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  1. Chapter 8 Peter Rehberg, Christian Fennesz and the Label Mego : Between Glitch and Bécs
    Published: 2018
    Publisher:  Taylor & Francis

    A large proportion of artists considered in this study at some stage of their career veered towards ‘serious’ or experimental music. This also refers to Peter Rehberg and Christian Fennesz. However, they differ from those considered previously,... more

     

    A large proportion of artists considered in this study at some stage of their career

    veered towards ‘serious’ or experimental music. This also refers to Peter Rehberg

    and Christian Fennesz. However, they differ from those considered previously,

    because unlike them, they did not cross the boundary between the popular and

    academic now and then but made it their personal signature. Their music also

    challenges our concept of electronic music, as well as studio and stage and even

    music and non-music. To contextualise their work, it is worth locating it first

    against the concept of ‘noise music’ or rather ‘noise as music’.

     

    Export to reference management software   RIS file
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    Source: OAPEN
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781315230627
    Parent title: Popular Viennese Electronic Music, 1990–2015
    Subjects: The arts
    Other subjects: Electronica; Musica; Austria; Vienna; History; Criticism; Popular music; Social aspects; Electronica; Musica; Austria; Vienna; History; Criticism; Popular music; Social aspects; Fennesz; Mego (label); Peter Rehberg; Techno
    Scope: 1 electronic resource (29 p.)
  2. Chapter 4 Kruder and Dorfmeister : The studio(us) remixers
    Published: 2018
    Publisher:  Taylor & Francis

    When Cruise , the film whose dialogue I used as an epigraph for this chapter, was released in 1970, these words were seen as capturing Polish inability to move beyond the safe zone of a well-known repertoire of images, melodies and symbols. Austrians... more

     

    When Cruise , the film whose dialogue I used as an epigraph for this chapter, was

    released in 1970, these words were seen as capturing Polish inability to move

    beyond the safe zone of a well-known repertoire of images, melodies and symbols.

    Austrians allegedly are also stuck in the past (see Chapter 1 ). This would

    explain Kruder and Dorfmeister’s penchant for making capital from our pleasure

    of listening to melodies we already know, if not for the fact that they gained fame

    not from capitalising on Vienna’s music history but remixing songs coming from

    the Anglo-American centre of popular music, such as those by Depeche Mode,

    Madonna and David Holmes. Theirs is thus an interesting case of colonisation,

    which includes self-colonisation and reverse colonisation: taking something from

    the centre, reworking it and returning to the centre an improved version. Depending

    on the perspective, their productions can be seen as proof of the hegemony of

    the centre or a sign that the periphery can not only resist the centre’s power but

    also penetrate it on its own terms. Equally, they can be seen as a sign of the end of

    authenticity and originality in popular music (and art at large) in the postmodern

    era or a need to rework these concepts to fit the art of creative recycling.

     

    Export to reference management software   RIS file
      BibTeX file
    Source: OAPEN
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781315230627
    Parent title: Popular Viennese Electronic Music, 1990–2015
    Subjects: The arts
    Other subjects: Electronica; Music; Austria; Vienna; History; Criticism; Popular music; Social aspects; Electronica; Music; Austria; Vienna; History; Criticism; Popular music; Social aspects; Brian Eno; Disc jockey; Kruder & Dorfmeister; Simon & Garfunkel
    Scope: 1 electronic resource (20 p.)