Landmarks: “Through A Glass Darkly” by Peter Howell

(First published in Issue 109 of Electronic Sound magazine, January 2024)

In 1977, the BBC Radiophonic Workshop’s Peter Howell recorded Through A Glass Darkly, a stunning original album of synth-heavy prog rock. His masterpiece? ‘A Lyrical Adventure’, the 19-minute epic sprawling across the entirety of Side One

Interview: Bob Fischer


“Absolutely nobody knew what I was doing. I’d said to [BBC Radiophonic Workshop Head] Desmond Briscoe that I wanted to record something, and – if he’d allow me to do it alongside my other work – that I’d like to use Studio Four, the rock music studio downstairs at Maida Vale. He said that was fine, providing I organised it myself. Generally speaking, he was very accommodating of anything that would broaden our horizons. I wanted to prove I wasn’t just a second fiddle guitarist to Paddy Kingsland, and that I could actually find my way around a piano – and Studio Four had a Steinway! This was 1977, three years after I’d joined the Radiophonic Workshop. I was getting used to working there, but I was feeling like I was in Paddy’s shadow a little bit.

“The concept of ‘A Lyrical Adventure’ is an allegory. It’s about good and evil. My original album title was In The Kingdom Of Colours and there was a very loose outline of a story. The piano is the protagonist, the person going into this place, and you could say the first five minutes are the arrival, taking in these new surroundings. Following that, there’s a visit to the King… in a courtly palace, with pageantry and flags. Then some rather threatening drums mark the arrival of more malevolent forces, and the remainder is literally a battle between the piano and those forces. It was rather nice to think of the piano being in a landscape, and of that landscape being made from electronics. Everything developed from there.

“Up until that time at the Radiophonic Workshop, I’d always been presented with commissions – ‘Could you write some music for this sequence?’. And I would just respond to the requirements of the film. But writing in a vacuum is harder, and that’s why I started out with some fairly basic structural ideas. I was aiming for half an album, 28 or 29 minutes… it was the age of prog rock! One of my favourite albums was Thick As A Brick by Jethro Tull, which I still absolutely adore. The musicianship on it is incredible.

“I worked in parallel with my other jobs, and it was pretty hard. It took an embarrassingly long time, probably about three months, working on evenings when there were no bookings in Studio Four. I was on my own, so I had to start the multi-track tape machine in the control room a minute and a half before I wanted to play, then run through two sealed doors into the studio, put my headphones on, hear the cue coming up, play the piano, and then go back. That cycle went on and on.

“There were also twelve fire doors between the Radiophonic Workshop studios and Studio Four, and they were always closed. The fire officers ruled the roost in those days! I’d be carrying the ARP Odyssey synth through them all, thinking ‘Is this worth the effort?’ But I stuck with it. The ARP features quite a lot on the album, it was a fantastic mainstay. Another synth I really enjoyed using was the Yamaha SY-2. It was very basic, but it had a soprano sax and a flute sound, and I used it for a lot of the thematic lines in the first half of ‘A Lyrical Adventure’.

“I tried to extend the concept onto Side Two of the album, but it was more of an afterthought. There’s a track called ‘Caches Of Gold’, and then ‘Colour Rinse’ was intended as an antidote to Side One. ‘Magenta Court’ was actually named after a block of flats close to Maida Vale. I walked past it once, after a swimming session with the now even more mega-famous Angela Rippon! I used to go swimming at a sports club in Ladbroke Grove, and on one occasion we were the only two people in the pool. She was gliding serenely through the water, almost as though she was running on a battery. Whereas I’ve never been a great swimmer, so I was on the other side making a hell of a fuss. On the way back, I walked through a series of flats, and each of them was named after a colour – Violet Court, Magnolia Court, Magenta Court – and I thought it all sounded a bit King Crimson.

“The word ‘allegory’ frightened [BBC Records producer] Mike Harding. He was a very direct Glaswegian guy, very experienced at what he was doing, and I was fully aware of the fact that I’d arrived from this madhouse in Maida Vale with these high-flying ideas about a long track taking up the entire first side of an album. He wrote a publicity quote, ‘It has been compared to Tubular Bells’. I asked him, ‘Who’s compared it to Tubular Bells?’. He said ‘I have…’

“But he wasn’t happy with the original album title, he thought it was a bit twee and naff. And this was most unlike him as a character, but he then said ‘I always think Biblical references work well’. He didn’t come across as a churchgoer, but he came up with three or four! I didn’t like any of them because I wanted In The Kingdom Of Colours, but we ended up with Through A Glass Darkly. I was disappointed and I felt it undermined the original concept of the album, but we went ahead.

“I actually listened to the album yesterday. My immediate reaction was that Side One stands up pretty well, but Side Two is a bit of a curate’s egg. One thing that did occur to me, and it’s a bit sad, really – how much the digital world has stunted our technique. My piano playing is nothing like as good as that now!”

Through A Glass Darkly is available here:
https://www.silvascreen.com/sillp1544-through-a-glass-darkly/

Electronic Sound – “the house magazine for plugged in people everywhere” – is published monthly, and available here:
https://electronicsound.co.uk/

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One thought on “Landmarks: “Through A Glass Darkly” by Peter Howell

  1. Roman Totale's avatar Roman Totale March 11, 2025 / 8:46 pm

    Hi,

    Have you seen this new book:

    https://headpress.com/product/ghost-of-an-idea/

    Your seminal article is mentioned of course along with lots of ideas and concepts you have also explored like the BBC Radiophonic Workshop. The author might be the American Bob Fischer

    Like

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