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#239: Aunt Sally – Hi Ga Kuchite

After seeing the Sex Pistols on Japanese television, Hiromi Moritani flew to London for a few weeks in 1976. Back in Osaka, and still under the impression of her experiences in the punk metropolis, the 17-year-old formed her own band, Aunt Sally.

#209: Gulfa-e-Ghani and Zareef – Train Rhythm Imitation

There were no flowers in the desert, but the scent of melodies hung in the air everywhere, recalls Deben Bhattacharya. In 1955, the music collector travelled from Paris to Kolkata, India, in a converted milk truck. On board: a tape recorder with which Bhattacharya recorded music along the way.

#116: Gerard Malanga And Ingrid Superstar – Gossip

Crowdfunding without the internet – in New York, this was done in 1966 with a record. The proceeds went to the newly founded counterculture magazine ‘The East Village Other’. A who's who of pop culture gathered for the recording on 6 August. The date not only marked the 21st anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima.

#103: Kristin Oppenheim – Long Gone

Whether love, hate or cool detachment – no musical instrument can express emotions as powerfully as the human voice. The sound works sung by New York artist Kristin Oppenheim herself consist of just a few words. Nevertheless, they powerfully address themes of longing and loneliness.

#43: Brion Gysin – Pistol Poem

With the Dreamachine, Brion Gysin invented the first art object that had to be experienced with closed eyes and induced a state of light relaxation. The artist also worked on methods at the sonic level that were intended to alter the state of consciousness.

#63: Jon Appleton – Newark Airport Rock

Electronic sounds were all the rage in the mid-1960s. The young American composer Jon Appleton was certain that they would enable him to reach the emotions and consciousness of a wider audience. In 1967, while waiting for a connecting flight at Newark Airport, he put this idea to the test.

#237: Henry Kawahara – Yorokobi-No-Koe

When cyber-shamanism emerged in Japan in the 1980s, 3D sound recording technologies and brain machines were developed there to simulate the effects of hallucinogenic drugs. Henry Kawahara was at the centre of this movement.

#139: Max Mathews – Daisy Bell (Bicycle Built For Two)

Robotic vocoder voices in music were the symbol of an electronic future in the 1970s. The technology was already being used during the Second World War and was further developed in 1961 at Bell Labs in New Jersey, where computer music pioneer Max Mathews employed it to adapt a love song from 1892.