Tag Archives: music

Book Review: Ambient Century By Mark Prendergast

The Ambient Century : From Mahler to Moby–The Evolution of Sound in the Electronic Age
Mark Prendergast
2003
Bloombury USA
$19.95
500 pp.

Ambient Century is an encyclopedic history of ambient music that actually lives up to the media snippets on the jacket. The lengthy history is encylopedic because it both exhaustively traces the evolution of ambient music and the information is presented in entry form, with each entry explaining a specific musician or band. As the title suggests, it begins with Mahler and closes with Moby, which should be enough range, temporarlly and musically, to satisfy anyone interested in this distinctively 20th century type of music.
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Album Reviews

1————>3———–>5
Terrible———->Fantastic

5
Aphex Twin Selected Ambient Works, Volume 02

4
7 Below Dubble Mix
Aphex Twin Ventolin
Brad Mehldauo Trio Anything Goes
Cee-Lo Cee-Lo Green and His Perfect Imperfections
Coltrane, John Live at the Half Note: One Down, One Up (CD1)
Various Artists No New York
A Problem of Alarming Dimensions H – hov – hover
Explosions in the Sky Earth is not a Cold Dead Place, The
Ralph, Dave Tranceport
Reid, Junior True World Order

3
Castanets Cathedral
Eno, Brian and David Byrne My Life in the Bush of Ghosts
Pumpkinhead Orange Moon Over Brooklyn
Adem Homesongs
Beta Band, The Heroes to Zeroes
Bexar Bexar Haralambos
Clann Zu Black Coats and Bandages
Glider Non-Spaces
Madonna Confessions On A Dance Floor

2
Breakestra Hit the Floor
Adicts, The Rollercoaster
Album Leaf, The Seal Beach EP
Fatboy Slim Palookaville

1
Various Artists Cult Cargo Belize City Boil Up
Floetry Flo’Ology
Download Furnace
Funeral Dress A Way of Life

(Y)Our Senses

Reconceptualizing ourselves and our environment interests me from both a social science perspective (e.g., constructivism) and a musical perspective (e.g., noise and field recordings). A recent All Things Considered on NPR reported on composer Brent Michael Davids’ Tinnitus Quartet, which replicates the sound Davids hears as a result of his tinnitus.

Davids’ idea is to communicate what he and other people with tinnitus hear to those who do not have the condition, and the radio segment approaches the music in this way. A more interesting approach, however, would have been to use the different ways in which we (in this case, people with and people without tinnitus) hear to question our conceptualization of sound and hearing (or, more generally, the senses). More specific, it demonstrates the personal/individual character of our senses and breaks apart the uniformity (among people) with which we treat/understand each sense. Unfortunately, neither the reporter, Jeffrey Freymann-Weyr, nor Davids does so directly.

Based on the snippets of the piece in the segment, I would certainly like to hear the full version, which is an 18 minute piece of a constant high-pitched tone with violin-created grasshopper chirping noises that eventually fall away to silence.