About this Event
Porous Instruments: Synthesizers & The Circulation of Cultural Value
Jennifer Iverson, music theorist and musicologist (University of Chicago)
Synthesized sound pervades our experience: A futuristic sci-fi thriller opens with electronic whirrs, clicks, and hums. Top-40 radio resuscitates the sounds of the analog Moog and the digital Yamaha DX-7 synths. Teenagers gather at clubs to lose themselves in the trance-inducing loops of DJ-produced electronic dance music. Hip hop producers create sick beats from samples, layered over the mechanical thumps of drum machines like the TR-808. How did synthesized sound become so ubiquitous? Culturally speaking, why does synthesized sound matter?
In this talk, I draw from research for my forthcoming book Porous Instruments, which investigates the production, flow, and meaning of synthesized sound. I argue that electronic music technologies—synthesizers, studios, turntables—fuel the emergence of raced, gendered, and classed sounds, as well as the circulation of social capital. Synthesizers might appear to be black boxes, but they are in fact porous tools for self-fashioning: users constantly intervene with new designs, hacks, and off-label (mis)uses. As listeners encounter new synthesized sounds, they navigate a continuum from novelty to ubiquity, ever-inventing new meanings for the electronic sounds that swirl around them. This talk works through several examples, from T-Pain to Janelle Monáe, from Wendy Carlos to J Dilla, and from Deniece Williams to John Chowning, showing how cultural value accrues to synthesized sound. Porous instruments mediate the social synthesis of identity, prestige, and cultural value.
ABOUT THE 2023 COOPER LECTURE SERIES:
Music and Technology
This year’s series of public lectures will focus on different musical technologies, ranging from acoustic to digital and from classical to popular music: the piano, the synthesizer, and the digital audio workstation (DAW). The series will feature distinguished music scholars Jennifer Iverson (University of Chicago) and Jasmine Henry (University of Pennsylvania) as well as Frost faculty Matteo Magarotto.
This series continues in the yearly tradition of public talks established by internationally renowned musicologist Frank Cooper (Frost’s Research Professor Emeritus, Musicology).
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Jennifer Iverson is a scholar of electronic music, sound studies, and disability studies. She is an Associate Professor of Music and the Humanities at the University of Chicago. She is currently writing a book titled Porous Instruments: Synthesizers and the Circulation of Cultural Value, which explores the complex histories and (mis)uses of synthesizers such as the vocoder, Moog, the DX7, and the TR-808. Her first book is Electronic Inspirations: Technologies of the Cold War Musical Avant-Garde (Oxford University Press, 2019).
THU / SEP 28, 2023 / 7:30 P.M.
Zoom
FREE
Register for Zoom here.
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