Available Formats
Sound Ideas: Music, Machines, and Experience
By (Author) Aden Evens
27.00
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
26th June 2005
United States
General
Non Fiction
Music recording and reproduction
Acoustic and sound engineering
780
Hardback
240
As people from record collectors to file swappers know, the experience of music - making it, marketing it, listening to it - relies heavily on technology. From the viola that amplifies the vibrations of a string to the CD player that turns digital bits into varying voltage, music and technology are deeply intertwined. What was gained - or lost - when compact discs replaced vinyl as the mass-market medium What unique creative input does the musician bring to the music, and what contribution is made by the instrument Do digital synthesizers offer unlimited range of sonic potential, or do their push-button interfaces and acoustical models lead to cookie-cutter productions Through this interrogation of sound and technology, Aden Evens provides an acute consideration of how music becomes sensible, advancing original variations on the themes of creativity and habit, analog and digital technologies, and improvisation and repetition. Evens elegantly and forcefully dissects the paradoxes of digital culture and reveals how technology has profound implications for the phenomenology of art. Sound Ideas reinvents the philosophy of music in a way that encompasses traditional aspects of musicology, avant-garde explorations of music's relation to noise and silence, and the consequences of digitization.
Aden Evens is assistant professor of technical communication at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a musician.