Britain's Throbbing Gristle used a kind of aural and conceptual violence to pursue specific ideological goals. The concept of noise is crucial to the understanding of this use, but is often explained in a limiting discourse. Friedrich Kittler offers an alternative approach by showing how the introduction of media technology initially formed this discourse. When one assesses the use of noise and its relation to violence from such a media historic point of view, Throbbing Gristle's layered work becomes conceptually coherent and turns out to be an exemplary case study for the status of noise in popular music more generally
Since Luigi Russolo first published The Art of Noise in 1913, certain lineages of experimental music...
This book is a timely contribution to the emerging field of the aurality of theatre and looks in par...
Noise permeates our highly mediated and globalised cultures. Noise as art, music, cultural or digita...
Britain's Throbbing Gristle used a kind of aural and conceptual violence to pursue specific ideologi...
This chapter examines the field of Industrial Music and Throbbing Gristle in particular as a media e...
What is it about noise that attracted musicians and listeners over the past century? Noise Resonance...
Violence, including acoustic violence, can be remarkably resistant to critique; the semiotic structu...
Noise has always been a slippery concept, at once a sonic phenomenon and a concept that transcends s...
The stated intention of British post-punk band, Throbbing Gristle (TG), was to harness sound to crea...
An audio tape documenting a ritual séance for a Throbbing Gristle performance held at the Now Societ...
Recent theoretical interest in Noise has drawn attention to the difficulties of making sense of it a...
Tape recorders, vinyl records, guitar amplifiers, and pianos are not typically designed in the aim o...
Throbbing Gristle made a unique intervention into popular culture that bridged confrontational perfo...
As Hogarth’s famous print, The Enraged Musician, makes clear, “sound” and “noise” are antithetical n...
Ever since Claude Shannons’ ‘A Mathematical Theory of Communication’ was published in 1948 we have s...
Since Luigi Russolo first published The Art of Noise in 1913, certain lineages of experimental music...
This book is a timely contribution to the emerging field of the aurality of theatre and looks in par...
Noise permeates our highly mediated and globalised cultures. Noise as art, music, cultural or digita...
Britain's Throbbing Gristle used a kind of aural and conceptual violence to pursue specific ideologi...
This chapter examines the field of Industrial Music and Throbbing Gristle in particular as a media e...
What is it about noise that attracted musicians and listeners over the past century? Noise Resonance...
Violence, including acoustic violence, can be remarkably resistant to critique; the semiotic structu...
Noise has always been a slippery concept, at once a sonic phenomenon and a concept that transcends s...
The stated intention of British post-punk band, Throbbing Gristle (TG), was to harness sound to crea...
An audio tape documenting a ritual séance for a Throbbing Gristle performance held at the Now Societ...
Recent theoretical interest in Noise has drawn attention to the difficulties of making sense of it a...
Tape recorders, vinyl records, guitar amplifiers, and pianos are not typically designed in the aim o...
Throbbing Gristle made a unique intervention into popular culture that bridged confrontational perfo...
As Hogarth’s famous print, The Enraged Musician, makes clear, “sound” and “noise” are antithetical n...
Ever since Claude Shannons’ ‘A Mathematical Theory of Communication’ was published in 1948 we have s...
Since Luigi Russolo first published The Art of Noise in 1913, certain lineages of experimental music...
This book is a timely contribution to the emerging field of the aurality of theatre and looks in par...
Noise permeates our highly mediated and globalised cultures. Noise as art, music, cultural or digita...