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15 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Vocoders at Work, Vocorders at Play
I don't think that before I read _How to Wreck a Nice Beach: The Vocoder from World War II to Hip-Hop: The Machine Speaks_ (Stop Smiling Books / Melville House Publishing) that I even knew what a vocoder was. After reading it, I am convinced vocoders must be everywhere. They seem to have been a foundation of Dave Tompkins's life. He has written this quirky book over a...
Published 22 months ago by R. Hardy

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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A mixed bag
On one hand, "How to Wreck a Nice Beach" is a frustrating read. Tompkins often takes off on tangents, offering irrelevant asides and allusions that are never fully explained or further explored. He mentions other devices and technology, but never illustrates how they are connected to the Vocodor and its development. Indeed, there's nothing technical at all in this book...
Published 21 months ago by Karl Pallmeyer


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15 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Vocoders at Work, Vocorders at Play, April 21, 2010
This review is from: How to Wreck a Nice Beach: The Vocoder from World War II to Hip-Hop, The Machine Speaks (Hardcover)
I don't think that before I read _How to Wreck a Nice Beach: The Vocoder from World War II to Hip-Hop: The Machine Speaks_ (Stop Smiling Books / Melville House Publishing) that I even knew what a vocoder was. After reading it, I am convinced vocoders must be everywhere. They seem to have been a foundation of Dave Tompkins's life. He has written this quirky book over a period spanning more than a decade, with some of the interviews going back more than ten years ago. Since he is an accomplished music columnist, mostly covering hip-hop and other popular music, most of the book is about the vocoder's use for entertainment, though it does cover the history of the device as a military tool. The vocoder helped win WWII, and even if you never appreciated it for that, and even if you aren't much of a pop music fan, you have probably heard its work when the movies needed a robot voice. _Colossus: The Forbin Project_ (1970) featured "the first paranoid supercomputer to speak through a vocoder." It has made cameo appearances in _Battlestar Galactica_ and _Tron_. It formed the words for the minimalist lyrics of Kraftwerk's _Autobahn_, and did the synthesized chorus for the electronic version of Beethoven's Ninth in _Clockwork Orange_. It was the basis for the vocals in the Christmas album _Zoot Zoot Zoot, Here Comes Santa in His New Space Suit_. OK, you don't know that one, and nobody is going to get all of Tompkins's astonishingly scattershot cultural references, but still, this hyper-illustrated, zingily-written historical tribute to Tompkins's favorite gadget is an amusing and in-depth examination of a particular and peculiar bit of technology and culture.

It is no surprise that the vocoder invented in 1928 is nothing like the vocoder now. It was invented for the purpose of cryptology, the brainchild of Homer Dudley working at Bell Labs. The ones used during WWII were as big as a three-bedroom home, but they were essential. Churchill had a vocoder installed in the basement of a London department store, and used it to discuss such things as D-Day with Roosevelt. President Johnson used it on Air Force One and flung the vocoder's headset in fury at an aide, yelling, "When I talk to the Secretary of State, he better _sound_ like the Secretary of State." Distortion was part of the security. Indeed, the peculiar title of Tompkins's book comes from a test of the vocoder, a bungled misunderstanding of the input phrase "how to recognize speech." The robotic distortion was what got the vocoder into pop music. It has become "the main machine of electro hip-hop, the black voice removed from itself, displaced by Reaganomics, recession, and urban renewal." Well, Tompkins is an expert on that sort of music, and presents the thoughts of many artists within hip-hop, but the vocoder has ranged widely. It sang "Barnacle Bill" in 1936 at Harvard. Ray Bradbury first encountered it at the 1939 New York World's Fair, and in 1977 his famous story about an automated house living on after a nuclear war had vocoder sound effects. Herbie Hancock, usually regarded as a jazz pianist, enraged some of his fans by using the vocoder in 1979. (Tompkins slyly notes, "Herbie Hancock did the unthinkable and used the vocoder to actually improve his voice.") Neil Young, faced with a disabled son who could not speak, made the album _Trans_ with a vocodered voice in 1983. This, too, bothered fans, and it also bothered his label, Geffen Records, which sued him, Tompkins summarizes, "for not being himself." Young countersued, and it was all settled out of court.

