{"id":4961,"date":"2020-01-08T14:47:10","date_gmt":"2020-01-08T14:47:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/theory.esm.rochester.edu\/integral\/?page_id=4961"},"modified":"2022-08-30T18:31:10","modified_gmt":"2022-08-30T18:31:10","slug":"vagnerova","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/theory.esm.rochester.edu\/integral\/33-2019\/vagnerova\/","title":{"rendered":"Review of <em>Electronic Inspirations: Technologies of the Cold War Musical Avant-Garde<\/em>, by Jennifer Iverson, Oxford University Press, 2018."},"content":{"rendered":"\n<script type=\"text\/x-mathjax-config\">\nMathJax.Hub.Config({\n  messageStyle: \"none\"\n});\n<\/script>\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Lucie V\u00e1gnerov\u00e1<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p><\/p><cite><strong><a href=\"http:\/\/esm.rochester.edu\/integral\/33-2019\/33-vagnerova\">View PDF<\/a><\/strong><br><\/cite><\/blockquote>\n\n\n<span id=\"su_tooltip_69d90a37aec8b_button\" class=\"su-tooltip-button su-tooltip-button-outline-yes\" aria-describedby=\"su_tooltip_69d90a37aec8b\" data-settings='{\"position\":\"right\",\"behavior\":\"hover\",\"hideDelay\":0}' tabindex=\"0\"><strong><u>Suggested Citation<\/u><\/strong><\/span><span style=\"display:none;z-index:100\" id=\"su_tooltip_69d90a37aec8b\" class=\"su-tooltip\" role=\"tooltip\"><span class=\"su-tooltip-inner su-tooltip-shadow-yes\" style=\"z-index:100;background:#FFFFFF;color:#454545;font-size:16px;border-radius:5px;text-align:left;max-width:300px;line-height:1.25\"><span class=\"su-tooltip-title\"><\/span><span class=\"su-tooltip-content su-u-trim\">V\u00e1gnerov\u00e1, Lucie. 2019. \u201cReview of <em>Electronic Inspirations: Technologies of the Cold War Musical Avant-Garde<\/em>, by Jennifer Iverson, Oxford University Press, 2018.\u201d <em>Int\u00e9gral<\/em> 33: 105\u2013109.<\/span><\/span><span id=\"su_tooltip_69d90a37aec8b_arrow\" class=\"su-tooltip-arrow\" style=\"z-index:100;background:#FFFFFF\" data-popper-arrow><\/span><\/span>\n\n\n\n<div style=\"height:25px\" aria-hidden=\"true\" class=\"wp-block-spacer\"><\/div>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"has-drop-cap\"> The electronic music studio of Cologne\u2019s <em>Westdeutscher Rundfunk<\/em> (WDR) in the postwar decade is too often presented as the cloistered workplace of Karlheinz Stockhausen, as synonymous with additive synthesis, and as a hub of the compositional discipline of <em>elektronische Musik<\/em>. In her new monograph on the postwar decade in German electronic music, Jennifer Iverson draws upon archival materials to tell a more complex story illustrated with myriad analyses of sound- and musical works. She reevaluates the composer- and discipline-centric understanding of the WDR, and details the training and background of studio technicians. Countering the narrative pushed by some of its main actors, Iverson presents the studio as a fundamentally interdisciplinary space. <em>Electronic Inspirations <\/em>is a refreshing repudiation of the presumed national and disciplinary insularity of <em>elektronische Musik<\/em>, and a model for addressing the role of failed experimentation, human-technological networks, and genre boundaries in electronic music and sound work. In the fragile years of German reclamation and the early years of the Cold War, the studio\u2019s musical experiments were mobilized as avatars of not only technological but also ideological progress. Iverson\u2019s text provides an investigation of the techniques and culture of this political project. <\/p>\n\n\n<p>Below, after introducing the book\u2019s organization, I will summarize and comment on each chapter. Finally, I will engage with Iverson\u2019s approach to the ideological meanings of <em>elektronische Musik<\/em>. How did the technologies, research, institutions, and people actively bolstering wartime Germany come to represent the progressive momentum of postwar German reclamation? In answering this question, I comment on Iverson\u2019s methodological approach and scholarly orientation towards the topic, as well as the glaring gender imbalance implicit in the scope of her study. To conclude, I address the possible readerships for the detailed analyses contained in this specialized book, and its contribution to multiple disciplines.<\/p>\n<p>The book is organized in six chapters, in addition to an introduction and epilogue. The chapters sequentially address the laboratory-like nature of the WDR studio; the contributions of Cage and Tudor to European music; the collaborative nature of additive synthesis; the perceptual limits of serialism and solutions offered by information theory and statistics; the 1958 Darmstadt controversy surrounding aleatory music; and the influence of phonetics, linguistics, and Cathy Berberian on vocal sound work at the WDR and RAI (Radio Audizioni Italiane) studios. The helpful \u201cGlossary of Actors\u201d at the end of the book, organized by area of specialization, tracks the network of \u201cheterogeneous professionals\u201d at the WDR (241). Together with the introduction, the chapters can be read independently. That said, Chapters 2 and 5 on Cage and Tudor in Europe are complementary, and Chapters 3 and 6 on ex-Nazi scientist Werner Meyer Eppler\u2019s expertise in information theory and phonetics could also be read in tandem.