Doctor Who Cuttings Archive

Difference between revisions of "Sounds and visions"

From The Doctor Who Cuttings Archive
Jump to navigationJump to search
(Created page with "{{article | publication = Financial Times | file = 2018-08-25 Financial Times.jpg | px = 450 | height = | width = | date = 2018-08-25 | author = Ian Thomson | pages = | la...")
 
 
Line 20: Line 20:
 
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 Stoc006Bhausen'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.
+
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.

Latest revision as of 00:02, 26 August 2019

2018-08-25 Financial Times.jpg

[edit]