Musique Concrete

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  • čas přidán 20. 08. 2024
  • Musique Concrete is the experimental technique of musical composition using recorded sounds as raw material. The principle uses the assemblage of various natural sounds to produce an aural montage. A precursor to the use of electronically generated sound, musique concrete was among the earliest uses of electronic means to extend the composer's sound resources. Before the days of sampling and computer manipulation of sounds, musicians used analogue tape recorders to record natural sounds and tape splicing techniques. Music concrete uses natural sounds to create aural compositions. This excerpt is taken from the BBC 1979 documentary "The New Sound of Music".

Komentáře • 430

  • @SacredNutrino
    @SacredNutrino Před 10 lety +272

    People were high as fuck in the 60s

    • @evandeneault186
      @evandeneault186 Před 9 lety

      Musique Concrete = Acid Rock. Both types of music you'd be tripping out listening to.

    • @tristanmiller5215
      @tristanmiller5215 Před 9 lety +2

      look up zoolook by jean micheal jarre, basically an acid trip in an album

    • @BananaPhoPhilly
      @BananaPhoPhilly Před 9 lety +5

      This is from 1979

    • @H4RM0N1C5
      @H4RM0N1C5 Před 8 lety +5

      +BananaPhoPhilly Musique Conrete started in 1928.

    • @BananaPhoPhilly
      @BananaPhoPhilly Před 8 lety

      Steve Goyne The video is from 1979

  • @zachary7573
    @zachary7573 Před 9 lety +410

    Oh my god I am so sampling this video.

  • @infantiltinferno
    @infantiltinferno Před 14 lety +118

    The ecstasy of Concrete Music explained by an enthusiastic man from the BBC, anno 1979. Oh, and there's a visual representation of the sounds being speed up, slowed down or played in reverse. Perfection.

    • @chappingcleeks76
      @chappingcleeks76 Před 7 měsíci

      Couldn't have put it better....like he even said wouldn't be the first. Mind blown 😅

  • @coryvreckan
    @coryvreckan Před 13 lety +36

    I lived through those days when we had to use spicing block, razor blades (and bandages) in the studio. We sometimes called it "music by the inch". I am eternally grateful for digital sound editors.

    • @cygil1
      @cygil1 Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah however innovative at he time it must have been likes building a car out of coconuts.

  • @mrfrosty3
    @mrfrosty3 Před 10 lety +82

    All tv presenters should talk like this chap. BBC English.

  • @MrSombulance
    @MrSombulance Před 8 lety +138

    The perverse pleasure on his face at 0:50 "Quite different sounds"

  • @bennyfromthe72
    @bennyfromthe72 Před 9 lety +75

    Musique Concrète was created in France as early as in the 40s, sort of making Pierre Schaeffer and Pierre Henry the pioneers of electronic music !

    • @michaelwilliams8781
      @michaelwilliams8781 Před 3 lety +1

      Exactement! 👍

    • @australianaliens5942
      @australianaliens5942 Před 2 lety +3

      Likewise artists such as Pauline Oliveros across the Atlantic were working with tape in similar ways , anticipating more recent forms of electronic music

    • @MrBarcode
      @MrBarcode Před 6 měsíci

      To me they were more pioneers of super proto industrial music. The found sounds, objects, sound manipulation. All stuff TG did years later and founded a label for this style of music

  • @Rascaduanok
    @Rascaduanok Před 11 lety +25

    Same story: whenever you get a new technology, you get people willing to take things to a wholly different and experimental level. Brilliant!

  • @horrordwarf
    @horrordwarf Před 14 lety +15

    The presenter is Michael Rodd, who used to present Tomorrow's World and Screen test on the BBC back in the 1970's. Great clip.

  • @DillingerR
    @DillingerR Před 5 lety +11

    that bottle beat at the end is fire

  • @concretesoundart1483
    @concretesoundart1483 Před 8 lety +67

    I became interested in Musique Concrete after I took an experimental music class. I like how they provided examples of Musique Concrete in this video.

