- Most important & controversial composers of the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries
- Work includes electronic music, aleatory (controlled chance) in serial composition, and musical spatialization.
Helicopter String Quartet
- Best-known pieces
- Most complex to perform
- String quartet, four helicopters with pilots, as well as audio and video equipment and technicians
- First performed and recorded in 1995
Alvin Lucier
- 1931 - present day
- American composer of experimental music
- Professor at Wesleyan University
- Most of his work is influenced by science
I am sitting in a room
"I am sitting in a room different from the one you are in now. I am recording the sound of my speaking voice and I am going to play it back into the room again and again until the resonant frequencies of the room reinforce themselves so that any semblance of my speech, with perhaps the exception of rhythm, is destroyed. What you will hear, then, are the natural resonant frequencies of the room articulated by speech. I regard this activity not so much as a demonstration of a physical fact, but, more as a way to smooth out any irregularities my speech might have."
- 1969
- Lucier recording himself narrating a text, and then playing the recording back into the room, re-recording it, and then repeated
- Certain frequencies are emphasized, until the words become unrecognisable, replaced by the harmonies and tones of the room itself.
"the idea that postmodernism is less a surface style or historical period than an attitude". Kramer says there are 16 characteristics of postmodern music:
1. Is not simply a repudiation of modernism or its continuation, but has aspects of both a break and an extension
2. Is ironic
3. Blurs boundaries between past and present
4. Challenges style barriers, including 'high' and 'low'
5. Shows disdain for the often unquestioned value of structural unity
6. Questions the mutual exclusivity of elitist and populist values
7. Avoids totalizing forms
8. Considers music as relevant to cultural, social, and political
9. Includes music of many cultures and traditions
10. Considers technology as a way to distribute music and enhance production
11. Accepts contradictions
12. Questions binary opposites
13. Includes fragments and breaks or gaps
14. Encloses plural and multiple sources
15. Has multiple meanings
16. Locates meaning and structure to listeners, more than in scores, performances, or composers
I have chosen a picture of me and Jordan at Dot to Dot festival last year, the picture next to it is of me, my mum, step dad and little brother at my brothers christening a few weeks ago and below a picture of me and my 18 closest friends at V festival last year.
The choice of these pictures taken over the last year are because I wanted the CD to be relevant to my life as of April 2011, as all the songs are my favourite by artists I have seen live over the last year.
All songs are in alphabetical order except Ellie Goulding - The End, for obvious reasons.
Below is a review on Virgin Music's Website of the bands first album To Lose My Life where Death is the embarking track, during this review they are examined against other bands of similar genres and compared to Joy Division.
In interviews White Lies have always expressed clearly their influences and reality of their lyrics. Their influences include Joy Division. 1. Although these songs aren't identical in sound, beat and rhythm, there are clear similarities. - JD have used a 25 second, guitar based instrumental before the first words are vocalised in LWTUA, this acts as an introduction to the music. WL have opted for a similar introduction of 20 seconds, but here the sound is structured around the drum beat. 2. Vocals -Harry McVeigh lead vocalist in WL has had his singing voice (which is different to his spoken voice) likened to Ian Curtis lead of JD. Said voice is quite unexpected of a 22 year old Man from west London.