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Exotica: Fabricated Soundscapes in a Real World: Fabricated Soundscapes in the Real World
 
 
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Exotica: Fabricated Soundscapes in a Real World: Fabricated Soundscapes in the Real World [Englisch] [Taschenbuch]

David Toop
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Produktinformation

  • Taschenbuch: 256 Seiten
  • Verlag: Serpent's Tail (20. Mai 1999)
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISBN-10: 1852425954
  • ISBN-13: 978-1852425951
  • Größe und/oder Gewicht: 21,1 x 13,5 x 2,3 cm
  • Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung: 5.0 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (1 Kundenrezension)
  • Amazon Bestseller-Rang: Nr. 470.589 in Englische Bücher (Siehe Top 100 in Englische Bücher)

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Produktbeschreibungen

Amazon.co.uk

Following his highly regarded exploration of ambient music, Ocean of Sound, David Toop has produced another exhilarating cultural investigation in Exotica, a guide to the diversity of Western musical responses to the foreign, the alien, the other. Moving from the easy-listening recordings of Les Baxter and Martin Denny, which overlaid exotic instrumentation onto familiar "semi-jazz or Latin beats", to the avant-garde music of Harry Partch and Sun Ra, Toop shows how the worlds of lowbrow and highbrow culture equally betrayed a complex fascination with the exotic, and often erotic, allure of non-Western music. But this is no straight history, for the book draws on literature, anthropology, cultural history, and travelogue to produce a shifting, suggestive network of connections and correspondences, imbricating musical appropriations and colonial attitudes. However, Toop also shows how permeable cultural boundaries can be: his account of the rapid spread of Hawaiian slide guitar techniques into Blues and Bollywood soundtracks (and taken up by artists in Japan, Burma and Zaire) humorously demonstrates that any simple notion of cultural "authenticity" is suspect, as does the fact that the Japanese composer Toru Takemitsu was overwhelmed by hearing, as a young man in Paris, Josephine Baker's "chinoiserie" recording "Ma Tonkinoise".

The book is as stylistically diverse as its subject matter, moving from the raw and painful autobiography of the introduction, through the science-fiction casbah environments of the fictional opening chapters, and into the deftly collaged and juxtaposed accounts of the music (where else would one find chapters on Ornette Coleman, Burt Bacharach and Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan next to each other?). With Exotica, Toop's intelligence, wit, and openness to diversity supplies us with an admirably erratic compass with which to navigate his redrawn, culturally porous topography. --Burhan Tufail

Kurzbeschreibung

A look at the people and music behind some of the world's most witty, experimental and adventurous sound recordings.

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Format:Taschenbuch
Exotica by David Toop

David Toop is arguably the most intelligent music critic writing today, his range of interests prospecting across an avant garde canvas coloured by the 20th century's foremost writers, thinkers and musicians.

Although Toop's subject is predominantly that of fabricated soundscapes in a real world, a music which has come to be categorised as exotica, his roots are literary and extend to novelistic cosmographers like Herman Melville, Joseph Conrad and William Burroughs. Toop is erudite, but refreshingly unacademic in the way his texts are interspersed with autobiography, anecdote, interviews and fiction. Bringing imaginative criticism to bear on a range of subjects from the beginnings of ethnic music to Josephine Baker and Yma Sumac, Les Baxter and Martin Denny, Toop succeeds in aligning the concept of the exotic with world music. In a century in which we have grown to be increasingly interiorised, television often providing our point of contact with the external world, so music has come to assume the role of transporting geography into our rooms. In this respect Les Baxter's floridly contrived soundscapes prove central to Toop's thesis, for Baxter was throughout the 1950's to offer his listeners package tours in sound. According to Toop Baxter's music provided 'running excursions for sedentary tourists who wanted to stroll around some taboo urges before lunch, view a pagan ceremony through gaps in the bamboo, go wild in the sun or conjure a demon, all without leaving home stereo comforts in the whitebread suburbs.' Baxter's albums carried titles such as Caribbean moonlight, Jewels of the Sea, Ritual of the Savage and Ports of Pleasure, and by hinting at sexual licentiousness in exotic landscapes, the music was to prove irresistible to a 1950's record buying public.

