I'm about to jump into a study of cybernetics/systems theory, what are some good bleeps & bloops to listen to?
I dig Aphex Twin, Andy Stott, Blank Banshee, Boards of Canada, Flying Lotus, Forest Swords, Four Tet, Sweet Trip, the list could go on.
I'm about to jump into a study of cybernetics/systems theory, what are some good bleeps & bloops to listen to?
I dig Aphex Twin, Andy Stott, Blank Banshee, Boards of Canada, Flying Lotus, Forest Swords, Four Tet, Sweet Trip, the list could go on.
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libgen.is
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Ben Frost
Autechre
B12
Love Ben Frost and enjoy Auteche.
Listening to B12 now, sounds dope. Thanks!
Orbital, model 500, underworld and books
the kind you make yourself
also Vril Anima Mundi
Orbital sounds good.
Model 500 is great.
Not digging underworld or books but just skimming through songs. Thanks!
The books are an acquired taste. Their last album is probably their most accessible , the others are more 'folky' if it makes sense
Of course the people who are going to automate the world away listen to shitty NPC electronic music. Fuck you faggots.
OP here, actually I'm an ecologist but have an interest in understanding complex systems which cybernetics provides. I don't listen to much electronic music in this vein usually.
cringing hard at this comment
facts
Nick Land is basically bleeps and bloops
based doomer
name back on s/t
David Hewsons "Research and Development" album
Stockhausen, Ligeti, Nono and guys like this for interesting classical/academic/avant-garde electronic music may be of interest to you.
Drexciya
Thanks, I'll check it out.
electronic music from the 60s that sounds like something they'd play at a happening acid test. I just like the aesthetic it's so eerie in retrospect, the juxtaposition of hippie utopianism with military industrial spooks and high modernist mad science. Our banal cyber reality has really interesting origins.
monoskop.org
youtube.com
youtube.com
youtube.com
this is truly the best aesthetic.
>Cybernetics is often thought of as a grim military or industrial science of control. But as Andrew Pickering reveals in this beguiling book, a much more lively and experimental strain of cybernetics can be traced from the 1940s to the present.The Cybernetic Brain explores a largely forgotten group of British thinkers, including Grey Walter, Ross Ashby, Gregory Bateson, R. D. Laing, Stafford Beer, and Gordon Pask, and their singular work in a dazzling array of fields. Psychiatry, engineering, management, politics, music, architecture, education, tantric yoga, the Beats, and the sixties counterculture all come into play as Pickering follows the history of cybernetics’ impact on the world, from contemporary robotics and complexity theory to the Chilean economy under Salvador Allende. What underpins this fascinating history, Pickering contends, is a shared but unconventional vision of the world as ultimately unknowable, a place where genuine novelty is always emerging. And thus, Pickering avers, the history of cybernetics provides us with an imaginative model of open-ended experimentation in stark opposition to the modern urge to achieve domination over nature and each other.
libgen.is
Planning on reading this eventually! Currently reading Ashby's Introduction to Cybernetics, the history of the matter will come next.
Stafford Beer & Allende's Chile is a particularly fascinating example, as a communist myself I see quite a lot of potential in recovering this history and subverting the science from its bourgeois, reductionist origins to serve the human race.
>dude...like...fuck women youtu.be
based and instrument pilled. Listen to Bach you subhuman cretins
boring trite
>as a communist myself