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OverviewMaking Synthwave: How an Online Music Community Invented a Genre documents the journey of an online community in their formation of the synthwave genre. Taking an emic perspective that delivers a behind-the-scenes, access-all-areas telling of synthwave’s story from the very beginning to the mid 2020s, this ethnographic account offers a full history and development of the online synthwave community. Through an insightful longitudinal virtual ethnography by a composer, producer and performer, the book observes how artists, audiences, musicians, producers and performers have come together to negotiate the musical and cultural boundaries of 1980s ‘throwback’ style synthwave. The book makes visible tacit knowledge of the synthwave creative process, as well as providing rich and experiential subcultural detail that situates synthwave as an active community of practice which formulated its roots as a music genre exclusively online in the mid to late 2000s. This book is essential reading for music makers in a variety of genres and scholars of popular music, cultural theory and music production, as well as those interested in the nuances of music-making on the internet, creative processes with synthesizers and the mechanics of genre theory and community music in the digital age. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Jess Blaise WardPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Focal Press Weight: 0.453kg ISBN: 9781032732039ISBN 10: 1032732032 Pages: 276 Publication Date: 13 November 2025 Audience: General/trade , College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , General , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available ![]() This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of Contents1. (Part 1) From Synthetix.FM to Stranger Things (2016-2025) Making Synthwave Subcultural Capital 1. (Part 2) From Synthetix.FM to Stranger Things (2016-2025) Making Synthwave Subcultural Capital 2. Making Synthwave Music with Music Technology 3. Metalheads in the Synthwave Community – Making Darksynth 4. Making Space for Vocals and Women: The Vocal Synthwave Subgenre 5. Making ‘Live’ Synthwave Performances – Tensions in Live Synthwave Practices 6. Keeping Synthwave ‘Alive’: Key Organisations, Events and Community Practices On/OfflineReviews‘Making Synthwave captures the complexities, passion, politics, and sounds that make this genre so meaningful. Tracing a compelling narrative of the key players in the synthwave community of practice, the book reveals a sophisticated investigation with rigour, richness, and depth that pays wonderful attention to the subtleties of genre studies.’ Dr Laura Glitsos, Senior Lecturer, Coordinator of Media and Cultural Studies at the School of Arts and Humanities, Edith Cowan University, Australia ‘Making Synthwave is an in-depth account of a musical genre that is little studied, but has a distinctive presence in popular culture through its close connection with film, TV and videogames. Through close musical analysis and interviews with musicians, podcasters, label heads and more, Jess Blaise Ward astutely navigates the interplay of online and offline creative and community-building activity that has contributed to the formation of synthwave, from YouTube tutorials and Reddit groups to gigs and festivals.’ Dr Frances Morgan, author of Delian Modes: Listening for Delia Derbyshire in Histories of Electronic Dance Music ‘Making Synthwave captures the complexities, passion, politics, and sounds that make this genre so meaningful. Tracing a compelling narrative of the key players in the synthwave community of practice, the book reveals a sophisticated investigation with rigour, richness, and depth that pays wonderful attention to the subtleties of genre studies.’ Dr Laura Glitsos, Senior Lecturer, Coordinator of Media and Cultural Studies at the School of Arts and Humanities, Edith Cowan University, Australia ‘Making Synthwave is an in-depth account of a musical genre that is little studied, but has a distinctive presence in popular culture through its close connection with film, TV and videogames. Through close musical analysis and interviews with musicians, podcasters, label heads and more, Jess Blaise Ward astutely navigates the interplay of online and offline creative and community-building activity that has contributed to the formation of synthwave, from YouTube tutorials and Reddit groups to gigs and festivals.’ Dr Frances Morgan, author of Delian Modes: Listening for Delia Derbyshire in Histories of Electronic Dance Music (Dancecult) Author InformationJess Blaise Ward (Leeds Beckett University, UK) is a synth artist and researcher of genre formation, online music communities, subcultural theory and feminist scholarship. Past publications include Who remembers post-punk women? (2019) and her paper on metalheads in the online synthwave community at the Internet Musicking conference (2022). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |