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Barbara Buchholz
Barbara Buchholz
from Wikipedia
Barbara Buchholz plays a TVox model by G. Pavlov.

Barbara Buchholz (8 December 1959 – 10 April 2012[1]) was a Berlin-based German musician and composer. She was one of the leading theremin players of the world.

Life

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Buchholz was born in Duisburg. She studied flute, guitar, bass guitar and singing at the Bielefeld University. She earned her first success as a bass player in the German woman jazz band Reichlich Weiblich.[2] Since the early 1980s she worked on various interdisciplinary projects both as performer and composer. She produced e.g. Tap It Deep - „midified“ Steppdance and music, Human Interactivity and Theremin: Berlin-Moscow.

At the end of the 1990s Buchholz met Lydia Kavina, the grandniece of Léon Theremin; later she went to Moscow and became a master student of Kavina. In jazz and contemporary music she develops new playing techniques and experiments with various sound possibilities for the theremin. Together with Kavina, in 2005 Buchholz founded the Platform Touch! Don't Touch! for theremin. New compositions for the platform were worked out amongst others by Moritz Eggert, Michael Hirsch, Caspar Johannes Walter, Juliane Klein, Peter Gahn, Gordon Kampe and Sidney Corbett. Buchholz performed in a trio with Norwegian trumpeter Arve Henriksen and live electronics performer Jan Bang,[3] toured with Jazz Bigband Graz in the framework of ELECTRIC POETRY & Lo-Fi Cookies and conducted solo performances as well.

She played the theremin in various contemporary works, like The Little Mermaid, a ballet by John Neumeier, music by Lera Auerbach, and in the operas Linkerhand by Moritz Eggert and Bestmann-Opera by Alex Nowitz.

In 2009 Buchholz participated in the talent show - the German version of Got Talent - and succeeded in presenting the theremin to a wide audience.[4][5]

Death

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Barbara Buchholz died on April 10, 2012, in Berlin after a long battle with cancer.

Selected discography

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Barbara Buchholz (8 December 1959 – 10 April 2012) was a German musician and composer known for her pioneering mastery of the theremin and her innovative contributions to contemporary and experimental music. Born on 8 December 1959 in Duisburg, she studied transverse flute, guitar, bass, voice, and music at the University of Bielefeld, and in the early 1980s toured as a bass player with the women’s orchestra Reichlich Weiblich while engaging in interdisciplinary projects blending music, theater, poetry, and dance. She later focused on the theremin, studying under Lydia Kavina in Moscow and making it the centerpiece of her work, including the development of MIDI theremin techniques that allowed control of samplers through hand movements without touching the instrument. Buchholz revived the theremin’s tradition in collaboration with Kavina and explored new expressive possibilities in modern music, earning recognition as one of the instrument’s leading performers. She received awards for interdisciplinary productions such as Tap It Deep (a MIDI-fied tap dance and music project) and Theremin: Berlin–Moscow (with Russian video artist Olga Kumeger), and co-founded the “Touch! Don’t Touch!” workshop for new theremin compositions. Her discography includes notable recordings such as Moonstruck and Theremin: Russia With Love, documenting her work as composer and interpreter. Buchholz died of cancer in Berlin on 10 April 2012.

Early life and education

Birth and background

Barbara Buchholz was born on 8 December 1959 in Duisburg, Germany. Duisburg, located in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia, served as her place of origin. She later became associated with Berlin.

Musical education

Barbara Buchholz studied music at the University of Bielefeld. Her training encompassed the transverse flute, guitar, bass, and voice, building a versatile foundation across wind, stringed, and vocal disciplines. This multi-instrumental education equipped her with broad technical and interpretive skills prior to her professional activities in the early 1980s.

Musical career

Early career in the 1980s

Barbara Buchholz studied music at the University of Bielefeld, where she trained on the transverse flute, guitar, bass, and voice. In the 1980s, she gained her first professional recognition as a bass player touring with the all-female jazz orchestra Reichlich Weiblich. During the early part of the decade, she established herself more broadly as an instrumentalist, performer, and composer through active participation in numerous interdisciplinary projects that blended music with other art forms, while also working as a theater musician. These activities laid the foundation for her versatile career as a multi-instrumentalist and collaborator across creative boundaries.

Specialization in the theremin

Barbara Buchholz specialized in the theremin after meeting Lydia Kavina, grandniece of the instrument's inventor Léon Theremin, and becoming her master student in Moscow at the Theremin Center. There she immersed herself in the classical Thereminvox, the traditional contactless instrument played through hand gestures in electromagnetic fields. She also adopted a custom-built MIDI theremin, constructed to her specifications to facilitate precise control of samplers and loops via aerial movements. Buchholz developed distinctive playing techniques that significantly extended the theremin's expressive range, enabling novel sound palettes suited to jazz improvisation and contemporary composition. She co-founded the project "Touch! Don't Touch!" with Lydia Kavina to promote and showcase innovative theremin music through performances, commissions, and collaborations. Her mastery of the instrument later informed its application across diverse musical contexts.

