Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Music_technology> ?p ?o }
- Music_technology abstract "Music technology is the use of any device, mechanism, machine or tool by a musician or composer to make or perform music; to compose, notate, play back or record songs or pieces; or to analyze or edit music. The earliest known applications of technology to music was prehistoric peoples' use of a tool to hand-drill holes in bones to make simple flutes. Ancient Egyptians developed stringed instruments, such as harps, lyres and lutes, which required making thin strings and some type of peg system for adjusting the pitch of the strings. Ancient Egyptians also used wind instruments such as double clarinets and percussion instruments such as cymbals. In Ancient Greece, instruments included the double-reed aulos and the lyre. Numerous instruments are referred to in the Bible, including the horn, pipe, lyre, harp, and bagpipe. During Biblical times, the cornet, flute, horn, organ, pipe, and trumpet were also used. During the Middle Ages, music notation was used to create a written record of the notes of Plainchant melodies.During the Renaissance music era, the printing press was invented, which made it much easier to mass-produce music (which had previously been hand-copied). This helped to spread musical styles more quickly and across a larger area. During the Baroque era (1600-1750), technologies for keyboard instruments developed, which led to improvements in the designs of pipe organs and harpsichords, and the development of a new keyboard instrument in about 1700, the piano. In the Classical era, Beethoven added new instruments to the orchestra to create new sounds, such as the piccolo, contrabassoon, trombones, and untuned percussion in his Ninth Symphony. During the Romantic music era (c. 1810 to 1900), one of the key ways that new compositions became known to the public was by the sales of sheet music, which amateur music lovers would perform at home on their piano or other instruments. In the 19th century, new instruments such as saxophones, euphoniums, Wagner tubas, and cornets were added to the orchestra.Around the turn of the 20th-century, with the invention and popularization of the gramophone record (commercialized in 1892), and radio broadcasting (starting on a commercial basis ca. 1919-1920), there was a vast increase in music listening, and it was easier to distribute music to a wider public. The development of sound recording had a major influence on the development of popular music genres, because it enabled recordings of songs and bands to be widely distributed. The invention of sound recording gave rise to new subgenre of classical music, the Musique concrete style of electronic composition. The invention of multitrack recording enabled pop bands to overdub many layers of instrument tracks and vocals, creating new sounds that would not be possible in a live performance. In the early 20th century, electric technologies such as electromagnetic pickups, amplifiers and loudspeakers were used to develop new electric instruments such as the electric piano (1929), electric guitar (1931), electro-mechanical organ (1934) and electric bass (1935). The 20th-century orchestra gained new instruments and new sounds. Some orchestra pieces used the electric guitar, electric bass or the Theremin.The invention of the miniature transistor in 1947 enabled the creation of a new generation of synthesizers, which were used first in pop music in the 1960s. Synthesizers became popular in the mass market in the early 1980s. With the development of powerful microchips, a number of new electronic or digital music technologies were introduced in the 1980s and subsequent decades. Electronic and digital music technologies are any device, such as a computer, an electronic effects unit or software, that is used by a musician or composer to help make or perform music. The term usually refers to the use of electronic devices, computer hardware and computer software that is used in the performance, playback, recording, composition, sound recording and reproduction, mixing, analysis and editing of music.".
- Music_technology thumbnail Peter_Francken_in_his_studio.jpg?width=300.
- Music_technology wikiPageExternalLink mustech.net.
- Music_technology wikiPageExternalLink www.120years.net.
- Music_technology wikiPageExternalLink music-tech-links.
- Music_technology wikiPageID "49182501".
- Music_technology wikiPageLength "53822".
- Music_technology wikiPageOutDegree "489".
- Music_technology wikiPageRevisionID "708372150".
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink 20th-century_classical_music.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink 20th-century_music.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Acousmatic_sound.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Acoustic_guitar.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Action_(piano).
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Aeneid.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Alpheus_Babcock.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Americus_Backers.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Egypt.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Greece.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Anton_Bruckner.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Arch_of_Titus.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Archaeology.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Arp_Schnitger.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Askaules.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Audio_editing_software.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Audio_mixing_(recorded_music).
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Audio_power_amplifier.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Aulos.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Bagpipes.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Bar_Kochba_Revolt_coinage.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Baroque_music.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Bartolomeo_Cristofori.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Bass_drum.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Bass_guitar.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Bass_instrument_amplification.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Bell.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Belshazzars_Feast_(Walton).
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Biblical_Sabbath.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Big_band.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Birmingham.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Blanchet_(harpsichord_makers).
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Boléro.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Boston.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Brass_instrument.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Bridge_(instrument).
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Buccina.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Bugle_call.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Burkat_Shudi.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Byzantine_Empire.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Byzantine_lyra.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Béla_Bartók.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Cast_iron.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Casting_(metalworking).
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Category:Electronics.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Category:Music_technology.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Category:Software.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Category:Sound_recording.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Cave_bear.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Celeste.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Chamber_music.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink China.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Church_(building).
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Cithara.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Clapper_(musical_instrument).
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Clarinet.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Classical_music.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Claude_Debussy.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Composer.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Computer.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Computer_hardware.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Contrabassoon.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Cornet.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Cornett.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Cornicen.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Cornu_(horn).
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Course_(music).
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Cymbal.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Damping.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink David.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Dead_Sea_Scrolls.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Der_Ring_des_Nibelungen.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Digital_audio_workstation.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Distortion_(music).
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Divje_Babe_Flute.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Double_clarinet.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Drum.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Effects_unit.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Eight_foot_pitch.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Ein_Heldenleben.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Electric_guitar.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Electric_piano.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Electromagnetic_induction.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Electronic_drum.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Electronic_musical_instrument.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Electronic_organ.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Euphonium.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Felix_Mendelssohn.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Femur.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Ferdinando_de_Medici,_Grand_Prince_of_Tuscany.
- Music_technology wikiPageWikiLink Fiddle.