<\/p>\n\n\n<hr class=\"wp-block-separator is-style-dots\"\/>\n\n\n<p>In the opening chapter, \u201cOrigins: Creating a Laboratory,\u201d Iverson describes the workflow at the WDR studio as laboratory-like, highly collaborative, and defined by technological affordances. She shows that the fierce hierarchization of studio labor contributed to blind spots in historiography, which foreground the work of composers at the expense of technicians, scientists, and engineers (33\u201355). While Stockhausen <em>was<\/em> a standout figure at the WDR, insofar as he both composed and understood studio technology (like a technician), he was far from the first and far from the only creative contributor to the work that took place there. Iverson credits the studio\u2019s co-founders and some of the book\u2019s major figures\u2014scientist Meyer-Eppler, musicologist and composer Herbert Eimert, and sound engineer and composer Robert Beyer\u2014as the true originators of the WDR studio\u2019s timbral orientation. (Meyer-Eppler, who brought his knowledge of synthesis, information theory, and phonetics to the WDR from U-boat research for the Nazi military, is perhaps the protagonist of Iverson\u2019s project.) Moreover, complicating the WDR composers\u2019 self-situation in a high-cultural lineage built upon the modernism of Ferrucio Busoni and Anton Webern, Iverson documents the influence of radio plays, or <em>H\u00f6rspiele, <\/em>on <em>elektronische Musik<\/em> (37). <em>H\u00f6rspiele<\/em> were only ever acknowledged in talks about seeking funding for the studio (38). In fact, the impact of this genre ran deep. Iverson presents meticulous analyses of WDR works that use the <em>H\u00f6rspiel<\/em>-adjacent portfolio of technicians such as Erhard Hafner and Heinz Sch\u00fctz as uncredited sound material for sound montages, passing them off instead as \u201csound synthesis\u201d (46). The first pieces coming out of the WDR show these connections: Sch\u00fctz, who worked on effects for an outer-space sci-fi <em>H\u00f6rspiel<\/em> titled <em>Das Unternehmen der Wega<\/em> [<em>The Adventure of Vega<\/em>], which opened with the words <em>\u2018Hier Abteilung Morgenr\u00f6te\u2019<\/em> [\u201cThis is Dawn Division\u201d], later composed the WDR\u2019s \u201cpiece zero,\u201d conspicuously titled <em>Morgenr\u00f6te<\/em> [<em>Dawn<\/em>] (1952) (40). As Iverson demonstrates, <em>Morgenr\u00f6te<\/em> became the substantive uncredited source material for Eimert and Beyer\u2019s <em>Klangstudie II <\/em>(1952), the WDR\u2019s second piece (40\u201347).<\/p>\n<p>In Chapter 2, \u201cKinship: Cage, Tudor, and the New Timbral Utopia,\u201d Iverson expands the WDR network to the rest of Germany and the United States, locating multiple origins for Stockhausen\u2019s interest in timbre. She charts the deep, long-term influence of John Cage and David Tudor on German electronic music, citing hefty sums paid to the pair for concert series in Donauschingen and Cologne. Cage\u2019s works, ideas, and invention of the prepared piano certainly influenced Stockhausen\u2019s idea of musical form and conception of timbre respectively (67), but Tudor\u2019s influence, argues Iverson, was even more important to Stockhausen\u2019s development (52). Iverson redresses Tudor\u2019s relative historiographical invisibility (72), and posits him as the most influential translator between the European and American scenes in the 1950s (73). From his 1954 visit to Cologne onwards, Tudor was avant-garde Europe\u2019s go-to pianist and unofficial ambassador in \u201cspeaking for the \u2018Cage Group,\u2019\u201d in Stockhausen\u2019s words (70). Iverson presents two effective network maps that illustrate Tudor\u2019s connectedness to European and American composers via his four visits to the Darmstadt <em>Ferienkurse<\/em> in 1956, 1958, 1959, and 1961 (70\u201371).