Book contents
- The Cambridge Companion to Music in Digital Culture
- Cambridge Companions to Music
- The Cambridge Companion to Music in Digital Culture
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Digital Technology and Cultural Practice
- Personal Take: Whatever Happened to Tape-Trading?
- 2 Toward a History of Digital Music: New Technologies, Business Practices and Intellectual Property Regimes
- Personal Take: On Serving as an Expert Witness in the ‘Blurred Lines’ Case
- 3 Shaping the Stream: Techniques and Troubles of Algorithmic Recommendation
- Personal Take: Being a Curator
- Personal Take: Can Machines Have Taste?
- 4 Technologies of the Musical Selfie
- Personal Take: Vaporwave is Dead, Long Live Vaporwave!
- 5 Witnessing Race in the New Digital Cinema
- Personal Take: Giving History a Voice
- 6 Digital Devotion: Musical Multimedia in Online Ritual and Religious Practice
- Personal Take: Technicians of Ecstasy
- Personal Take: Live Coded Mashup with the Humming Wires
- Personal Take: Algorave: Dancing to Algorithms
- 7 Rethinking Liveness in the Digital Age
- Personal Take: Augmenting Musical Performance
- Personal Take: Digital Demons, Real and Imagined
- Personal Take: Composing with Sounds as Images
- Personal Take: Compositional Approaches to Film, TV and Video Games
- 8 Virtual Worlds from Recording to Video Games
- 9 Digital Voices: Posthumanism and the Generation of Empathy
- Personal Take: In the Wake of the Virtual
- 10 Digital Inequalities and Global Sounds
- 11 The Political Economy of Streaming
- Bibliography
- Index
Personal Take: - Vaporwave is Dead, Long Live Vaporwave!
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 August 2019
- The Cambridge Companion to Music in Digital Culture
- Cambridge Companions to Music
- The Cambridge Companion to Music in Digital Culture
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Digital Technology and Cultural Practice
- Personal Take: Whatever Happened to Tape-Trading?
- 2 Toward a History of Digital Music: New Technologies, Business Practices and Intellectual Property Regimes
- Personal Take: On Serving as an Expert Witness in the ‘Blurred Lines’ Case
- 3 Shaping the Stream: Techniques and Troubles of Algorithmic Recommendation
- Personal Take: Being a Curator
- Personal Take: Can Machines Have Taste?
- 4 Technologies of the Musical Selfie
- Personal Take: Vaporwave is Dead, Long Live Vaporwave!
- 5 Witnessing Race in the New Digital Cinema
- Personal Take: Giving History a Voice
- 6 Digital Devotion: Musical Multimedia in Online Ritual and Religious Practice
- Personal Take: Technicians of Ecstasy
- Personal Take: Live Coded Mashup with the Humming Wires
- Personal Take: Algorave: Dancing to Algorithms
- 7 Rethinking Liveness in the Digital Age
- Personal Take: Augmenting Musical Performance
- Personal Take: Digital Demons, Real and Imagined
- Personal Take: Composing with Sounds as Images
- Personal Take: Compositional Approaches to Film, TV and Video Games
- 8 Virtual Worlds from Recording to Video Games
- 9 Digital Voices: Posthumanism and the Generation of Empathy
- Personal Take: In the Wake of the Virtual
- 10 Digital Inequalities and Global Sounds
- 11 The Political Economy of Streaming
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Popular music subcultures have acknowledged, engaged with, or rejected digital platforms to varying degrees; their relationship to it is often made fraught, ambivalent and ironic by projections of the Internet as inauthentic or impersonal and their inheritance of Romantic-influenced countercultural aesthetics. The genre vaporwave offers a key example of this, especially given that it emerged and exists almost exclusively on digital platforms. Vaporwave addresses its own digital nature and historicity in sound and image, as recent scholarship on it has observed. Its life online represents not an abandonment of traditional formulations of the relationship between culture, technology and authenticity, but a new arena in which to negotiate them.
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- The Cambridge Companion to Music in Digital Culture , pp. 119 - 123Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019
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