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The World's Din - Listening to Records, Radio and Films in New Zealand, 1880-1940

Author
Hoar, Peter
Price
NZ$35.00
Stock
1
Variations
Description

Published by Otago University Press, Dunedin, 2018. Stamp of previous owner on front endpaper, otherwise good secondhand copy.

New Zealanders started hearing things in new ways when new audio technologies arrived from overseas in the late 19th century. From the frst public demonstration of a phonograph in a Blenheim hall in 1879, people were exposed to a succession of machines that captured, stored and transmitted sounds - through radio, cinema and recordings. In The World's Din, Peter Hoar documents the arrival of the frst such `talking machines', and their growing place in New Zealanders' public and private lives, through the years of radio to the dawn of television.In so doing, he chronicles a `sonic revolution' in how New Zealanders heard the world. The change was radical, signifying a defining break from the past. Human experience of the world changed forever during the late 19th and early 20th centuries because we learned to capture, store, and transmit sounds and moving images. `Audio' since then has been a continued refinement of the original innovation, even in the contemporary era of digital sound, with iPods, streaming audio and Spotify. The World's Din is a beautifully written account that will delight music-lovers and technophiles everywhere. Without further ado, it is time to crank the gramophone, or tune the wireless, or open the Jaffa box as the cinema lights dim, and hearken to the richness and variety of listening in New Zealand's past soundscapes.

Format
Second hand Paperback
ISBN
9781988531199
Catalog
SKU
128657

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