    • @lars38010
      @lars38010 Před 7 lety +19

      It`s funny when most people today still think that Music and Sound are different. Music is just a combination of vibrating sounds. And Musique Concrete shows that :)

    • @concretesoundart1483
      @concretesoundart1483 Před 7 lety +2

      I agree. Having produced some Musique Concrete tracks in the past, I'd say that it is both frustrating and fun how one must search for sounds that reflect the style that one desires from unconventional sources. It ends up feeling like a giant musical puzzle.

    • @lars38010
      @lars38010 Před 7 lety

      I almost forgot to say. That music does also have expression. So vibrating sounds+expression is music.

    • @benpowell5682
      @benpowell5682 Před 4 lety

      Do you make musique concrete? :)

    • @JustifyTheseHeathens
      @JustifyTheseHeathens Před 2 lety

      @@lars38010 good point. I'm crunching a donut right now and it sounds soooo good

  • @TheBishMighty
    @TheBishMighty Před 12 lety +16

    These simple sounds may not seem like much, but one single note added to a song for atmospheric effect can create something that is a work of genius.

  • @PSPmaster321
    @PSPmaster321 Před 10 lety +39

    Last tune was top-notch.

  • @TheTectonical
    @TheTectonical Před 9 lety +48

    Tune at 4:30 sounds a little like the opening of the Futurama theme tune !

  • @princealigorna7468
    @princealigorna7468 Před 9 lety +222

    The thing about musique concrete is this stuff is pretty much the prototype for sampling. Sure, Cage wrote pieces involving turntables and radios that were also kinda proto-sampling, but this stuff really is sampling before that was even considered a thing. Except what was being sampled was field recordings, and everything was done by hand. You couldn't run a sampler through a synth and do all the editing from the sampler like you can now. You have to physically manipulate this stuff yourself.

    • @SuperCartiel
      @SuperCartiel Před 9 lety +6

      Prince Aligorna Like Roger Waters did on 'Meddle' and 'Dark Side of the Moon'?

    • @princealigorna7468
      @princealigorna7468 Před 9 lety +8

      *****
      Exactly! Or I think the Beatles had to do with "Revolution #9"

    • @SuperCartiel
      @SuperCartiel Před 9 lety +7

      Prince Aligorna As much as I know, Waters and Syd Barrett started the trend in England. But Frank Zappa used musique concrete on his earlier albums.

    • @profd65
      @profd65 Před 4 lety +1

      How the f-ck is it the prototype of sampling? With sampling, you're simply stealing somebody else's music, often without giving any credit to the artist. The video describes recording your own sounds and then manipulating the recording tape. It is possible to use samples of another artist's work creatively and legitimately, but often sampling is simply theft carried out by the creatively impaired.

    • @jan_Travis
      @jan_Travis Před 4 lety +1

      @@profd65 sampling has always been a thing a thing. Back in the 1500s, churches would often steal a melody of a popular song and use it as a base line. They did this so much, they even gave it a name.

  • @theabcsofstds
    @theabcsofstds Před 12 lety +18

    gives me the warm fuzzies inside
    jesus christ i love music, i love noise, i love sound, i love the waves reverberating through my ears

  • @yasirozer4782
    @yasirozer4782 Před 4 lety +4

    its weird to think that we living these guys' future

  • @boring5718
    @boring5718 Před 8 lety +231

    Welcome to level infinity

  • @Blockistium
    @Blockistium Před 10 lety +80

    NO LONGER IN NEED OF ANY CONTACT WITH THE MATERIAL WORLD

    • @kjl3080
      @kjl3080 Před 5 měsíci

      is this a quote

  • @user-ef3om4jb6s
    @user-ef3om4jb6s Před 8 lety +356

    I'm socially disattached from social dogma

    • @hermanni563
      @hermanni563 Před 8 lety +5

      +Sasha Brannon omg other 9gagger

    • @maxw.2833
      @maxw.2833 Před 8 lety +2

      Well, hello there.

