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Noise music is a genre of music that is characterised by the expressive use of noise . This type of music tends to challenge the distinction that is made in conventional musical practices between musical and non-musical sound. Noise music includes a wide range of musical styles and sound-based creative practices that feature noise as a primary aspect .

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72-491: Human Animal is the fifth studio album by American noise music group Wolf Eyes , released on September 26, 2006, by Sub Pop . The title track "Human Animal" is different from the one originally issued on the Wolf Eyes / Prurient split The Warriors (2005). "Noise Not Music" was originally by hardcore punk band No Fucker. The album received critical praise upon release. This 2006 rock album–related article

144-683: A Quadrophonic version of the Metal Machine Music recording that was produced by playing the master tape back both forward and backward, and by flipping the tape over. Reed was well aware of the drone music of La Monte Young and cites him as a major influence on Metal Machine Music . Young's Theatre of Eternal Music was a proto- minimal music noise group in the mid-60s with John Cale , Marian Zazeela , Henry Flynt , Angus Maclise , Tony Conrad , and others. The Theatre of Eternal Music's discordant sustained notes and loud amplification had influenced Cale's subsequent contribution to

216-498: A "continuous flowing curve" of sound that he could not achieve with acoustic instruments. In 1931, Varese's Ionisation for 13 players featured 2 sirens, a lion's roar , and used 37 percussion instruments to create a repertoire of unpitched sounds making it the first musical work to be organized solely on the basis of noise. In remarking on Varese's contributions the American composer John Cage stated that Varese had "established

288-552: A City) and Convegno d'aeroplani e d'automobili (The Meeting of Aeroplanes and Automobiles) were both performed for the first time in 1914. A performance of his Gran Concerto Futuristico (1917) was met with strong disapproval and violence from the audience, as Russolo himself had predicted. None of his intoning devices have survived, though recently some have been reconstructed and used in performances. Although Russolo's works bear little resemblance to contemporary noise music such as Japanoise , his efforts helped to introduce noise as

360-407: A communicative signal, and a third definition based in subjectivity (what is noise to one person can be meaningful to another; what was considered unpleasant sound yesterday is not today). According to Murray Schafer there are four types of noise: unwanted noise, unmusical sound, any loud sound, and a disturbance in any signaling system (such as static on a telephone). Definitions regarding what

432-433: A famous Elvis Presley recording. I believe that the use of noise to make music will continue and increase until we reach a music produced through the aid of electrical instruments which will make available for musical purposes any and all sounds that can be heard. In 1932, Bauhaus artists László Moholy-Nagy , Oskar Fischinger and Paul Arma experimented with modifying the physical contents of record grooves. Under

504-417: A genre known as noise music. The album, recorded on a three speed Uher machine and mastered/engineered by Bob Ludwig , is an early, well-known example of commercial studio noise music that the music critic Lester Bangs has sarcastically called the "greatest album ever made in the history of the human eardrum ". It has also been cited as one of the " worst albums of all time ". In 1975, RCA also released

576-542: A group of contemporary art called Actual Art . Sometime around 1966 the word "art" was dropped from the name and group was called poor AKTUAL . Already known and also documented are their actions in the part of old Prague called New World , such as Demonstration of One (1964). Some of AKTUAL's songs were remastered by unofficial musical group The Plastic People of the Universe , which members became, somewhat against their will, dissidents during political process in

648-437: A half minutes of "silence" (Cage 1973), that represents the beginning of noise music proper. For Hegarty, "noise music", as with 4'33" , is that music made up of incidental sounds that represent perfectly the tension between "desirable" sound (properly played musical notes) and undesirable "noise" that make up all noise music from Erik Satie to NON to Glenn Branca . Writing about Japanese noise music, Hegarty suggests that "it

720-694: A live acoustic/electronic improvisational group formed in Rome, made a recording titled SpaceCraft using contact microphones on such "non-musical" objects as panes of glass and motor oil cans that was recorded at the Akademie der Kunste in Berlin. At the end of the sixties, they took part in the collective noise action called Lo Zoo initiated by the artist Michelangelo Pistoletto . The art critic Rosalind Krauss argued that by 1968 artists such as Robert Morris , Robert Smithson , and Richard Serra had "entered

