Edinburgh Research Archive

Following the instruments and users: the mutual shaping of digital sampling technologies

dc.contributor.advisor
Frith, Simon
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dc.contributor.advisor
Prior, Nicholas
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dc.contributor.author
Harkins, Paul Michael
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dc.date.accessioned
2017-07-20T13:03:56Z
dc.date.available
2017-07-20T13:03:56Z
dc.date.issued
2016-11-24
dc.description.abstract
The socio-musical practice of sampling is closely associated with the re-use of pre-existing sound recordings and the technological processes of looping. These practices, based on appropriation and repetition, have been particularly common within the genres of hip-hop and Electronic Dance Music (EDM). Yet early digital sampling instruments such as the Fairlight Computer Musical Instrument (CMI) were not designed for these purposes. The technologists at Fairlight Instruments in Australia were primarily interested in the use of digital synthesis to imitate the sounds of acoustic instruments; sampling was a secondary concern. In the first half of the thesis, I follow digital sampling instruments like the Fairlight CMI and the E-mu Emulator by drawing on interviews with their designers and users to trace how they were used to sample the sounds of everyday life, loop sequenced patterns of sampled sounds, and sample extracts from pre-existing sound recordings. The second half of the thesis consists of case studies that follow the users of digital sampling technologies across a range of socio-musical worlds to examine the diversity of contemporary sampling practices. Using concepts from the field of Science and Technology Studies (STS), this thesis focuses on the ‘user-technology nexus’ and continues a shift in the writing of histories of technologies from a focus on the designers of technologies towards the contexts of use and ‘the co-construction’ or ‘mutual shaping’ of technologies and their users. As an example of the ‘interpretative flexibility’ of music technologies, digital sampling technologies were used in ways unimagined by their designers and sampling became synonymous with re-appropriation. My argument is that a history of digital sampling technologies needs to be a history of both the designers and the users of digital sampling technologies.
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/22943
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.relation.hasversion
Brøvig-Hanssen, R. & Harkins, P. 2012. Contextual Incongruity and Musical Congruity: the aesthetics and humour of mash-ups. Popular Music. 31:1. pp. 87–104
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dc.subject
digital sampling
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dc.subject
E-mu
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Fairlight Computer Musical Instrument
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music technology
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organology
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popular music
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SCOT
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dc.subject
Science and Technology Studies
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dc.subject
STS
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synthesizers
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dc.title
Following the instruments and users: the mutual shaping of digital sampling technologies
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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