Noise: The Political Economy of Music

Noise: The Political Economy of Music
First Edition 1977 by Presses Universitaires de France
AuthorJacques Attali
TranslatorBrian Massumi
Cover artistPieter Breughel the Elder
The Fight Between Carnival and Lent (1559)
LanguageFrench / English
GenreNon-fiction
PublisherPresses Universitaires de France/ University of Minnesota Press (US)
Publication date
1977
Publication placeFrance
Media typePrint
ISBN0-8166-1286-2
OCLC11549283
780/.07 19
LC ClassML3795 .A913 1985

Noise: The Political Economy of Music is a book by French economist and scholar Jacques Attali which is about the role of music in the political economy.

Attali's essential argument in Noise: The Political Economy of Music (French title: Bruits: essai sur l'economie politique de la musique) is that music, as a cultural form, is intimately tied up in the mode of production in any given society. Although this idea is familiar in strands of Marxism, the novelty of Attali's work is that it reverses the traditional understandings about how revolutions in the mode of production take place:

"[Attali] is the first to point out the other possible logical consequence of the “reciprocal interaction” model—namely, the possibility of a superstructure to anticipate historical developments, to foreshadow new social formations in a prophetic and annunciatory way. The argument of Noise is that music, unique among the arts for reasons that are themselves overdetermined, has precisely this annunciatory vocation; that the music of today stands both as a promise of a new, liberating mode of production, and as the menace of a dystopian possibility which is that mode of production’s baleful mirror image."[1]

  1. ^ Fredric Jameson, from the "Foreword" to Noise