The Club Life Shop
 Location:  Home» Carl Cox » General » Modulations: Cinema for the Ear  
Subcategories
Grade Level (feature_five_browse-bin)
Preschool
Kindergarten
Elementary School
Middle & High School
College
Post-Graduate
Related Products
• General
Dance & DJ
• Electronica
Dance & DJ
• General
Techno
• General AAS
Techno
• General
Pop
• General AAS
Dance Pop
• General
R&B
• General AAS
Soul
• General
Soundtracks
• General
Documentary
• General
Music Video & Concerts
• Genesis
Artists
• General AAS
Classic Rock
• R&B
Other Music
• General
Pop
• General AAS
Pop
• General
Rock & Roll
• General AAS
Rock & Roll
• ( M )
Titles
• DVD
Format (binding)
• Unrated
MPAA Rating (feature_browse-bin)
• DVDs Playable in any Region
Region (feature_two_browse-bin)
• 1990 - 1999
Decade (feature_three_browse-bin)
• English
Original Language (theme_browse-bin)
• Dolby
Special Editions (feature_four_browse-bin)
• Standard Edition
Special Editions (feature_four_browse-bin)
• Grade Level (feature_five_browse-bin)
Refinements
• Dolby
Audio Type (feature_six_browse-bin)
Join Our Mailing List !

Enter your email address:

ByFeedBurner

More From Us
124 Beats Per Minute
Las Vegas Gift Shop
Music Tool Bar
U.K. Dance and Audio

Modulations: Cinema for the Ear

Modulations: Cinema for the Ear

enlarge enlarge 
Director: Iara Lee
Actors: Danny Tenaglia, Dj Spooky, Rob Playford, Robert Moog, Arthur Baker
Studio: Mvd Visual
Category: DVD

List Price: $19.95
Buy New: $12.32
You Save: $7.63 (38%)

Qty 2 In Stock


New (10) Used (2) from $12.32

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 28 reviews
Sales Rank: 62198

Format: Ac-3, Color, Dolby, Dvd-video, Soundtrack, Ntsc
Language: English (Original Language)
Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Region: 0
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Number Of Discs: 1
Running Time: 74 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6

UPC: 022891434993
EAN: 0022891434993
ASIN: B0000844LI

Theatrical Release Date: September 18, 1998
Release Date: February 18, 2003
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: BRAND NEW Factory Sealed - Ready to be shipped within 24 hrs from California - Average 5 workdays delivery time - Excellent customer service - Buy with confidence!

Similar Items:

  • Better Living Through Circuitry
  • Put the Needle on the Record
  • OHM: The Early Gurus of Electronic Music
  • Moog
  • High Tech Soul: The Creation of Techno Music

Editorial Reviews:

Description
MODULATIONS traces the evolution of Electronica music as one of the most profound artistic developments of the 20th century! By cutting back and forth between avante garde composers, kraftwerk's innovative synthesizer drones, giorgio moroder's glacial eur


Customer Reviews:   Read 23 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars The history on electronic music   December 18, 2007
B. R. Smith (Louisiana USA)
Modulation is a deep look into the past and present of sound and techno music. All Techno DJs should watch this dvd. This one is my all time favorite dvds that can be played every night and not get tired of watching it.


5 out of 5 stars Movie Provides A Great History of Electronic Music   October 17, 2007
Michael Kasper (Cleveland, OH USA)
I found this video very helpful in examining the history of electronic music. Many of the electronic music styles such as House, Techno, Trance, Ambient, and Trip Hop were the focus of this video. The video examined the history of the disco era and psychedelic music's contributions to the styles listed above. Many of the most established and recognized electro artists appeared such as DJ Spooky, Squarepusher, Kraftwerk, Afrika Bambaataa, Moby, Derrick May, Brian Eno, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Carl Cox, TG's Genesis Porridge, and Giorgio Moroder Chicory Tip. In the historical references much credit is given to the classical composer John Cage and Pierre Henry and Pierre Schaeffer as well as Miles Davis. There is discussion of the Moog synthesizer and its influence in electronic music. I learned a lot of new information about the origins of electronic music, its sources, its inspirations, and what its pioneers have achieved and their ideas for the future of music.


