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ELECTRONIC_MUSIC_HISTORY.md

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An history of electronic music

full of personal and geographical biases...

Before modern electronics (The Electricity Fairy)

Some ancestors of electronic instruments

Musique concrète

Before music produced by electronic circuits, experiments were made in the 1940s with electroacoustic music and musique concrète, where (concrete) sounds were recorded on tape or vinyl and arranged and manipulated (the ancestor of sampling):

50's: Stockhausen

50's: misc

50's: Forbidden Planet (1956)

First film whose soundtrack (Louis & Bebe Barron) is entirely electronic:

60's: computers

60's: some famous electric keyboards

  • The Doors, "When The Music's Over" (1967) (Ray Manzarek is generally playing a Fender Rhodes electric piano keyboard bass and a Vox Continental combo organ).

60's: Moog synthesizers

Wendy Carlos

Popcorn (Gershon Kingsley, 1969)

The first great success of electronic music.

Bernie Krause

He was a student of Stockhausen. As a guitarist, he will work for Moog and learn about electronic music, before becoming a bio-acoustician: he will study soundscapes, record the sounds of nature, highlight their frequential and temporal organisation, then show the degradation over the decades of soundscapes and therefore of the corresponding ecosystems (https://www.wildsanctuary.com/). He also played with people like The Doors or George Harrison.).

The Beatles (Abbey Road, 1969)

The Moog is used on the tracks "Maxwell's Silver Hammer", "I Want You (She's So Heavy)", "Here Comes The Sun", and "Because".

About modular synthesizers

Before becoming digital, the first synthesizers were analogue and modular: each function corresponds to a button, the functions and modules are connected by cables (wave generators, envelope generators, low frequency oscillators, filters, sequencers...) Ideal to understand what a synthesizer is!

70's: Tangerine Dream and Klaus Schulze

Tangerine Dream:

Klaus Schulze:

70's: Vangelis

Later famous works:

70's: Jean-Michel Jarre

70's: Synth-Punk

70's: Kraftwerk

70's: Giorgio Moroder

70's: misc

80's: the synth invasion (pop, techno, electro, new wave...)

The synthesiser market skyrockets, prices fall. The year 1980 marks a turning point.

...

We can stop here, with Art of Noise (remember Luigi Russolo) and Musique Non Stop: electronic music is now mainstream!