792-503: A modest musique concrète student piece entitled Etude . Cage's work resulted in his famous work Williams Mix , which was made up of some six hundred tape fragments arranged according to the demands of the I Ching . Cage's early radical phase reached its height that summer of 1952, when he unveiled the first art " happening " at Black Mountain College , and 4'33" , the so-called controversial "silent piece". The premiere of 4'33"

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864-527: A musical aesthetic and broaden the perception of sound as an artistic medium. At first the art of music sought purity, limpidity and sweetness of sound. Then different sounds were amalgamated, care being taken, however, to caress the ear with gentle harmonies. Today music, as it becomes continually more complicated, strives to amalgamate the most dissonant, strange and harsh sounds. In this way we come ever closer to noise-sound. Antonio Russolo , Luigi's brother and fellow Italian Futurist composer, produced

936-425: A piece conducted by a team using flags and pistols when performed in the city of Baku in 1922. In 1923, Arthur Honegger created Pacific 231 , a modernist musical composition that imitates the sound of a steam locomotive. Another example is Ottorino Respighi 's 1924 orchestral piece Pines of Rome , which included the phonographic playback of a nightingale recording. Also in 1924, George Antheil created

1008-466: A recording of two works featuring the original intonarumori . The 1921 made phonograph with works entitled Corale and Serenata , combined conventional orchestral music set against the famous noise machines and is the only surviving sound recording. An early Dada -related work from 1916 by Marcel Duchamp also worked with noise, but in an almost silent way. One of the found object Readymades of Marcel Duchamp , A Bruit Secret (With Hidden Noise),

1080-536: A set of recordings made at the train station Gare des Batignolles in Paris that included six steam locomotives whistling and trains accelerating and moving over the tracks. The piece was derived entirely from recorded noise sounds that were not musical, thus a realization of Russolo's conviction that noise could be an acceptable source of music. Cinq études de bruits premiered via a radio broadcast on October 5, 1948, called Concert de bruits ( Noise Concert ). Later in

1152-456: A single 20-minute sustained chord (followed by a 20-minute silence) — showing how the sound of one drone could make music. Also in 1949, Pierre Boulez befriended John Cage , who was visiting Paris to do research on the music of Erik Satie . John Cage had been pushing music in even more startling directions during the war years, writing for prepared piano, junkyard percussion, and electronic gadgetry. In 1951, Cage's Imaginary Landscape #4 ,

1224-409: A situation the logical conditions of which can no longer be described as modernist." Sound art found itself in the same condition, but with an added emphasis on distribution . Antiform process art became the terms used to describe this postmodern post-industrial culture and the process by which it is made. Serious art music responded to this conjuncture in terms of intense noise, for example

1296-594: A vacuum cleaner, a radio, an oil drum, a doll, and a set of dishes. Moreover, the speed of the tape recording was manipulated, further distorting the sounds being recorded. Canada's Nihilist Spasm Band , the world's longest-running noise act, was formed in 1965 in London, Ontario, and continues to perform and record to this day, having survived to work with many of the newer generation which they themselves had influenced, such as Thurston Moore of Sonic Youth and Jojo Hiroshige of Hijokaidan . In 1967, Musica Elettronica Viva ,

1368-459: A work for twelve radio receivers, was premiered in New York. Performance of the composition necessitated the use of a score that contained indications for various wavelengths, durations, and dynamic levels, all of which had been determined using chance operations . A year later in 1952, Cage applied his aleatoric methods to tape-based composition. Also in 1952, Karlheinz Stockhausen completed

1440-606: A work titled Ballet Mécanique with instrumentation that included 16 pianos , 3 airplane propellers , and 7 electric bells . The work was originally conceived as music for the Dada film of the same name, by Dudley Murphy and Fernand Léger , but in 1926 it premiered independently as a concert piece. In 1930 Paul Hindemith and Ernst Toch recycled records to create sound montages and in 1936 Edgard Varèse experimented with records, playing them backwards, and at varying speeds. Varese had earlier used sirens to create what he called

1512-547: Is Sonic Youth , who took inspiration from the No Wave composers Glenn Branca and Rhys Chatham (himself a student of La Monte Young ). Marc Masters, in his book on the No Wave, points out that aggressively innovative early dark noise groups like Mars and DNA drew on punk rock , avant-garde minimalism and performance art . Important in this noise trajectory are the nine nights of noise music called Noise Fest that

