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brettworks

thinking through music


  • May 21, 2014

    On Web Searches That Brought You Here

    This post is an exercise in reflexivity and feedback loops. My WordPress blog homepage provides me with various statistics on total page views, most popular posts (yes, top post honor is still held, by a country mile, by an entry on M.C. Escher), and so on. One interesting statistic is something called “Search Engine Terms.”… Continue reading

    feedback, reflexivity
    DJ David Guetta, J. Dilla, M.C. Escher, search queries, Sia Furler
  • May 16, 2014

    On The Paths Of Spirit Music: Ken Hyder’s “How To Know”

    “It’s not the music which creates the magic, it’s the magic sitting over, under and all through the music.” – Ken Hyder Ken Hyder is a Scottish percussionist and shaman. His brief but sparkling e-book, How To Know, is a story about his journey through percussion, shamanism in Tuva, and what he calls Spirit Music.… Continue reading

    drumming, musical healing, shamanism
    Ken Hyder Ken Hyder, Spirit Music, Tuva
  • May 13, 2014

    Literary Distillation: Notes on John Coates’ “Between The Hour Of Dog And Wolf”

    John Coates’ Between The Hour Of Dog And Wolf (2012) proposes that our thinking and decision-making are inseparable from our bodily experience, and more specifically, dependent on the various chemicals (testosterone, cortisol, dopamine, etc.) that course through our brains and literally alter our perceptions. His case studies revolve around Wall Street traders (Coates worked in… Continue reading

    literary distillation
    John Coates
  • May 8, 2014

    On The Trickle-Down Of Electronic Dance Music Aesthetics V: Coldplay’s “A Sky Full Of Stars”

    Though it has been fashionable to criticize the English band Coldplay for one reason or another–they’ve been too popular, their music is too sentimental, their singer Chris Martin overuses his falsetto voice–they do what they do well. Their music uses pop materials precisely, and for many listeners, Martin’s concise and catchy vocal melodies are worth… Continue reading

    ecstasy of influence, electronic dance music
    Coldplay, electronic dance music, Sky Full Of Stars
  • May 6, 2014

    Ventrilo-Dialogue: A Conversation With A Popular Singer

    T: Rihanna, thank you for talking with me today. R: My pleasure, Tom. It’s nice to have this conversational break. T: I agree. So, lets begin with the obvious. You’re omnipresent in the pop culturescape: it seems that every few weeks one hears your voice on a new song, and your image is everywhere—on TV,… Continue reading

    ventrilo-dialogue
  • May 1, 2014

    On Unconventional Measures: That “Selfie” Song

    By conventional measures, “Selfie” by the DJ duo The Chainsmokers is a clichéd, threadbare, and annoying piece of music. But if you can endure it, it’s also a fascinating bit of meta-commentary on the rituals of nightlife and club culture circa 2014. The song enacts its stance through copious use of voice samples of a fictional… Continue reading

    bad music, electronic dance music, unconventional measures, voice
    Alexis Campisi, club culture
  • April 28, 2014

    On A Note That Just Won’t Quit: A Great Big World’s “Say Something”

    Every so often I peruse Spotify’s various listening lists to see what musics folks around the world are streaming onto their devices. This time around I clicked on Spotify’s “Global Hits.” Along with some usual suspects–Pharrell Williams’ “Happy” (which will undoubtedly become as enduring as “Happy Birthday”), songs by Katy Perry, Coldplay and Shakira, and… Continue reading

    musical signification, repetition
    Spotify
  • April 24, 2014

    On The Nature Of Blogs V: Reflections On Stability And Instability

    A friend recently pointed out the use of the word “destabilize” in one of my Ventrilo-Dialogues. Here’s the video: He liked the idea of “destabilizing the notion of authorship” enough that he mentioned it to me several times. That got me thinking. And since it was me who wrote those words in the first place… Continue reading

    blogging, self-help, theory
    Ventrilo-Dialogues
  • April 23, 2014

    Literary Distillation: Notes On Bruce Weber’s “Life Is A Wheel”

      Among the many lessons offered in Bruce Weber’s Life Is A Wheel, a flowing and meditative memoir about bicycling across the United States, are two delightful insights about the nature of thinking and progress. Riding all those miles each day, Weber has lots of time and space to think his thoughts (and then write… Continue reading

    literary distillation, memoir, motion
    Bruce Weber
  • April 15, 2014

    David Hockney On Perspective

    I’ve been reading more Lawrence Weschler lately, this time his engaging study of the painter David Hockney, True to Life: Twenty-Five Years of Conversations with David Hockney (University of California Press, 2009). I first encountered Hockney’s work in the mid-1990s at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. The exhibit was a show of Hockney’s English… Continue reading

    aesthetics, perception, perspective
    David Hockney, Lawrence Weschler, University of California Press
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Thomas Brett is a musician and writer who holds a PhD in ethnomusicology from New York University. He is the author of Principles of Electronic Music Production and The Creative Electronic Music Producer, a book described by Sound On Sound magazine as “a deep philosophical analysis of the various creative inspirations, ideas and processes involved in producing electronic music.” His essays have appeared in the journals Popular Music and Popular Music and Society, as well as edited collections by Routledge, Oxford, and Cambridge University presses. Thomas has played percussion on Broadway since 1997 and writes about music at brettworks.com.

Recent Posts

  • Same Walk, Different Music: Actress, Suzanne Ciani, “Concrète Waves London B2” (2026).
  • Brett’s Sound Picks: Actress and Suzanne Ciani’s “Concrète Waves Barcelona B4” (2026)
  • The Real, The Virtual, and Thinking Compositionally
  • No. 6
  • Art About Music: “When Is That Young Man Going Home?” (1931)

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