Monumental Movement Podcast
This episode explores the evolution of lo-fi and bedroom folk recording culture—an aesthetic where limitation becomes identity, and intimacy replaces studio perfection. From early home recording experiments to today’s digital-native workflows, lo-fi emerges as both technical condition and philosophical stance. We trace its lineage through artists such as Daniel Johnston and Elliott Smith, whose cassette-based recordings and minimal setups foreground vulnerability, imperfection, and direct emotional transmission. Tape hiss, room noise, and unpolished takes become integral to the sonic identity rather than flaws to be corrected. Technologically, the shift from analog portastudios to laptops and digital audio workstations expanded accessibility while preserving the ethos of independence. Microphones, interfaces, and software allow artists to construct personal recording environments—spaces where composition, performance, and production converge. Historically, bedroom recording reflects a broader democratization of music-making, where distribution platforms enable global reach without traditional industry infrastructure. The aesthetic continues to evolve, influencing indie folk, ambient, and experimental scenes. This episode analyzes lo-fi as design philosophy: constraint as catalyst, imperfection as texture, and proximity as emotional force. Through history, technology, and aesthetics, we explore how bedroom folk recording reshapes the relationship between artist, space, and listener. 【Related Column】The genealogy of Lo-Fi Folk / Bedroom Folk and the deepening of home recording culture https://monumental-movement.jp/en/column-lo-fi-folk-bedroom-folk/
180 episodios
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