Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte
View Post
Classical music as 'protest music'
Collapse
X
-
heliocentric
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostWell there was a story about Xenakis's "Nuits" having acted as a trigger for the student unrest in Paris of May 1968
Comment
-
Wheels of Cheese
This is all absolutely brilliant stuff. I did initially start the thread to experiment with the notion that in a culture which increasingly privileges the brisk, shallow and meaningless that the mere act of taking time to listen to classical music was a radical gesture. But I a also fascinated by the whole culture of the leftist compsers discussed here - Cardew I knew in passing, but Rzewski was completely unfamiliar to me. Sent The Workers United to a couple of friends after listening to the first couple of minutes, thinking, this is a pretty funny idea. But God, it's SO moving. When the whisting starts. Bourgeois term I know, but gosh it is beautiful. And Cardew's book Stockhausen Serves Imperialism is gloriously mad - my favourite sort of thing. Does anyone know of any good books about this whole area?
Comment
-
Originally posted by teamsaint View PostAlso, my kids protest when I play classical music on MY stereo !
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI was delighted a few years ago, while going through some tube stations (e.g Vauxhall) to hear classical music being played. It was some while before I realised (or was told) that this was being used as a weapon, to get young people who "wouldn't be seen dead at a classical concert" to move on.
Comment
-
-
heliocentric
Originally posted by Wheels of Cheese View PostDoes anyone know of any good books about this whole area?
Comment
-
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostPreferable to the supersonic whistle tone either being used or contemplated as an effective means to disperse demonstrators by some regimes!
lots of stuff (and many urban myths !!) on the net
etc etc
Comment
-
-
heliocentric
Yeessss... it should be possible (as a particular kind of "protest music") to use the technology developed for noise-cancelling headphones to emit a phase-inverted version of whatever frequency you're being attacked with.
Is that actually an interesting book, MrGG? From the blurb it strikes me that it could be quite fascinating or on the other hand a waste of shelf-space.
Comment
-
Originally posted by heliocentric View PostYeessss... it should be possible (as a particular kind of "protest music") to use the technology developed for noise-cancelling headphones to emit a phase-inverted version of whatever frequency you're being attacked with.
Is that actually an interesting book, MrGG? From the blurb it strikes me that it could be quite fascinating or on the other hand a waste of shelf-space.
it had mixed reviews but i've got a pile of unread stuff to read first !
Stockhausen suggested a phase cancelling thing years ago , i think its in the conversations book ?
and I have met someone who was working on a similar technology at Rolls Royce to try and get jet engines to be quieter
phase cancellation can be an interesting process but I think it's hard to get it to work fast enough on complex streams ? (I'm sure there's lots of stuff about this online)
I'd have a look here also
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostPreferable to the supersonic whistle tone either being used or contemplated as an effective means to disperse demonstrators by some regimes!
If the frequencies are high enough, then nobody will hear them anyway, so no effect.
However, there are devices which emit high power whistles which deter young people, but not so many older ones, as the younger people can still hear the high frequencies (though perhaps not for long if in the vicinity of high power high frequency audio).
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostDo you mean supersonic? I think you mean high frequency.
If the frequencies are high enough, then nobody will hear them anyway, so no effect.
However, there are devices which emit high power whistles which deter young people, but not so many older ones, as the younger people can still hear the high frequencies (though perhaps not for long if in the vicinity of high power high frequency audio).
Ultrasonics mmmmmmm
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostStockhausen suggested a phase cancelling thing years ago , i think its in the conversations book ?
and I have met someone who was working on a similar technology at Rolls Royce to try and get jet engines to be quieter
phase cancellation can be an interesting process but I think it's hard to get it to work fast enough on complex streams ? (I'm sure there's lots of stuff about this online)
I'd have a look here also
http://wfae.proscenia.net/
Some of the problems with noise cancelling have clearly been overcome. Obviously if there's positive feedback rather than negative, then they could make a poor situation worse.
In theory it should also be possible to use noise cancelling devices inside cars, buses and airplanes to provide a quieter environment.
There's probably not much point in using the systems actually in jet engines.
Comment
-
-
Wheels of Cheese
Back to the disruptive theory of classical music. Been listening to a lot of Pauline Oliveros, especially this... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8wrNL063Gys. Is it me or does the very existence of such music attack, let it be said, the whole smug edifice of contemporary capitalism. A bit? A little bit?
Comment
Comment