Difference between revisions of "Sounds and visions"
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In this beguiling history of electronic music from the Victorian era to the present, British journalist David Stubbs considers how a once avant-garde art form entered the mainstream by way of elevators, airports and hotel lounges. | In this beguiling history of electronic music from the Victorian era to the present, British journalist David Stubbs considers how a once avant-garde art form entered the mainstream by way of elevators, airports and hotel lounges. | ||
− | Electronic music's journey from the experimental to the commercial has been a long and eventful one. Futurist compositions In Fascist era Italy, for example, influenced Karlheinz | + | Electronic music's journey from the experimental to the commercial has been a long and eventful one. Futurist compositions In Fascist era Italy, for example, influenced Karlheinz Stockhausen's studio experimentations in late 1950s Germany, which in turn influenced the trance-inducing tape loops of New York minimalists Terry Riley and Steve Reich. It was not such a leap from Reich and company to the 1980s electro-pop of Depeche Mode and Kraftwerk. And whether techno or tinny pop, electronic music is still very much the sound of today. |
Organised thematically ("Futurism", "Stevie Wonder", "Kraftwerk and Pop Automata"), Mars by 1980 is chock full of the quaintest detail. Inevitably, the earliest electronic experiments baffled traditionalists. In 1897, Washington-based inventor Thaddeus Cahill patented the Telharmonium electrical organ, which was intended to play music down telephone lines much like a prototype Spotify. Sadly, all the Telharmonium could do was produce spooky-sounding hiccups from a pair of horn speakers. | Organised thematically ("Futurism", "Stevie Wonder", "Kraftwerk and Pop Automata"), Mars by 1980 is chock full of the quaintest detail. Inevitably, the earliest electronic experiments baffled traditionalists. In 1897, Washington-based inventor Thaddeus Cahill patented the Telharmonium electrical organ, which was intended to play music down telephone lines much like a prototype Spotify. Sadly, all the Telharmonium could do was produce spooky-sounding hiccups from a pair of horn speakers. |