Neha Patil (Editor)

Minimal wave

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Derivative forms
  
Electropunk

Minimal wave Minimal Wave Free Listening on SoundCloud

Stylistic origins
  
Synthpop, post-punk, coldwave, new wave

Cultural origins
  
1970s and 1980s; Europe, UK, US

Typical instruments
  
Synthesisers, drum machine, circuit bending

Veronica vasicka minimal wave


Minimal wave is a contentiously named genre of electronic music which focuses on electronic, pre-MIDI (1982, but not pre-sequencer) instrumentation and themes of sincere, rather than ironic, detachment. It comprises obscure, atypical examples of genres such as new wave, so-called "minimal" electronic or synthesizer music, electropunk, synthpop, post-punk, coldwave, electroclash and electropop. Although much Minimal Wave music was created in the late 1970s and early 1980s and subsequently appeared on bootleg and one-off compilations, the genre didn't have a name until a record label of the same name began releasing compilations and reissues in the mid-2000s.

Contents

Minimal wave Minimal Wave Records Articles

Emergence

Minimal wave minimal wave TOTAL ECLIPSE

The Punk phenomenon of the 1970s created a challenge to the monopoly of the established recording studios, giving young performers the confidence to go live with relatively unpolished acts. In the post-punk era new technologies, especially cheaper synthesisers, in particular the Roland 303 and the Wasp, led to a popular expansion of electronic music styles. The music, especially in the original releases, generally has a D.I.Y. aesthetic; in the genre's original production era. Many of the emerging artists composed in their bedrooms and garages then exchanged works through cassette exchanges, bypassing the major vinyl producers and giving rise to the cassette culture of the 1980s.

Characteristics

Minimal wave Minimal Wave CDs and Vinyl at Discogs

Musicians in the genre were often influenced by avant-garde movements such as futurism and constructivism, and by the literature of science fiction and existentialism.

Minimal wave Various The Minimal Wave Tapes Vol 1 Stones Throw Records

The genre's hallmarks include minimal musical structures, relatively unpolished production, and the use of analog synthesizers and drum machines manufactured in the 1970s and 1980s. The instrumental arrangements featured "mechanical beats" and "short repetitive patterns", plus "noticeably synthesized drum programming and trebly, thin melodies" which emphasized the artificiality of synthesized sound. Vocal arrangements "acted as a counterpoint to that artificiality."

Geographic reach

Minimal wave Music Week Minimal Wave Desktop

In its heyday, the genre had subcultures all over the world, but was most notable in Europe (particularly the UK) and the US, where the machines used to create this type of music were readily available.

Minimal wave Various The Minimal Wave Tapes Vol 2 Stones Throw Records


The fanzine CLEM (Contact List Of Electronic Musicians) helped create a worldwide community of musicians in the genre, prior to the use of the Internet. Many of the musicians in the genre collaborated via mail.

Etymology

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Veronica Vasicka, founder of the Minimal Wave record label, claims to have coined the genre name. She said in a 2009 interview, "I had this collection of Dutch magazines from the early ’80s, and they kept using the terms "minimal electronics", "new wave", "coldwave" and a bunch of others. I kind of thought there should be a term that covers all this music, and I thought "minimal wave" could be it. When I registered the website, I was able to register the name.".

One author, reviewing one of the label's compilations, wrote "Minimal Wave as a synecdoche of a broader scene has been a term of contention for many. The phrase stems from Veronica Vasicka’s restoration project/record label of the same name, but has become something of a stand-in for the entire spectrum of music Vasicka championed."

Vasicka acknowledges the music is also included in other genres; in a 2009 publicity piece for the same compilation, she wrote "The Minimal Wave genre actually formed only several years ago, as a result of a resurgence of interest in the roots of pre-MIDI electronic new wave (1978-1985), mainly from North America, Europe and Japan. This music is sometimes referred to as minimal electronic, minimal synth, coldwave, new wave, technopop, or synthpop, depending on the particular style, year, and location of the band."

Notable artists

  • Absolute Body Control
  • Blancmange
  • Crash Course In Science
  • Felix Kubin
  • Final Program
  • KaS Product
  • Liaisons Dangereuses
  • Polyphonic Size
  • Solid Space
  • SPK
  • New scene artists from 2000

  • ADULT.
  • Sixth June
  • Black Marble
  • Noteworthy Examples of the Genre

    Most of the entries in this have been drawn from an article published by Veronica Vasicka in 2010, many of them pre-date her first use of the term

  • Oppenheimer Analysis Oppenheimer Analysis (Minimal Wave 12″, 2005)
  • Solid Space "Space Museum" (In Phaze MC, 1982)
  • Linear Movement "On The Screen" (Minimal Wave LP, 2008)
  • Unovidual + Tara Cross ‘Like I Am, Comme Je Suise’ (from Entropies, Micrart MC, 1986)
  • Borghesia "Ljubav Je Hladnija Od Smrti" (Fv Zalozba, Toto Alle Prese Coi Disci LP, 1985)
  • 1000 Ohm ‘A.G.N.E.S.’ (Ace Records 7″, 1979)
  • IKO "83" (Manhattan-Formula LP, 1982)
  • Ceramic Hello "The Absence of a Canary" (Mannequin Records LP, 1981)
  • Guyer’s Connection "Portrait" (Self-released LP, 1983)
  • Kym Amps ‘You Don’t Know My Name (But I Know You)’ (Diversion 7″)
  • Night Moves ‘Transdance’ (GC Recordings 12″, 1981)
  • Psychic Youth ‘Step In Time’ (Self-released 7″, 1982)
  • Snowy Red "The Right To Die" (Dirty Dancing LP, 1982)
  • Futurisk "Player Piano EP" (Clark Humphrey Records 7″, 1982)
  • Stephan Eicher "Stephan Eicher Spielt Noise Boys" (Off Course Records 7″, 1980)
  • Ruins "Fire" (CGD 12″, 1984)
  • Experimental Products "Prototype" (Short Circuit LP, 1982)
  • Circuit 7 ‘Video Boys’ (Rapp/Micro Records 7″, 1984)
  • A Blaze Colour ‘Against The Dark Trees Beyond’ (Self-released MC, 1981)
  • Stereo "Somewhere In The Night" (Minimal Wave LP, 1982/2008)
  • References

    Minimal wave Wikipedia