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As a musical condition, postmodern music is simply the state of music in postmodernity. In this sense, postmodern music does not have any one particular style or characteristic, and is not necessarily postmodern in style. However, the music of postmodernity is thought to differ from that of modernity in that whereas modern music was valued for its fundamentals and expression, postmodern music is valued as both a commodity and a symbolic indicator of identity. For example, one significant role of music in postmodern society is to act as a language by which people can signify their identity as a member of a particular subculture.
In the modern period, recording of music was seen as a way of transcribing an external event, as a photographA photograph (often just called a photo is an image (or a representation of that on e. paper) created by collecting and focusing electromagnetic radiation. The most common photographs are those created of visible wavelengths, producing permanent records o is supposed to record an moment in time. However, with the invention of magnetic tapeMagnetic tape is an information storage medium consisting of a magnetisable coating on a thin plastic strip. Nearly all recording tape is of this type, whether used for video with a video cassette recorder, audio storage ( reel-to-reel tape, compact audio in the 1930's the ability to directly edit a recording, and create a result which did not actually occur, made it possible for a recording to be viewed as the end product of artistic work itself. Through the 1950's, most music, even popular music, presented itself as the capturing of a performance, even if that performance was mic'ed to improve hearing of different parts.
Antecedants to this process, including the electronic music of Edgar Varese, can be found dating back for several decades, and in 1948 Pierre SchaefferPierre Henri Marie Schaeffer (born August 14, 1910, died August 19, 1995) was a French composer, noted as the inventor of musique concrete. He is generally acknowledged as being the first composer to make music using magnetic tape. Schaeffer was born in N would use tape to "compose" pieces, however it is with the advent of Rock 'n' RollRock and roll also called rock is a form of popular music, usually featuring vocals (often with vocal harmony backing), electric guitars and a strong back beat; other instruments, such as the saxophone, are common in some styles. As a cultural phenomenon, and particularly producer Phil SpectorHarvey Phillip "Phil" Spector (born December 26, 1939) is a record producer of some of the best-known popular music of the 1960s and 1970s. Early life Born into a lower-middle class Jewish family in Bronx, New York, his father committed suicide because of and Glenn GouldGlenn Herbert Gould ( September 25, 1932 October 4, 1982) was a celebrated Canadian pianist, noted especially for his recordings of Johann Sebastian Bach. He gave up live performances in 1964, dedicating himself to the recording studio for the rest of his in classical musicThis article is about the broad genre of classical music in the Western musical tradition. For the period of music in the 18th century see Classical music era, for articles on classical music of non-Western cultures, see: List of classical music tradition in the late 1950's that the idea of using tape to create a stand alone artistic work became more and more prevalent. However, it was with the studio recordings of the Beatles where the full use of multi-track recording and layering became common to popular music. The creation of this recording process transformed pop music. Rock and Hip Hop both extend this process further, by using more and more sophisticated techniques to layer and mix individual tracks .
The rise of popular music created another pressure on music, which would lead to another strand of post-modernity, namely the ability to create a sufficiently large audience for works. In the Modernist view, such a connection was unecessary - people would naturally gravitate towards "serious" music as the place where ideas could be presented in musical form, rather than "popular" music, which was seen, as the Victorians had seen it, as subsidiary to the more "weighty" genres. As with Post-modern philosophy, post-modern music questioned whether this hierarchy of "high" and "low" culture was correct or appropriate.
A third strand of post-modern music is a change in the fundamental idea of what music is supposed to be "about". As the period wore on, the idea that "music is mainly about itself", became more and more firmly entrenched. Reference was not merely a technique, but the substance of music. Musical works reference other musical works, not because they can, but because they must. This is part of the general change from Modernism which saw the basic subject of art being the most pure elements of musical technique - whether intervals, motivic fragments or rhythms - to Postmodernism which sees the basic subject of art being the stream of media, manufactured objects, and genre materials. In otherwords, post-modernity views the role of art to be commenting on the consumer society and its products, where as modernism sought to convey the "reality" of the universe in its most fundamental form.
The ability to record and mix, and later sample, would feed into this idea, with the inclusion of "found sounds", snippets of other recordings, spoken voices, noises, sampled tableux into music. Precursors to this can be seen in both classical world, for example John Cage's Europeara and Olivier Messiaen's "bird song" compositions. Early examples include Abbey Road, Pink Floyd's Meddle and the "dub" style of music of Lee 'Scratch' Perry.
In the classical world, elements of late modernism began to lay a framework for later postmodern styles. For example, in the immediate post-war era, the modernist project of atonality, begun by Arnold Schoenberg, had been taken to its logical conclusion, total serialism, by such late modernist composers as Pierre Boulez, Karlheinz Stockhausen, and others. In reaction to this ultra-modernist trend in which music was created in essence by mathematical principles, Boulez, Stockhousen, John Cage, and others began introducing elements of 'chance' in their music to create aleatory music. Aleatory music began to blur the boundaries between the composer and the audience, and between the musician and the environment, which was a postmodern trend.
At almost the same time, modernist composers such as Edgar Varese began to experiment with the new electronic instruments, using synthesizers and tape loops (what we would now call 'sampling'). This was developed throughout the 1960s. There was also a new interest in non-Western music. For example, György Ligeti began to use elements of Pygmy song in his compositions, and Olivier Messiaen experimented with Eastern musical techniques.