1 / 9

Chapter 14 Classical and Experimental Music

Chapter 14 Classical and Experimental Music. Contents Perspectives on Electronic Music Varèse and the Listener’s Experiment Composing Electronic Music Stockhausen: Vibrations of His Universe Wendy Carlos: In a More Classical Tradition The Art of Drones and Minimalism Process Music

tuyen
Download Presentation

Chapter 14 Classical and Experimental Music

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 14 Classical and Experimental Music • Contents • Perspectives on Electronic Music • Varèse and the Listener’s Experiment • Composing Electronic Music • Stockhausen: Vibrations of His Universe • Wendy Carlos: In a More Classical Tradition • The Art of Drones and Minimalism • Process Music • The San Francisco Tape Music Center

  2. Chapter 14 Classical and Experimental Music • The aesthetic clash over approaches to electronic music between the French and Germans during the 1950s was short-lived due to the refusal of artists to be contained by any single school of thought or dogmatic approach to organizing such sounds. • Because electronic music was reliant on technology, the music itself was going to become a testing ground for new aesthetic ideas about the art of musical sound. Chapter 14

  3. Chapter 14 Classical and Experimental Music • Three cultural perspectives on electronic music assume that technology naturally leads to experimentation, the acceptance of electronic music will succeed by comparing it to other forms of music, and composing and listening to electronic music requires new skills. • Poème électronique was perhaps the first work of electronic music to be so thoroughly integrated into a performance space and implemented on such a grand, immersive scale. Chapter 14

  4. Chapter 14 Classical and Experimental Music • Techniques for composing electronic music include sound crafting/montage, the use of a technical score, the combining of electronics with other instruments, and instructional composition that follows a set of directions written in text. • Among his many contributions to electronic music, Stockhausen pioneered the orchestration of live electronic musicians accompanied by recorded passages. Chapter 14

  5. Chapter 14 Classical and Experimental Music • Wendy Carlos pioneered the synthesizing of orchestral sounds using both analog synthesis and digital algorithms of her own design. Chapter 14

  6. Chapter 14 Classical and Experimental Music • Elements of minimalism include a tendency to repeat lines of notes many times, greatly reducing the motion and tension of a piece of music so that it does not appear to change or progress. Chapter 14

  7. Chapter 14 Classical and Experimental Music • Process music involves rules established by a composer that govern the way that a piece unfolds, sometimes with a minimum of human intervention. A piece of process music lasts as long as it takes to complete the predefined process. Chapter 14

  8. Chapter 14

  9. Chapter 14

More Related