English Electronic Music: Delve into the Digital Archives

Posted 1 year 3 months ago by University of Huddersfield

Study Method : Online
Duration : 4 weeks
Subject : Media
Overview
Explore the history of English electronic music, while mastering techniques and approaches in digital music archiving.
Course Description

Trace the history of electronic music

Electronic music is the backbone of contemporary musical culture. We owe the studios and pioneers of the mid-20th century for laying the foundations of the electronic music we listen to today.

On this four-week course from the University of Huddersfield, you’ll trace electronic music back to its origins in the 1950s and 1960s. You’ll explore the lives and experience of the genre’s early trailblazers, the techniques they used, the attitudes they met with, and the impact they had on musical history.

Discover the origins and ideologies of early electronic music

Before homing in on the specifics of English electronic music, you’ll investigate the genre’s global roots.

You’ll compare different the philosophies and ideologies that helped to shape electronic music in Europe and America.

Understand Roberto Gerhard’s role in shaping the genre

In the third week of the course, you’ll learn more about the composer and musical scholar Roberto Gerhard.

You’ll explore Gerhard’s legacy on English electronic music, and ask why his pioneering contribution to the genre has largely been forgotten.

Master processes, techniques, and approaches in digital music archiving

In the final week of the course, you’ll discover how digital archiving can inform our understanding of musical history. You’ll get to grips with digital archiving processes, and identify the challenges of archiving analogue materials.

By the end of the course, you’ll know where electronic music came from, and how we can document it in the future.

This course is designed for anyone interested in the history of English electronic music, or in the process of archiving analogue music.

It will be particularly valuable to high school students completing coursework in music and music technology, or undergraduates studying electronic music at university.

Requirements

This course is designed for anyone interested in the history of English electronic music, or in the process of archiving analogue music.

It will be particularly valuable to high school students completing coursework in music and music technology, or undergraduates studying electronic music at university.

Career Path
  • Explain and critique the dominant ideologies that shaped electronic music in the 20th century
  • Assess electronic music to determine its structural forces and the techniques that shape its expression
  • Compare and contrast Roberto Gerhard’s approach to electronic music to that of other major practitioners of the time and his connections to the BBC Radiophonic Workshop
  • Identify and explain the main concerns in digitally archiving fragile, analogue materials
  • Assess the contribution archives make to our understanding of history