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1584-802: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Noise music Noise music can feature acoustically or electronically generated noise, and both traditional and unconventional musical instruments. It may incorporate live machine sounds, non-musical vocal techniques , physically manipulated audio media, processed sound recordings, field recording , computer-generated noise, stochastic process , and other randomly produced electronic signals such as distortion , feedback , static , hiss and hum. There may also be emphasis on high volume levels and lengthy, continuous pieces. More generally noise music may contain aspects such as improvisation , extended technique , cacophony and indeterminacy . In many instances, conventional use of melody, harmony, rhythm or pulse

1656-406: Is a predictor of social change and demonstrates how noise acts as the subconscious of society—validating and testing new social and political realities. His disruption of the standard history of music and his inclusion of noise in an attempt to theorize culture cleared the way for many noise music theoretical studies. Like much of modern and contemporary art, noise music takes characteristics of

1728-427: Is characterized by its use of recorded sound, electronics, tape, animate and inanimate sound sources, and various manipulation techniques. The first of Schaeffer's Cinq études de bruits ( Five Noise Etudes ), called Étude aux chemins de fer (1948) consisted of transformed locomotive sounds. The last étude, Étude pathétique (1948), makes use of sounds recorded from sauce pans and canal boats. Cinq études de bruits

1800-466: Is considered analogous to white light which contains all frequencies. In much the same way the early modernists were inspired by naïve art , some contemporary digital art noise musicians are excited by the archaic audio technologies such as wire-recorders, the 8-track cartridge , and vinyl records . Many artists not only build their own noise-generating devices, but even their own specialized recording equipment and custom software (for example,

1872-539: Is considered noise, relative to music, have changed over time. Ben Watson , in his article Noise as Permanent Revolution , points out that Ludwig van Beethoven 's Grosse Fuge (1825) "sounded like noise" to his audience at the time. Indeed, Beethoven's publishers persuaded him to remove it from its original setting as the last movement of a string quartet. He did so, replacing it with a sparkling Allegro . They subsequently published it separately. In attempting to define noise music and its value, Paul Hegarty (2007) cites

1944-670: Is dispensed with. The Futurist art movement (with most notably Luigi Russolo 's Intonarumori and L'Arte dei Rumori ( The Art of Noises ) manifesto) was important for the development of the noise aesthetic, as was the Dada art movement (a prime example being the Antisymphony concert performed on April 30, 1919, in Berlin). In the 1920s, the French composer Edgard Varèse , when New York Dada associated via Marcel Duchamp and Francis Picabia 's magazine 391 , conceived of

2016-477: Is not a genre, but it is also a genre that is multiple, and characterized by this very multiplicity ... Japanese noise music can come in all styles, referring to all other genres ... but crucially asks the question of genre—what does it mean to be categorized, categorizable, definable?" (Hegarty 2007:133). Writer Douglas Kahn , in his work Noise, Water, Meat: A History of Sound in the Arts (1999), discusses

2088-413: Is not being used to transmit a signal, but is simply produced as an unwanted by-product of other activities. Noise can block, distort, or change the meaning of a message in both human and electronic communication. White noise is a random signal (or process) with a flat power spectral density . In other words, the signal contains equal power within a fixed bandwidth at any center frequency. White noise

2160-767: Is often associated with extreme volume and distortion. Notable genres that exploit such techniques include noise rock and no wave , industrial music , Japanoise , and postdigital music such as glitch . In the domain of experimental rock , examples include Lou Reed 's Metal Machine Music and Sonic Youth . Other notable examples of composers and bands that feature noise based materials include works by Iannis Xenakis , Karlheinz Stockhausen , Helmut Lachenmann , Cornelius Cardew , Theatre of Eternal Music , Glenn Branca , Rhys Chatham , Ryoji Ikeda , Survival Research Laboratories , Whitehouse , Coil , Merzbow , Cabaret Voltaire , Psychic TV , Jean Tinguely 's recordings of his sound sculpture (specifically Bascule VII ),

2232-486: Is the final track of the Beatles ' 1966 studio album Revolver ; credited as a Lennon–McCartney song, it was written primarily by John Lennon with major contributions to the arrangement by Paul McCartney . The track included looped tape effects. For the track, McCartney supplied a bag of 1 ⁄ 4 -inch audio tape loops he had made at home after listening to Stockhausen 's Gesang der Jünglinge . By disabling