<\/p>\n<p>Chapter 3, \u201cCollaboration: The Science and Culture of Additive Synthesis,\u201d parses the process of experimentation in the studio\u2019s signature technique. In addition to a collaborative workflow, experimental results of failure and discovery characterized the WDR studio equally. Composers and technicians worked in parallel, sending work products back and forth, often hitting a wall. Many work products\u2014such as Stockhausen\u2019s <em>Studie I\u2014<\/em>were in large part determined by what was possible, and what was not, with the technologies in the studio, often leaving composers dissatisfied. Ultimately, many of the theoretical ideas explored at the WDR were only realizable acoustically. For example, based on a flawed understanding of psychoacoustics at the WDR, Gy\u00f6rg<em>y<\/em> Ligeti predicted that a melodic line would materialize from combination tones in <em>Pi\u00e8ce \u00e9lectronique No. 3 <\/em>(1957\u20131958). Ligeti did, however, come to enunciate this \u201cimpossible\u201d melody through string harmonics in his acoustic <em>Atmosph\u00e8res<\/em> (1961) (102\u2013103). The WDR is thus shown, in spite of its limitations, to be a generative hub of experimental hypotheses that influenced music beyond the <em>elektronische<\/em> genre.<\/p>\n<p>Continuing with the theme of technological limitations, in Chapter 4, \u201cReclaiming Technology: From Information Theory to Statistical Form,\u201d Iverson shows how WDR composers\u2019 interdisciplinary infatuation with Claude Shannon\u2019s information theory helped them realize \u201cthe crucible of constraints and affordances\u201d of their studio\u2019s technologies (137). The wartime discourse addressing questions of data compression and human perception made it clear that human ears cannot perceive the density of information resulting from some of the serialist and total-aleatory techniques. For example, Gottfried Michael Koenig\u2019s serialist <em>Essay<\/em> (1957) taxes the limits of human perception by working with durations so imperceptibly short that they become a blur. Meyer-Eppler and Cage receive only passing credit from Stockhausen for bringing information theory and a broader interest in perception to the WDR. Moreover, Stockhausen completely failed to credit the contributions of Koenig, Henri Posseur, and Iannis Xenakis. Xenakis, who worked with probability theory in pieces such as <em>Achorripsis<\/em> (1957), was ostracized by Stockhausen and disconnected from the discourses of the WDR (129\u2013135). The Greek composer himself guessed that this was because of exclusivist sentiments about expanding the German-French-Italian network (135). Iverson speculates that Stockhausen\u2019s personal insecurity may have played a role as well (136). Either way, the disciplinary openness of the WDR had its limits.<\/p>\n<p>Rethinking the American influence on European composition, Iverson returns to Cage and Tudor to offer a new understanding of disagreements about compositional technique in Chapter 5, \u201cControversy: The Alteatory Debates Beyond Darmstadt.\u201d An outdated, but persistent, story of Darmstadt 1958 tells of a rift between the Americans and the Germans, exemplified by Carl Dahlhaus who wrote that Cage\u2019s arrival \u201cswept across the European avant-garde like a natural disaster\u201d (Dahlhaus 1992, 777). Iverson presents a much more nuanced account. Applications of aleatory procedures certainly veered in different directions for Cage and the Europeans. American composers such as Cage or Earl Brown privileged performer-centered indeterminacy, while European composers such as Gy\u00f6rgy Ligeti and Pierre Boulez preferred for all statistical constraints to take place precompositionally, the latter warning that a performer\u2019s imagination \u201cmisfires more often than it fires\u201d (155). However, in Iverson\u2019s estimation, the debates surrounding these explorations were generative, not adversarial: \u201cthere was an aesthetic split, but there was no personal split,\u201d in Brown\u2019s words (164). Iverson concludes that the \u201cdebate and disagreement\u201d at Darmstadt 1958 can be understood \u201cas a sign of shared investment,\u201d and argues that \u201cdebate makes the stakes visible, helping actors on both sides to clarify their own positions, investments, and next moves\u201d (164). This is an important rethinking of a key moment in twentieth-century music history. Here, Iverson shows the U.S.-European discursive network as intellectually and creatively porous in the early years of the Cold War, with everyone always engaged with everyone else\u2019s work, whether in Germany, the United States, or France.<\/p>\n<p>Finally, Chapter 6, \u201cTechnosynthesis: From Vocoder Speech to Electronic Music,\u201d charts the influence of phonetics and linguistics discourses on the WDR and RAI studios. Advances in speech synthesis in the U.S. at the Bell Laboratories, Meyer-Eppler\u2019s phonetics research, and the structural linguistics work of Roman Jakobson were particularly influential. Like information theory, phonetics became Meyer-Eppler\u2019s area of academic expertise after denazification; he was already familiar with the Vocoder from his time as a Nazi researcher (175). Iverson also notes Berberian\u2019s significant creative contribution to phonetics pieces such as John Cage\u2019s <em>Aria <\/em>and <em>Fontana Mi<\/em>x, composed between 1958 and 1959 at the RAI. The appropriation of phonetics for music composition was, Iverson speculates, also a way to assuage fears about technology slipping out of human control: investing technological (and disciplinary) capital in the voice and language demonstrated control of the machine (193).