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Veteran
Don Lewis, Electronic Music Pioneer, Dies at 81
The musician and composer created the “Live Electronic Orchestra”—a precursor to MIDI—and helped develop the Roland TR-808 drum machineNovember 9, 2022
Don Lewis, August 1975 (John Sunderland/The Denver Post via Getty Images)
Don Lewis, the pioneering electronic music composer and musician, died Sunday (November 6), his representatives confirmed to Pitchfork. Over a 54-year career in music, Lewis designed sounds and instrument voices for Hammond, Roland, Yamaha, and ARP, and developed a unique live rig that was years ahead of its time. He was 81.
Born in Dayton, Ohio, Lewis served in the Air Force as a Nuclear Weapons Specialist in Denver, Colorado, but would eventually move to Los Angeles. In 1981, he settled in Pleasanton, in California’s East Bay suburbs.
In the mid-1970s, he developed the “Live Electronic Orchestra,” a custom rig he used to control multiple synthesizers and sound modules with custom-designed keyboards nearly a decade before the introduction of MIDI in 1983. He designed voices for the Yamaha DX7, among other synthesizers, and worked directly with Roland founder Ikutarô Kakehashi developing rhythm units, including the iconic TR-808 drum machine.
Over the course of his career Lewis gave performances at the Sydney Opera House, Carnegie Hall, and the Apollo Theater and collaborated with the likes of Quincy Jones, Michael Jackson, and the Beach Boys. In 1987, he created the education-focused “Say Yes to Music!” concert tours, produced by his wife Julie