Electronic and Experimental Music: Technology, Music, and Culture, Sixth Edition, presents an extensive history of electronic music--from its historical beginnings in the late nineteenth century to its everchanging present--recounting the musical ideas that arose in parallel with technological progress. In four parts, the author details the fundamentals of electronic music, its history, the major synthesizer innovators, and contemporary practices. This examination of the music's experimental roots covers the key composers, genres, and techniques used in analog and digital synthesis, including both art and popular music, Western and non-Western.
NEW to this edition:
A reorganized and revised chapter structure places technological advances within a historical framework Shorter chapters offer greater modularity and flexibility for instructors Discussions on the elements of sound, listening to electronic music, electronic music in the mainstream, Eurorack, and more An appendix of historically important electronic music studios around the globe
Listening Guides throughout the book provide step-by-step annotations of key musical works, focusing the development of student listening skills. Featuring extensive revisions and expanded coverage, this sixth edition of Electronic and Experimental Music represents an comprehensive accounting of the technology, musical styles, and figures associated with electronic music, highlighting the music's deep cultural impact.
I am into this book... checked it out of the library...along with a number of other books on the subject ...wondering which one should I break down and purchase. This is pleasure reading for me on MUNI (like books about thinking and inventions & creative stuff that stretch the noggin) - I am a bit in love with the subject. I like the fact that this author also writes books for kids about dinosaurs!!! Nice choices for history lessons for home schools.
I realized, somewhat belatedly, that for me this book is one to refer back to over and over for the next few decades, rather than one to read from page 1 to page 585.
Which isn’t to say I didn’t give that a try — I read the first couple hundreds pages, to my great enjoyment— but the book is so packed with information that I would frequently fall down a rabbit hole, enticed by a random mention of some obscure composition or experiment, or one of the listening guides, or a photo of some odd-looking piece of technology.
I’m sure I’ll pick up where I left off again, and then put it down for a while, because it’s way too interesting not to disappear into it every now and again. But its greatest value is as a reliable reference book.
The publisher provides bonus material on their website, and the author hosts an incredible podcast (The Holmes Archive of Electronic Music), so the whole package makes for a very useful resource. If this stuff is your cup of tea, you will want this book.
First of all, for clarity's sake, I'm reading the third edition. I like this book in a lot of ways, I think the coverage dutifully ranges from the "big names" (Cage, Stockhausen) and important but less celebrated artists, such as the Ann Arbor school (Ashley, Mumma). the listening lists are generally pretty sound, assuming you can find many of these recordings!
And yet, I have a major complaint. The edition I'm reading is riddled with errors, ranging from minor to obvious. I've counted five so far, and I have a feeling there are more. For example: The author lists Xenakis' "Metastasis" as being written in 1964, with the aid of computers. It was actually composed in 1954, years before Xenakis (or anyone else for that matter) used computers as a means of composing music.
I'm tempted to contact the author and point out the various things I've found.
I'm extremely persnikkity about bks on this subject b/c it's one of my main obsessions. NO bk is ever likely to cover the subject as thoroughly as I'd like. Such bks are always about superstars &, if they're written by NYC authors, then they're about NYC superstars. Dullsville, daddio. Holmes at least attempts to cover a broader spectrum of people. I liked this one enuf to even read the revised 2nd edition. On the downside, though, Holmes is a NYC writer wch means that when he knows about obscure people they're obscure NYC people. Oh well, it' still a good bk.