<\/p>\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\"><strong>&#8220;Reclamation&#8221; through Electronic Music<\/strong><\/h4>\n\n\n<p>Navigating how the ideological shift from wartime to post-war Germany played out on the stage of electronic music, which adopted the very material resources and human resources left over from wartime, is the challenging central thread of Iverson\u2019s book. Iverson traces the wartime pedigrees of cutting-edge technologies, ideas, and employees in the studio. How did additive synthesis, information theory, phonetics research, and figures such as former Nazi Meyer-Eppler transition from one project to another? According to Iverson, electronic music played a significant role in the PR campaign of German reclamation, not just in spite of, but also because of its ties to the wartime regime. These ties were merely made invisible by the repurposing of human and technological capital: \u201c[i]t was on the grounds of electronic music that West Germany could stake its claims to cultural integrity and Cold War superiority\u201d (107). &nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>Within the broader West German cultural project, electronic music was intended to function as an ostensible vaccine against prejudice, inoculating listeners with small doses of (aesthetic) difference meant to cultivate open-mindedness\u2014\u201ca take your medicine approach\u201d (6). It also acted as a model of Germany\u2019s cultural heterogeneity, showcasing the freedoms that differentiated the West German approach from a Soviet-style grip on cultural production. Asking to what extent listeners recognized and\/or responded to these ideological missions of electronic music is not part of Iverson\u2019s investigation. Aside from calling this cultural mission \u201ckind of paternalistic,\u201d she stops short of sharing her own estimation of this sociocultural campaign\u2019s efficacy, suggesting, perhaps, an interesting area of future research (6).<\/p>\n<p>On the ground, the process of reclamation had less than polished contours, and it is to Iverson\u2019s credit that she leaves them so. The denazification of Meyer-Eppler personifies the WDR\u2019s appropriation of wartime brainpower for the field of electronic music research. Meyer-Eppler\u2019s story, cropping up throughout the text, makes for an uneasy read (4, 114, 138, 168, 175\u2013176). Iverson speculates that his WDR collaborators likely never explicitly addressed his Nazi affiliation, \u201cif they even knew\u201d (138). No cathartic \u2018reckoning\u2019 ever takes place. At best, writes Iverson, the studio\u2019s \u201cinterdisciplinarity\u201d and \u201creclamations\u201d of technologies, research, and people from the Nazi regime\u2019s military-industrial complex \u201cdo not so much heal the wounds of war as accumulate new meanings and layers that distance us from the trauma\u201d (138). Iverson returns to this image of a palimpsest of history, writing that \u201cshifting attention\u201d from the militaristic \u201con[to] the artistic uses of the Vocoder and on[to] the scientific advancement of phonetics\u201d rendered the former \u201cinvisible\u201d(176). I questioned whether the WDR was merely a new layer of meanings or an effective site of reputational laundering for Meyer-Eppler, postwar Germany, and certain fields of research. On this question, Iverson generously honors the complexities of history; her writing radiates a broader ethic of compassion.<\/p>\n<p>Still, I would have liked to learn more about Iverson\u2019s own positioning towards her subject of study as a site comprised of almost exclusively straight white men, to the point where the WDR\u2019s demographic homogeneity may be its main, albeit unspoken, characteristic. Iverson discusses the topic briefly in the introduction, valuably locating the WDR\u2019s male heteronormativity\u2014which she says lent the institution an air of perceived trustworthiness\u2014within the broader \u201cspeculative project of cultural remasculinization\u201d happening across West Germany (17\u201318). Is this \u201cremasculinization\u201d part of postwar \u2018reclamation,\u2019 or does it actually reproduce, or at least perpetuate, the techniques of the project of cultural superiority that defined German culture in the preceding century? Is it both?