Pierre Schaeffer -- Études de bruits (1948)

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  • čas přidán 12. 09. 2024
  • 00:00 Étude aux chemins de fer - trains
    02:53 Étude aux tourniquets - toy tops and percussion instruments
    04:52 Étude violette - piano recorded for Schaeffer by Boulez
    08:12 Étude noire - piano recorded for Schaeffer by Boulez
    12:11 Étude pathétique - sauce pans, canal boats, singing, speech, harmonica, piano

Komentáře • 203

  • @gnikcohs
    @gnikcohs Před 7 lety +217

    This was just a few years before Schaeffer had access to magnetic tape. He was working out of the French national Radio organization and had access to their state of the art equipment and sound libraries. It must have been incredibly painstaking, but he invented techniques using turntables and phonographic discs to get his effects and the Etudes de Bruits is the result. He used techniques like the 'locked groove' which was a kind of loop. The idea was to make a single circular groove instead of the normal spiral groove so that the sound repeated as often as you wanted and you could also speed it up or slow it down. A little research on google and you can find info on how he made 'tape' music without tape. The first piece of tape music in the world was supposedly made in Egypt in 1944 by Halim el Dabh. It's here on YT.

    • @isherrod13
      @isherrod13 Před 3 lety +2

      @Klaus Sperger It is!

    • @MurkyWatersRock
      @MurkyWatersRock Před 2 lety

      Thanks! :)

    • @stuartchapman5171
      @stuartchapman5171 Před 2 lety +1

      Hi, do you have a reference to the pre tape work of Pierre? I was aware of train recordings being before tape but couldn't find a reference for an academic I know. I started to think I'd imagined it. I was aware of the Halim el Dabh work, I have a copy on CD. His earliest work was made using a magnetic Eire reel to reel machine, the precursor to tape. Thanks for the info.

    • @tedbyron1499
      @tedbyron1499 Před rokem

      ​@klaussperger6237it sounds like Musique Concrete b/c you're listening to the invention of it.
      Pierre Schaeffer invented the term and the idiom and this set of studies (etudes) is the beginning.

  • @kacperklimkowski2271
    @kacperklimkowski2271 Před 7 lety +66

    This is the great grandfather of all electronic music. And it's unbelievable

    • @lars38010
      @lars38010 Před 6 lety +4

      No. Luigi Russolo is the great grandfather of electronic music.

    • @lars38010
      @lars38010 Před 6 lety +8

      But this is not Electronic music tho. This is Electro-Acoustic music.

    • @iseytheteethsnake6290
      @iseytheteethsnake6290 Před 3 lety

      This is! czcams.com/video/yIR3pCgqb5o/video.html

    • @tonystephen6312
      @tonystephen6312 Před 3 lety +3

      No way - electronic music instruments go back much further - 1920/30s

    • @jankupka9106
      @jankupka9106 Před 2 lety +2

      @@tonystephen6312 First are Theremin and Variophone from USSR (Late 20's - early 30's)

  • @huntrrams
    @huntrrams Před 6 lety +194

    The Godfather of sampling

    • @mightynagato6909
      @mightynagato6909 Před 3 lety

      Well I'm sampling him so

    • @huntrrams
      @huntrrams Před 3 lety +5

      @@Niente-um9bx i agree that Luigi and Halim El-Dabh should take the place but i feel like Pierre Schaffer's creation was using actual sounds to create a composition and music. He's almost like a early innovator of the Plunderphonics genre.

  • @richardlaforest5727
    @richardlaforest5727 Před 6 lety +18

    To my point of view, this music is justified by itself. And especially through the last part where we find a lot of creativity. There are the sound effects for the movies, and there is this electronic music. This music is not subordinated to a visual schema. She is not obliged to an image. This is what sets it apart from electronic music (and electronic sound effects) designed to accompany a film's images. You can feel this difference by listening to the soundtrack.

  • @tfdoom2295
    @tfdoom2295 Před 3 lety +9

    This is like watching a david lynch film with eyes closed

  • @baldrbraa
    @baldrbraa Před 3 lety +20

    This is very listenable in 2020.

