Monumental Movement Podcast

Joy Division to New Order: The Manchester Sound Evolution

22 min · 6. kesä 2026
jakson Joy Division to New Order: The Manchester Sound Evolution kansikuva

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This episode explores the evolution of the Manchester sound through the transition from Joy Division to New Order—a transformation that reshaped the relationship between post-punk, electronic music, and club culture. Emerging from the industrial landscape of Manchester, Joy Division established a stark, introspective aesthetic defined by minimal arrangements, rhythmic restraint, and emotional intensity. Following the death of Ian Curtis, the remaining members reformed as New Order, shifting toward synthesis, rhythm machines, and dancefloor-oriented structures. This transition did not abandon the past, but reconfigured it—retaining emotional depth while embracing electronic innovation and rhythmic expansion. Technologically, the adoption of synthesizers, sequencers, and drum machines enabled a new sonic identity, where repetition and melody intersect with club-oriented production. Tracks such as Blue Monday exemplify this fusion, bridging underground experimentation with global accessibility. Historically, this evolution reflects broader cultural shifts in the late 20th century: the rise of club culture, the integration of electronic instruments into popular music, and the transformation of post-punk into new wave and beyond. This episode analyzes the Manchester sound as process of transformation—where loss, technology, and cultural context converge. Through history, aesthetics, and sonic identity, we explore how Joy Division and New Order redefined modern music’s emotional and structural possibilities. 【Related Column】From Joy Division to New Order: The evolution of Manchester sound https://monumental-movement.jp/en/Column-Joy-Division-New-Order/

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jakson New Age Steppers: Post-Punk and Dub’s Revolutionary Collision kansikuva

New Age Steppers: Post-Punk and Dub’s Revolutionary Collision

This episode explores the revolutionary collision between post-punk and dub through the work of New Age Steppers, a fluid collective that transformed rhythm, space, and political atmosphere into a radically hybrid sound. Emerging from the experimental networks surrounding On-U Sound Records, the project became a crucial meeting point between punk’s fractured energy and dub’s spatial consciousness. We trace the role of producer Adrian Sherwood, whose studio techniques—echo, delay, bass manipulation, and tape experimentation—redefined recording itself as compositional process. Rather than treating songs as fixed structures, New Age Steppers approached music as unstable environment: rhythms dissolve into reverb, vocals emerge and disappear, and silence becomes active element. Historically, the group reflects the cultural intersections of late 1970s and early 1980s Britain, where Caribbean sound system culture and post-punk experimentation converged within politically charged urban environments. Collaboration and fluid membership reinforced the collective’s open-ended identity. Technologically, dub production methods transformed the mixing desk into instrument, while post-punk minimalism introduced tension, fragmentation, and emotional ambiguity. Together, these approaches generated a sound both physical and atmospheric. This episode analyzes New Age Steppers as architecture of collision—where bass, space, and disruption create new forms of sonic resistance. Through history, production techniques, and cultural context, we explore how post-punk and dub reshaped each other into a lasting experimental language. 【Related Column】New Age Steppers: The revolution of an action label that reconnected the strata of post-punk and dub https://monumental-movement.jp/en/column-new-age-steppers/

28. kesä 202617 min
jakson Noise Music and the Death of Melody kansikuva

Noise Music and the Death of Melody

What happens when music abandons melody? What remains when harmony, rhythm, and traditional song structures are stripped away? For many listeners, the answer might seem obvious: What remains is no longer music. Yet for more than a century, artists around the world have challenged that assumption. They have asked a radical question: What if noise itself can become music? This is the story of noise music. A genre—or perhaps anti-genre—that fundamentally challenged how we define listening, sound, and musical expression. The roots of noise music reach back to the early twentieth century. In 1913, Italian Futurist artist Luigi Russolo published The Art of Noises, a manifesto arguing that industrial society had created entirely new sound environments. Factories. Engines. Machines. Urban life. Russolo believed music should embrace these sounds rather than exclude them. His ideas would prove remarkably influential. Throughout the twentieth century, composers increasingly questioned traditional musical boundaries. Experimental figures such as John Cage explored chance, silence, and the musical potential of everyday sounds. By the 1960s and 1970s, avant-garde artists were actively dismantling conventional assumptions about composition and performance. At the same time, industrialization, mass media, and technological change were transforming the soundscape of modern life. Noise was no longer an exception. It had become a permanent part of everyday existence. This cultural context helped prepare the ground for noise music. In the late 1970s and 1980s, a more aggressive form emerged. Artists such as Merzbow, Masonna, Whitehouse, and Hijokaidan pushed sound toward extremes. Distortion. Feedback. Electronic interference. Volume. Texture. In many works, melody seemed to disappear entirely. Traditional musical signposts were deliberately removed. For some listeners, this felt confrontational. For others, it felt liberating. Noise music challenged the assumption that music must be beautiful, pleasant, or emotionally comforting. Instead, it treated sound as raw material. A noise artist might focus on texture rather than melody. Density rather than harmony. Physical sensation rather than narrative structure. The experience often becomes less about following a song and more about inhabiting a sonic environment. This shift raises a philosophical question: Is melody necessary for music? Western musical traditions have often prioritized melody as a central organizing principle. Yet many forms of music throughout history have emphasized rhythm, texture, repetition, or timbre instead. Noise music pushed this logic to its furthest extreme. What if sound itself is enough? What if listening does not require recognizable patterns? Interestingly, noise music shares unexpected similarities with other experimental traditions. Minimalism. Drone music. Industrial music. Free improvisation. Even certain forms of ambient music. All explore what happens when conventional musical expectations are suspended. Noise simply does so more radically. Japan became one of the most important centers of noise culture. The international influence of artists such as Merzbow helped establish what many listeners call "Japanoise." This movement became known for its intensity, physicality, and uncompromising approach to sound. Yet beneath the apparent chaos often lies remarkable attention to detail. Many noise artists carefully sculpt frequencies, dynamics, and texture. What sounds random may in fact be highly intentional. By the 2000s, noise music's influence had spread far beyond underground scenes. Elements of noise appeared in electronic music, experimental hip-hop, metal, contemporary classical music, and sound art. Artists increasingly blurred distinctions between music and noise. The boundary itself became unstable. Today, noise remains controversial. Some listeners hear only chaos. Others hear complexity. Some hear aggression. Others hear freedom.

