The Sound-Sweep

"The Sound-Sweep" is a short story by British writer J.G. Ballard. It was first published in Science Fantasy, Volume 13, Number 39, February 1960 and was reprinted in the collection The Four-Dimensional Nightmare.[1]

Plot summary

The main character, a mute boy vacuuming up stray sounds in a world without music, befriends an opera singer living in an abandoned recording studio. As all previous music has been rendered obsolete thanks to advances in "ultrasonic music", the opera singer is destitute.

Reception

According to Trevor Horn and Bruce Woolley, the lyrics of the song "Video Killed the Radio Star" by The Buggles were inspired by this story of a world where audible music is superseded by developments in new technology.[2]

gollark: Sandboxing is actually pretty hard if you want to make most existing programs work about the same (but sandboxed). But Firewolf doesn't really have that excuse.
gollark: There are probably other holes.
gollark: But the unsafe bits were *removed*, instead of safe bits being *added*, so eventually `openTab` got added and it didn't get updated and so you can now execute stuff out of the sandbox on advanced computers.
gollark: Specifically, for some foolish reason they allowed webpages to access `shell`, without unsafe functions like `run`.
gollark: Sorry, blacklisting instead of whitelisting.

References

  1. "JG Ballard Book Cover Scans: 1960–61". The Terminal Collection. Retrieved 6 January 2009.
  2. Hodgkinson, Will (5 November 2004). "Horn of plenty". The Guardian. Retrieved 14 September 2008.



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