    • @generaltoast9910
      @generaltoast9910 Před 8 lety +1

      nope, level infinite.

    • @DeathTimer
      @DeathTimer Před 8 lety +1

      I felt I was alone.
      Yet I've found some people who've disconnected themselves from the material world.
      All rejoice in the hands of the golden empress.

    • @generaltoast9910
      @generaltoast9910 Před 8 lety +2

      DeathTimer Fuck the golden empress, GLORY TO THE GOD EMPEROR!

  • @lesnyk255
    @lesnyk255 Před 5 lety +3

    Oh, God - back in the days when "cut & paste" meant just that - marking the tape with a grease pencil, cutting with nonmagnetic ceramic shears, taping it back together, all while hoping for the best. There was no "UnDo" - at best, a "ReDo", if you were working with a 2nd generation copy...
    I first encountered musique concrete back in the early 1970s - freshly degreed, with disposable income for the first time in my life, I'd spend Saturday mornings perusing the cutout bins at the "record store" (q.v.) for "albums" (q.v.) to play on my "turntable" (q.v.). I chanced upon a Nonesuch recording of musique concrete by Iannis Xenakis - and it blew me away, destroying all of my preconceived notions of what music had to be.

  •  Před 14 lety +31

    Very cool... one of the best demonstrations of tape music, music concrete I've seen. Back in Seattle, we had Soundwork Studio, late 70's and early 80's... Several of us spent a million hours or so creating tape pieces. Fun video, thanks.

    • @csnerd21
      @csnerd21 Před rokem

      do you still have the tape pieces?!

    •  Před rokem

      @@csnerd21 I do. I have a few of them here on CZcams on my channel. And... several boxes of reel to reel tapes.

    • @csnerd21
      @csnerd21 Před rokem +1

      @ That's so cool! I will check out your channel and give them a listen. I'm new to musique concrete, but I find it so fascinated... I'm diving into any which way I can. It was just yesterday that I came across a TEAC reel-to-reel, and I said to the owner that I'd be back for it.
      I'd love to hear more about _'million_ _hours_ _creating_ _tape_ _pieces'_ and tips/advice you'd have for a newbie!

  • @Zaiatheism
    @Zaiatheism Před 4 lety +2

    It's been seven years since I first saw this video and last had any contact with the material world

  • @JeffreyPlaide
    @JeffreyPlaide  Před 15 lety +18

    Many thanks for this.
    I found this programme very inspirational for the creative sound artist, and also quite enjoyable to watch Michael Rodd explain tape techniques.
    Much appreciation!

  • @BaddaBigBoom
    @BaddaBigBoom Před 6 lety +9

    Thanks a million for uploading this, I now have to locate the entire documentary :-)

    • @VanielDeeform
      @VanielDeeform Před 6 lety +2

      BaddaBigBoom The New Sound Of Music 1979 Part 1

  • @Klatski
    @Klatski Před 8 lety +33

    Sometimes it's so fascinating that it makes me want to make music in some... experimental or gimmick-y way. I thought it was only for creepy kind of music, but I guess not. I'll see.

  • @Audiodump
    @Audiodump Před 10 lety +45

    A box of gravel.

  • @Dtuba15
    @Dtuba15 Před 11 lety +2

    im a music tech and a Dr.Who fan ....... im so happy right now

  • @arkantika3927
    @arkantika3927 Před 3 lety +2

    Was just watching Gene Hackman in "The Conversation " David Shire used the Musique Concrete technique for some of the score in the movie , very hip! 😎

  • @gorgorgorillaneck
    @gorgorgorillaneck Před 11 lety +8

    4:28 The primordial version of the Futurama Theme song.

  • @aaronsimpson4340
    @aaronsimpson4340 Před 4 lety +6

    4:06 the opening to Time by Pink Floyd

  • @BaddaBigBoom
    @BaddaBigBoom Před 6 lety +2

    That cash register composition is SO sardonic it makes my eyes cross with delight!

