You can hear the spooky sounds of Marie Antoinette Aussenac de Broglie playing the electronic Croix Sonore in the 1930s. Plug your headphones (noise cancelling, if you can) into jacks installed beside some of the exhibits. This is your chance to step inside the visual world of The Chemical Brothers featuring elements of their legendary live show, as visuals and lights interact to create a three- dimensional immersive experience by Smith & Lyall – inspired by the psychedelic duo’s acclaimed ’No Geography’ Tour.”Also in the exhibition are visuals created by Weirdcore for Aphex Twin’s recent Gemma Curtin, curator of the exhibition, said: “Sound is only part of the story when it comes to this category of music: it has built communities on and offline, democratised music technology and provided a safe space for free expression.”“Design is an essential element enhancing the experience of our live show,” The Chemical Brothers added. The section called Utopian Dreams and Ideals presents clubs such as Berlin’s Some aficionados of electronic music might quarrel with the choice to elevate DJs and dancers over inventors and therefore to concertina the pre-1980s narrative – trailblazers such as

Guardian, 15th June 2020. Become a member today and enjoy a year of priority free entry for you and a guest, plus up to three children aged 15 and under, plus exclusive discounts in the shop.Discover the 127 tracks selected by Laurent Garnier for the exhibition.Join a music conversation between electronic music legend, Jeff Mills and sound designer - Yuri Suzuki.A new pay it forward scheme in partnership with local charities that distributes free exhibition tickets in the local community.Electronic is an Exhibition by the Musée de la Musique – Philharmonie de ParisCORE Installation (video above) by 1024 ArchitectureElectronic: From Kraftwerk to The Chemical Brothers Did newly discovered and inexplicable sounds carry suggestion of a great unknown, a numinous order of things, carried on invisible waves?Decades later, the language of evangelical congregation – trance, unity, rapture and universal love – would become associated with gatherings in which the music itself was worshipped. Devices, of course, tracking the long journey from the lab to the club. Yes, the These things may thrill you into little geeky gobbits of electronic joy. Still, it somehow seems perfectly apt that a show about electronic music is not only noisy, but also chaotic and disorienting.Scheduled originally for the end of March, this delayed opening of All rights reserved. You’re drawn to bodies and faces: a video of Detroit street dancers, a collage of clubbers preparing for the weekend in Mark Farrow’s playful advertising campaign for the 90s superclub Cream, Parisian dancers frozen in awe in Jean-Christian Meyer’s grainy black-and-white portraits. Tickets cost £7.20-£16.30, and are available to book now. You may have missed the headlines - "Summer of illegal raves expected in England despite coronavirus crises." ... Electronic: From Kraftwerk to The Chemical Brothers. You may have missed the headlines - "Summer of illegal raves expected in England despite coronavirus crises." Design Museum. © 2020 JPIMedia Publications Ltd. Electronic: From Kraftwerk to The Chemical Brothers was scheduled to run in March, and in August it becomes the first major exhibition to open in the UK since lockdown forced the closure of museums and galleries across the country. "Illegal lockdown rave sees police swarm on woodlands." The exhibition, which opens in April, will come with a specially created soundtrack by Laurent GarnierA new exhibition at London’s Design Museum is set to explore the visual world behind some of electronic music’s most iconic acts.An explanation of the exhibition reads: “Grab your headphones and plug into the first music-themed exhibition at the Design Museum, from Wednesday 1 April 2020 – featuring a club-like environment where lighting and video are synched to a specially curated soundtrack by French DJ Laurent Garnier.“Complete with a new series of live AV experiences, visitors will be transported by multi-sensory installations.