Contribution to Book
Timbral Thievery: Synthesizers and Sonic Materiality
The Oxford Handbook of Timbre
(2018)
Abstract
Timbre often indexes an instrument’s materiality, and timbral variation often correlates with a player’s actions. Yet synthesizers complicate phenomenological links between sound and source. This chapter juxtaposes three instruments: an electromagnetic tuning-fork apparatus, developed by the nineteenth-century scientist Hermann von Helmholtz; the RCA Mark II, used by Milton Babbitt and other mid-twentieth-century composers; and the Yamaha GX-1, a large polyphonic synthesizer from the 1970s, played by Stevie Wonder and Keith Emerson. These synthesizers create new timbres and also imitate acoustic instruments, in a process that Robert Moog calls “timbral thievery.” Such imitations can provoke exaggerated or anxious discussions of synthetic and natural timbre. At the same time, performers may showcase the gap between timbre and instrument, exploiting a sense of uncanny or ambiguous sound sources for varied expressive ends. Ultimately, then, synthesizers help musicians both produce and conceptualize timbre.
Keywords
- timbre,
- synthesizer,
- musical instruments,
- critical organology,
- phenomenology,
- acoustics,
- Hermann von Helmholtz,
- Milton Babbitt,
- Stevie Wonder,
- Keith Emerson
Disciplines
- Music and
- Musicology
Publication Date
2018
Editor
Emily I. Dolan and Alexander Rehding
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Citation Information
Jonathan De Souza. "Timbral Thievery: Synthesizers and Sonic Materiality" New YorkThe Oxford Handbook of Timbre (2018) Available at: http://works.bepress.com/jonathan-desouza/9/