Just as there
auteur and genre cinema, music writer there and music genre. However there are authors who use gender as an excuse to develop a particular aesthetic, getting works that can be considered both author and genre, and in some cases inaugurate a new subgenre.
Take for example the great Sergio Leone and his film "A Fistful of Dollars" (1964), where the Western, plus the unique insight Leone, with its close-ups and panoramic sound as an expressive element, dilation time, their expertise to create tension, his anti-capitalist metaphorized skillfully in "adult fables", his complex plots and allegorical characters, marks the birth of the Spaghetti Western. Saving
distances, so it is with "A Fistful of Dub" (2004). We have a gender: The Dub, an author, Disrupt, and a particular aesthetic: the computer uses to create his music, but instead of trying to make something that sounds "modern" electronic sounds recovered from old game consoles, giving created a new subgenre called Digital Laptop Reggae (DLR) and although, as in the case of Leone and "For A Fistful of Dollars" , it is not his most finished, it remains an interesting (and, if you will, exciting) starts, culminating in the creation Jahtari seal, official home of reggae pixelated and intergalactic exploration 8 bits.
A taste.
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