  • @MichaelMichuki
    @MichaelMichuki Před 9 lety +10

    Ideas inspire ideas - music production has gone to so many other new levels, totally fascinating :)

  • @icewallowcome2964
    @icewallowcome2964 Před 7 lety +3

    with the alarm clock and the the beat counter thing all getting faster and the weird noise that the tape recorder makes looks like it should be in a horror movie

  • @JeffreyPlaide
    @JeffreyPlaide  Před 13 lety +2

    1979 in fact, and produced by the BBC. It shows some of the facilities of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop as it was in 1979.

  • @dreamcyberium
    @dreamcyberium Před 4 lety +3

    So this is what tape splicing is. I heard all about this about had no idea what it actually was until now. Wow so cool! You can literally do this exact technique via Audacity- without the fuss of physical tapes. Would be fun to do it authentically at some point, though.

    • @annother3350
      @annother3350 Před rokem +2

      You should look into how Delia Derbyshire made the first Doctor Who theme. Its crazy. they would work out how many inches of tape made, say, a bar of music and then at the right moment play another tape loop to interact with that which was 3/4 bar so was ever changing. She made that whole theme with no synthesizers!

  • @ThighcherryTube
    @ThighcherryTube Před 9 měsíci

    1979, wow. Genius. I did a lot of experimenting with tapes and cassettes myself, until I bought my Casio SK-5 sampling keyboard. Spent a lot of time making music like this. A shame all my cassettes disappeared in a fire.

  • @ethereal-alice
    @ethereal-alice Před 10 lety +23

    So so so so so trippy. i love it

  • @2degucitas
    @2degucitas Před 9 lety +2

    Inspired so many things in pop culture. The Beatles, electronic music bands...list goes on.

  • @ImFromAMS
    @ImFromAMS Před 12 lety +5

    I always wondered how they edited music before there were computers. i didn't know they literally cut the tape~

  • @AlessioPremoliOfficial
    @AlessioPremoliOfficial Před 9 lety +19

    Well, thist time I wasn't actually looking for some Doctor Who stuff, but it popped up anyhow! :D

  • @cosmicroundingerror
    @cosmicroundingerror Před 9 lety +29

    4:29 sounds like the ed edd n' eddy theme

    • @lumencosmo
      @lumencosmo Před 6 lety +4

      ed edd n' eddy in acid ahahhaha XD

  • @xXxequisxXx
    @xXxequisxXx Před 8 měsíci

    Good lord, the physical manipulation of media on tape must've taken the patience of a saint and skill of a surgeon.

  • @chappingcleeks76
    @chappingcleeks76 Před 7 měsíci

    Absolutely epic.....and for the time and technology. This is exactly why music is an art. That and Rimba tubes.

  • @travisniles6800
    @travisniles6800 Před 3 lety +1

    I love this guys confidence

  • @WimGrundy
    @WimGrundy Před 13 lety +1

    analoguously refreshing

  • @Desmaad
    @Desmaad Před 14 lety +2

    Funnily enough, Fairlight released their CMI in the same year as this segment, making this genre of music easier (albeit not cheaper).

  • @JeffreyPlaide
    @JeffreyPlaide  Před 14 lety +6

    Many thanks Yuran,
    There are two BBC Documentaries actually - "The New Sound of Music" 1979 - used here, and "The Alchemists of Sound" 2003 - that features the mysterious man in the background. I haven't been able to source who he is though.
    Thanks!

  • @JohnnyBeane
    @JohnnyBeane Před 4 lety +4

    Awesome stuff!!! So many cool sounds to play with!

  • @tomasenrique
    @tomasenrique Před rokem

    Such an amazing video! I am so glad to be born in the CZcams era!

  • @theTORTUGAZUL
    @theTORTUGAZUL Před 8 lety +1

    It may have started there in 1958, but that was decades after it had originally been started.

