-
Musique concrète (French pronunciation: [myzik kɔ̃kʁɛt]; lit. '
concrete music') is a type
of music composition that
utilizes recorded sounds as raw material...
-
development of the magnetic tape recorder,
sound poetry evolved thanks to
the upcoming of the concrete music movement at
the end
of the 1940s. Some
sound poetics...
- re-creation of
sound waves, such as
spoken voice, singing,
instrumental music,
or sound effects.
The two main
classes of sound recording technology are
analog recording...
-
sounds derived from
musical instruments,
voice,
electronically generated sound,
or sounds employing audio signal processing, as well as
general sound...
- In
the history of film and television,
accidents have
occurred during shooting, such as cast
or crew
fatalities or serious accidents that
plagued production...
-
drone elements rather than song
structure Use
of synthesizers and
musique concrète techniques A
movement away from rock's
traditional rhythm &
blues roots...
- and
concrete sounds (1994–95,
revision and new
master 2013) Etats-Limites, ou les cris de
Petra [Borderlines,
or Petra's Shouts]. To
the memory of Petra...
-
dropped sound equipment into a hole they had been digging, as was
the standard procedure. This time, they
detected some
movement underneath the concrete slab...
-
leading proponent of sound poetry and
concrete poetry.
Greenham was born in Vienna, Austria, on
January 4, 1924,
the only
child of Rena Pfiffer-Lax and...
-
nationalist movement in
the late 19th century, in
reaction to
newer waves of antisemitism and in
response to
the Haskalah,
or Jewish Enlightenment.
The arrival...