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2304-632: Is the son of the painter, musician and teacher of mathematics Karel Knížák from Doubravka u Plzně, nowadays part of the town Plzeň , and Julia Knížáková. The parents taught in Jarov (1932–1934) and later in Blovice close to Pilsen . Milan Knížák was born in Plzeň on 19 April 1940. In 1945, after the expulsion of Germans from Czechoslovakia the family moved to the Mariánské Lázně , a spa town in

2376-542: The C++ software used in creating the viral symphOny by Joseph Nechvatal ). In "Futurism and Musical Notes", Daniele Lombardi discussed the French composer Carol-Bérard; a pupil of Isaac Albéniz , who composed a Symphony of Mechanical Force s in 1910, wrote on the problems of the instrumentation of noise music, and developed a notation system. In 1913 Futurist artist Luigi Russolo wrote his manifesto, L'Arte dei Rumori , translated as The Art of Noises , stating that

2448-523: The DAAD to West Berlin , where he meet artist Wolf Vostell and Czech poet in emigration Jiří Kolář . In West Berlin he worked as a designer on an avant-garde film and created the automobile cycle of collages for Volkswagen . During the communist era Knížák was under police surveillance and was called an Enemy of the State . He was arrested during an event with the music band The Plastic People of

2520-533: The Demonstration for Oneself (both 1964). Later he had contacts with the first contact mediated Czech philosopher Jindřich Chalupecký. Knížák was promoted to Director Fluxus East by director George Maciunas about 1965. In the countries of former Eastern Bloc there were managed these activities: The Fluxus Festivals in Vilnius (1966), Prague (1966), Budapest (1969), and Poznań (1977). Knížák

2592-640: The La Monte Young Fluxus composition 89 VI 8 C. 1:42–1:52 AM Paris Encore from Poem For Chairs, Tables, Benches, Etc. Young's composition Two Sounds (1960) was composed for amplified percussion and window panes and his Poem for Tables, Chairs and Benches, Etc. (1960) used the sounds of furniture scraping across the floor. AllMusic assessed 1960s English experimental group AMM as originators of electronica , free improvisation and noise music, writing that "noise bands owe it to themselves to check out their primary source." Freak Out! ,

2664-706: The erase head of a tape recorder and then spooling a continuous loop of tape through the machine while recording, the tape would constantly overdub itself, creating a saturation effect, a technique also used in musique concrète . The Beatles would continue these efforts with " Revolution 9 ", a track produced in 1968 for The White Album . It made sole use of sound collage , credited to Lennon–McCartney , but created primarily by John Lennon with assistance from George Harrison and Yoko Ono . In 1975, Ned Lagin released an album of electronic noise music full of spacey rumblings and atmospherics filled with burps and bleeps entitled Seastones on Round Records . The album

2736-589: The former Sudetenland , close to the German border. There, his father played violin in a spa orchestra and Milan attended primary school, where he was interested in music and literature. He also took piano, trumpet and guitar lessons. Knížák started painting at fourteen in Mariánské Lázně where his first exhibition was held in 1958. He attended secondary/high-school (Gymnasium in Planá u Mariánských Lázní ) and graduated in 1957. On several occasions young Knížák visited

2808-505: The 'stylus' and small sounds amplified by contact microphones. Also in 1960, Nam June Paik composed Fluxusobjekt for fixed tape and hand-controlled tape playback head. On May 8, 1960, six young Japanese musicians, including Takehisa Kosugi and Yasunao Tone , formed the Group Ongaku with two tape recordings of noise music: Automatism and Object . These recordings made use of a mixture of traditional musical instruments along with

2880-610: The 1960s, the Fluxus art movement played an important role, specifically the Fluxus artists Joe Jones , Yasunao Tone , George Brecht , Robert Watts , Wolf Vostell , Dieter Roth , Yoko Ono , Nam June Paik , Walter De Maria 's Ocean Music , Milan Knížák 's Broken Music Composition , early La Monte Young , Takehisa Kosugi , and the Analog #1 (Noise Study) (1961) by Fluxus-related composer James Tenney . Contemporary noise music

2952-700: The 1966 debut album by the Mothers of Invention made use of avant-garde sound collage —particularly the closing track " The Return of the Son of Monster Magnet ". The same year, art rock group the Velvet Underground made their first recording while produced by Andy Warhol , a track entitled "Noise". AllMusic assessed the Godz as an early noise band: "the three squalling bits of avant-garde noise/junk they recorded from 1966–1968. " Tomorrow Never Knows "