  • @WrvrUgoThrUR
    @WrvrUgoThrUR Před rokem

    The basis and inspiration of modern chill-hop and LoFi.

  • @Outstralian
    @Outstralian Před 12 lety +4

    This guy is like the Carl Sagan of electronic music.

  • @lonefox5868
    @lonefox5868 Před 3 lety +1

    People watching this in 2020
    30% Interested People (Curious people)
    10% Random People
    60% Grade 10 students (Modular Classes)
    like me... bruhhh

  • @ky-el1292
    @ky-el1292 Před 7 lety +1

    One could say that hip hop, in its traditional style, did the same thing but with but with turntables and funk/soul records

  • @Fcutdlady
    @Fcutdlady Před 4 lety +3

    This is similar to how Delia Derbyshire played the Dr who theme.(which I said before I saw and heard mention of it on this clip)

  • @LawnmowerJoe
    @LawnmowerJoe Před 12 lety +2

    Absolute genius

  • @EmilyMaddenComposer
    @EmilyMaddenComposer Před 13 lety +1

    Really good video.

  • @joshualee4212
    @joshualee4212 Před 7 lety +1

    Extraordinary. That was how it all started.

  • @nikoguarro
    @nikoguarro Před 3 lety

    This video is helping me to understand Deleuze and Guattari. Thank you.

  • @lurholm
    @lurholm Před 13 lety +1

    Wonderful, wonderful, wonderful!

  • @keitomineproductions4133

    this guy just casually explained producing.

  • @shrub74
    @shrub74 Před 12 lety +1

    Oh man, that was fascinating.

  • @PettyBlue1
    @PettyBlue1 Před 11 lety +1

    Okay, I'm in love with this clip.

  • @itsmarius6054
    @itsmarius6054 Před 7 lety +8

    I'm outcast from the material world

  • @neelshiv
    @neelshiv Před 15 lety

    This is a great educational video for modern music lovers.

  • @JeffreyPlaide
    @JeffreyPlaide  Před 12 lety +1

    The BBC Documentary was broadcast I believe in 1979.

  • @MrTanzadogs
    @MrTanzadogs Před 12 lety +6

    Now I know where Pink Floyd got their idea for the intro to 'Money'.... This video!!!

    • @Ailgadem
      @Ailgadem Před 3 lety

      This video is from 1979, Money is from 1973

  • @Capriccio01
    @Capriccio01 Před 14 lety +7

    This is so interesting! I would love to be able to experiment with reel-to-reel, sadly at this day in age it's way way too expensive for me...

    • @WrvrUgoThrUR
      @WrvrUgoThrUR Před rokem +1

      This is done these days with modern computer DAWs. Same techniques and aesthetic, but with samolers and sample packs.

  •  Před 9 lety +1

    Thanks for uploading this, really helps with my work.

  • @SlyHikari03
    @SlyHikari03 Před 3 lety

    Thank the lord for Tape recording.

  • @Quartered_Rodent
    @Quartered_Rodent Před 7 lety +10

    We're a few more videos from being on that side of the youtube again.

    • @mathiaswbbe7711
      @mathiaswbbe7711 Před 7 lety +2

      I searched for this, i must be contributing in weird ways ~~

    • @GuyRWood
      @GuyRWood Před 7 lety +1

      I'm here because I was reading about Dark Side of the Moon on wikipedia and it mentioned Musique concrète.

  • @JosephO75
    @JosephO75 Před 11 lety +1

    this video makes me feel not so alone

  • @AU24097
    @AU24097 Před 7 lety +1

    some bands like the beatles incorporated this style into their songs as well.

  • @JeffreyPlaide
    @JeffreyPlaide  Před 12 lety +2

    Hello, I have posted in four parts "The New Sound of Music" - the documentary from which this excerpt came. Have a look. If you still need anything extra, just contact me.

