Futuromania

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Audiobook Downloadable / ISBN-13: 9781399618366

Price: £24.99

ON SALE: 11th April 2024

Genre: The Arts / Music / Music: Styles & Genres / Electronic Music

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Simon Reynolds’s first book in eight years is a celebration of music that feels like a taste of tomorrow. Sounds that prefigure pop music’s future – the vanguard genres and heroic innovators whose discoveries eventually get accepted by the wider mass audience. But it’s also about the way music can stir anticipation for a thrillingly transformed world just around the corner: a future that might be utopian or dystopian, but at least will be radically changed and exhilaratingly other.

Starting with an extraordinary chapter on Giorgio Moroder and Donna Summer, taking in illuminating profiles of Ryuichi Sakamoto, Boards of Canada, Burial, and Daft Punk, and arguing for Auto-Tune as the defining sound of 21st century pop, Futuromania shapes over two-dozen essays and interviews into a chronological narrative of machine-music from the 1970s to now. Reynolds explores the interface between pop music and science fiction’s utopian dreams and nightmare visions, always emphasising the quirky human individuals abusing the technology as much as the era-defining advances in electronic hardware and digital software.

A tapestry of the scenes and subcultures that have proliferated in that febrile, sexy and contested space where man meets machine, Futuromania is an enthused listening guide that will propel readers towards adventures in sound. There is a lifetime of electronic listening here.

Reviews

A captivating celebration of the music that pushes us forward
Record Collector
Futuromania is a testament to our ever-changing imagination of what the future holds and whether radical sounds equate to radical politics
TANK
Should be guaranteed a place on the bookshelf of everyone who claims to be a music lover
Blitzed Magazine
Read it and you will believe he believes in life after love
Mojo
The deeper he digs, the better it gets - his explanation of Auto-tune is fascinating
Uncut