Alan R Pearlman about to blow out candles of the cake at his 90the birthday party.

Alan R Pearlman about to blow out candles of the cake at his 90the birthday party.

NOTE: This blog post was originally written last June to celebrate his birthday. I didn’t publish it in part, because realized that I wasn’t ready to share him just yet.  On the one hand, I want  the world to know about a pioneer, inventor, mover and shaker. On the other hand,  these memories are mine, and a selfish part of me wants to hang on to them.

Let’s see how this rolls.

~Dina Alcalay Pearlman


June 7, 2019

This is the first of what I hope are many blogposts that will talk about Alan Pearlman the person: father, husband, son, brother as well as the inventor of one of the most influential, pioneering electronic music synthesizers, the likes of which are still influencing musicians and inventors nearly 50 years later.

Happy Birthday Alan R. Pearlman!

My father would have been 94 today. It’s hard to believe that he’s gone—this is cliche, but for anyone who has lost a parent, you know what I’m talking about. I keep thinking, “Oh, I have to ask Dad this,” or “I wonder if Dad remembers that,”

What I have written below was originally the eulogy, which I delivered in a surrealistic haze, the truth is, it’s a celebration of life; birth and death are the life-cycles and my father sincerely believed that death was equally ‘ok’. He was comfortable with his own mortality, embraced it, and never, ever got morbid even when he became ill.

My Dad was a rock star.

This has nothing to do with rock music, ARP synthesizers or music in general.  It has to do with a man who rose to the occasion and overcame so much and persevered after many would have given up. He was a 5’6’’ giant, but without the ego, vanity or posturing that many use to overcompensate. Like many nerds (his own description for himself when we last spoke in person) he knew his capabilities and unapologetically accepted them as fact. But was also humble and willing to learn. He didn’t even particularly care for rock music, though he bought me my first Beatles albums when I was a toddler, and Stevie Wonder and Herbie Hancock graced our music collection alongside Beethoven and Bartok. After finding out he had failed to get George Harrison’s autograph, a prepubescent me chided him soundly and the next trip yielded a Pete Townshend 12” autographed disk. He rose to the occasion.