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3024-472: The 1970s, combined with the simultaneous influence of punk rock , established the No Wave aesthetic, and instigated what is commonly referred to as noise music today. Since the early 1980s, Japan has produced a significant output of characteristically harsh artists and bands, sometimes referred to as Japanoise , with names such as Government Alpha , Alienlovers in Amagasaki and Koji Tano, and perhaps

3096-611: The Gerogerigegege and Hanatarash . Nick Cain of The Wire identifies the "primacy of Japanese Noise artists like Merzbow, Hijokaidan and Incapacitants" as one of the major developments in noise music since 1990. Milan Kn%C3%AD%C5%BE%C3%A1k Milan Knížák ( Czech: [ˈmɪlan ˈkɲiːʒaːk] ; born 19 April 1940) is a Czech performance artist , sculptor, noise musician , installation artist , political dissident, graphic artist , art theorist and pedagogue of art associated with Fluxus . Milan Knizak

3168-487: The Judgment of God ), an audio piece full of the seemingly random cacophony of xylophonic sounds mixed with various percussive elements, mixed with the noise of alarming human cries, screams, grunts, onomatopoeia , and glossolalia . In 1949, Nouveau Réalisme artist Yves Klein wrote The Monotone Symphony (formally The Monotone-Silence Symphony , conceived 1947–1948), a 40-minute orchestral piece that consisted of

3240-529: The Mafia, Coil , Laibach , Thee Temple ov Psychick Youth , Smegma , Nurse with Wound and Einstürzende Neubauten performed industrial noise music mixing loud metal percussion, guitars, and unconventional "instruments" (such as jackhammers and bones) in elaborate stage performances. These industrial artists experimented with varying degrees of noise production techniques. Interest in the use of shortwave radio also developed at this time, particularly evident in

3312-891: The Velvet Underground in his use of both discordance and feedback. Cale and Conrad have released noise music recordings they made during the mid-sixties, such as Cale's Inside the Dream Syndicate series ( The Dream Syndicate being the alternative name given by Cale and Conrad to their collective work with Young). Krautrock bands such as Neu! and Faust would incorporate noise into their compositions. Roni Sarig, author of The Secret History of Rock called Can's sophomore album Tago Mago "as close as it ever got to avant-garde noise music." The aptly named noise rock fuses rock to noise, usually with recognizable "rock" instrumentation, but with greater use of distortion and electronic effects, varying degrees of atonality , improvisation, and white noise . One notable band of this genre

3384-475: The advent of various types of noise produced in Japanese music, and in terms of quantity this is really to do with the 1990s onwards ... with the vast growth of Japanese noise, finally, noise music becomes a genre". Other key Japanese noise artists that contributed to this upsurge of activity include Hijokaidan , Boredoms , C.C.C.C. , Incapacitants , KK Null , Yamazaki Maso 's Masonna , Solmania , K2,

3456-469: The autumn of the year 1976. Knížák was a member of Fluxus , an international (anti-)artistic community of music, actions, poetry, objects and events. Knížák was director of Fluxus East from the year 1965. He is known for organising and performing the first happenings and noise music concerts in Czechoslovakia : e.g. A Walk around Novy Svět (The part of old Prague called New World ) and

3528-486: The best known being Merzbow (pseudonym for the Japanese noise artist Masami Akita who himself was inspired by the Dada artist Kurt Schwitters 's Merz art project of psychological collage ). In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Akita took Metal Machine Music as a point of departure and further abstracted the noise aesthetic by freeing the sound from guitar based feedback alone. According to Hegarty (2007), "in many ways it only makes sense to talk of noise music since

3600-569: The elements of his music in terms of sound-masses ; writing in the first half of the 1920s, Offrandes , Hyperprism , Octandre , and Intégrales . Varèse thought that "to stubbornly conditioned ears, anything new in music has always been called noise ", and he posed the question: "what is music but organized noises?" Pierre Schaeffer 's musique concrète 1948 compositions Cinq études de bruits ( Five Noise Studies ), that began with Etude aux Chemins de Fer ( Railway Study ) are key to this history. Etude aux Chemins de Fer consisted of

3672-595: The exams at the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague, but soon abandoned his studies there. He then studied mathematical analysis at the Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Charles University for one year. At the beginning of the 1960s, he created his first activity – happenings , ceremonies, installations and various environments on the busy or calm streets or in courtyards of Prague . Together with his friends he founded

