Get LoFi Circuit Bending Blog

Circuit Bending and Synth building blog for beginners and pros alike. Featuring Circuit Bending resources that include: Tips, images, audio, and video. The lowdown on my new instruments, Glitch art, Minimalist ideas, electronic music, etc.

Saturday, October 22, 2005

Pathways to Music Part 2

Well here it, finally after months and months of waiting is the conclusion of Part 1. To be honest I had this on file for about a month, however did not want to post it cause the quality turned out not the greatest with slides being washed out and having lines through them. I do have to rescan the slides and adjust some things at some point, but I may not get to that for a while. So I figured better post it as it is for now. Enjoy. Pathways to Music Part 2 ( 40mb )

5 Comments:

  • At 10/22/2005 02:24:37 PM, Yves Usson said…

    Hi

    Nice and interesting stuff, though some important landmarks are missing : the modernist italian composers (Luigi Russo) from the 1910, and Raymond Scott in the 50-60 and the canadian LeCaine.

    Nice job anyway

     
  • At 10/23/2005 02:17:58 PM, Anonymous said…

    Very nice presentation of the electronic music development! But i would want to comment a bit on the Stockhausen section. He and other composers at the time was actively into composing serial music. The were pushing serialism into all the musical parameters - pitch, duration, dynamics etc. Stockhausen discovered that the tape recorder and the sine tone generator made it possible to serialize timbre too as all sounds can be broken down to sine partials, timbres could be built up with the same. So he organized the sine tones in the clusters according to the series of the piece. This was the reason, not to make a more pleasant sounds.

     
  • At 10/23/2005 11:02:27 PM, matrix said…

    Finally got around to watching this. What a find. This is an amazing piece. Thanks for posting it.

     
  • At 10/24/2005 11:21:14 AM, Eric.Bar said…

    10nX 4 this gr8 video,
    It`s very interesting....

     
  • At 11/02/2005 04:00:30 PM, Rick Hein said…

    Thanks for your work!

     

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