  • @november8039
    @november8039 Před 6 lety +13

    This is one of his few pieces that has almost no overarching sense of darkness and I'm really digging it

  • @williamstone7544
    @williamstone7544 Před 3 lety +13

    I hear early days of drum n bass/hardcore techno.
    This is the birth of Electronic music.

  • @heinklug2655
    @heinklug2655 Před 9 lety +41

    Amazing stuff for this time! Still sounds futuristic in 2015!

  • @KamilKosecki
    @KamilKosecki Před 8 lety +41

    It was the beginning of electronix, just beautiful

    • @Shakads
      @Shakads Před 8 lety +10

      +Kamil Kosecki Composer Fascinating stuff indeed, one of the fathers of modern noise music. Actually early Merzbow work from the 80s sound very similar. Totaly got asmr listening to this :)

    • @lars38010
      @lars38010 Před 6 lety +1

      Also 1 of the fathers of electronic music in general.

    • @gomesdiogo
      @gomesdiogo Před 6 lety +1

      yeah, this is like a baby doing the firsts steps

    • @GhostProducer
      @GhostProducer Před 5 lety +1

      czcams.com/video/bWCR9DEObR0/video.html

    • @tonystephen6312
      @tonystephen6312 Před 3 lety +1

      Crap. Do research.

  • @Dieguichucho92
    @Dieguichucho92 Před 8 lety +37

    He abstracted familiar sound and cutted, coppied and mixed them to create music. The beginning of the history of recording studios

    • @jalenfunnychannel6081
      @jalenfunnychannel6081 Před 7 lety

      Emot. Issues ::i

    • @Karl_Squell
      @Karl_Squell Před 4 lety +1

      A piece of the history for sure, but recording studios had been in existence for easily 20 years!

  • @Exli3r
    @Exli3r Před 6 lety +7

    This is mesmerising, especially timbre of each sound is very unique

  • @philippelomu
    @philippelomu Před 6 lety +25

    0:52 : Ennio Morricone - The good, the bad, the ugly

    • @rodrigorivas5374
      @rodrigorivas5374 Před 3 lety

      The good, the bad and the ugly was released in the 60's

    • @Emnor1993
      @Emnor1993 Před 3 lety +11

      @@rodrigorivas5374 come on mr. aphex twin logo, you can do better than that. I'm sure OP meant that Morricone was inspired by this. And I'm glad I'm not the only one who's heard it. In fact, as I've just found out, Morricone made the acquaintance of Schaeffer, but no-one has pointed out this link anywhere. fascinating stuff!

    • @ac7diffusion_mastering
      @ac7diffusion_mastering Před 3 lety

      True

    • @septima_de_dominante
      @septima_de_dominante Před 3 lety

      Good ear. I don't know if you're a musician but if you don't know it's not that easy to make this kind of match.

  • @floniesr
    @floniesr Před rokem +1

    I forgot about Pierre! 😯Thanks for posting. Love him. He influenced many of the greats that came later.

  • @lopesesilva4744
    @lopesesilva4744 Před 7 lety +6

    ... Verdadeiramente ... ! Genial ... ! Adorei, Todos Estes Estudos e as Criações De Música Concreta e dos Objectos Sonóros de Pierre Schaeffer ... ! Durante O Meus Estudos - De Música Concreta - de Música Electrónica - e Experimental ... ! Com Os Professores - Compositores : Filipe Pires - António Sousa Dias - Bill Alves e Luís de Pablo - Entre Outros ... ! * BRAVÍSSIMO* ... !!! ...

  • @dochallenstein676
    @dochallenstein676 Před 6 lety +25

    I hope to understand this some day. I was born in 1948.

  • @johnappleseed8369
    @johnappleseed8369 Před 8 lety +11

    At times it reminds me of Negativland because of the large contrast of seemingly unrelated sounds and also the precision of the way the tape is spliced. Very enjoyable suite of pieces, Schaeffer has really been on my mind lately.

    • @Helaw0lf
      @Helaw0lf Před 4 lety +1

      Plunderphonics owes much to Electro-Acoustic.

    • @isherrod13
      @isherrod13 Před 3 lety +1

      Does sound like the first Negativland album.

