Electric Background Music
What is the Electric Music?
Electronics is a branch of applied physics, that deals with the shaping of electrical signals for the transmission of information. Electronic music, therefore, designates first of all a set of musical practices based on the use of instruments or machines generating sound frequencies from the shaping of electrical signals. However, this purely technical definition struggles to give a fair view of this musical practice.
In this article, we provide you the best Electric Soundtrack.
Song Name: Electric Music ft.Wasim Bhatti
Music provided by: Creators gallery
Copyright Free Music: Creative Commons
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Guillaume Kosmicki, musicologist and author of Electronic music: from avant-garde to dance floors defines electronic music as "a set of music based on sounds of the acoustic origin or sound synthesis, treated (reverberation, filtering, transposition, etc. then recorded in the form of an analog or digital signal, and intended to be amplified and then retransmitted through loudspeakers”. This definition has the merit of accuracy, clarity, and synthesis. However, it has the defect of designating many current musical practices which, while increasingly using electronic technology and while borrowing some of the compositional models characteristic of electronic music, do not openly claim their aesthetics.
We must therefore approach the question differently. Thom Holmes, author of Electronic & Experimental Music offers a reasonably close definition, but in a more dynamic form, based on two parallel historical practices, purely electronic music and electroacoustic music. The first is created from sound waves generated electrically, through the use of computers or synthesizers.
This music is composed without the use of any acoustic instrument or any sound found in our environment. The second uses electronic technology to copy, modify and manipulate sounds from our external environment, through the use of reproduction technologies such as the microphone, tape recorder, or digital sampler. The sounds used can be of any kind: acoustic instruments, natural sounds, or urban sounds.
These two axes, which can merge within the practice of the same musician, make it possible to describe both the experiences of the pioneers of the 1950s as well as the productions of popular dance-music culture.