David Novak is Assistant Professor of Music at the University of California, Santa Barbara.
Request Academic Copy
Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form
Description
Acknowledgments vii Introduction 1 1. Scenes of Liveness and Deadness 28 2. Sonic Maps of the Japanese Underground 64 3. Listening to Noise in Kansai 92 4. Genre Noise 117 5. Feedback, Subjectivity, and Performance 139 6. Japanoise and Technoculture 169 7. The Future of Cassette Culture 198 Epilogue: A Strange History 227 Notes 235 References 259 Index 279
"Edgy, compelling, and sharply insightful, this is the definitive book on Japanoise. Through his personal involvement in Noise scenes across two continents and over two decades, David Novak takes readers into the experience of Noise: its production and performance through apparati of wires, pedals, amplifiers, and tape loops, its intensity on the stage and in one's ears and body." - Anne Allison,author of Millennial Monsters: Japanese Toys and the Global Imagination "This is a striking book: theoretically exciting, aesthetically intriguing, and well crafted. Japanoise is an extreme case study of modern musical subjectivity that demonstrates how core cultural ideas are formed on the fringe. Novak's treatment of circulation as embedded in the creative process will shift the debate in ethnomusicology, popular music studies, and global media studies." - Louise Meintjes,author of Sound of Africa! Making Music Zulu in a South African Studio "The book should prove particularly interesting to musicians; Novak has done a good job in describing the instrumental set up of the artists whose shows he watches. Just as interesting, though, is hearing that members of Boredoms were once welcomed as "noise idols" on mainstream Japanese TV in the 1990s - I'm sure the many Arashi variety shows on air could benefit from the likes of Merzbow showing up."--JapanTimes.co.jp