Tompkins juggles the two sides of the vocoder, cryptography and entertainment, adroitly. His prose is more subdued when discussing the technical and historical aspects of the instrument; when you read him on hip-hop, you are likely to get sentences like these, discussing "Clear," the first electro song he heard as a kid: "Music makes you hallucinate blue Lamborghinis airbrushed by a Ciara chorus while Fat Man Scoop, the drill sergeant of hype men, berates the freaks, freaking the club. It's all seizures and tracksuits, boneless and acrylic." If you are like me, and don't have much of a clue about artists like Jonzun Crew, Rammellzee, DJ Disk, or Grandmixer DXT, that part of the book will be a lively puzzle. What is truly interesting about the two different worlds, one trying to communicate secretly and the other trying to communicate openly, is that neither seems to know the other existed. Hip-hop artists were surprised to be told by Tompkins that their vocoders had a background of military service; WWII cryptologists were amazed to learn that their vocoders were being used in clubs and on records. Tompkins's book, full of personal reminiscences, visits with quirky artists and geeks, and analyses of the cultural zeitgeist of contented or befuddled vocoder users, is an important documentation of a tiny slice of the modern way of life.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A mixed bag, May 13, 2010
This review is from: How to Wreck a Nice Beach: The Vocoder from World War II to Hip-Hop, The Machine Speaks (Hardcover)
On one hand, "How to Wreck a Nice Beach" is a frustrating read. Tompkins often takes off on tangents, offering irrelevant asides and allusions that are never fully explained or further explored. He mentions other devices and technology, but never illustrates how they are connected to the Vocodor and its development. Indeed, there's nothing technical at all in this book. We don't need a detailed examination of electric capacitors and sonic waveforms, but a little more scientific meat would have been nice.
That might seem a damning condemnation, but the other hand, the writing in this book is very enteraining. Tomkins' energetic stream-of-conscious style recalls the mix-master techniques of the hip hop music of which he is so fond. While annoyed at the lack of a chronological, coherent narrative, I love they way Tompkins puts words together. I continued to read just to see where he'd go next.
If you want a comprehensive history of the Vocodor and related technology, this is not the book for you. However, if you're looking for a fascinating, emotional tribute to this marriage of music, technology and culture, you should read "How to Wreck a Nice Beach."
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars How to wreck a nice book..., December 30, 2010
This review is from: How to Wreck a Nice Beach: The Vocoder from World War II to Hip-Hop, The Machine Speaks (Hardcover)
The writing, frankly, is indulgent beyond belief, and often diffuses what he is trying to say. You have to pick through unclear convolutions and winking references you either get or you don't (it's like a Simpsons episode, except more distracting than entertaining) to get at the meat. To boot, he often throws in fictional elements to further pursue our admiration for his "flash" style. For instance, in setting a scene, he mentions that a cow is yawning and a food cart worker is stealing money while someone is onstage at a state fair with their vocoder...in the eighties. Pretty sure that didn't turn up in his research. That would be fine for a novel, but this ain't that. The cow is a harmless enough detail, but the result of telling me someone stole money while the band played--because you think it reads cool--is I am often wondering if more ambiguous details are fact or fiction. Bad news for a history of anything, even the vocoder. There were a lot of things I took with a grain of salt; you certainly couldn't cite this book as a source for research! (If you were even completely sure of what was being said in the first place.) The style is basically what someone might use trying to get attention and look clever in a 100-word blurb review in a magazine, stretched out over a book. I finally packed it in and am just skimming now. Check this one out from the library if you want to read about the vocoder, don't buy. I generally don't review things on amazon...once every couple of years...but this book is so off-putting I wanted to warn people. Or as Dave Tomkins might say: "the throbbing migraine twisting around in my skull beamed in from the type-set nightmare spilling out across the pages of the book bound from another planet, one where editors snooze under liquor-filled palm trees, caused my fingers to do a spasmastic dance across the plastic keys of a 2002 Dell Keyboard (a friend once told me I looked like an eagle scout next to my Dell keyboard), shrieking with the culmination of their tapping: 'NO! This book is better off not bought, this book will bring you down until the carpet has found a permanent home on your face.'"
Honest to God, that's really what it's like.
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9 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars ... you sing calm incense, and speak distinctly, May 11, 2010
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This review is from: How to Wreck a Nice Beach: The Vocoder from World War II to Hip-Hop, The Machine Speaks (Hardcover)
This is a tech geek's wild ride through ten years of research and interviews, taking tangent at every opportunity to weave together the improbable uses and history of this one technological wonder. Like most of the inescapable gadgets that come to permeate popular culture the vocoder is unrecognizable from its original form.

Behind the fireworks on the page there is an obsessive's amount of information. Music fans of a certain tech bent will be interested in the scope of Tompkins' interviews from Afrika Bambaataa, to Laurie Anderson, to Holger Czukay of the group Can. These are not household names to casual pop listeners, and the book will have a built-in cult appeal, but it is surprising to discover a few major interview omissions. (Stevie Wonder is one.)