5 out of 5 stars An extraordinary compendium of electronic music   May 26, 2007
Y. Jossa (NJ)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

"Modulations" is truly the most complete electronic music DVD documentary released as of 2007. Any fan of electronic music will recognize at least some (if not all) of the artists featured.
I can't think of any other film (with the exception of the rave oriented "Better Living Through Circuitry") that features such a compendium of electronic music pioneers, including instrument makers, composers, DJs, producers.. Autechre, Robert Moog, Moby, Q-bert, Karlheinz Stockhausen, John Cage, Squarepusher, Derrick May, Carl Craig, Carl Cox, O Yuki Conjugate, Scanner, Oval, Genesis P Orridge, George Moroder, DJ Spooky, Bill Laswell and many others are all here.

Notably missing from the film are Aphex Twin, Brian Eno and Kraftwerk, although Eno and Kraftwerk are quoted and mentioned throughout the film.

I am sure that the quantity of interview footage posed a problem for the producers and editors of this film, so everything is tightly edited to keep this movie from becoming another boring academic documentary with voice overs, (which i am sure it was something the producers and director wanted to avoid)

I wish this movie would have been made a lot longer, or more extra footage made available on the DVD, maybe a more structured editing approach would have made this movie a little less chaotic, but this still doesn't detract from the breadth and scope of this truly remarkable film.

This DVD is a must for anyone interested in electronic music, rave and DJ culture.



1 out of 5 stars Trash   September 14, 2006
Dude (nyc)
8 out of 17 found this review helpful

Ok, look at the cover of this DVD. It says it all:

Limegreen wording. An asian girl, with a purple-tinted face, wearing huge bug-eye glasses, big headphones over both ears. WHAT does any of this have to do with House/Techno/Drum'n'Bass, the 80's/90's Rave Scene, the developing music in Chicago and New York in the birth of Underground Dance music?

Absolutely nothing. Like most of the project, it plays to popular misconceptions of the electronic music scene (crazy teenagers having sex, high on drugs! Baggy pants! "Drum N Bass was 'invented' because people did too much ecstasy, and needed darker-sounding music!)

It's an outsider's view, misinformed, fetishized, meandering.


-------
UPDATE:

If I could make some additional points:



==================================

A LITTLE ABOUT THE WORD ELECTRONICA

In the 90's, Underground Dance Music began making it's way into the mainstream in a way similar to its last head-rearing in the 1970's. Disco was a popularized version of underground dance music, understandably despised for it's excess and apparent superficiality, just like we have today's popularized (read: diluted) versions.

In the 90's, a corporate entity called "Billboard" made a decision. Now, understand, the people who work at Billboard are not musicians. They may have taken guitar lessons when they were 15, but they not musicians. They are accountants, marketers, executives, etc. Necessary to society, but NOT to be confused with musicians.

They decided to come up with the marking name "Electronica" to describe certain styles of music gaining popularity in the 90's. This taxonomy is based neither on musicology, extensive industry experience with the music, or anything beyond catchphrase convenience. It unfortunately groups styles of music together that have very little intrinsically in common. So here's your first bit of advice - people who use the word "Electronica" got into this game via a mainstream marking taxonomy.

Please let me make something clear: marketing is necessary to the sale of music - but it is not a path to learn about music.

==================================



Now get this. We all know that DJ's, who comprise the largest group of electronic-media sound artists, play other people's records to create their "sets". This means that record companies cannot publish a DJ set as their own entirely. They have to authorize and pay for *every single record* that is played in a set (as opposed to one or two samples, which we find in hiphop/rap). This means a very slim profit margin and a very complicated royalty distribution. Companies don't like that, so DJ's, even GREAT DJ's don't get picked up by large labels.

