'ev and Survival Research Laboratories 4. Factrix and Chrome VII. Mail Art, Tape Technology, and the Network 1. Fluxus and UFOs 2. A History of Tape Trading 3. Taping as a Political Act 4. The Eternal Network 5. A Virtual Scene Part 3: Industrial Music as Music VIII. The Tyranny of the Beat: Dance Music and Identity Crisis 1. Those Heady Days of Idealism Are Over 2. Irony 3. Technology and Rhythm 4. Futurist Pop 5. Pleasure 6. Industrial Identity IX. ": England 1981-1985 1. The Mission is Terminated 2. London 3. Beyond London X. Body to Body: Belgian EBM 1981-1985 1. A Satellite State 2. Luc Van Acker 3. Front 4. Musical Order 5. Bodily Order XI. Industrial Music as a Theatre of Cruelty 1. Artaud-Damaged 2. Theatricalities of All Kinds XII. "She's a Sleeping Beast": Skinny Puppy and the Feminine Gothic 1. From Pop to Puppy 2. Vancouver's Fertile Ground 3. Disrupting Maleness 4. The Feminine Gothic Part 4: People and Industrial Music XIII. Wild Planet: WaxTrax! Records and Global Dance Scenes 1. Industrial Music and the Mainstream 2. The Beginnings of WaxTrax! 3. Ministry 4. Mixing and Merging 5. The Business of Chaos 6. Clubbing and Participatory Culture 7. New Beat 8. The WaxTrax! Heyday XIV. Q: Why Do We Act Like Machines? A: We Do Not. 1. Pretty Hate Machine 2. Industrial Harmony 3. Language, the Self, and Gender 4. Get Me an Industrial Band 5. Resembling the Machine XV. Death 1. Death as Event 2. Death as Metaphor 3. Death as Fashion 4. New Life XVI. Wonder 1. Covenant and the Ubiquitous Sublime 2. Apoptygma Berzerk and the Spontaneous Sublime 3. VNV Nation and the Unthinkable Sublime 4. The Futurepop Backlash 5. Clubbed to Death 6. The Longevity of Industrial Bands 7. Industrial Music Is Dead? Part 5: Meaning and Revolution XVII. Back and Forth: Industrial Music and Fascism 1. Extremism as the Norm 2. Silent Politics 3. Loud Apolitics 4. The Effects of Fascism's Spectre 5. Fascist Assimilation 6. The Hidden Reverse XVIII. White Souls in Black Suits: Industrial Music and Race 1. Whiteness 2. The Inheritance of Blues, Jazz, and Dub 3. Exotica, Caricature, and the Techno-Oblivious 4. Technology and Racial Engagement 5. Black and White 6. Repetition and the English Ballad XIX. Is There Any Escape for Noise? 1. Unpalatable Truths 2. The First Two Options 3. Transgression as Law 4. The Future Happened Already 5. Pleasure, Flag Planting, and Revolution 6. The Third Mind"> 'ev and Survival Research Laboratories 4. Factrix and Chrome VII. Mail Art, Tape Technology, and the Network 1. Fluxus and UFOs 2. A History of Tape Trading 3. Taping as a Political Act 4. The Eternal Network 5. A Virtual Scene Part 3: Industrial Music as Music VIII. The Tyranny of the Beat: Dance Music and Identity Crisis 1. Those Heady Days of Idealism Are Over 2. Irony 3. Technology and Rhythm 4. Futurist Pop 5. Pleasure 6. Industrial Identity IX. ": England 1981-1985 1. The Mission is Terminated 2. London 3. Beyond London X. Body to Body: Belgian EBM 1981-1985 1. A Satellite State 2. Luc Van Acker 3. Front 4. Musical Order 5. Bodily Order XI. Industrial Music as a Theatre of Cruelty 1. Artaud-Damaged 2. Theatricalities of All Kinds XII. "She's a Sleeping Beast": Skinny Puppy and the Feminine Gothic 1. From Pop to Puppy 2. Vancouver's Fertile Ground 3. Disrupting Maleness 4. The Feminine Gothic Part 4: People and Industrial Music XIII. Wild Planet: WaxTrax! Records and Global Dance Scenes 1. Industrial Music and the Mainstream 2. The Beginnings of WaxTrax! 3. Ministry 4. Mixing and Merging 5. The Business of Chaos 6. Clubbing and Participatory Culture 7. New Beat 8. The WaxTrax! Heyday XIV. Q: Why Do We Act Like Machines? A: We Do Not. 1. Pretty Hate Machine 2. Industrial Harmony 3. Language, the Self, and Gender 4. Get Me an Industrial Band 5. Resembling the Machine XV. Death 1. Death as Event 2. Death as Metaphor 3. Death as Fashion 4. New Life XVI. Wonder 1. Covenant and the Ubiquitous Sublime 2. Apoptygma Berzerk and the Spontaneous Sublime 3. VNV Nation and the Unthinkable Sublime 4. The Futurepop Backlash 5. Clubbed to Death 6. The Longevity of Industrial Bands 7. Industrial Music Is Dead? Part 5: Meaning and Revolution XVII. Back and Forth: Industrial Music and Fascism 1. Extremism as the Norm 2. Silent Politics 3. Loud Apolitics 4. The Effects of Fascism's Spectre 5. Fascist Assimilation 6. The Hidden Reverse XVIII. White Souls in Black Suits: Industrial Music and Race 1. Whiteness 2. The Inheritance of Blues, Jazz, and Dub 3. Exotica, Caricature, and the Techno-Oblivious 4. Technology and Racial Engagement 5. Black and White 6. Repetition and the English Ballad XIX. Is There Any Escape for Noise? 1. Unpalatable Truths 2. The First Two Options 3. Transgression as Law 4. The Future Happened Already 5. Pleasure, Flag Planting, and Revolution 6. The Third Mind" />
更多详情 在线阅读
被引数量: 10
评价数量: 0
馆藏高校

