- Repetitive music
Repetitive music is
music which features a relatively high degree ofrepetition in its creation orreception . Examples includesminimalist music ,krautrock ,disco (and its later derivatives such as house music), someTechno ,Igor Stravinsky 's compositions,barococo , and theSuzuki method . (Fink 2005, p.5)Types of repetitive music
Repetitive music has often been negatively linked with
Freud ianthanatos .Theodor Adorno (1948, p.178) provides an early example in his criticism ofIgor Stravinsky , whose, "rhythmic proceduresostinato closely resemble the schema of catatonic conditions. In certain schizophrenics, the process by which the motor apparatus becomes independent leads to infinite repetition of gestures or words, following the decay of the ego."Wim Mertens (1980, p.123-124) argues that "In repetitive music, repetition in the service of thedeath instinct prevails. Repetition is not repetition of identical elements, so it is not reproduction, but the repetition of the identical in another guise. In traditional music, repetition is a device for creating recognizability, reproduction for the sake of the representingego . In repetitive music, repetition does not refer to eros and the ego, but to thelibido and to the death instinct."Repetitive music has also been linked with
Lacan ianjouissance .David Schawrz (1992, p.134) argues that the repetition in John Adams's "Nixon in China" "trapping listeners in a narrow acoustic corridor ofthe Real " whileNaomi Cumming (1997, p.129-152) argues that the repetitive string ostinatos ofSteve Reich 's "Different Trains " are "prearticulate" pieces of the Real providing a refuge from theHolocaust and its "horror of identification."Disco, House, and Rave music
DJs at disco clubs in the 1970s played "... a smooth mix of long single [disco] records to keep people “dancing all night long.” While
disco songs do have some repetitive elements, such as a persistent throbbing beat, these repetitive elements were counterbalanced by the musical variety provided by orchestral arrangements anddisco mix es that added different sound textures to the music, ranging from a full, orchestral sound to stripped-down "break" sections.The electric dance music genres that followed disco in the 1980s and 1990s, such as house music and
techno kept the bass drum rhythm introduced by disco but did not use the orchestral arrangements or horn sections. House and techno had a more minimalist sound that layered electronic sounds and samples over a drum machine drum part and a repetitive synth bass bassline.In the 1990s, an offshoot of one form of house music (acid house) developed into
rave music , a high-energy electronic music for dancing that depends heavily on samples.Initially "rave music" was considered a particular style that was a combination of fast breakbeat and more hardcore forms of techno. Rave music was played at massive dance parties ("raves") where many Ecstasy-fueled dancers would dance all night to the throbbing, repetitive beat of rave songs.After some teens and young adults were injured in raves (either from drug overdoses or dehydration), the UK government introduced its Criminal Justice Bill of 1994. This was government attempt to ban large rave-style dance events featuring music with "repetitive beats" (e.g., rave music, house music, techno, etc) which were associated with illegal drug use. Although the bill did become law in November 1994, it had little effect, and rave music events continued in underground, illegal settings, such as empty warehouses or factories.
ource
*Adorno, Theodor (1948). "The Philosophy of Modern Music". Trans. Anne G. Mitchell and Wesley V. Blomster (1973). Cited in Fink 2005.
*Cumming, Naomi (1997). "The Horrors of Identification: Reich's "Different Trains" "Perspectives of New Music" 35, no. I (winter).
*Fink, Robert (2005). "Repeating Ourselves: American Minimal Music as Cultural Practice". ISBN 0-520-24550-4.
*Mertens, Wim (1980/1983/1988). "American Minimal Music", trans. J. Hautekiet. ISBN 0-912483-15-6. Cited in Fink 2005.
*Schwarz, David (1992). "Postmodernism, the Subject, and the Real in John Adams's "Nixon in China" "Indiana Theory Review" 13, no. 2 (fall). Cited in Fink 2005.Further reading
*Attali, Jacques (1977/1985). "Repeating" "Noise". ISBN 0-8166-1287-0.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.