  • @artbugzrecords
    @artbugzrecords Před 3 lety +7

    This rocks! early experimental electronic music

  • @zerenatorodrigues
    @zerenatorodrigues Před rokem

    Thank you for providing so much knowledge about sound, Pierre Schaeffer.

  • @jas31937
    @jas31937 Před 4 lety +5

    This is amazing work. I guess it's time to find physical copies of his works. Interesting.

  • @FUBU19845
    @FUBU19845 Před 5 lety +2

    Very intresting composition with sample of natural and industrial sound

  • @JCDealy
    @JCDealy Před 8 lety +69

    It is difficult for people to imagine in these times how few magnetic tape machines there were in 1948.

    • @senorton
      @senorton Před 5 lety +10

      This was not done using magnetic tape. Schaeffer and the French radio studio did not get a tape recorder until 1951. This was done using disk recorders.

    • @marguskiis7711
      @marguskiis7711 Před 2 lety

      thousands actually. Germans started to produce them in 1930s and they sold them a lot.

    • @marguskiis7711
      @marguskiis7711 Před 2 lety

      France got their German AEG magnetophones in 1945 at least.

  • @sawhiminnhalf4956
    @sawhiminnhalf4956 Před 6 lety +12

    1948 and still ahead of everyone else

  • @idelsagil9129
    @idelsagil9129 Před rokem +2

    Trains 0:01
    Toy Tops And Pericussions 2:52
    Piano Records 4:51 8:11
    Sauce Pans Canal Boats Singing Speech Harmonica Piano 12:11

  • @michelzenitud5524
    @michelzenitud5524 Před 6 lety +1

    Compositeur de génie
    💞👍✌👍👍👍👍👍
    Avec les bruits de la vie ✌extraordinaire
    Michel !

  • @emmanueleperra1851
    @emmanueleperra1851 Před 5 lety +2

    Point de référence Historique de Composition-Acousmatique Contemporain.
    Étude aux chemins de fer - trains.
    Étude aux tourniquets - toy tops and percussion instruments.
    Étude noire - piano recorded for Schaeffer by Boulez.
    Étude pathétique - sauce pans, canal boats, singing, speech, harmonica, piano.

  • @tedbyron1499
    @tedbyron1499 Před rokem +3

    I highly encourage folks to read his books:
    Treatise On The Musical Object and In Search Of A Concrete Music -especially the latter.
    It gives added dimension to these compositions .

  • @Dynamite1Deluxe
    @Dynamite1Deluxe Před 3 lety +9

    0:21 Listen closely and feel the beat. It goes like Ya EY! EY EY EY EY EY EY. Make a easy drum pattern under this and you got a groove to rap on 😅
    Jokes aside I don't can even realise how genius this man was.

  • @nathanbrs8942
    @nathanbrs8942 Před 7 lety +95

    BOILER ROOM

  • @maury3095
    @maury3095 Před 2 lety +1

    OK like safic aisha music 👍👌🎶🎼🎧🎵❤️🎸 house, panic and thrill, 🎼💋

  • @efrainhernandez645
    @efrainhernandez645 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Molto bene!!😊👍

  • @lecopainjai1694
    @lecopainjai1694 Před 10 lety +45

    Le mentor d'un certain Jean Michel Jarre ....

  • @xfronwenzyoucamex
    @xfronwenzyoucamex Před 9 lety +15

    This was composed using only turntable technology.

    • @pocoapoco2
      @pocoapoco2 Před 9 lety +2

      Dragonhammer Soulbreath Magnetic tape with analog effects and often times mechanical, not electronic, analog effects. All hand spliced together.

    • @ojgsk8ter
      @ojgsk8ter Před 9 lety +16

      +pocoapoco2 this was actually created before magnetic tape was widely used in recorded music. People still used magnetic wire back then, which was very hard to edit on and the magnetic tape they had during this time period, I believe wasn't durable or of high enough quality to manipulate for a piece like this. He recorded all of the parts onto different phonograph discs and then manipulated each part by creating locked grooves, playing parts backward, playing them at different speeds, etc. and then mixed all these parts together onto one master disc. really really difficult and time consuming im sure.