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3744-565: The first Fluxus concert in Czechoslovakia in Prague in which he appeared together with Ben Vautier , Jeff Berner, Alison Knowles , Serge Oldenbourg and Dick Higgins . Knížák returned to Czechoslovakia in 1970. His works were exhibited in the galleries in the East bloc , f.e. Kraków in Poland, Budapest in Hungary, but also in capitalistic Austria. In 1979 he received a fellowship from

3816-403: The industrial revolution had given modern men a greater capacity to appreciate more complex sounds. Russolo found traditional melodic music confining and envisioned noise music as its future replacement. He designed and constructed a number of noise-generating devices called intonarumori and assembled a noise orchestra to perform with them. Works entitled Risveglio di una città (Awakening of

3888-499: The influence of Henry Cowell in San Francisco in the late 1940s, Lou Harrison and John Cage began composing music for junk ( waste ) percussion ensembles, scouring junkyards and Chinatown antique shops for appropriately tuned brake drums, flower pots, gongs, and more. In Europe, during the late 1940s, Pierre Schaeffer coined the term musique concrète to refer to the peculiar nature of sounds on tape, separated from

3960-511: The lengths on a stopwatch while turning the pages of the score. Only then could the audience recognize what Cage insisted upon: that there is no such thing as silence. Noise is always happening that makes musical sound. In 1957, Edgard Varèse created on tape an extended piece of electronic music using noises created by scraping, thumping and blowing titled Poème électronique . In 1960, John Cage completed his noise composition Cartridge Music for phono cartridges with foreign objects replacing

4032-408: The music of Hermann Nitsch 's Orgien Mysterien Theater , and La Monte Young 's bowed gong works from the late 1960s. According to Danish noise and music theorist Torben Sangild, one single definition of noise in music is not possible. Sangild instead provides three basic definitions of noise: a musical acoustics definition, a second communicative definition based on distortion or disturbance of

4104-516: The perceived negative traits of noise mentioned below and uses them in aesthetic and imaginative ways. In common use, the word noise means unwanted sound or noise pollution . In electronics noise can refer to the electronic signal corresponding to acoustic noise (in an audio system) or the electronic signal corresponding to the (visual) noise commonly seen as 'snow' on a degraded television or video image. In signal processing or computing it can be considered data without meaning; that is, data that

4176-602: The potential to be used creatively. His aim was to capture and control elements of the sonic environment and employ a method of sound organisation, a term borrowed from Varese, to bring meaning to the sound materials. Cage began in 1939 to create a series of works that explored his stated aims, the first being Imaginary Landscape #1 for instruments including two variable speed turntables with frequency recordings. In 1961, James Tenney composed Analogue #1: Noise Study (for tape) using computer synthesized noise and Collage No.1 (Blue Suede) (for tape) by sampling and manipulating

4248-504: The present nature of music" and that he had "moved into the field of sound itself while others were still discriminating 'musical tones' from noises". In an essay written in 1937, Cage expressed an interest in using extra-musical materials and came to distinguish between found sounds, which he called noise, and musical sounds, examples of which included: rain, static between radio channels, and "a truck at fifty miles per hour". Essentially, Cage made no distinction, in his view all sounds have

4320-492: The production were referred to as trompe l'oreille sounds by Cocteau and included a dynamo , Morse code machine, sirens, steam engine, airplane motor, and typewriters. Arseny Avraamov 's composition Symphony of Factory Sirens involved navy ship sirens and whistles, bus and car horns, factory sirens, cannons, foghorns, artillery guns, machine guns, hydro-airplanes, a specially designed steam-whistle machine creating noisy renderings of Internationale and Marseillaise for

4392-547: The recordings and live performances of John Duncan . Other postmodern art movements influential to post-industrial noise art are Conceptual Art and the Neo-Dada use of techniques such as assemblage , montage , bricolage , and appropriation . Bands like Test Dept , Clock DVA , Factrix , Autopsia , Nocturnal Emissions , Whitehouse , Severed Heads , Sutcliffe Jügend, and SPK soon followed. The sudden post-industrial affordability of home cassette recording technology in

