Available Formats
Becoming Noise Music: Style, Aesthetics, and History
By (Author) Dr. Stephen Graham
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic USA
22nd August 2024
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Psychology
Theory of music and musicology
956.104
Paperback
248
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
Becoming Noise Music tells the story of noise music in its first 50 years, using a focus on the musics sound and aesthetics to do so. Part One focuses on the emergence and stabilization of noise music across the 1980s and 1990s, whilst Part Two explores noise in the twenty-first century. Each chapter contextualizes tells the story of the music under discussion before describing and interpreting its sound and aesthetic. Stephen Graham uses the idea of becoming to capture the unresolved dialectical tension between noise disorder and musical order in the music itself; the experiences listeners often have in response; and the overarching story or becoming of the genre that has taken place in this first fifty or so years. The book therefore doubles up on becoming: it is about both the becoming it identifies in, and the larger, genre-making process of the becoming of, noise music. On the latter count, it is the first scholarly book to focus in such depth and breadth on the sound and story of noise music, as opposed to contextual questions of politics, history or sociology. Relevant to both musicology and noise audiences, Becoming Noise Music investigates a vital but analytically underexplored area of avant-garde musical practice.
Genuinely illuminating ... a good antidote to much of the existing blather about noise. * The Wire *
Becoming Noise Music provides a much needed and compelling musical account of one of the most complex and contested descriptors in the contemporary history of sonic practices. The book carefully unpacks the multiple philosophical, political, and artistic strands of meaning that have been attached to the concept of 'noise' and weaves them back together masterfully to highlight the aesthetic, sensory, and conceptual resonances between noise and music. This is pivotal reading for those interested in understanding how noise has, in the last five decades, become aestheticized as a global musical genre with roots in powerful locally grounded musical styles and practices. * Franois Mouillot, Assistant Professor in Humanities and Cultural Studies, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong *
Stephen Graham is Head of the Arts & Humanities School at Goldsmiths, University of London, UK, and Senior Lecturer in Music. Stephens book, Sounds of the Underground: A Cultural, Political, and Aesthetic Mapping of Underground and Fringe Music, was published in 2016. Stephen has pieces on popular modernism, late style and fringe music writing in journals such as Popular Music and Twentieth Century Music. Stephen is co-author of a multi-generic history of 20th-century music due out in 2022.