<\/p>\n<p>In the book\u2019s sixty-two deep \u201cGlossary of Actors\u201d (241\u2013250), only three women are listed: Fluxus artist Mary Bauermeister, new music patron Suzanne T\u00e9zenas, and the above-mentioned vocalist and composer Berberian. Berberian, a \u201ccentral collaborator\u201d who contributed to \u201cnearly every piece to emerge from the RAI studio,\u201d predictably receives the most space (188\u2013189). Iverson credits her with \u201crehumanizing\u201d (191) and \u201cdomesticizing\u201d (193) speech synthesis for the listener, which was no doubt part of her role. Unfortunately, Iverson does not explore how descriptions of Berberian\u2019s vocal work reveal the tenuous terms defining composition, human-machine boundaries, and labor itself: what is at stake, for example, when Berberian is described as \u201cthe RAI studio\u2019s most important technology\u201d and its \u201ctenth oscillator\u201d (188)? What goes unarticulated, though it does simmer in the background of Iverson\u2019s analysis (e.g. 163), is that electronic music has always flirted with difference, looking to gendered and racialized sonic expressions (and male\/white fantasies thereof) for its \u2018electronic inspirations.\u2019 It would have been worthwhile to address the influence of jazz, like that of <em>H\u00f6rspiel<\/em>, on timbral exploration at the WDR. That Eimert pitched Cage\u2019s music as operating in the lineage of jazz could have been a starting point for this discussion (52), though one could look more directly to jazz records and performances in Europe.<\/p>\n\n\n<hr class=\"wp-block-separator is-style-dots\"\/>\n\n\n<p>The <em>Inspirations<\/em> of Iverson\u2019s title seems to refer to several things: to multiple disciplines sharing in postwar electronic music-making; to the restoration of credit to previously disregarded experimental, technical, and discursive work in the studio; and to the multiple national ideologies (Nazi German, West German, French, American, Italian) that influenced the genre. As for the book\u2019s subtitle, <em>Technologies of the Cold War Musical Avant-Garde<\/em>, some readers may agree that <em>Electronic Inspirations <\/em>has more to do with the aftereffects of World War II than the core dynamics of the Cold War. That is, the central political tension implicit in the text\u2014albeit one that goes unarticulated at the WDR\u2014is between Nazi Germany and postwar Germany, not between the Soviet Bloc and the U.S.-oriented West.<\/p>\n<p>The core reader of <em>Electronic Inspirations <\/em>may be a music theorist or musicologist interested in <em>elektronische Musik<\/em> and the mythology surrounding Stockhausen. Iverson shows <em>elektronische Musik<\/em> to be\u2014yes\u2014niche, but also fundamentally dependent on exchange with fields of specialization and schools of composition outside of its Cologne studio. The book will certainly speak to those researching Cage, Tudor, and aleatory music, as well as the RAI studio.<\/p>\n<p>Further, music theorists and historians will appreciate Iverson\u2019s analytical-archeological digs into connections between seemingly unrelated pieces of sound work. My favorite ones relate to Pousseur\u2019s aleatory <em>Mobile <\/em>(1957\u20131958) for two pianos, which challenges performers to coordinate fixed, aleatory, and improvised sections chosen on the fly from a notebook score. Iverson notes the human-centered \u201cmobility\u201d of <em>Mobile<\/em>, and argues that Cage\u2019s vision of indeterminacy clearly did influence Pousseur in the end (155). A map of <em>Mobile<\/em>\u2019s structure is one of many analytical graphs among the book\u2019s rich illustrations, which also include archival documents and score excerpts. Other graphs of form, such as a map of durations in Koenig\u2019s <em>Essay <\/em>(121\u2013123), also helpfully illustrate at least some of the principles from information theory that I, frankly, found difficult to grasp. <em>Electronic Inspirations <\/em>is a fairly specialized text, and few readers will have expertise in all of the disciplines circulating at the WDR, which is, after all, Iverson\u2019s main point.<\/p>\n<p>The book will also be valuable to those interested in postwar German cultural history, the cultural history of technology, scholars of radio, and those exploring the influence of information theory and mathematics on music. Devotees of Bruno Latour\u2019s actor-network theory (ANT) will find Iverson\u2019s interpretation of the studio as a laboratory instructive. Iverson only briefly gestures to ANT as such, but her approach to the role of technological limitations, the porous disciplinary boundaries of the WDR, and the disciplinary transfer of technologies and people offers a model for revealing the \u201cinvisible\u201d\u2014her frequent term of choice\u2014in a network. &nbsp;By accounting for all of the creative work, expertise, and professional relationships surrounding the WDR, Iverson brings the figure of studio technician into the purview of music studies in a way that should inspire scholars studying the work of producers, administrators, patrons, stage hands, and other marginalized figures across disciplines. On top of contributing valuable research on the technical sources of <em>elektronische Musik,<\/em> Iverson offers an important analysis of networks, disciplinarity, and institutionalism. <em>Electronic Inspirations <\/em>is also sure to inspire further research into electronic studios, reception studies, other disciplines\u2019 influence on music, and music\u2019s role in political history.