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4464-502: The same time, the first postmodern wave of industrial noise music appeared with the Pop Group, Throbbing Gristle , Cabaret Voltaire , and NON (aka Boyd Rice ). These cassette culture releases often featured zany tape editing, stark percussion and repetitive loops distorted to the point where they may degrade into harsh noise. In the 1970s and 1980s, industrial noise groups like Killing Joke , Throbbing Gristle , Mark Stewart &

4536-593: The source that generated them initially. Pierre Schaeffer helped form Studio d'Essai of the Radiodiffusion-Télévision Française in Paris during World War II. Initially serving the French Resistance , Studio d'Essai became a hub for musical development centered around implementing electronic devices in compositions. It was from this group that musique concrète was developed. A type of electroacoustic music , musique concrète

4608-512: The studio of the painter Vladimír Modrý (1907–1976). Later Knížák wrote in his diary about the movie Fantastic Voyage and how its fantastic scenes reminded him of the paintings of Modrý. During the period of mid-1957 to 1958 he attended the Pedagogical University in Prague, majoring in art education and Russian language . In 1958 he dropped out and became an assistant worker at Prague's exhibition grounds. He later passed

4680-587: The use of noise as a medium and explores the ideas of Antonin Artaud , George Brecht , William Burroughs , Sergei Eisenstein , Fluxus , Allan Kaprow , Michael McClure , Yoko Ono , Jackson Pollock , Luigi Russolo , and Dziga Vertov . In Noise: The Political Economy of Music (1985), Jacques Attali explores the relationship between noise music and the future of society by considering noise music as not merely reflective of, but importantly prefigurative of social transformations. He indicates that noise in music

4752-458: The work of noted cultural critics Jean Baudrillard , Georges Bataille and Theodor Adorno and through their work traces the history of "noise". He defines noise at different times as "intrusive, unwanted", "lacking skill, not being appropriate" and "a threatening emptiness". He traces these trends starting with 18th-century concert hall music. Hegarty contends that it is John Cage 's composition 4'33" , in which an audience sits through four and

4824-621: Was a collaborative work that created a noise instrument that Duchamp accomplished with Walter Arensberg . What rattles inside when A Bruit Secret is shaken remains a mystery. In the same period the utilisation of found sound as a musical resource was starting to be explored. An early example is Parade , a performance produced at the Chatelet Theatre, Paris, on May 18, 1917, that was conceived by Jean Cocteau , with design by Pablo Picasso , choreography by Leonid Massine , and music by Eric Satie . The extra-musical materials used in

4896-697: Was also visited by American beatnik poet Allen Ginsberg and conceptual art artist Joseph Kosuth . George Maciunas invited Knížák to the United States in 1965 and he participated in Fluxus events there. He realized his Lying Ceremony in New Brunswick and the Difficult Ceremony in New York City . Maciunas prepared the publication of Knížák's Collected Works as a Fluxus Edition. In October 1966, Knížák organised

4968-659: Was organized by Thurston Moore of Sonic Youth in the NYC art space White Columns in June 1981 followed by the Speed Trials noise rock series organized by Live Skull members in May 1983. In the 1970s, the concept of art itself expanded and groups like Survival Research Laboratories , Borbetomagus and Elliott Sharp embraced and extended the most dissonant and least approachable aspects of these musical/spatial concepts. Around

5040-468: Was performed by David Tudor . The audience saw him sit at the piano, and close the lid of the piano. Some time later, without having played any notes, he opened the lid. A while after that, again having played nothing, he closed the lid. And after a period of time, he opened the lid once more and rose from the piano. The piece had passed without a note being played, in fact without Tudor or anyone else on stage having made any deliberate sound, although he timed

5112-504: Was premiered via a radio broadcast on October 5, 1948, titled Concert de bruits . Following musique concrète, other modernist art music composers such as Richard Maxfield , Karlheinz Stockhausen , Gottfried Michael Koenig , Pierre Henry , Iannis Xenakis , La Monte Young , and David Tudor , composed significant electronic, vocal, and instrumental works, sometimes using found sounds. In late 1947, Antonin Artaud recorded Pour en Finir avec le Jugement de dieu ( To Have Done with

5184-581: Was recorded in stereo quadraphonic sound and featured guest performances by members of the Grateful Dead , including Jerry Garcia playing treated guitar and Phil Lesh playing electronic Alembic bass . David Crosby , Grace Slick and other members of the Jefferson Airplane also appear on the album. Lou Reed 's double LP Metal Machine Music (1975) is cited as containing the primary characteristics of what would in time become

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