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  2. Ebooks
  3. Shock Factory

EBOOK

Shock Factory

The Visual Culture Of Industrial Music

Nicolas BalletSeries: Global Punk
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Year
2025
Language
English
Publisher
Intellect Books

About

Industrial music appeared in the mid-1970s, and far from being a simple sound experimentation phenomenon, it quickly spawned a coherent visual culture operating at the intersection of a multitude of media (collage, mail art, installation, film, performance, sound, video) and initiated a close inspection of the legacy of modernity and the growing, pervasive influence of technology.





Originally British, the movement soon outgrew Europe, extending into the United States and Japan during the 1980s. The sound experiments conducted by industrial bands – designing synthesizers, manipulating and transforming recorded sounds from audio tapes, either recycled or laid down by the artists – were backed up by a rich array of radical visual productions, deriving their sources from the modernist utopias of the first part of the 20th century. Such saturated sounds were translated into abrasive images, manipulated through the détournement of reprographic techniques (Xerox art), that investigated polemical themes: mind control, criminality, occultism, pornography, psychiatry and totalitarianism, among others.





This book introduces the visual and aesthetic elements of 1970s and 1980s industrial culture to a general history of contemporary art by analysing the different approaches taken and topics addressed by the primary protagonists of the movement, who perceptively anticipated the current discourse concerning the media and their collective coercive power.

Related Subjects

  • Film & Video
  • Art
  • Adult Nonfiction
  • Mixed Media
  • Performance
  • 20th & 21st Century
  • History

Extended Details

  • SeriesGlobal Punk

    Reviews

    "A history of industrial music needed to be written. Nicolas Ballet has accomplished this. Thoroughly. This is the book's greatest strength. It explore the significance of noise as a reflection of a world in decay and screaming as a need. And doing it so it reveals a significant connection between industrial music and contemporary art. This is also what makes it an essential book: its contribution
    David G. Torres, art critic
    "'A beautiful and somewhat seminal exploration of industrial culture that would certainly appeal to aficionados of the genre, but also to those who want to explore the more academic elements of a scene that ran side by side with punk. With a plethora of illustrations and exhaustive details collated together, this is a vade mecum for those who opt to explore more than just the clang of industria
    Lee Powell, Vive Le Rock magazine

    Artists

    Nicolas BalletAuthor