Innovations and playing techniques

Barbara Buchholz pioneered innovative approaches to theremin performance by developing new playing techniques and experimenting with extended sound possibilities in jazz, contemporary, and experimental contexts. She commissioned the construction of a MIDI theremin, an instrument built at her request that integrates MIDI signals with a sampler to trigger and modulate loops and samples through hand gestures in the air, without touching the device. This innovation expanded the theremin's interactive capabilities, allowing direct gestural control over electronic sound elements and blending traditional non-contact playing with digital processing. Together with Lydia Kavina, Buchholz helped revive and expand the theremin's tradition by venturing into new paths in experimental contemporary music, bridging the instrument's historical roots with modern technological applications. The combination of the classic Thereminvox and her MIDI theremin represented a link from the oldest to the latest technology, enabling fresh ways to explore human gesture in electronic music.

Projects and collaborations

Interdisciplinary projects

Barbara Buchholz engaged in several interdisciplinary projects that fused her theremin expertise with dance, video art, and contemporary composition, pushing the instrument into experimental territory. One notable example was "Tap It Deep", a prize-winning collaboration integrating MIDI-modified tap dance with theremin-generated music and sounds, creating a dynamic interplay between movement and electronic tones. She also worked on "Human Interactivity", an exploration of interactive performance elements involving the theremin and audience or technological engagement. In partnership with video artist Olga Kumeger, Buchholz developed "Theremin: Berlin-Moscow", a prize-winning multimedia project that combined live theremin performances with video projections to bridge cultural and sonic narratives between the two cities. From 2005 onward, she initiated and led the "Touch! Don't Touch!" platform, dedicated to commissioning and premiering new works for theremin by contemporary composers including Moritz Eggert, Michael Hirsch, Caspar Johannes Walter, Juliane Klein, Peter Gahn, Gordon Kampe, and Sidney Corbett.

Key recordings

Barbara Buchholz's discography features several notable albums that highlight her pioneering work with the theremin in collaborative and genre-blending contexts. Her album Theremin: Russia With Love (2004, Intuition) pairs her theremin and sampler performances with contributions from Tilmann Dehnhard on various flutes and clarinets, Paul Kleber on double bass, and other musicians, creating a fusion of electronic, jazz, and Russian-influenced compositions. Additionally, Buchholz released Touch! Don't Touch! Music for Theremin (2006, Wergo) in collaboration with fellow theremin virtuoso Lydia Kavina and the Kammerensemble Neue Musik Berlin, presenting the instrument within contemporary chamber music frameworks. She also appeared as a guest theremin player on Susanna Wallumrød's Sonata Mix Dwarf Cosmos (2007, Rune Grammofon), lending ethereal textures to select tracks on the intimate, acoustic-leaning album. Her 2008 release Moonstruck (Intuition) marks a collaborative milestone in contemporary theremin music, featuring contributions from Jan Bang on sampler and programming, Tilmann Dehnhard on multiple woodwinds, trumpeter Arve Henriksen, and others, including an arrangement of Henry Purcell's "When I'm Laid" with vocals by Susanna Wallumrød.

Stage work

Contributions to opera, ballet, and theater

Barbara Buchholz contributed the ethereal sound of the theremin to several contemporary staged productions in opera, ballet, and theater, collaborating with notable composers to integrate the instrument into dramatic and musical narratives. In opera, Buchholz played the theremin in Moritz Eggert's Linkerhand, an opera in 33 scenes based on the novel Franziska Linkerhand by Brigitte Reimann. The work premiered on March 30, 2005, at the Frühjahrstage für Neue Musik in Weimar, where she was featured as a performer. The composer assigned the theremin a particular and special role within the score. Beyond these specific roles as performer, she engaged in theater as a composer and performer, bringing her distinctive theremin techniques to enhance dramatic presentations.

Television appearance

Participation in Das Supertalent

In 2009, Barbara Buchholz participated in the German talent show Das Supertalent on RTL, appearing as herself in two episodes. She performed "Over the Rainbow" on the theremin during her initial broadcast on November 21, 2009, drawing 7.5 million viewers and impressing the jury, including Dieter Bohlen, sufficiently to advance her to the semi-finals. Buchholz, who was contacted by the show's producers rather than applying herself, viewed the opportunity as a chance to present the rare and lesser-known theremin to a mass television audience. Her appearance, featuring the instrument's distinctive contactless playing technique, generated significant public interest and numerous viewer messages of appreciation, helping to introduce the theremin to a broader audience in Germany.

Death

Illness and passing

Barbara Buchholz died on 10 April 2012 in Berlin, Germany, at the age of 52 after a long battle with cancer. Her passing marked the end of a notable career in theremin performance and composition, though her contributions to the instrument continue to be recognized in specialized music communities.
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