Bone Flute to Auto-tune
Forty Thousand Years of Music Technology
Bone Flute to Auto-tune
Forty Thousand Years of Music Technology
An accessible history of music technology from the earliest days to the present.
Over forty thousand years ago, humans fashioned flutes from bone. Ever since, music-making has continued to be motivated and shaped by technological innovations. The first book to offer a history of western music through the lens of tools, Bone Flute to Auto-tune explores the relationship between music and technology from the Paleolithic Age to the present day. Taking an expansive view of music technology, Deirdre Loughridge develops critical perspectives on how the past is built into the present, the affordances and constraints of tools, and the trade-offs made in adopting one tool rather than another. By examining music-technological transitions from across history, including the violin, piano, cymbal, electric guitar, and synthesizer, Bone Flute to Auto-tune thinks through how and why certain changes have taken place and shows how earlier eras have been built into later technologies, influencing not only the sound of our music but also what our tools help us and hinder us from doing.
The result is a music history attuned to the possibilities that new technologies open up or reveal and those they foreclose or conceal, and that considers what is gained and lost in the transition from one technology to another. By identifying turning points and trade-offs, a long historical perspective enables us to see alternate paths along which music technologies might have developed, and to grapple with our own moment in the ongoing interplay between technological change and the enduring human need for music.
Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction: A Long History of Music Technology
Part 1. Perspective: Musicians’ Theories of Technology
1. The First Musical Instruments?
2. Music Writing
3. Sound and Number
Part 2. Perspective: How Do(n’t) Music Technologies Change?
4. From Found Objects to Valved Brass
5. Viols and Violins
6. Orchestras
7. Saxophone
Part 3. Perspective: Values in Musical Instrument Design
8. Voice as Instrument
9. Organ, “King of Instruments”
10. More Keyboard Instruments
11. Instruments of Ethereal Tone
Part 4. Perspective: Transculturation
12. Cymbals
13. Banjo
14. Harmonium
Part 5. Perspective: Rationalization and Standardization
15. Tuning Trouble
16. Metronomes
17. A440, CD, MP3, MIDI
Part 6. Perspective: Gender in the Mix
18. Accordions
19. Electric Guitar and Reconceptualization
20. Electronics Explorers
21. Mainstreaming Electronic Sounds
Part 7. Perspective: Becoming a Musical Instrument
22. Player Piano and Phonograph
23. Microphone
24. Magnetic Tape, Multitracking, and Looping
25. Turntables and Samplers
26. Drum Machines
Part 8. Perspective: Hopes and Fears
27. The Promise of Computers
28. Auto-Tune Debates
29. Algorithms and the Internet
30. What’s Next?
Acknowledgments
List of Audio and Video Examples
Index