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      • No wave was an avant-garde music genre and visual art scene which emerged in the late 1970s in Downtown New York City.
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › No_waveNo wave - Wikipedia

    No wave was an avant-garde music genre and visual art scene which emerged in the late 1970s in Downtown New York City. [4] [5] The term was a pun based on the rejection of commercial new wave music. [6] Reacting against punk rock 's recycling of rock and roll clichés, no wave musicians instead experimented with noise, dissonance, and atonality ...

  3. Feb 6, 2023 · Through May 15, the Pompidou Center in Paris is hosting a radically original exhibition devoted to one of the more obscure — if not noisiest, shortest-lived yet highly influential — music and visual art movements in New York’s cultural history: no wave.

    • When did no wave art start?1
    • When did no wave art start?2
    • When did no wave art start?3
    • When did no wave art start?4
  4. No Wave began in 1976-1977 during the same time period as early punk rock and New Wave. It was characterized by a harsh, rhythm based sound, nihilistic lyrics and shouted or monotone vocals mixed with noisy, atonal guitar and screeching saxophone parts reminiscent of free jazz.

  5. No wave was a short-lived avant-garde music and art scene that emerged in the late 1970s in downtown New York City. Reacting against punk rock 's recycling of rock and roll clichés, no wave musicians instead experimented with noise , dissonance and atonality in addition to a variety of non-rock genres , while often reflecting an abrasive ...

  6. Feb 21, 2023 · The artistic scene known as "no wave" came to light in New York in the late 1970s. It provided a veritable open-air laboratory for a new generation of musicians, filmmakers, visual artists and performers, including James Chance, Alan Vega, Lydia Lunch, Karole Armitage, Sonic Youth, Beth B & Scott B, and Christian Marclay.

  7. Malcolm McLaren. Summary of Punk and Post-Punk Art. More than a musical genre or fashion trend, punk was a cultural movement that represented a near-complete reset for the way art, music, film, journalism, and style was made and understood.

  8. Jan 14, 2008 · In the late 1970s, a loose collective of New York bands created a radical reaction to New Wave and Punk that came to be known as No Wave.

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