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  2. List of electronic music genres - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_electronic_music...

    In its early development, electronic music was associated almost exclusively with Western art music, but from the late 1960s, the availability of affordable music technology—particularly of synthesizers—meant that music produced using electronic means became increasingly common in the popular domains of rock and pop music and classical ...

  3. Noise music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noise_music

    Noise music is a genre of music that is characterised by the expressive use of noise. This type of music tends to challenge the distinction that is made in conventional musical practices between musical and non-musical sound. [4] Noise music includes a wide range of musical styles and sound-based creative practices that feature noise as a ...

  4. Free improvisation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_improvisation

    Free improvisation, as a genre of music, developed primarily in the U.K. as well as the U.S. and Europe in the mid to late 1960s, largely as an outgrowth of free jazz and contemporary classical music. Exponents of free improvised music include saxophonists Evan Parker, Anthony Braxton, Peter Brötzmann, and John Zorn, composer Pauline Oliveros ...

  5. Power electronics (music genre) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_electronics_(music...

    Power electronics is a style of noise music that typically consists of static, screeching waves of feedback, analogue synthesizers making sub-bass pulses or high frequency squealing sounds, with sometimes screamed and distorted vocals.

  6. Electroacoustic music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electroacoustic_music

    The initial developments in electroacoustic music composition to fixed media during the 20th century are associated with the activities of the Groupe de recherches musicales at the ORTF in Paris, the home of musique concrète, the Studio for Electronic Music in Cologne, where the focus was on the composition of elektronische Musik, and the ...

  7. Glitch (music) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glitch_(music)

    Glitch is a genre of electronic music that emerged in the 1990s which is distinguished by the deliberate use of glitch-based audio media and other sonic artifacts. [1]The glitching sounds featured in glitch tracks usually come from audio recording device or digital electronics malfunctions, such as CD skipping, electric hum, digital or analog distortion, circuit bending, bit-rate reduction ...

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  9. White Noise (band) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Noise_(band)

    White Noise are an English experimental electronic music band formed in London in 1968, after American-born David Vorhaus, a classical bass player with a background in physics and electronic engineering, attended a lecture by Delia Derbyshire, a sound scientist at the BBC Radiophonic Workshop. [2]