Perfect Music
Четверг, 30.01.2025, 17:01
Приветствую Вас Гость | RSS

Меню сайта

Чат

Вход

Статистика

Rambler's Top100 Яндекс.Метрика

Онлайн всего: 6
Гостей: 6
Пользователей: 0

Новых сегодня: 0

Новых вчера: 0

Новых за неделю: 0

Новых за месяц: 0

Комментарии

прикольный сборник bye

написал:  iGoshan
огромный плюс)

написал:  lover
hkjhkhk

написал:  ishka
thanks for thaT

написал:  kurva
Thanks 4 that 1 :)

написал:  untone
Thanks For That 1!!!

написал:  untone
i like you,music good

написал:  nbdjaming
Зачётный трек music

написал:  NoEu

Треки

Главная » Файлы » Треки » Описание стиля / The style description

Lo-Fi / Лоу-Фай
21.03.2011, 02:21
Lo-fi (from the term "Low fidelity") is a term used to describe music in which the sound is of a lower quality than the usual standard. The qualities of lo-fi are usually achieved by either degrading the quality of the recorded audio, or using certain equipment. Recent uses of the phrase have led to it becoming a genre, although it still remains as an aesthetic in music recording practice. Many lo-fi artists use inexpensive cassette tape recorders. The term was adopted by WFMU DJ William Berger who dedicated a half hour segment of his program to home recorded music throughout the late '80s under the name Lo-fi.

Lo-fi's roots can be dated as far back as a set of live cylinder recordings created in 1900–04 by Lionel Mapleson from a catwalk 40 ft (12 m) above the stage of the Metropolitan Opera. The sound quality of these "Mapleson Cylinders" is very poor (more so since they are one-of-a-kind artifacts that have been further worn down by being played over the last century); the aesthetic quality, though, partakes in the electric[citation needed], authentic feeling of an unedited event being captured in real time. In the same historical period, commercial field recordings of folk music had begun to be created in many nations of the world, recorded catch-as-catch-can by early record producers such as Fred Gaisberg of HMV. The description of "lo-fi", however, would be slightly amiss, since the intention of the recordists can be assumed[weasel words] to be to capture the recordings in as high a quality as was possible within certain pragmatic boundaries.

In a later era, Buddy Holly recorded some songs in a converted garage. Some posthumous Hank Williams demos were also overdubbed for commercial release. However, it was not until Bob Dylan decided in 1975 to officially release a set of The Basement Tapes, first recorded as music publisher demos in 1967, that the first lo-fi pop music milestone was reached. The music was really not originally intended for general release, the recordings, made on a consumer-quality Ampex quarter-track machine with two microphones set up for "dual mono", made a virtue of their flaws; with their asides, laughter and unselfconscious looseness, they defined the authenticity of the lo-fi experience. As a historical matter, in the years between the production and the official release, the popularity of these particular recordings also created the first market for pop bootleg records, which as a listening experience came to include seemingly every scrap of certain rock artists' off-the-cuff and unreleased work, including home recordings. Seminal early examples of this were the 1976 home-made debut album Phonography by pioneer DIY popster R. Stevie Moore and the 1976 debut album Carcass by lo-fi pioneer Sean Terrington Wright. Also, famed songwriter Lou Reed produced a version of the self-titled 3rd album by his band, The Velvet Underground. Its lo-fi, cramped sound became known as the closet mix. It was highly influential to up-and-coming indie lo-fi groups.

Lo-fi recordings became more commonly heard in the late seventies to early eighties with many electronic acts. In Monte A. Melnick's biographical book, On The Road with the Ramones, Thomas Erdelyi considers the band's first record to be a "great lo-fi album." Suicide's debut album is a large collection of Lo-fi classics, which Bruce Springsteen took inspiration from on his 1982 lo-fi album Nebraska. Other classic lo-fi's to appear around this time include Throbbing Gristle's "United", Thomas Leer's "Private Plane", The Normal's TVOD/Warm Leatherette single, and The Human League's "Being Boiled". Another UK classic Lo-fi band is the Young Marble Giants.

As a term to describe a musical genre, lo-fi is mainly associated with recordings from the 1980s onwards, when cassette technology such as Tascam's four-track Portastudio became widely available. Prime early exponents included Daniel Johnston, New Zealand bands such as the Tall Dwarfs, who recorded on Chris Knox's 4-track and released on Flying Nun Records, and Beat Happening and the Olympia, Washington label K Records. In the early-mid 1990s (1991–1998), Lo-fi found a wider audience with the success of such acts as Beck, Blur, Sebadoh, Guided by Voices, Smog, Mercury Rev, Pavement, Modest Mouse, Liz Phair, Will Oldham, Yo La Tengo, Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, Ween, David Kilgour and (later) (1999–2003) Elliott Smith, Neutral Milk Hotel, The Apples in Stereo, Dr. Dog, The Olivia Tremor Control, Elf Power, Beulah, Of Montreal, Mike Rifone, Sufjan Stevens and The Shins.

