CTM Festival
CTM Festival | |
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Genre | Electronic music, visual arts |
Location(s) | Berlin, Germany |
Years active | 1999-present |
Website | |
CTM on Facebook |
The annual CTM Festival is a music and visual arts event held in Berlin, Germany. Founded in 1999, the festival originally focused on electronic music, but has since evolved to cover a wide range of genres under the banner "Festival for Adventurous Music and Related Visual Arts".[1]
Changing through various shapes and formats over the years, the festival currently takes place as a week-long event in which the music program is supplemented by an extensive daytime program of workshops, art installations, panel discussions, screenings and presentations that illustrate the latest artistic, technological and economic developments in music and media cultures.
Distinguishing the festival from many others in its field is the fact that CTM spotlights music’s social role in electronic and digital culture. Through the festival, as well as various events curated by CTM throughout the year, the organization reflects the latest musical currents against a backdrop of new technologies, modern art, historical perspective, and social issues.
Themes
2016: New Geographies
2015: Untune
2014: Discontinuity
Publications
Catalogues:
PDF versions:
- CTM13
- CTM12
- CTM11
- CTM10
- CTM09 Catalogue
- CTM08 Catalogue
- CTM07 Catalogue
- CTM06 Catalogue
- CTM05 Catalogue
- CTM04 Catalogue
Books:
GENDERTRONICS – DER KÖRPER IN DER ELEKTRONISCHEN MUSIK
Edited by CTM and Meike Jansen
When, in the early 50s, electronic music appeared on the scene with the promise of abandoning all physical limits of music-making this was – like much besides – a Promethian male fantasy. Indeed, this music subsequently led to everything but disembodiment. From the psychedelic trances of the 60s and Kraftwerk robotics of the 70s, through to Techno ecstasies, gender-political interventions in the 90s and laptop performance – the questions as to how, from whom, to what ends and in which contexts electronics and the human body might be cable-linked have continually had to be addressed anew.
“Gendertronics” is an in-depth study of questions raised by last year’s festival theme, "Performing Sound", edited by CTM and Meike Jansen and published by Edition Suhrkamp Verlag. With contributions from Olaf Arndt, Claudia Basrawi, Jochen Bonz & Thomas Meinecke, Mariola Brillowska, Kurt Dahlke, Diedrich Diederichsen, Harald Fricke, Tom Holert, Miss Kittin, Pinky Rose, Birgit Richard, Terre Thaemlitz, Marc Weiser and 17 black and white drawings by Jan Rohlf. – In German language only.
See also
References
- ↑ DISK/CTM Festival Official Website
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to club transmediale. |
- DISK/CTM Festival Official Website
- CTM All Artist Archive
- CTM on Facebook
- CTM on Twitter
- DISK/CTM at Flickr
- DISK/CTM at Last.fm
- Recordings of Club Transmediale at Samurai.fm
- Gendertronics / Suhrkamp Publisher
- I.C.A.S. / E.C.A.S. network
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