played on a Moog synthesizer. He decided to design his own electronic instrument and started a new company. He christened it Tonus and later changed it to ARP, his childhood nickname (after Alan R. Pearlman). (Hayim Kobi)
To learn more about synths, Alan consulted with a friend who used Moogs in the Electronic Music Lab at Brown University and Harvard University composer Leon Kirchner, who used Buchlas. (Mark Vail)
Morton Subotnick -from The Wild Bull (Buchla, 1968)
Entire Album follows this excerpt
Gershon Kingsley - Popcorn (Music to Moog By)
Alan's daughter, Dina remembers early electronic music in the house, including Gershon Kingsely... (Moog)
We came to the conclusion,” Alan told me in 2000, “that neither of those systems was particularly stable for frequency. It wouldn’t be a very good musical instrument unless it stayed in tune.” (Mark Vail)
Bright Sparks Documentary
Thus was born the ARP 2500. If you don’t recall it, a version played a prominent roll in the “making-contact” scene of Steven Spielberg’s Close Encounters of the Third Kind, when aliens in the mothership exchanged the familiar five-note motif with musician Jean Claude at a huge synthesizer console. The character was played by Philip Dodds (b. 5/17/1951, d. 10/6/07), vice president of engineering at ARP. (Mark Vail)
Alan R. Pearlman using ARP 2500 (1972) by ARP InstrumentsThe Alan R. Pearlman Foundation
The ARP 2500
Al testing out the first ARP modular, the 2500 made by Tonus Inc, in their first location, 45 Kenneth Street, Newton, MA 1969
ARP Instruments became a major U.S. synth manufacturer...
...producing revered analog instruments including the 2600 (you’ll see Edgar Winter wield its keyboard like a guitar in the video for his sensational “Frankenstein”), Odyssey, Pro-Soloist, and Omni before shutting its doors in 1981. (Mark Vail)
Article, The Boston Phoenix, May 17, 1977 (1977) by Jib Ellis for The Boston PhoenixThe Alan R. Pearlman Foundation
Al's notes from the notorious 1974 NAMM JAM (NAMM, the National Association of Music Merchants, holds a bi-annual world-class music industry trade show). Al was blown away by the full sound that came from three keyboardists and a percussionist.
A never-ending quest for inner peace...
...led to Alan's nearly life-time practice of physical fitness. He managed to finish more than one Boston marathon. He was a long-distance runner for the majority of his ARP career, something keeping him grounded during a very public career.
After ARP closed its doors in 1981, the inventor still invented.
Although he did some consulting with companies that wanted to recreate his synths ten years later, Alan told me (Mark Vail) in April 2000 that he didn’t miss making synthesizers because he kept busy developing “other electronic things.” (Mark Vail)
That included renewable-energy technology. “I suspect that using fuel cells and metal hydrides instead of liquid hydrogen or regressive hydrogen are going to be playing a role in the industrial world,” he said in early 2006. “Right now it isn’t clear to anybody exactly what’s going to be, but companies are already manufacturing hydride systems, and some of them are extremely interesting to me.” (Mark Vail)
Alan won numerous awards from industry peers, including a mention in the 2019 Grammy awards after his passing on January 5, 2019.
Alan R. Pearlman with pianos and synths (2005) by ARP InstrumentsThe Alan R. Pearlman Foundation
Alan Robert Pearlman 1925 - 2019
Alan Robert Pearlman 1925 - 2019
Alan Robert Pearlman 1925 - 2019
Alan Robert Pearlman 1925 - 2019
Story by Dina Pearlman with excerpts from Alex Ball, Hayim Kobi, Dave Spiers and Mark Vail and edits by Mary Lock and Rich Formidoni of The Alan R. Pearlman Foundation