    • @jonathanpatrick9373
      @jonathanpatrick9373 Před 8 lety +8

      +pocoapoco2 Schaeffer did not get his hands on magnetic tape until 49, and did not begin using it much until 51

  • @ZeugmaP
    @ZeugmaP Před 5 lety +4

    I really like Étude noire

  • @kroh
    @kroh Před 3 lety +2

    It's insane that he made this just using records with circular grooves. didn't even have tape

  • @jc2112
    @jc2112 Před 9 lety +1

    beautiful

  • @roberte.o.speedwagon3122
    @roberte.o.speedwagon3122 Před 3 lety +1

    I love this samples

  • @gerardoinzunza1899
    @gerardoinzunza1899 Před 4 lety +3

    Genio musical.

  • @cranemp161
    @cranemp161 Před 5 lety +1

    P.Schaeffer - Études de bruits || Chef-d'œuvre (masterpieace)

  • @emmanueleperra1851
    @emmanueleperra1851 Před 5 lety +2

    - "Études de bruits" it's a real Classic of electroacustic music.

  • @armandmichaeldream8654

    Très intéressant !

  • @Fullprops
    @Fullprops Před 8 lety +8

    1:52 Time for a cup of tea

  • @maelgouzou-neelastitch2380

    Pierre Schaeffer - Études de bruits (1948)
    0:01 Étude aux chemins de fer
    02:53 Étude aux tourniquets
    04:52 Étude violette
    08:13 Étude noire
    12:11 Étude pathétique

  • @rikurodriguesneto6043

    this is actually very enjoyable

  • @benpowell5007
    @benpowell5007 Před 5 lety +30

    Add beats to this and BAM- industrial techno.

  • @lalo24681
    @lalo24681 Před 7 lety +3

    this is lit

  • @Kolevaaa
    @Kolevaaa Před 9 lety +2

    damn gooooooooood!

  • @RadioSerendipia
    @RadioSerendipia Před 7 lety +1

    Tremendo Sr. Schaeffer ;)

  • @Kevon420
    @Kevon420 Před 9 lety +1

    real nice

  • @habiyambereantoine8707
    @habiyambereantoine8707 Před 8 lety +6

    it was not tape at this time. it was vinyl discs. tape came after

    • @Adhansstuff
      @Adhansstuff Před 8 lety +3

      no it was tape. tape had been around for a while. There was no way to make this without tape.

    • @Pandangus
      @Pandangus Před 8 lety +7

      no it was turntable technology for sure. Schaeffer didn't have access to a tape recorder until 1951 when he founded GMRC with Henry and Poullin.

    • @djpopcorn
      @djpopcorn Před 8 lety

      Can you explain why?

    • @Pandangus
      @Pandangus Před 8 lety +3

      I couldn't explain why exactly, but I can have a go at explaining how. If my memory serves me correctly in his book "On The Trail of a Concrete Music" there is only mention of a "disc cutting lathe" at least up until after he begins working with Pierre Henry in '49. I'm sure the tape recorder was a later edition to his studio in '51, I seem to remember reading they had some trouble with the thing at first.

    • @MrvlZmb
      @MrvlZmb Před 7 lety +1

      Magnetic tape wasn't in widespread use. Americans used coated paper until after the war, when they discovered that the Germans had been using a more rugged material.

  • @Twitter2023ElonMusk
    @Twitter2023ElonMusk Před 2 lety

    dale like si sigues escuchando esta rola en 2021

  • @jt3712
    @jt3712 Před 3 lety +1

    I find it funny how Schaeffer is advocating very strongly for reduced listening approach and disassociating oneself from the 'cause' or 'origin' of the sound, but then make the titles of his work to associate again with the source of the sound...

  • @davidmckelvey2601
    @davidmckelvey2601 Před 6 lety +29

    This guy invented electronic music,.

    • @tedmerr
      @tedmerr Před 5 lety +3

      Leon Theremin

    • @conchejoraff
      @conchejoraff Před 4 lety +2

      @@tedmerr Not really. The theremin was invented to be incorporated in orchestral and band music amongst acoustic instruments. But it was Schaeffer the one who actually invented "acusmatica" and conceived the creation of music by entirely out of non-acoustic instruments.

