From our CD collections to iPods bursting with MP3s to the hallowed vinyl of DJs, recordings are the most common way we experience music. Perfecting Sound Forever tells the story of recorded music, introducing us to the innovators, musicians and producers who have affected the way we hear our favourite songs, from Thomas Edison to Phil Spector. Exploring the balance that recordings strike between the real and the represented, Greg Milner asks the questions which have divided sound recorders for the past century: should a recording document reality as faithfully as possible, or should it improve upon or somehow transcend the music it records? What does the perfect record sound like? The answers he uncovers will change the way we think about music.
From our CD collections to iPods bursting with MP3s to the hallowed vinyl of DJs, recordings are the most common way we experience music. Perfecting Sound Forever tells the story of recorded music, introducing us to the innovators, musicians and producers who have affected the way we hear our favourite songs, from Thomas Edison to Phil Spector. Exploring the balance that recordings strike between the real and the represented, Greg Milner asks the questions which have divided sound recorders for the past century: should a recording document reality as faithfully as possible, or should it improve upon or somehow transcend the music it records? What does the perfect record sound like? The answers he uncovers will change the way we think about music.
'[A] breathless, surprisingly thrilling rollercoaster ride through the history of recorded music ... a tour-de-force of fascinating anecdotes, lucidly expounded science, witty asides, stylistic verve, and page after page of "gosh, I never knew that" facts' Mail on Sunday
Greg Milner is the author of Perfecting Sound Forever, a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award, and Pinpoint. A former editor at Spin, his writing has also appeared in Slate, the Village Voice, Wired, Salon, New York, Blender, Rolling Stone, the Word, the Sunday Times, and the Journal of Technology in Human Services. He lives with his family in Brooklyn, New York.
Very, very, very few books will change the way you listen to music.
This is one such book. Read it
*Jarvis Cocker*
Greg Milner tells the story of recorded music with novelistic
verve, ferocious attention to detail, and a soulful ambivalence
about our quest for sonic perfection. He shows how great recordings
come about not through advances in technology, but through a love
of the art, and that same love is the motor of his prose
*Alex Ross, author of THE REST IS NOISE*
Greg Milner's work dispels much of the mystique of recording, but
its true worth lies in its articulate, thoughtful raising of
questions concerning philosophy and aesthetics ... Perfecting Sound
Forever is a marvellous story told with passion and genuine,
original insight
*Sunday Herald*
Milner's appreciation of music is wide and deep ... [his]
passionate love of music resonates throughout, and he provides
illuminating answers to questions that are poorly understood. The
blurb claims that Perfecting Sound Forever "will change the way we
think about music" and, when the din dies down, you find that it
has
*Guardian*
An epic study ... Having interviewed hundreds of people for his
exhaustive history of recorded sound, Greg Milner has been nothing
if not meticulous ... If a single question underpins Milner's
historical excavations, it's probably this. Does music have a
"soul" and, if so, how does an artefact best go about preserving
it? "Presence" is a recurring theme in Milner's investigations
*The Times*
[A] superbly researched book ... an absorbing historical narrative,
travelling from Thomas Edison's tours with the first phonograph,
through the breakthrough of magnetic tape and on into the iPod
age
*Metro*
This engrossing book is a history of recording technology and an
examination of the high-fidelity fallacy ... The battle between
analogue and digital recording methods is covered in admirable
detail. This is when Milner's knack for explaining the
technicalities in layman's terms without oversimplifying comes into
its own ... This is an interesting, largely untold history of the
medium, not the message, and simultaneously, a history of human
credulity. Perfecting Sound Forever is an unashamedly anoraky book.
As an unashamed anorak, that's high praise
*Literary Review*
Milner has done such a terrific job, riddling the book with
absorbing characters and interviews and fossicking diligently for
those illuminating nuggets ... Milner is laudably lucid on the
technicalities of how music works ... of the many things that this
fascinating book will make you ponder, most intriguingly is the
question of whether - given that we treat it so disrespectfully -
we really like music all that much
*New Humanist*
An amiably garrulous and discursive guide to the development of
recorded sound from acoustic cylinders and discs, to analogue LPs
and the digital era of CDs and MP3 players
*Classic FM magazine*
This is such a gorgeous book. I cannot recommend this book highly
enough
*BBC Radio 5 Live, Up All Night*
Fascinating ... a rich blend of commerce, ideology, technology and
creativity. There are excellent sketches of key figures
*Sunday Times*
The book is illuminating. Its main subtext concerns the notion of
what Milner calls "presence" - the human element in recorded music
... Milner has interviewed the leading players in the fight against
digital tyranny
*Observer*
Ornamented by a seemingly inexhaustible array of insights from
eyewitnesses and practitioners ... Perfecting Sound Forever will
send you back to your record collection with sharpened ears, and an
enhanced appreciation of the sounds enshrined within it
*Wire*
Lively, passionate and ever-questioning ... the book is pieced
together with such energy and spirit that you often forget you're
reading about sound waves. From Edison's tone test techniques to
Spector's Wall of Sound, this is an accessible, well-informed and
unique perspective
*Record Collector*
An exceptional book ... a mix of passion and intelligence ... [and]
brilliant read from start to finish
*Big Issue*
[A] breathless, surprisingly thrilling rollercoaster ride through
the history of recorded music ... a tour-de-force of fascinating
anecdotes, lucidly expounded science, witty asides, stylistic
verve, and page after page of "gosh, I never knew that" facts
*Mail on Sunday*
Greg Milner's detailed and engaging book examines the rich
relationship between music and the eureka moments of invention ...
it's a work of great stylistic charm, one that never loses its
pleasing balance between facts and human interest ... [An]
excellent book
*Daily Telegraph*
Perfecting Sound Forever portrays the history of recordings as a
series of battles between quality and commercial expediency ...
[Milner] has a relish for technical details ... He writes
interestingly about high-tech tricks such as the loss of dynamic
range in modern recordings in order emphasise loudness
*Financial Times*
Milner proves an assured and erudite spirit guide through the sonic
labyrinth ... Perfecting Sound Forever forms the last part of a
holy trinity of books about the science, psychology and sheer magic
of sound - the other two being Alex Ross's The Rest Is Noise and
Oliver Sacks's Musicophilia - that manage to educate and
entertain
*Sunday Business Post (Ireland)*
The book's strengths lie in dealing with phenomena such as mixing,
dub and explorations of such behemoths as the Fairlight synthesiser
and digital sampling. It also has a fascinating section on the
flatness of digital sound
*Jazzwise magazine*
Lively and accessible ... Milner focuses on the fascinating
characters behind the technology
*Nature*
A compelling and thoroughly rewarding read for any music freak
fascinated by the recording and manipulation of sound ... [Milner]
covers a phenomenal number of seismic shifts in our sonic
landscape
*Time Out*
Sprawling and ambitious, covering the entire history of music
recording from Edison cylinders to Pro Tools
*Australian Financial Review*
Beginning in 1915 with Thomas Edison, Greg Milner's history of
recording Perfecting Sound Forever shows that "authenticity" has
never been a music industry goal, even before the 1940s when
magnetic tape made an "alternate universe" possible
*Independent*
This quirky narrative is a reminder what a great democratising
force records have been and what unique conjuring tricks they
are
*Evening Standard*
Fascinating and brilliant... A cracking read
*HiFi Choice*
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