But, there is still a lot of buzz surrounding this music, and now Billboard has branded a marketing catchphrase, so the major labels *tend* to sign and produce groups which create their own material entirely, but are frankly MEDIOCRE artists - generally speaking. I'm not saying every non-DJ electronic artist is mediocre, but when an entire population of musicians is essentially out of marketable bounds - you're left with detritus.

Modulations is one of the business spin-offs from the spike in interest in electronic music in the 90's. It is derivative, unoriginal, uninformed. Enthusiastic, yes, but without focus or merit. It is born of detritus. Iara Lee has never had anything to do with any of these fields, and it shows in the documentary. A recurring interview in the documentary is with a culture/fashion/lifestyle magazine writer. You know, the types who can always comment, no matter how vapidly, on every subject. It makes for nice sound-bites, and maybe an easier editing job for film production. But... don't you want to learn what all this beautiful music is really about?

Her aesthetic and presentation of the disparate worlds of Underground Dance Music, the European avant-garde (and the deeply misguided implication of specific connections between the the two), electronic experimental, and all other turntable-based musics, for me, encapsulates the very essence of the very contrived word: Electronica.

Don't let the fact that they drop names of concert-music composers like Cage and Stockhausen impress you. It's a documentary, not a cocktail party.

If this documentary amazed and inspired you to learn more about all the different types of electronic music - well, great! It's serves some purpose. But I would encourage you to drop any this sugar-candy edited-for-radio version and really go out to explore the good stuff.

Some recommendations:



Informative movies:
Paris is Burning
KIDS

Informative books:
You better work
Last Night a DJ Saved my Life



2 out of 5 stars Droning interviews spoil this DVD   June 1, 2006
Mountains to Sea
1 out of 3 found this review helpful

A disappointment. I was hoping for extended selections of the artists' music, with maybe a little introduction/explanation. Unfortunately, its mostly artist interviews droning on and on with only snippets of the music. The artist comments are typically, "...its like everything that's noise can be music...but its like, uh, all about the technology..." No real passion or insight until some more snippets of a rave flash briefly by. Lots of subtypes of the techno music described, but its confusing how they differ for the lack of lengthy defining examples. If you are a knowledgeable fan and want some camera shots and comments of your heroes, this may be for you. If you want a clear introduction of the music and which artists may interest you enough to buy their music, skip it.

Qty 2 In Stock



Featured Artists
MP3 Albums
MP3 Singles
Above and Beyond
Anjunabeats
Armin Van Buuren
Armand Van Helden
ATB
Blank and Jones
Bad Boy Bill
Benny Benassi
Carl Cox
Danny Tenaglia
Creamfields
Darude
Deep Dish
David Guetta
Derrick May
D Fuse
Eddie Halliwell
Fat Boy Slim
Ferry Corsten
Gabriel and Dresden
George Acosta
Godskitchen
Hed Kandi
Hernan Cattaneo
Infected Mushroom
John Digweed
Judge Jules
Lange
Mark Farina
Miguel Migs
Ministry of Sound
Moby
Paul Oakenfold
Paul Van Dyk
Pete Tong
Peter Rauhofer
Robbie Rivera
Ronski Speed
Sander Van Doorn
Sander Kleinenberg
Shapeshifters
Solarstone
Stonebridge
Stoneface and Term
Tall Paul
The Chemical Brothers
The Thrillseekers
Tiesto
Timo Maas
Victor Calderone
Yoshitoshi
Promo's
DJ & Pro Audio Marketplace U.K. Dance and Electronic Store Dance Music Magazine My Space
Privacy Policy Returns Policy Shipping Rates & Policies Order Tracking
Harley-Davidson Marketplace Political & Military Collectibles Model Trains and Hobby Unique Gift Ideas
Political Blog That 60's Store Rare Coins and Currency Contact Us