{{holding.name}}

Assimilate —— A Critical History of Industrial Music

----- 同化:工业音乐批评史

ISBN: 9780199832583 出版年:2015 页码:376 Reed, S Alexander Oxford University Press

知识网络
知识图谱网络
内容简介

Introduction 1. A Fading Vision Lost in Time 2. The Pan-Revolutionary 3. The "I"-Word Part 1: Technology and the Preconditions of Industrial Music I. Italian Futurism 1. Industry 2. The Aesthetics of the Machine 3. Crash II. William S. Burroughs 1. Junkie 2. The Control Machines 3. Brainwashing and the Conflation of Authority 4. Mediatic Verses 5. The Cut-Up 6. Process as Composition 7. Media 8. Techno-Ambivalence III. Industrial Music and the Avant-Garde 1. Noise and Revisionism 2. The Revolutionary Class Part 2: Industrial Geography IV. Northern England 1. Progress in Hell 2. The Original Sound of Sheffield 3. Meatwhistle and ClockDVA 4. Throbbing Gristle 5. Manchester in the Shadow of War V. Berlin 1. An Island Out of This Planet 2. Strategies Against Architecture 3. German-ness 4. Ingenious Dilettantes 5. West Germany Beyond Berlin VI. San Francisco 1. Madness in Any Direction, at Any Hour 2. Monte Cazazza and Self-Propaganda 3. Z>'ev and Survival Research Laboratories 4. Factrix and Chrome VII. Mail Art, Tape Technology, and the Network 1. Fluxus and UFOs 2. A History of Tape Trading 3. Taping as a Political Act 4. The Eternal Network 5. A Virtual Scene Part 3: Industrial Music as Music VIII. The Tyranny of the Beat: Dance Music and Identity Crisis 1. Those Heady Days of Idealism Are Over 2. Irony 3. Technology and Rhythm 4. Futurist Pop 5. Pleasure 6. Industrial Identity IX. ": England 1981-1985 1. The Mission is Terminated 2. London 3. Beyond London X. Body to Body: Belgian EBM 1981-1985 1. A Satellite State 2. Luc Van Acker 3. Front 4. Musical Order 5. Bodily Order XI. Industrial Music as a Theatre of Cruelty 1. Artaud-Damaged 2. Theatricalities of All Kinds XII. "She's a Sleeping Beast": Skinny Puppy and the Feminine Gothic 1. From Pop to Puppy 2. Vancouver's Fertile Ground 3. Disrupting Maleness 4. The Feminine Gothic Part 4: People and Industrial Music XIII. Wild Planet: WaxTrax! Records and Global Dance Scenes 1. Industrial Music and the Mainstream 2. The Beginnings of WaxTrax! 3. Ministry 4. Mixing and Merging 5. The Business of Chaos 6. Clubbing and Participatory Culture 7. New Beat 8. The WaxTrax! Heyday XIV. Q: Why Do We Act Like Machines? A: We Do Not. 1. Pretty Hate Machine 2. Industrial Harmony 3. Language, the Self, and Gender 4. Get Me an Industrial Band 5. Resembling the Machine XV. Death 1. Death as Event 2. Death as Metaphor 3. Death as Fashion 4. New Life XVI. Wonder 1. Covenant and the Ubiquitous Sublime 2. Apoptygma Berzerk and the Spontaneous Sublime 3. VNV Nation and the Unthinkable Sublime 4. The Futurepop Backlash 5. Clubbed to Death 6. The Longevity of Industrial Bands 7. Industrial Music Is Dead? Part 5: Meaning and Revolution XVII. Back and Forth: Industrial Music and Fascism 1. Extremism as the Norm 2. Silent Politics 3. Loud Apolitics 4. The Effects of Fascism's Spectre 5. Fascist Assimilation 6. The Hidden Reverse XVIII. White Souls in Black Suits: Industrial Music and Race 1. Whiteness 2. The Inheritance of Blues, Jazz, and Dub 3. Exotica, Caricature, and the Techno-Oblivious 4. Technology and Racial Engagement 5. Black and White 6. Repetition and the English Ballad XIX. Is There Any Escape for Noise? 1. Unpalatable Truths 2. The First Two Options 3. Transgression as Law 4. The Future Happened Already 5. Pleasure, Flag Planting, and Revolution 6. The Third Mind

Amazon评论 {{comment.person}}

{{comment.content}}

作品图片
推荐图书