Often lo-fi artists will record on old or poor recording equipment, ostensibly out of financial necessity but also due to the unique aural association such technologies have with "authenticity", an association created in listeners by exposure to years of demo, bootleg, and field recordings, as well as to older pop studio recordings produced more simply. The growth in lo-fi coincided with the growth of extreme slickness and polish associated with the multitrack pop recording techniques of the 1980s.

Many artists associated with the lo-fi movement, such as Bill Callahan, or Bob Log III, have frequently rejected the use of finer recording equipment, trying to keep their sound raw instead, whereas others such as Guided by Voices and The Mountain Goats slowly moved to using professional studios.

The black metal genre embraced the lo-fi idea during the late 1980s and early 1990s as it strived to distance itself from pop music. Most bands recorded their albums on extremely low budgets, using four-track recorders and any other equipment they could use. The greatest example is the Darkthrone album Transilvanian Hunger, though almost all of their albums have an intentionally "lo-fi" sound quality. The band started as a clean , well produced technical death metal band before evolving their style and almost singlehandedly producing the low quality production style that would become common place in the black metal scene. Varg Vikernes of Black Metal band Burzum was also known to purposely use extremely lo-fi recording techniques on his albums. On the album Filosofem, Varg was said to have intentionally asked a local store for the cheapest microphone they had, and they sold him a headset, which he used to record vocals on the album. For guitar he was said to have used a distortion pedal to drive a stereo receiver, which made the extremely fuzzy, buzzing guitar tone found on the album. The term "raw" is generally preferred to "lo-fi" in black metal circles.

Currently, there is a growing scene of lo-fi bands in the United States and Canada. This recent wave of artists has been given the name shitgaze, due to the notable shoegaze influence as well as the extremely low-budget recording techniques. Notable bands and solo artists include Two Gallants, Wavves, No Age, Times New Viking, Rogue Wave, Best Coast, Gonjasufi, Vivian Girls, Former Ghosts, Zola Jesus and Glass Graves.

There is also an even newer trend of Lo-fi Goth bands, which incorporate influence from Noise, deathrock, new wave, and hardcore punk. This scene grew out of an influx of ex-deathrock revivalists into the indie music scene.

Ло́у-фай (англ. Lo-fi, от low fidelity — низкое качество) — направление в музыке, для которого характерно низкое качество записи звука. Многие лоу-фай-группы записывают свою музыку на дешевые кассетные рекордеры. Это своеобразная форма протеста, которая присуща альтернативному року.

Лоу-фай движение началось довольно давно. Все ранние рок-н-ролльные записи (Бадди Холли, The Beach Boys, Beatles), гаражный рок 1960-х, альбомы The Velvet Underground, панк-рок конца 1970-х можно отнести к лоу-фаю.

Однако, как отдельный жанр, лоу-фай выделился в альтернативном роке 1980-х. Тогдашние инди-рокеры предпочитали записываться на непрофессиональных четырёхдорожечных магнитофонах.

В Советском Союзе концептом лоу-фай осознанно пользовалась только группа ДК (1980—1990) [1], а также признававшая на себе огромное её влияние Гражданская оборона (и другие проекты и продюсерские работы Егора Летова) — при том, что весь советский рок того времени ненарочно и вынужденно имел лоу-файное звучание, но всячески стремился от него избавиться.

Лоу-фай приобрёл широкую известность лишь в 1990-х благодаря таким группам, как Beck, Sebadoh и Pavement.

На сегодняшний день многие релизные группы mp3 сцены используют термин Lo-Fi, помещая его в ID3 тэги жанра музыки, чтобы обозначить принадлежность того или иного mp3 релиза к стилю тихой, спокойной и красивой музыки с медленным ритмом: chillout, lounge, downtempo, trip-hop, acid jazz и т. п.

Special For perfect-music.ru / Специально для perfect-music.ru

Категория: Описание стиля / The style description | Добавил: Perfect-Music | Теги: Lo-Fi
Просмотров: 647 | Рейтинг: 0.0/0

Радио

Поиск

Опрос

За каким стилем будущее электронной музыки?
Всего ответов: 1075