The Culture Journalist

Revisiting Hauntology, or the sound of lost futures

Dec 4, 2025
Simon Reynolds, a veteran music critic and historian, popularized the term 'hauntology' to explore music's eerie relationship with time and memory. He discusses how the genre emerged from post-war UK music, citing artists like Burial and The Caretaker who utilize ghostly archival sounds. Reynolds connects hauntology to nostalgic longings for lost futures and critiques the recycling of past styles in contemporary culture. He also reflects on the oppressive atmosphere of today, urging a revival of hopeful imaginaries to combat cultural despair.
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ANECDOTE

Boards Of Canada Triggered Uncanny Memory

  • Simon Reynolds recalls Boards of Canada's music activating involuntary childhood images and memories for him.
  • He describes their tones and sampled children's voices as poignantly uncanny and emotionally powerful.
INSIGHT

Medium Decay Becomes A Sonic Theme

  • Hauntological music often uses sampling and fragile recording media to make the past sound fallible and ghostlike.
  • Artists emphasize tape hiss, vinyl crackle, and disintegration to sonically represent memory decay.
INSIGHT

Digital Permanence Sparked Analog Fetish

  • Hauntology partly arose as a reaction to the digital turn and its perceived perfection and permanence.
  • That perceived digital immortality made artists fetishize analog flaws as a site of authenticity and mortality.
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