  • @WintersFinalstand
    @WintersFinalstand Před 10 lety +1

    Well, Ive learned something new, and I have seen it before without realizing it

  • @michaeledwards6683
    @michaeledwards6683 Před 7 lety +3

    Thank you. I was curious as to what exactly is musique concréte because The Mars Volta use it on various occasions, but I didn't really understand until now. Truth is that I have already been planning to make music this way, but I've been calling it "noise music".

    • @lars38010
      @lars38010 Před 7 lety +1

      Well as far as i know. Noise music has 4 different sides. Wall Noise,Power Electronics,Harsh Noise and Musique Concrete.

  • @HammerHead656
    @HammerHead656 Před 12 lety +1

    this is the origin of all electronic music

    • @lars38010
      @lars38010 Před 7 lety +1

      No one knows the origin of electronic music. Electronic music is about 121 years old. The oldest we know of is Noise music from 1913 by Luigi Russolo

  • @grail68
    @grail68 Před 12 lety

    This guy was having a blast

  • @JeffreyPlaide
    @JeffreyPlaide  Před 13 lety +1

    Of course,
    Just sample the section you need with some filtering or reverb for effect.

  • @MythicSuns
    @MythicSuns Před 2 lety

    "mum, what happened to all the pots and pans?" "ask your dad, he's in the basement trying to create Moonlight Sonata"

  • @autredimension
    @autredimension Před 7 lety +1

    this is my kind of musique now, goodbye world

  • @jackcimino8822
    @jackcimino8822 Před 8 lety +24

    I came here because of Wikipedia, not 9gag

    • @swagv
      @swagv Před 3 lety +2

      I came here of my own volition because I'm not an obedient sap

  • @user-yy9wp5mo6e
    @user-yy9wp5mo6e Před 9 lety +58

    What would YOU do for a vintage tape machine? Would you........would you kill a man?

  • @Velktron
    @Velktron Před rokem

    The ancestor of tracker music.

  • @slowmotionspot
    @slowmotionspot Před 6 lety +1

    If you like this you should check out the Delia Derbyshire documentary too. She's the one who made the Doctor Who theme

  • @esoteric2slr
    @esoteric2slr Před 8 lety +1

    Fascinating!

  • @xoFiroza
    @xoFiroza Před 11 lety

    This is a lovely video and I really like the host too!

  • @EuropeanAnimation
    @EuropeanAnimation Před 13 lety

    I've got to steal that cash register idea. Too much satirical potential to go to waste.

  • @upvalue
    @upvalue Před 12 lety +3

    The way he edits the tape is pure art. Nowadays it's all pushing buttons and computers doing everything for you.

    • @DamienDrake
      @DamienDrake Před rokem

      Yeah, because it's about the tools and not the creativity and inspiration behind it. Riiiiight.

  • @loljustice31
    @loljustice31 Před 12 lety

    YOU ARE SO DEEP AND INTELLIGENT

  • @b1ggbyrd
    @b1ggbyrd Před 11 lety

    and thus, the first DJ was born

  • @MountAnalogue
    @MountAnalogue Před 14 lety +1

    RIP Schaeffer!!

  • @fancyfeces
    @fancyfeces Před 11 lety

    damn that's a great little demonstration.

  • @melekbonpartie-cocteau4749
    @melekbonpartie-cocteau4749 Před 10 lety +1

    The aim of musique concrete is, using varying mathematical permutations, to distort "material sounds" into metaphorical symbolism. If you don't get it, check out my track "Gutter Trash Ballerina." Cheers.

  • @akashboinpally4389
    @akashboinpally4389 Před 11 měsíci

    very good video, thanks

  • @livvy94
    @livvy94 Před 2 lety

    The first YTPMV

  • @udomatthiasdrums5322
    @udomatthiasdrums5322 Před 3 lety +1

    still love it!!

  • @StormsandSaugeye
    @StormsandSaugeye Před 5 lety

    Just passing through as I break all contact with the material world

  • @CinematicaMusic
    @CinematicaMusic Před 9 měsíci +1

    i am obsessed..........................