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Just what is it that makes today's noise music so different, so appealing?1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 February 2008

Paul Hegarty
Affiliation:
Dept of French, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland email: phegarty@french.ucc.ie

Abstract

This article explores how ‘noise music’ uses its influences, how it refers to them, and what occurs formally, when using influence self-consciously and formally. Specifically, it takes two artists, Nurse With Wound and The New Blockaders, that emerged at the same time as ‘industrial music’, and through different strategies, incorporated visual art influences into their work, to the point where influence as question is raised. Referring to Harold Bloom, the article notes that influence is not linear, nor is it fixed. The article begins with some general considerations about what noise is and how it works when in contact with music; it then looks in detail first at some works by Nurse With Wound, then at works by The New Blockaders. In so doing, it also pays attention to the material presentation of those works, which is a key part of the formal work of these artists. It concludes with some thoughts about how we can not only apply Bloom to experimental music, but that ‘noise music’ can provide itself as a theorisation of influence.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2008

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References

1 Borrowed from Richard Hamilton's painting of a similar title from 1956.