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Glossary›Noise Music

Glossary

Noise Music

An experimental genre that uses dissonance, distortion, feedback, and non-musical sounds as primary compositional elements, rejecting traditional melody and harmony.

What is Noise Music?

Noise music is an experimental genre that employs dissonance, atonality, distortion, feedback, and non-traditional sound sources as core compositional materials rather than incidental effects. Unlike conventional music built on melody, harmony, and rhythm, noise music treats all sounds—including those typically considered “unmusical” such as static, industrial clamor, or electronic hiss—as valid aesthetic content. The genre challenges fundamental assumptions about what constitutes music, often creating immersive sonic environments that bypass intellectual analysis to provoke visceral, sometimes meditative responses in listeners.

Origins & Lineage

The theoretical foundations emerged in Luigi Russolo’s 1913 Futurist manifesto “The Art of Noises” (L’arte dei Rumori), which argued that the Industrial Revolution had expanded the human ear’s capacity to appreciate complex sounds. Russolo built mechanical noise instruments called intonarumori to realize his vision.

The mid-20th century saw John Cage’s 1952 composition “4’33"” reframe silence and ambient sound as music, while Edgard Varèse incorporated sirens and industrial sounds into orchestral works. The 1960s-70s brought Fluxus movement experiments and early industrial groups like Throbbing Gristle, who coined the term “industrial music” in 1976.

Japanese noise (Japanoise) crystallized the genre’s aesthetic in the late 1970s through artists like Merzbow (Masami Akita), who began recording in 1979, and the Hijokaidan collective. The term “harsh noise” emerged to describe the maximalist, uncompromising approach of this scene. Simultaneously, American No Wave bands and power electronics acts explored aggressive sonic textures through different cultural lenses.

How It’s Practiced

Noise musicians employ diverse methods: analog synthesizers generating raw oscillations, contact microphones amplifying resonant objects, guitar pedals pushed into extreme feedback, cassette tape manipulation, circuit-bent children’s toys, field recordings of machinery or natural phenomena, and digital granular synthesis. Performances often involve physical gesture—turning knobs, striking metal, manipulating electronics in real time—making the creation process visible.

The listening experience ranges from overwhelming walls of distortion that flood perception to subtle textural compositions revealing fine sonic detail. Some practitioners work in the harsh noise tradition of unrelenting intensity; others create drone-based pieces that encourage meditative states through sustained tones and gradual transformation. Improvisational approaches are common, with performers responding intuitively to emerging sounds rather than following predetermined structures.

Noise Music Today

Contemporary noise exists across underground venue performances, boutique cassette and vinyl labels, experimental music festivals, and online communities. Events like No Fun Fest (2004-2009, sporadically thereafter) and labels such as Hospital Productions, RRRecords, and Editions Mego have sustained the ecosystem. Academic institutions occasionally host noise performances within electronic music or sound art programs.

The genre has influenced ambient, drone metal, and experimental electronic music while remaining largely underground. Some practitioners frame their work within sound healing, vibrational therapy, or consciousness exploration contexts, though this remains controversial within the noise community. Meditation practitioners occasionally use dense drone or harsh noise recordings as objects of concentration or to disrupt habitual thought patterns.

Common Misconceptions

Noise music is not simply loud or chaotic rock music, nor is it random sound without intention. Most noise artists work with deliberate aesthetic choices, even when embracing unpredictability. The genre is not inherently therapeutic or spiritual—many practitioners reject these framings entirely, viewing noise as confrontational art or political statement rather than healing modality.

It is not “anti-music” in a nihilistic sense but rather an expansion of musical possibility. Not all noise is harsh; the term encompasses quiet, delicate work and slow-moving drone pieces. The genre’s relationship with consciousness exploration is individual rather than inherent to the form.

How to Begin

New listeners might start with accessible entry points: Fennesz’s “Endless Summer” (2001) blends melody with textural noise, while Tim Hecker’s “Ravedeath, 1972” (2011) offers immersive drone-noise atmospheres. For harsher aesthetics, Merzbow’s “Pulse Demon” (1996) represents the genre’s maximalist extreme.

Attending live performances provides context often absent from recordings. Small experimental venues, DIY spaces, and university electronic music departments occasionally host noise events. The book “Noise & Capitalism” edited by Mattin and Anthony Iles examines the genre’s theoretical dimensions, while “Japanoise: Music at the Edge of Circulation” by David Novak provides cultural and historical analysis.

Creating noise requires minimal equipment: a single guitar pedal, contact microphone, or free software like Audacity can generate source material. Online communities and labels often welcome new artists regardless of technical background.

Related terms

sound healingdrone musicambient musicexperimental musicvibrational therapydeep listening
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