Schizophonia

Schizophonia is a term coined by R. Murray Schafer to describe the splitting of an original sound and its electroacoustic reproduction.[1] This concept comes from the invention of electroacoustic equipment for the transmission of sound, which meant that any sound could be recorded and sent anywhere around the world. Originally, that was not possible, as every sound was an original and could only be heard once. Schizophonia is the separation of this native sound and the recording of it.[2]

  • Mike Batt released an album in 1977 entitled Schizophonia
  • Rinôçérôse released an album in 2005 entitled Schizophonia
  • A number of albums are entitled the related term Schizophonic
gollark: ^
gollark: Madness.
gollark: And events.
gollark: I made terminal redirect over skynet, though it is unreliable and just directly proxies term calls.
gollark: Which overrides print, that is.

See also

Notes

  1. Schafer, R. Murray (1969). The New Soundscape: a handbook for the modern music teacher. BMI Canada. ISBN 0-900938-29-3.
  2. Schafer, Murray. The Music of the Environment. ISBN 0826416144.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.