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Popular styles of electronic dance music are pervasively mediated by technology, not only within production but also in performance. The most familiar performance format in this style, the DJ set, is created with turntables, headphones, twelve-inch vinyl records, and a mixing board. Going beyond simply playing other people's records, DJs select, combine, and manipulate different parts of records to form new compositions that differ substantially from their source materials. In recent years, the "laptop set" has become equally common; in this type of performance, musicians use computers and specialized software to transform and reconfigure their own precomposed sounds. Both types of performance are largely improvised, evolving in response to the demands of a particular situation through interaction with a dancing audience. Within performance, musicians make numerous spontaneous decisions about variables such as which sounds they will play, when they will play them, and how they will be combined with other sounds. Yet the elements that constitute these improvisations are also fixed in certain fundamental ways: performances are fashioned from patterns or tracks recorded beforehand, and in the case of DJ sets, these elements are also physical objects (vinyl records). In Playing with Something that Runs, author Mark J. Butler explores these improvised performances, revealing the ways in which musicians utilize seemingly invariable prerecorded elements to create dynamic, real-time improvisations. Based on extensive interviews with musicians in their studios, as well as in-depth studies of particular mediums of performance, including both DJ and laptop sets, Butler explores the ways in which technologies, both material and musical, are used in performance and improvisation in order to make these transformations possible. An illuminating look at the world of popular electronic-music performance, Playing with Something that Runs is an indispensable resource for electronic dance musicians and fans as well as scholars and students of popular music.Readership: Scholars and students of popular music interested in contemporary electronic music, fans of electronic dance music (EDM), and EDM DJs and musicians.
Show morePopular styles of electronic dance music are pervasively mediated by technology, not only within production but also in performance. The most familiar performance format in this style, the DJ set, is created with turntables, headphones, twelve-inch vinyl records, and a mixing board. Going beyond simply playing other people's records, DJs select, combine, and manipulate different parts of records to form new compositions that differ substantially from their source materials. In recent years, the "laptop set" has become equally common; in this type of performance, musicians use computers and specialized software to transform and reconfigure their own precomposed sounds. Both types of performance are largely improvised, evolving in response to the demands of a particular situation through interaction with a dancing audience. Within performance, musicians make numerous spontaneous decisions about variables such as which sounds they will play, when they will play them, and how they will be combined with other sounds. Yet the elements that constitute these improvisations are also fixed in certain fundamental ways: performances are fashioned from patterns or tracks recorded beforehand, and in the case of DJ sets, these elements are also physical objects (vinyl records). In Playing with Something that Runs, author Mark J. Butler explores these improvised performances, revealing the ways in which musicians utilize seemingly invariable prerecorded elements to create dynamic, real-time improvisations. Based on extensive interviews with musicians in their studios, as well as in-depth studies of particular mediums of performance, including both DJ and laptop sets, Butler explores the ways in which technologies, both material and musical, are used in performance and improvisation in order to make these transformations possible. An illuminating look at the world of popular electronic-music performance, Playing with Something that Runs is an indispensable resource for electronic dance musicians and fans as well as scholars and students of popular music.Readership: Scholars and students of popular music interested in contemporary electronic music, fans of electronic dance music (EDM), and EDM DJs and musicians.
Show moreIntroduction
1. Remixing One's Self: Ontologies of the Provisional Work
2. Performing Performance: Interface, Design, Liveness and Listener
Orientation
3. Making it Up and Breaking it Down: Improvisation in EDM
Performance
4. Looking for the Perfect Loop: Musical Technologies of Mediated
Improvisation
Appendix
Works Cited
Mark J. Butler is Associate Professor of Music Theory and Cognition at Northwestern University and is the author of Unlocking the Groove: Rhythm, Meter, and Musical Design in Electronic Dance Music (Indiana University, 2006).
"Playing with Something That Runs is an immaculate piece of popular
musicology, with the potential to become one the cornerstone texts
in our discipline. Its interdisciplinary approach provides an
incredibly compelling insight into the performance and consumption
of live EDM, and the companion website offers a great tool in
bringing the discussions of recordings and performances to life
through carefully curated audio and video examples." -- Toby
Young
, Dancecult.net
"These reflections do not fail to pose many difficulties to the
musical theory: where does the identity of the work lie? Is there a
hierarchy between different "versions" of the same "composition"?
Why are some compositions not intended to be listened to publicly
but only to provide the raw material of improvisation?...What is
the relationship between human and technology? In asking these
questions, Mark Butler invites us to go beyond many of the common
places
of musicology that have been settled since the nineteenth century
as the objections between product and process, work and
performance, composition and improvisation - and many othersâIt
shows us that
popular electronic music is the current place for an intense
widening of the spectrum of possible on the future of musical
creation, both in the field of avant-garde and mainstream music."
-- Emmanuel Parent, L'Université Rennes 2, Volume!
Winner of the 2015 PMIG Outstanding Publication Award from the
Society of Music Theory
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