<\/p>\n\n\n<hr class=\"wp-block-separator\"\/>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p><em>Lucie V\u00e1gnerov\u00e1 is a Czech music historian based in New York City. After acting as Core Lecturer in Music Humanities at Columbia University, she is now Visiting Assistant Professor at New York University for Spring 2020. Her research spans women composers of electronic music, media history, sound art, and issues of gender, race, and labor in audio culture, experimental music, and popular music. Her dissertation \u201cSirens\/Cyborgs: Sound Technologies and the Musical Body\u201d (Columbia University 2016) explores the role of the body in electroacoustic music. In more recent projects, she has investigated histories of transnational factory labor in audio culture. She has taught courses on the Western classical tradition, non-Western musics, popular music, sound art, music and labor, and digital culture at Columbia University, Montclair State University, and New York University. At Columbia, Lucie directed a public outreach project For the Daughters of Harlem: Working in Sound that invited young women of color from New York\u2019s public high schools to discuss, make, record, and produce music at Columbia. She also volunteers in the Brooklyn Public Library&#8217;s Adult Literacy program.<\/em><br><\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<div style=\"height:70px\" aria-hidden=\"true\" class=\"wp-block-spacer\"><\/div>\n\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\"><strong>References<\/strong><\/h4>\n\n\n<p>Dahlhaus, Carl. 1992. \u201cForm: Introduction,\u201d in Ruth Katz and Carl Dahlhaus, eds. <em>Contemplating Music: Source Readings in the Aesthetics of Music, <\/em>Vol. III: <em>Essence. <\/em>New York: Pendragon Press.<\/p>\n<p>Iverson, Jennifer. 2018. <em>Electronic Inspirations: Technologies of the Cold-War Musical Avant Garde<\/em>. New York: Oxford University Press.<\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Lucie V\u00e1gnerov\u00e1 View PDF The electronic music studio of Cologne\u2019s Westdeutscher Rundfunk (WDR) in the postwar decade is too often presented as the cloistered workplace of Karlheinz Stockhausen, as synonymous with additive synthesis, and as a hub of the compositional discipline of elektronische Musik. In her new monograph on the postwar decade in German electronic &hellip; <\/p>\n<p class=\"link-more\"><a href=\"https:\/\/theory.esm.rochester.edu\/integral\/33-2019\/vagnerova\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading<span class=\"screen-reader-text\"> &#8220;Review of <em>Electronic Inspirations: Technologies of the Cold War Musical Avant-Garde<\/em>, by Jennifer Iverson, Oxford University Press, 2018.&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"parent":4702,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":{"_oasis_is_in_workflow":0,"_oasis_original":0,"_exactmetrics_skip_tracking":false,"_exactmetrics_sitenote_active":false,"_exactmetrics_sitenote_note":"","_exactmetrics_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-4961","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/theory.esm.rochester.edu\/integral\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/4961","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/theory.esm.rochester.edu\/integral\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/theory.esm.rochester.edu\/integral\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/theory.esm.rochester.edu\/integral\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/theory.esm.rochester.edu\/integral\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=4961"}],"version-history":[{"count":8,"href":"https:\/\/theory.esm.rochester.edu\/integral\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/4961\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":7598,"href":"https:\/\/theory.esm.rochester.edu\/integral\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/4961\/revisions\/7598"}],"up":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/theory.esm.rochester.edu\/integral\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/4702"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/theory.esm.rochester.edu\/integral\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=4961"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}