In the spirit of the Perspectives On Music Production series, 'Distortion in Music Production: How Distortion, Colouration and Saturation Shape the Production Process', follows on from Mixing Music (2017), Producing Music (2019), Mastering Music (2020) and several monographs in the field.
Distortion in Music Production will collect detailed and informed considerations on the use of non-linear signal processing, by authors working in a wide array of academic, creative, and professional contexts. It will solicit the perspectives of scholars, alongside producers and engineers, to provide a fully comprehensive analytic point-of-view on how distortion has shaped the production process. It will explore distortion as a production technique, ranging from the overt use of the process as a sound mangling tool to the subtle changes in an audio signal's sonic signature, afforded as a consequence of non-linear signal processing. The book will explore ways in which music producers can implement distortion in their work, investigate how the effect can be used and abused while examining things from technical, practical and musicological perspectives. In addition, the book will look at distortion from a historical perspective, noting how it was initially an unwanted artefact of the production process, whereas today it is a much sought-after process, used by engineers in their quest to colour and transform audio signals.
The editors welcome abstracts for proposed chapters in a forthcoming Routledge edited-volume entitled, 'Distortion in Music Production: How Distortion, Colouration and Saturation Shape the Production Process'. The scope for contribution areas are listed below but these areas are not exclusive:
Distortion in music production from a musicological perspective
Hardware and software design and application, past, present and future
Case studies
Distortion as a mixing, recording and mastering process
Historical use and adaptation of distortion and saturation in music production
Future trends in the application of distortion
The use of distortion as a compositional device
The use of distortion as a performance tool
Perceptual experiments in how the listener perceives distortion in music production
How distortion affects timbre perception
As an aesthetic expression in mixing
Other topics to do with distortion would be considered
The Abstracts are requested to be emailed to distortion@hepworthhodgson.com by the 20th September 2019. Abstracts will be reviewed, submitted to Routledge, and the authors known of the result in the latter weeks of October 2019. Final submission of chapters expected 11th September 2020.
Please feel free to email me personally if you have any specific questions as I'll be co-editing the work with Austin Moore at the University of Huddersfield. He can also be contacted at A.P.Moore@hud.ac.uk
Kind regards,
Gary Bromham
Centre for Digital Music
Queen Mary University of London
School of Electronic Engineering and Computer Science