Ken Burns: All of a sudden everything became heightened and something was revealed. Oh, my goodness.
Éliane Radigue: You can guess where you are, but maybe you are no longer in the preceding tonality.
Burns: I am, of course, slicing and dicing it up.
Radigue: This was in 1955-57.
Burns: You bet. 150 versions.
•••
Radigue: I told him that horizontal, slightly sloped sliders in particular are easier to work on for many hours.
Burns: He's written a brilliant script. But everybody tells me that.
Radigue: Of course we all knew how to use tape recorders.
Burns: It just requires so much concentration and hearing.
Radigue: I remember coming back at night and enjoying the changing sights, the subways, and the metallic sculptures at Times Square station.
•••
Burns: Sometimes it’s just really having mental ideas and then suddenly something emotional drops down from your head to your heart, and you say, “Yeah.” Tens of thousands of them.
Radigue: By accident, I discovered that you could slightly change the sound by putting one finger very lightly on a knob on the recording system. But life was too tough and I missed Paris.
Burns: I worked in a record store, and so by that time, because the Beatles were no more, I was a Stones fan and I liked a lot of R&B—still do a lot—and soul music.
Radigue: I remember one of those concerts, which took place in a swimming pool.
Burns: That's not the way things ever work.