Power electronics (music)
Death industrial
See also
References
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Power electronics
Stylistic origins
- Industrial
- noise
Cultural origins
- Early 1980s United Kingdom
- Mid 1980s Germany
Typical instruments
Electronic
Fusion genres
Death industrial
Power electronics was originally coined by William Bennett as part of the sleevenotes to the Whitehouse album Psychopathia Sexualis, and is related to the early Industrial Records scene but later became more identified with noise music.[1] It consists of static, screeching waves of feedback, analogue synthesizers making sub-bass pulses or high frequency squealing sounds, and screamed, distorted, often hateful and offensive lyrics. Deeply atonal, there are no conventional melodies or rhythms.[2]Tellus Audio Cassette Magazine produced a compilation compact cassette tape called Power Electronics in 1986 that was curated by Joseph Nechvatal.[3]
Death industrial
Death industrial is an industrial subgenre typified by a dense atmosphere, low-end drones, harsh loops and screamed and/or distorted vocals. It can be differentiated from power electronics by a slower, more atmospheric sound reminiscent of dark ambient, and a less abrasive sound.[4] Acts described as death industrial include Brighter Death Now, Anenzephalia, Atrax Morgue, Aelia Capitolina, Author & Punisher, Genocide Organ, Hieronymus Bosch, Stratvm Terror, S.T.A.B. Electronics, IRM, Monowolf and Dead Man's Hill.
See also
- Electroacoustic improvisation
- Experimental music
- Sonology
References
^ Whitehouse, Allmusic bio. [1] Access date: March 15, 2009.
^ Emily Benjamin, "Whitehouse Asceticists Susan Lawly". The Johns Hopkins News-Letter. February 14, 2006. [2] Access date: March 15, 2009.
^ [3] Tellus #13 - Power Electronics (1986)
^ [4] Last.fm - Death Industrial (2008)
This article about a music genre is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
- Industrial
- noise
- Early 1980s United Kingdom
- Mid 1980s Germany
Power electronics was originally coined by William Bennett as part of the sleevenotes to the Whitehouse album Psychopathia Sexualis, and is related to the early Industrial Records scene but later became more identified with noise music.[1] It consists of static, screeching waves of feedback, analogue synthesizers making sub-bass pulses or high frequency squealing sounds, and screamed, distorted, often hateful and offensive lyrics. Deeply atonal, there are no conventional melodies or rhythms.[2]Tellus Audio Cassette Magazine produced a compilation compact cassette tape called Power Electronics in 1986 that was curated by Joseph Nechvatal.[3]
Death industrial
See also
References
^ Whitehouse, Allmusic bio. [1] Access date: March 15, 2009.
^ Emily Benjamin, "Whitehouse Asceticists Susan Lawly". The Johns Hopkins News-Letter. February 14, 2006. [2] Access date: March 15, 2009.
^ [3] Tellus #13 - Power Electronics (1986)
^ [4] Last.fm - Death Industrial (2008)
This article about a music genre is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.