Toop is particularly good on inventive vocalists like Josephine Baker and Yma Sumac. When Baker arrived in Paris in 1925 as a dancer with La Revue Négre, she caused a sensation by exposing her breasts when she danced. Aspiring to chanson, she injected the medium with her atavistic African roots, so as to create an exotic vocal genre.

Yma Sumac noted for her collaboration with Les Baxter on Voice of the Xtabay, was an extraordinarily volatile singer of South American ancestry noted for her multi-octave range and freakishly histrionic tone. Sumac shared with Baxter and Denny the ability to transpose a spuriously sourced primitivism to the contrived medium of the Western recording studio.

David Toop is a marvellous guide to the curious, the bizarre, the culted and the durable in 20th century music. His book includes interviews with the eclectic likes of Burt Bacharach, Ornette Coleman, Bill Laswell, Maroumi Hosno and Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, the renowned Pakistani popular singer.

More than just a vibrantly maverick musician and musicologist David Toop writes with the exciting inventiveness of a fine prose stylist. This is a book to be ingested slowly and with careful attention paid to the originality of the author's metaphors. Exotica is a rich text in the best sense of contemporary writing.

JEREMY REED

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Arguably the most intelligent music critic writing 18. August 1999
Von JEREMY REED c/o eaw@centrenet.co.uk - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Taschenbuch
Exotica by David Toop

David Toop is arguably the most intelligent music critic writing today, his range of interests prospecting across an avant garde canvas coloured by the 20th century's foremost writers, thinkers and musicians.

Although Toop's subject is predominantly that of fabricated soundscapes in a real world, a music which has come to be categorised as exotica, his roots are literary and extend to novelistic cosmographers like Herman Melville, Joseph Conrad and William Burroughs. Toop is erudite, but refreshingly unacademic in the way his texts are interspersed with autobiography, anecdote, interviews and fiction. Bringing imaginative criticism to bear on a range of subjects from the beginnings of ethnic music to Josephine Baker and Yma Sumac, Les Baxter and Martin Denny, Toop succeeds in aligning the concept of the exotic with world music. In a century in which we have grown to be increasingly interiorised, television often providing our point of contact with the external world, so music has come to assume the role of transporting geography into our rooms. In this respect Les Baxter's floridly contrived soundscapes prove central to Toop's thesis, for Baxter was throughout the 1950's to offer his listeners package tours in sound. According to Toop Baxter's music provided 'running excursions for sedentary tourists who wanted to stroll around some taboo urges before lunch, view a pagan ceremony through gaps in the bamboo, go wild in the sun or conjure a demon, all without leaving home stereo comforts in the whitebread suburbs.' Baxter's albums carried titles such as Caribbean moonlight, Jewels of the Sea, Ritual of the Savage and Ports of Pleasure, and by hinting at sexual licentiousness in exotic landscapes, the music was to prove irresistible to a 1950's record buying public.

Toop is particularly good on inventive vocalists like Josephine Baker and Yma Sumac. When Baker arrived in Paris in 1925 as a dancer with La Revue Négre, she caused a sensation by exposing her breasts when she danced. Aspiring to chanson, she injected the medium with her atavistic African roots, so as to create an exotic vocal genre.

Yma Sumac noted for her collaboration with Les Baxter on Voice of the Xtabay, was an extraordinarily volatile singer of South American ancestry noted for her multi-octave range and freakishly histrionic tone. Sumac shared with Baxter and Denny the ability to transpose a spuriously sourced primitivism to the contrived medium of the Western recording studio.

David Toop is a marvellous guide to the curious, the bizarre, the culted and the durable in 20th century music. His book includes interviews with the eclectic likes of Burt Bacharach, Ornette Coleman, Bill Laswell, Maroumi Hosno and Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, the renowned Pakistani popular singer.

More than just a vibrantly maverick musician and musicologist David Toop writes with the exciting inventiveness of a fine prose stylist. This is a book to be ingested slowly and with careful attention paid to the originality of the author's metaphors. Exotica is a rich text in the best sense of contemporary writing.

JEREMY REED

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