The Instrument as Medium: Phonographic Work
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The Bloomsbury Handbook of Sound Art. Hrsg. / Sanne Krogh Groth; Holger Schulze. 1. Aufl. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2020. S. 436-445 23 (Bloomsbury handbooks).
Publikation: Beiträge in Sammelwerken › Aufsätze in Sammelwerken › Forschung › begutachtet
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RIS
TY - CHAP
T1 - The Instrument as Medium
T2 - Phonographic Work
AU - Großmann, Rolf
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - To understand the emergence of new sound instruments through media technology, it is helpful to overcome the limitations of thought that arise from the history of European art music. The Western European cultural tradition of the instrumental production of sounds is almost opposite to the concept of sound art. It follows the tradition of abstraction from concrete sound in favor of melodic and later harmonic structure. Here an instrument is necessary tomake the signs of time and pitch of the written score (re-)sound. More precisely, the sound of an instrument is an accidental property of the tone, which is defined by its frequency, its pitch. Not until the twentieth century, with its emancipation of noise, did the paradigm of pitch leave the “universe of tone,” which contrasts with the “universe of sound.” The development of technical media of sonic writing, most of all the phono-graph, which for the first time made it possible to record acoustic events in their own sound, had a decisive influence on this change.
AB - To understand the emergence of new sound instruments through media technology, it is helpful to overcome the limitations of thought that arise from the history of European art music. The Western European cultural tradition of the instrumental production of sounds is almost opposite to the concept of sound art. It follows the tradition of abstraction from concrete sound in favor of melodic and later harmonic structure. Here an instrument is necessary tomake the signs of time and pitch of the written score (re-)sound. More precisely, the sound of an instrument is an accidental property of the tone, which is defined by its frequency, its pitch. Not until the twentieth century, with its emancipation of noise, did the paradigm of pitch leave the “universe of tone,” which contrasts with the “universe of sound.” The development of technical media of sonic writing, most of all the phono-graph, which for the first time made it possible to record acoustic events in their own sound, had a decisive influence on this change.
KW - Music education
KW - Sound Art
KW - Sound Studies
KW - Sound Art
KW - Sound Studies
KW - Media and communication studies
UR - https://b-ok.cc/book/5502067/d0cde4?dsource=recommend
UR - https://www.academia.edu/41807430/The_Bloomsbury_Handbook_of_Sound_Art
U2 - 10.5040/9781501338823.0032
DO - 10.5040/9781501338823.0032
M3 - Contributions to collected editions/anthologies
SN - 978-1-5013-3879-3
T3 - Bloomsbury handbooks
SP - 436
EP - 445
BT - The Bloomsbury Handbook of Sound Art
A2 - Krogh Groth, Sanne
A2 - Schulze, Holger
PB - Bloomsbury Academic
CY - London
ER -