    • @tonystephen6312
      @tonystephen6312 Před 3 lety

      not really its found sound non of its electronic..other than the recording device

    • @RayZappa
      @RayZappa Před 3 lety

      @@tonystephen6312 But it is the manipulation of sounds by use of electrical devices. It's the beginning of music-making without musicians playing in real time, or musicians at all.

    • @tonystephen6312
      @tonystephen6312 Před 3 lety

      @@RayZappa Well that's just recording - what defines electronic music as 2 interpretations. In the 1970s it generally was used to mean synthesis with electronic oscillators as a sound source.
      electronic music goes back to the 1920s vacuum tube oscillator. re-Ondes Martenot etc so the OPs wrong.

  • @eric1faure
    @eric1faure Před 10 lety +2

    Très bien

  • @nekstuk1671
    @nekstuk1671 Před 7 lety +1

    Banger

  • @edwinvanderkooij8713
    @edwinvanderkooij8713 Před 3 lety +1

    The man is the great grandfather of many styles.

  • @SheldonBird
    @SheldonBird Před 5 lety +1

    Some of this kinda reminds me of Boards of Canada

  • @vittoriaoliva8924
    @vittoriaoliva8924 Před 9 lety +1

    grazie

  • @dukathneu
    @dukathneu Před 3 lety

    4:30 I can literally hear that sound when I try to read my colleagues programming code.

  • @temporoboto
    @temporoboto Před 4 lety

    Master!

  • @claudekagebe2918
    @claudekagebe2918 Před 28 dny

    Parfait

  • @djtrakakadrunkpoet8598
    @djtrakakadrunkpoet8598 Před 3 lety +1

    The first Madlib

  • @richardlaforest5727
    @richardlaforest5727 Před 6 lety +8

    Je trouve que cette musique se justifie par elle-même. Et spécialement dans la dernière partie il y a beaucoup de créativité. Il y a les effets sonores pour les films, et il y a cette musique électronique. Cette musique n'est pas subordonnée à un schéma visuel. Elle n'est pas obligée à une image. C'est ce qui la distingue de la musique électronique (et des effets sonores électroniques) conçue pour accompagner les images d'un film. On peut sentir cette différence à l'écoute de la trame sonore.

  • @user-ys5ib2kt6d
    @user-ys5ib2kt6d Před 3 lety

    20세기 - [3.구체음악]
    [구체음악] →이후 전자음악
    피에르 셰퍼 : 구체음악의 [창시자]로 (소음, 악기소리, 새소리) 같은 구체적인 음향을 [★1.녹음] 한 후 [★2.변형 가공] 하여 [*스피커]를 통해 재생하는 방법으로 작품을 만들었다.

  • @bruitx2939
    @bruitx2939 Před 2 lety

    Ne pas oublier que l'Analogique est toujours présent entre les 1 et 0 que l'on nous sert à tour de bras tous les jours ! 😉 ❗

  • @udomatthiasdrums5322
    @udomatthiasdrums5322 Před 3 lety

    still love it!!

  • @yukzerhilarvir
    @yukzerhilarvir Před 2 lety

    6:40 i love this part

  • @TOMTOM-lt4ke
    @TOMTOM-lt4ke Před 2 lety +1

    Là 3 ème Music Me Fait Flipper

  • @sicktomystomach
    @sicktomystomach Před 3 lety

    Mfw EMA field recording stage 1 is due next Monday

  • @b00i00d
    @b00i00d Před 6 lety

    The Sample is born...

  • @felis_felisandshaz1290

    Only I hear Resurrection of Planet Perfecto Knights on 1:11? I'm referring to the sound of train's wheels meets the split between the rails

  • @aptspire
    @aptspire Před 8 lety +1

    This reminds me of Giygas :)
    Ça me rapelle Giygas

  • @DRORELIMELECH120V
    @DRORELIMELECH120V Před 2 lety

    super classic !

  • @vollewestervelt7354
    @vollewestervelt7354 Před 10 lety +15

    1948?

    • @beaterbeating2879
      @beaterbeating2879 Před 6 lety +4

      Volle Westervelt yep, literally studying about it now and he's the first one to do it

  • @davidcarter3049
    @davidcarter3049 Před 3 lety

    I wonder if the first etude influenced Steve Reich’s Different Trains?

