Electroacoustic music, a flourishing medium for over half a
century, remains today, in a wide array of technological forms, one
of the major areas of creative activity in music. However, it has
long been overlooked in theoretical studies--possibly in part
because it does away with traditional scores and notation. In this
landmark collection, a group of distinguished composers and
theorists who have actively worked in the field present detailed
analyses of important electroacoustic works while also
demonstrating some recent approaches to the analysis of the music
of this medium. Included here are discussions of such significant
works as Karlheinz Stockhausen's "Gesang der Junglinge "(1955/56),
Iannis Xenakis' "Diamorphoses" (1957), and Jean-Claude Risset's
"Contours" (1982). Overall, the collection aims to elucidate the
sonic design of each of the electroacoustic music works under
investigation, using its best examples as a lens through which to
examine an unduly neglected genre.
Demonstrating recent techniques in the analysis of
electroacoustic music, the volume also considers various
compositional approaches as well as computer applications that have
become an irreplaceable tool in the composing of this music. So
little has been written about this 20th-century art form that
Electroacoustic Music: Analytical Perspectives is at once a fresh,
bold step forward in musicology and analysis.
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