The book is fun, written in a dense style that could be called pop-baroque. Tompkins likes to scatter his literary references wide and drop time-space continuum non-sequiturs on the unsuspecting reader, in that disquieting way of the truly inspired -- or obsessed, depending on one's point of view. Over the long haul the book takes on exhausting dimensions. Ten years of research into one corner of pop culture is a long time; the writing may be fun, but the writer often loses focus in that "what was I saying?" style as he layers on the stories.

But the dedicated reader/gadget fan will hang in there. Like a spy novel there are unexpected connections throughout the book. If there are no real conspiracies, no unexpected dark secrets to discover about the vocoder or its uses, the facts themselves pile up to make an intriguing story. At the very least, having read "How To Wreck a Nice Beach" will bring a sly smile the next time I choose between Kathy or Alex, Bad News, Hysterical or Deranged as a text-reading voice option.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Great intent with a very pretentious, misguided follow through., August 31, 2010
This review is from: How to Wreck a Nice Beach: The Vocoder from World War II to Hip-Hop, The Machine Speaks (Hardcover)
I really wanted to like this book. It's from a guy that has written for one of my favorite periodicals (Wax Poetics). It's about a very unique musical instrument, slash, device. It covers quite heartily some lesser known facts about quite a few hip hop nuggets. But...

This book really couldn't be any more haphazard if the author give it another go in the second edition. The book follows no kind of chronological or thematic order. Tangents and anecdotes are utilized quite liberally with no rhyme, reason OR resolution. And...

The writing is pretentious to no end. It appears that the author was purposefully playing a game of "define that word" when concocting this confounded tome (perfect example of the kind of unnecessary, verbose language used throughout the entire book).

I still gave it two stars because there are sections there where you get some great insight into artist's love for and idiosyncratic usage of the vocoder, in it's various incarnations (the section on Roger Troutman is especially good), but, hopefully for his next book (if another publisher allows it), he will look up the definition of this word: flow.

Because his writing really needs it. This kind of disjointed writing might be cool for a 2-3 page article, but surely is very disorienting in book form.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Too Scattered, April 12, 2011
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This review is from: How to Wreck a Nice Beach: The Vocoder from World War II to Hip-Hop, The Machine Speaks (Hardcover)
As other reviewers have said, the writing "style" -- if it is a style -- is almost incomprehensible. The writer seems to know lots of history and pivotal people of the vocodor world. It would have been great if an editor had stepped in and helped the writer present his thoughts and knowledge in a reasonable way. This book was very, very frustrating to struggle through. Actually painful to read. It's not playful or eccentric, just awful, scatter-brain writing. I had hoped this would be a companion to the book "Analog Days: The Invention and Impact of the Moog Synthesizer," by Frank Trocco -- that book was GREAT, but this book really disappointed me. The only good thing I'll say about it is that the physical production values are good--it's a hardcover and the pages are thick and it's a nice, old-fashion book in a physical way. Just an awful, awful read.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars a wrecked beach sounds nice, May 19, 2010
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This review is from: How to Wreck a Nice Beach: The Vocoder from World War II to Hip-Hop, The Machine Speaks (Hardcover)
A hip and cleverly written book. Informative and fun. Dave Tompkins creates a historic vibe of distorted words- How codes became cool.
You would never know how connected we are to sounds until you read this book. A learning and memory recalling read.
I highly recommend How to Wreck A Nice Beach.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Yessss!, January 9, 2012
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At first I was giving in to my inclination toward wanting this book to be a straight-forward linear account of the history of the vocoder... like accidentally drinking seltzer late at night when you are going for the milk. A bad taste in my mouth. But once I settled in, got used to the style, I had my mind totally opened and then blown apart. If you aren't a philistine, I recommend this highly. Awesome!

Oh yeah, and who knew Roger didn't use a vocoder, egads!
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4.0 out of 5 stars How to wreck a nice beach, October 18, 2011
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This review is from: How to Wreck a Nice Beach: The Vocoder from World War II to Hip-Hop, The Machine Speaks (Hardcover)
Allthough this book has its focus on the use of the vocoder in the hiphopscene, non-hiphop-fans, like myself, can still enjoy it alot. The author has a special style of telling the tale, it's not allways easy to understand and requires some background knowledge, but it is written in a very interesting way.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Modulation history, June 19, 2011
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P. Cook "remixer" (Oldsmar, Florida, US) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: How to Wreck a Nice Beach: The Vocoder from World War II to Hip-Hop, The Machine Speaks (Hardcover)
This is the greatest book written on the electronic encoding of the human voice. It has people that worked on this when it was developed in interviews and people that used this technology with music with song titles. Buy it and check out the blog, howtowreckanicebeach.com Support this movement and buy the 2nd installment comming in the fall of 2011 =)
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