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Book Cover
E-book
Author Warner, Timothy

Title Pop Music : Technology and Creativity - Trevor Horn and the Digital Revolution
Published Milton : Routledge, 2018

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Description 1 online resource (187 pages)
Contents Cover; Half Title; Title Page; Copyright Page; Contents; List of Tables; General Editor's Preface; Acknowledgements; Introduction; Part One: Pop Music; 1 Characteristics of Pop Music; Pop and rock; Pop as a format: the single; Short and sweet; The art of the familiar; Simplicity and repetition; Round and round, like a record; Machine aesthetics; Pop and television; Pop and commerce; Pop and fashion; Let's dance; Image; Mixed media; 2 The Production of Pop Music; An aural art; The recording studio as resource; From analogue to digital; Using technology; Multitrack recording; Signal processing
MIDI sequencingSound synthesis and sampling; Recording the voice; The fade-out; The record producer; Part Two: Technology and Creativity; 3 'Video Killed the Radio Star' by The Buggies; The ghost in the machine; Music; Lyrics; Production and arrangement; Disco killed the radio star; 4 'Buffalo Gals' by Malcolm McLaren; A charismatic manager; From manager to artist; Applied cultural theory; The anthropological connection; Stylistic collage; 'Buffalo Gals'; Structure; Timbre; Half-heard words; 5 'Owner oaf Lonely Heart' by Yes; Yes: from progressive rock to chart pop; 90125; A new image
Live/recordedChart pop music; 'Owner of a Lonely Heart'; Form: repetition and suspension; Timbre and gesture; The artificial guitar; The multitracked vocal; Machine drums; 6 'Relax' by Frankie Goes to Hollywood; Zang Tuum Tumb; Another band from Liverpool; The image; Too much, too young?; The making of' Relax'; 'Remix, Re Use It'; Banned; The sound of 'Relax'; A novel approach to musical form; What's the hook?; Repetition in 'Relax'; 7 Who's Afraid of The Art of Noise?; What's in a name?; Who's afraid of The Art of Noise?; Cover imagery; Sampling; Recording records; Listening to samples
Sampling and The Art of NoiseStudio made; Timbre; Space; 8 'Jewel', 'Duel' and 'Jewelled' by Propaganda; Recordings revisited; Propaganda; A Secret Wish: pretentious packaging; From engineer to producer; The music of A Secret Wish; 'Jewel'/'Duel'/'Jewelled'; 'JeweP/'Duel'/'Jewelled' -- the structure; 'Jewel'/'Duel'/'Jewelled' -- the sound; Technology and Propaganda; 9 Slave to the Rhythm by Grace Jones; Slave to the fashion; Slave to the image; Slave to the cliche; Slave to the Rhythm; 'Re-written by machine'; Concerto for Synclavier; Slave to the sampler; Space; Spatial orchestration; Words
Slave to the remixConclusion; Appendix 1: Interview with Trevor Horn; Appendix 2: Trevor Horn Discography; Discography; Bibliography; Index
Summary "This highly original and accessible book draws on the author?s personal experience as a musician, producer and teacher of popular music to discuss the ways in which audio technology and musical creativity in pop music are inextricably bound together. This relationship, the book argues, is exemplified by the work of Trevor Horn, who is widely acknowledged as the most important, innovative and successful British pop record producer of the early 1980s. In the first part of the book, Timothy Warner presents a definition of pop as distinct from rock music, and goes on to consider the ways technological developments, such as the transition from analogue to digital, transform working practices and, as a result, impact on the creative process of producing pop. Part two analyses seven influential recordings produced by Trevor Horn between 1979 and 1985: 'Video Killed the Radio Star' (The Buggles), 'Buffalo Gals' (Malcolm McClaren), 'Owner of a Lonely Heart' (Yes), 'Relax' (Frankie Goes to Hollywood), 'Slave to the Rhythm' (Grace Jones), and albums by The Art of Noise and Propaganda. These records reveal how the creative use of technology in the modern pop recording studio has informed Horn?s work, a theme that is then explored in an extensive interview with Horn himself."--Provided by publisher
Notes Print version record
Subject Horn, Trevor
SUBJECT Horn, Trevor fast
Subject Popular music -- History and criticism
Music and technology.
Electronic music -- History and criticism
Creation (Literary, artistic, etc.)
Creation (Literary, artistic, etc.)
Electronic music
Music and technology
Popular music
Genre/Form Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9781351774529
1351774522