Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The book was re-released in 2006 in a new hardback edition. In his study on Throbbing Gristle's third album, Drew Daniel points out that the Handbook included «extensive "reference" sections» which allowed the devotees to absorb the history of the bands and «the network of industrial music and noise radiating outwards of it».
This category contains articles about "how-to" books, instruction manuals, and guides to other practical topics. See Category:Self-help books for books on popular psychology and self-improvement. Contents
Industrial music is a form of experimental music which emerged in the 1970s. In the 1980s, industrial splintered into a range of offshoots, sometimes collectively named post-industrial music. [1] This list details some of these offshoots, including fusions with other experimental and electronic music genres as well as rock, folk, heavy metal ...
IEEE Xplore (stylized as IEEE Xplore) digital library is a research database for discovery and access to journal articles, conference proceedings, technical standards, and related materials on computer science, electrical engineering and electronics, and allied fields.
The Hawkins Electrical Guide was a technical engineering book written by Nehemiah Hawkins, first published in 1914, intended to explain the highly complex principles of the new technology of electricity in a way that could be understood by the common man.
A music library contains music-related materials for patron use. Collections may also include non-print materials, such as digitized music scores or audio recordings . Use of such materials may be limited to specific patron groups, especially in private academic institutions .
The book is an attempt to chart the history of industrial music as a genre from its early influences (including art music, Italian Futurism, Situationism, and the works of Antonin Artaud and William S. Burroughs) to the present day (including its connections to political radicalism, the gothic subculture, and dance music).
Electro-industrial is a music genre that emerged from industrial music in the early 1980s. While EBM (electronic body music) has a minimal structure and clean production, electro-industrial tends to have a grittier, complex and layered sound with a more experimental [ 1 ] approach.