Playback: From The Victrola To Mp3, 100 Years Of Music, Machines, And MoneySuddenly, popular music resembles an alien landscape. The great common ground of 45s, LPs, and even compact discs is rapidly falling by the wayside to be replaced by binary bits of sound. In the 21st century, radical advances in music technology threaten to overshadow the music itself. Indeed, today the generations divide over how they listen to the music, not what kinds of music they enjoy.Playback is the first book to place the staggering history of sound reproduction within its larger social and cultural context. Concisely told via a narrative arc that begins with Edison's cylinder and ends with digital music, this is a history that we have all directly experienced in one way or another. From the Victrola to the 78 to the 45 to the 33 1/3 to the 8track to the cassette to the compact disc to MP3 and beyond (not to mention everyone from Thomas Edison to Enrico Caruso to Dick Clark to Grandmaster Flash to Napster CEO Shawn Fanning), the story of Playback is also the story of music, and the music business, in the 20th century. |
Other editions - View all
Playback: From the Victrola to MP3, 100 Years of Music, Machines, and Money Mark Coleman Limited preview - 2009 |
Playback: From the Victrola to MP3, 100 Years of Music, Machines, and Money Mark Coleman No preview available - 2005 |
Playback: From the Victrola to MP3, 100 Years of Music, Machines, and Money Mark Coleman No preview available - 2009 |
Common terms and phrases
8-track album American artists audience audio Bambaataa band beat Beatles became broadcast cassette classical Columbia compact disc consumers copies cylinders dance Dick Clark disco downloading early electric electronic eventually file sharing format format war Gnutella Goldmark gramophone Grandmaster Flash grooves Herc hi-fi high fidelity hip-hop home taping Internet invention inventor iTunes jazz jukebox label late later listeners long-playing LP format machine million Moog music business music industry musicians Napster patent Petrillo phonograph piano play playback pop music popular music portable prerecorded ragtime record companies record industry record player recorded music released rhythm RIAA rock roll Saturday Night Fever scratch Shawn Fanning singers songs sonic Sony sound quality sound system spinning stereo studio stylus synthesizers tech theremin Thomas Edison tion tracks transistor turned turntable users Victor Victrola vinyl vinyl records York
References to this book
Net, Blogs and Rock 'n' Roll: How Digital Discovery Works and What It Means ... David Jennings No preview available - 2007 |