A worldwide electronic music index · 1970–1979
The decade when circuits became culture.
From Cologne studios and Parisian tape laboratories to Tokyo synthesists, New York minimalists, Italian electronic disco and radiophonic workshops: explore 1,354 artists documented through qualified 1970s electronic-release evidence.
FREQ.70.79GLOBAL / ELECTRONIC
Context / 01
Not one scene, but a connected planet of sound
“Electronic music” in the 1970s covered very different practices: institutional studios, home-built instruments, sequencer-driven rock, computer composition, electronic disco, ambient, industrial experiments, dub processing and music for film and television.
Kosmische & Berlin School
Long-form synthesis, tape loops and motorik rhythm made West Germany a center of exploratory electronic rock. Tangerine Dream, Cluster, Harmonia and Klaus Schulze turned the studio into an instrument.
French electroacoustic music
GRM composers developed musique concrète through tape transformation, spatial sound and acousmatic listening, while artists such as Heldon connected the laboratory to amplified rock.
Japanese synthesizer culture
Isao Tomita’s orchestral synthesizer records, Yellow Magic Orchestra’s programmed pop and Ryuichi Sakamoto’s solo work helped establish distinct Japanese electronic languages.
Minimalism, systems & computers
American composers used pulse, process, Buchla systems and early computer tools. Laurie Spiegel, Morton Subotnick, Wendy Carlos and Pauline Oliveros expanded both technique and listening practice.
Electronic disco & machine rhythm
Munich, Paris, Montreal, Milan and New York dance floors absorbed synthesizers and sequencers. Giorgio Moroder’s productions made machine pulse a decisive part of popular music.
Industrial & post-punk electronics
By the late decade, inexpensive synths, tape machines and confrontational performance powered Throbbing Gristle, Cabaret Voltaire, Suicide and the first synth-pop groups.
Chronology / 02
Ten years of accelerated signals
Index / 03
The 1,354-artist archive
Every entry is tied to qualified artist-level or release-level electronic evidence from the 1970s, or to a separately documented canonical work. Every artist includes a sourced profile and transparent inclusion evidence.
Sources / 04
What this archive is—and is not
Selection
The working set begins with MusicBrainz release groups tagged electronic and first released from 1970 through 1979. A fail-closed qualification gate then requires artist-level target tags, specialist release evidence, repeated electronic releases or explicit canonical curation; contradictory mainstream evidence is rejected.
Audio
No recordings are copied into this project. Artist profiles expose up to ten provider-hosted Apple or Deezer promotional samples after conservative artist and release matching. The archive currently offers 4,501 samples across 704 artists; it does not pad unmatched artists with approximate recordings. Catalog entries may be later remasters or reissues; original 1970s release evidence is listed separately.
Histories
Every artist has a sourced profile: attributed introductory material from English Wikipedia where safely resolved, otherwise a deliberately conservative summary of the cited MusicBrainz evidence. Artist artwork is original deterministic vector art—not copied album artwork.
Sources
- MusicBrainz — releases and artist identifiers
- Wikipedia — attributed profile context
- Apple Search API — promotional previews
- Deezer API — promotional preview fallback
Independent archive. Signals 70–79 is a research and listening project published by Around Geek.