  • @lucasvidela3476
    @lucasvidela3476 Před 4 lety

    NANANANANANANAANA EPICO EL PIERRE

  • @andrejohnson6731
    @andrejohnson6731 Před 2 lety +3

    ALL CAPS when you spell the man name

  • @tequilaman19
    @tequilaman19 Před 9 lety +1

    buena musica para dormir haha like +1

  • @matiasekois
    @matiasekois Před 4 lety

    💎

  • @damienderbes1962
    @damienderbes1962 Před 8 lety +1

    from 4:30 .. pure electronica ! nothing invented today..

  • @fritagogo1
    @fritagogo1 Před 7 lety +1

    french maestro electro acousmatic...

  • @donrollins3412
    @donrollins3412 Před 3 lety

    Cool.

  • @toxniox140
    @toxniox140 Před 4 lety

    OK COOL

  • @bruitx2939
    @bruitx2939 Před 2 lety

    Yes ! 😀

  • @othmanmoat
    @othmanmoat Před 3 lety

    WHERE'S THE DROP

  • @michaelchrist5356
    @michaelchrist5356 Před 3 měsíci

    I hear some harry partch

  • @opiekundps8806
    @opiekundps8806 Před 8 lety

    Nonmusic is boredom without melody harmony and rhythm

    • @thatartsyguy
      @thatartsyguy Před 8 lety +6

      You amuse me.

    • @lars38010
      @lars38010 Před 7 lety +1

      Nonmusic actually doesn't exist. Because music in it's most stripped down form, is just a combinaton of vibrations and expressions.

  • @Sun_Inside
    @Sun_Inside Před rokem +1

    👁🍄👁

  • @TOMTOM-lt4ke
    @TOMTOM-lt4ke Před 2 lety +10

    J'aime pas trop

  • @colenip5384
    @colenip5384 Před rokem

    0:22-0:44 - train/horse/waves 1:52 - bird/kettle/alarm 5:08-5:50 - haunting presence 5:31 14:00 - ok yea this is haunted

  • @MaxAires
    @MaxAires Před 9 lety +3

    Appropriate music for shrinks

  • @igveri
    @igveri Před 6 lety +2

    Kraftwerk's father!

    • @frankalfar
      @frankalfar Před 6 lety

      Perfect I was trying to link KW to this …...

  • @loischapelain5369
    @loischapelain5369 Před 3 lety +1

    j'ai peur du gros monsieur sur la photo
    il me plait quand même mais bon

  • @robin8959
    @robin8959 Před 3 lety

    lit

  • @BarbieChaite
    @BarbieChaite Před 7 lety +2

    historique mais stérile.

  • @fernandoabdo1255
    @fernandoabdo1255 Před 8 lety +1

    tan grande como J. Cage.

  • @djtrakakadrunkpoet8598
    @djtrakakadrunkpoet8598 Před 3 lety +1

    This actually helps anxiety tbh

  • @superkonaa7646
    @superkonaa7646 Před 8 lety +12

    This is REAL music, I was born in the wrong generaton, screw Justin Bieber!!!!!!11

    • @nickrobertson7853
      @nickrobertson7853 Před 7 lety +2

      really?

    • @friesiamans1966
      @friesiamans1966 Před 7 lety +1

      you WERE born in the wrong generation, you wouldn´t get it, if it happened right in front of your nose - off with you into the stone age, so we don´t have to read your boring comments....
      say, what´s wrong with justin bieber?

    • @cuerpoeperra
      @cuerpoeperra Před 7 lety

      buuuuuuuuuuu.................................

    • @janmajer4662
      @janmajer4662 Před 6 lety

      Maybe Justin Bieber is shit but this is crap aswell. I don't fucking know how you can consider this REAL MUSIC !!! This is by miles away from good music.

    • @maiab-w8733
      @maiab-w8733 Před 4 lety +1

      @@janmajer4662 I know these comments are years-old, but some of you guys don't know what a joke is

  • @pressureworks
    @pressureworks Před 11 měsíci

    13:00

  • @zangasparac5210
    @zangasparac5210 Před 3 lety

    It is difficult