Routledge Handbook to Rethinking the History of Technology-Based Music
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Product details
- ISBN 9781032554204
- Weight: 960g
- Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
- Publication Date: 29 Dec 2025
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
This Handbook explores and critiques a new sonic reality – one which unearths new narratives that chart embryonic practices from the early twentieth century that have developed in parallel with accepted narratives of electronic music.
Today’s musical and artistic practices within technology-based music represent radical changes in production, engagement and dissemination of all sonic arts for composers, musicians, listeners, media content creators and casual music users. Constant everyday exposure to electronic or processed sounds influences our listening skills and listening intentionality, and our ideas of what constitutes valuable sound experiences have expanded radically. What are we listening to? How and why? This new reality is also more inclusive, and technology-borne music now appears as the new folk music – unwritten, improvised and finding its own relevance unfettered by the traditional hierarchies of taste. It is also where black and Asian technology-based experimental music is emerging with its own sonic genealogy, where music is no longer limited to sound only but can be more fruitfully seen as a branch of media arts, combining diverse materials, techniques and tools into more holistic experiences.
Jøran Rudi was educated at New York University and pioneered the digital development of music in Norway as composer, studio director (NOTAM 1993–2019), technologist and historian. He is currently the Leverhulme Professor at the University of Huddersfield.
Monty Adkins is a composer and professor of electronic music at the University of Huddersfield. He has worked extensively on the tape archive of Roberto Gerhard and has published four edited collections on the composer’s work. He is currently leading an Arts and Humanities Research Council research project investigating the electronic music of Ernest Berk.
