Monumental Movement Podcast

Glitch: The Aesthetics of the Broken Moment

18 min · 28. maj 2026
episode Glitch: The Aesthetics of the Broken Moment cover

Description

This episode explores Glitch as the aesthetics of the broken moment—where error, interruption, and digital artifact become compositional material. Emerging in the late 1990s and early 2000s, glitch reframed technological failure not as limitation, but as creative resource. We trace its development through artists such as Oval and Alva Noto, whose work transformed clicks, skips, and corrupted data into precise sonic language. Drawing from microsound theory and minimalism, glitch operates at the threshold of perception—where tiny fragments of sound construct complex rhythmic and textural systems. Technologically, the genre is inseparable from digital media: CDs, software errors, buffer glitches, and data manipulation techniques become instruments. Editing environments allow artists to isolate, repeat, and structure these micro-events, turning instability into controlled aesthetic. This episode analyzes glitch as philosophy of imperfection—where fragmentation, discontinuity, and absence redefine musical form. Through history, technology, and aesthetics, we explore how broken moments reveal new possibilities of listening in the digital age. 【Related Column】Glitch: When noise turns into beauty https://monumental-movement.jp/en/Column-Glitch/

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Monumental Movement Podcast community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

227 episodes

episode Sound of Borders: Mapping Three Nations of Euro Music artwork

Sound of Borders: Mapping Three Nations of Euro Music

This episode explores the sound of borders through the musical landscapes of three European nations—examining how geography, migration, language, and political history shape distinct yet interconnected sonic identities. Across Europe, music continuously crosses boundaries while preserving traces of local memory and cultural specificity. We trace how electronic music, folk traditions, and experimental scenes evolved differently in cities such as Berlin, Paris, and Manchester, where industrial history, immigration, and youth culture generated unique musical ecosystems. These urban centers became nodes within broader continental networks of exchange. The episode examines how genres such as techno, chanson, post-punk, and ambient absorbed transnational influences while maintaining regional character. Artists and communities moved across borders, carrying rhythms, technologies, and aesthetic ideas that transformed local scenes into hybrid cultural spaces. Technologically, the expansion of radio broadcasting, vinyl distribution, club networks, and digital platforms accelerated the circulation of European music, allowing underground movements to evolve into global phenomena. Yet local architecture, language, and social structure continue to shape how music is produced and experienced. This episode analyzes European music culture as cartography of sound—where borders function not only as divisions, but as zones of exchange and transformation. Through history, urban studies, and sonic aesthetics, we explore how three nations reveal the layered geography of contemporary European music culture. 【Related Column】"Euro sounds" change depending on national borders: Italy, Germany, and Sweden: Differences in Euro music produced by the three major producing countries https://monumental-movement.jp/en/Column-Euro-Sound/

Yesterday22 min
episode The Sound of Disappearance: Angine de Poitrine and Artistic Anonymity artwork

The Sound of Disappearance: Angine de Poitrine and Artistic Anonymity

This episode examines the artistic and political philosophy behind Angine de Poitrine, a musical project that prioritizes anonymity over celebrity culture. By intentionally removing the creator’s identity, the artist challenges a modern attention economy that often values personal branding and social media presence more than the actual compositions. This approach draws on historical and philosophical concepts, such as the "Death of the Author," to argue that a lack of biographical context allows for a more intimate and unbiased listening experience. Ultimately, the source suggests that refusing visibility serves as a radical form of resistance against the commodification of individuals. Such silence does not represent an absence of meaning but rather empowers the listener to project their own emotions and interpretations onto the music.

Yesterday19 min
episode Grateful Dead and the San Francisco Musical Commune artwork

Grateful Dead and the San Francisco Musical Commune

This episode explores the communal world of Grateful Dead and the broader musical culture that emerged in **San Francisco during the 1960s and 1970s. More than a rock band, the Grateful Dead became the center of an evolving social ecosystem where improvisation, collective experience, and countercultural ideals converged. We trace the group’s origins within the psychedelic scene surrounding the Summer of Love, where communal living, experimental art, and expanded consciousness shaped new approaches to music and performance. Their concerts emphasized unpredictability and open-ended improvisation, transforming songs into constantly evolving structures shaped by audience energy and interaction. Historically, the Grateful Dead helped establish alternative touring networks, independent fan communities, and tape-sharing cultures that anticipated later participatory media systems. The relationship between performers and listeners became unusually reciprocal, dissolving traditional boundaries between artist and audience. Technologically, the band also pushed innovations in live sound reinforcement and recording. Massive custom audio systems and extended live documentation reflected a commitment to clarity, immersion, and sonic exploration. This episode analyzes the Grateful Dead as architects of musical communality—where improvisation becomes social structure and live performance becomes temporary autonomous space. Through history, technology, and cultural theory, we explore how the San Francisco musical commune reshaped ideas of music, community, and collective experience. 【Related Column】The Grateful Dead and San Francisco: A complete record of the musical community born of the counterculture https://monumental-movement.jp/en/column-gratefuldead-sanfrancisco/

4. juli 202619 min
episode Rara: The Sacred Sound and Social Memory of Haiti artwork

Rara: The Sacred Sound and Social Memory of Haiti

This episode explores Rara as a sacred sound system and living archive of Haitian social memory. Emerging through processions, ritual practice, and communal performance, Rara exists at the intersection of spirituality, resistance, and collective identity within **Haiti>. We trace the historical roots of Rara through Afro-Caribbean traditions, Vodou ceremonial structures, and postcolonial cultural expression. Bamboo trumpets, percussion, call-and-response vocals, and cyclical rhythms create a mobile sonic environment where music functions simultaneously as ritual communication, political commentary, and communal celebration. Historically, Rara processions have occupied public space as forms of social gathering and cultural continuity, often carrying encoded messages related to resistance, inequality, and historical memory. The music’s repetitive structures and participatory nature reinforce collective identity through movement and sound. Technologically, Rara retains strong connections to handmade acoustic instrumentation and street-based performance, emphasizing physical presence and environmental acoustics rather than studio refinement. Yet recordings and global circulation have introduced these traditions to wider audiences while raising questions about preservation and transformation. This episode analyzes Rara as sonic memory—where rhythm becomes historical transmission and procession becomes living archive. Through history, spirituality, and sound culture, we explore how Haitian musical traditions continue to sustain communal resilience and cultural continuity across generations. 【Related Column】Rara: Festival music and social memory resounding on the streets of Haiti https://monumental-movement.jp/en/column-haiti-rara/

4. juli 202619 min