Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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Electronic Music
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Current listening:
François Bayle - Erosphère
Erosphère (1982)Erosphère is my name for that membrane of nerves which surrounds our world with its network of, waves modulating into an infinite number of f...
Enjoying this more than I can recall doing Toupie dans le ciel (which I know Erosphère contains).
And I find the description beneath the video interesting - especially in its comparison/analogy with Max Ernst.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostCurrent listening:
François Bayle - Erosphère
Erosphère (1982)Erosphère is my name for that membrane of nerves which surrounds our world with its network of, waves modulating into an infinite number of f...
Enjoying this more than I can recall doing Toupie dans le ciel (which I know Erosphère contains).
And I find the description beneath the video interesting - especially in its comparison/analogy with Max Ernst.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostCurrent listening:
François Bayle - Erosphère...Enjoying this more than I can recall doing Toupie dans le ciel (which I know Erosphère contains).
Erosphère has appeared in various versions/mixes but I believe the original scheme was as follows:
La fin du bruit 26'
Tremblement de terre très doux 28'
Toupie dans le ciel 22'
Each of the above having a short prelude, respectively as follows:
Eros bleu 5' / Eros rouge 6' / Eros noir 6'
The three preludes were composed last.
I remember being bowled over in the 1980s by a Radio 3 broadcast of Voyage Au Centre De La Tête (on YouTube partitioned over several videos) which is from Son-Vitesse-Lumière.Last edited by Boilk; 28-02-21, 16:12.
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Originally posted by Boilk View PostFor me, Bayle's big late-70s/early-80s pieces (i.e. Erosphère, Son-Vitesse-Lumière) represent the absolute apex of pre-digital era acousmatic music, French or otherwise.
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Yes, Francois Bayle - very light melodic touch - still a lot of listening to do.....
Actually, I'm finding this thread, together with Wikipedia, the best resource for History of Electronic Music, and what's currently going on.
Searching for books, articles, everything seems to have been swamped since the 2000's by electronic dance music, djs, electronica, and all their sub-genres. The early history is well dealt with, but getting to the current day, the authors tend to dive off into popular music.
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Originally posted by Quarky View PostYes, Francois Bayle - very light melodic touch - still a lot of listening to do.....
Actually, I'm finding this thread, together with Wikipedia, the best resource for History of Electronic Music, and what's currently going on.
Searching for books, articles, everything seems to have been swamped since the 2000's by electronic dance music, djs, electronica, and all their sub-genres. The early history is well dealt with, but getting to the current day, the authors tend to dive off into popular music.
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Originally posted by Quarky View PostSearching for books, articles, everything seems to have been swamped since the 2000's by electronic dance music, djs, electronica, and all their sub-genres. The early history is well dealt with, but getting to the current day, the authors tend to dive off into popular music.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThat's true, there are very few sources of information on "non-idiomatic" electronic music in the 21st century. This https://www.emdoku.de/en might be an interesting resource for you.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThat's true, there are very few sources of information on "non-idiomatic" electronic music in the 21st century. This https://www.emdoku.de/en might be an interesting resource for you.
Clearly there might be many starting points - that resource seems very comprehensive. Not all the music will be electronic, but much of it is "experimental" in various ways.
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Christopher Fox wrote an electronic piece called Zone, it has been performed by Apartment House, there's no commercially available recording but I have a bootleg. I like it very much.
Anyway, just randomly looking at what Google threw up about it, I found this article which had, for me, an irresistible-to-click title, Music for a Dis-Uniting Kingdom?
The UK is bursting with ideas in new music, writes Christopher Fox, but what are the current trends telling us?
so I clicked and found a reference to a musician whose music I hadn't explored before, Matthew Wright. And Spotify led me to this -- I love it!
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Originally posted by Quarky View Post
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