28. kesä 202615 min
jakson Aphex Twin: The Architecture of Controlled Chaos kansikuva

Aphex Twin: The Architecture of Controlled Chaos

This episode explores the architecture of controlled chaos in the work of Aphex Twin, one of the most influential and enigmatic figures in electronic music history. Through intricate rhythm programming, unstable textures, and emotional ambiguity, Aphex Twin transformed electronic composition into a space where disorder and precision coexist. We trace the evolution of projects such as Selected Ambient Works 85-92 and later experimental releases that pushed breakbeats, micro-rhythms, and synthesis into unfamiliar territory. His music combines melodic fragility with machine-like complexity, often balancing serene ambience against abrupt sonic disruption. Technologically, Aphex Twin’s work reflects deep engagement with synthesizers, drum machines, custom software, and unconventional programming methods. Rhythms fragment and reassemble at extreme speed, yet remain structurally coherent—revealing a compositional logic beneath apparent chaos. Historically, his influence extends across IDM, ambient, techno, drill’n’bass, and experimental sound design, shaping how electronic music approaches texture, unpredictability, and emotional nuance. His work challenged assumptions that machine-generated music must be cold or rigid. This episode analyzes controlled chaos as sonic philosophy—where instability becomes structure, and complexity becomes expressive force. Through history, technology, and aesthetics, we explore how Aphex Twin redefined the possibilities of electronic listening and composition. 【Related Coluimn】Aphex Twin's philosophical view of music: coexistence of order and disorder https://monumental-movement.jp/en/column-aphex-twin/

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jakson The Evolution of Sound: From Analog Grooves to Spatial Audio kansikuva

The Evolution of Sound: From Analog Grooves to Spatial Audio

This episode explores the evolution of recorded sound—from analog grooves to immersive spatial audio—tracing how technological innovation continually reshapes the way humans experience music. Across more than a century of audio history, recording has evolved from mechanical inscription into multidimensional sonic architecture. We begin with early analog formats such as vinyl records and magnetic tape, where physical grooves and electromagnetic signals captured sound as tangible material. These technologies introduced warmth, saturation, and noise characteristics that became inseparable from the emotional identity of recorded music. Engineers and producers learned to use limitations creatively, transforming fidelity itself into aesthetic choice. The episode then follows the transition into digital recording, compact discs, and computer-based production environments, where editing precision and distribution radically expanded. Artists and engineers gained unprecedented control over timing, layering, and spatial placement, enabling increasingly complex sound design. We also examine the rise of immersive listening technologies, including surround sound and spatial audio, where sound moves beyond stereo into three-dimensional environments. In these systems, listening becomes navigational—music surrounds the listener rather than merely facing them. Historically, each shift in audio technology reshaped listening culture itself: from collective radio experiences to personal headphones and algorithm-driven streaming ecosystems. The evolution of sound is therefore not only technical, but social and perceptual. This episode analyzes audio history as transformation of space, materiality, and human attention. Through engineering, media theory, and aesthetics, we explore how recorded sound evolved from physical grooves into immersive digital environments that redefine contemporary listening. 【Related Column】"From the sound of a needle to streaming, sound continues to live on through time." From the era of rewind to the era of infinite skip https://monumental-movement.jp/en/Column-Media-Types/

Eilen21 min
jakson Amapiano: The African Sound Revolutionizing Global Dance Music kansikuva

Amapiano: The African Sound Revolutionizing Global Dance Music

This episode outlines the rise of Amapiano, a revolutionary music genre originating from South Africa that has achieved global dominance. It describes how this style emerged by blending jazz, deep house, and Kwaito, characterized specifically by its signature log drum basslines and relaxed tempo. Unlike traditional industry-driven hits, the sources explain that the movement spread through local taxi culture and viral TikTok dance challenges rather than major label marketing. By attracting the attention of international pop stars, the genre has shifted the cultural flow, making Africa a primary exporter of musical trends. Ultimately, the text presents Amapiano as a new musical language that prioritizes community and groove over high-intensity digital stimulation.

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