Holly Herndon (born 1980) is an American artist and composer based in Berlin, Germany.
After studying composition at Stanford University and completing her Ph.D. at Stanford University's Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics, she pursued a music career internationally.
Herndon's music often includes human singing voices (including her own), is primarily computer-based, and regularly uses the visual programming language Max/MSP to create custom instruments and vocal processes.
She has released music on the labels RVNG Intl. and 4AD.
Holly Herndon was born in 1980 and raised in Johnson City, Tennessee.
As a teenager, she spent several years living in Berlin on a high school exchange program, absorbed in the city's dance and techno scene.
When Herndon returned to the United States she began studying electronic music at Mills College in Oakland, California.
She studied under John Bischoff, James Fei, Maggi Payne, and Fred Frith, receiving her MFA in Electronic Music and Recording Media.
2010
While at Mills she composed the vocal-generated piece 195, which won her the Elizabeth Mills Crothers award for best composer in 2010.
At school she focused on laptop performance, and she currently does most of her composing via laptop.
2011
In 2011 she released Car, an independent, near hour-long track on cassette.
2012
In 2012, she was a doctoral candidate in composition at Stanford University.
At Stanford she continued to use coding software such as Max/MSP to program many of her own electronic instruments and patches.
Movement was released in November 2012 through RVNG Intl, a record label based in Brooklyn.
For the album she used the visual programming language Max/MSP to create custom instruments and vocal processes.
Movement received a score of 8.1 on Pitchfork, who stated that Herndon "uses her crystalline voice as a chief input for her laptop, ultimately arriving at a poignant nexus of electronic accessibility and experimentation that owes as much to her academic forebears as her club contemporaries. It's a record with the rare capacity to turn cynics who might scoff at the idea of laptops-as-intimate-instruments into believers."
According to The Quietus, "Movement's sound certainly has its forebears and contemporaries – it's possible to detect traces of everyone from Coil and Aphex Twin to Ellen Allien and Laurel Halo in the mix – but equally it contains elements, both sonic and thematic, that are quite unlike any other electronic music currently out there."
Also, "Herndon's music reflects the ambiguous nature of our interactions with these technologies. It's by turns sensual, blissful and disturbing, and often hints towards all three states at once."
2014
Her single "Chorus" was released on January 24, 2014, with a music video created by Akihiko Taniguchi.
"Chorus" was named Best New Track by Pitchfork.
For sounds to build the song, Herndon sampled her browsing experience on the internet, incorporating sources such as YouTube and Skype.
The video focuses explicitly on the personal nature of modern computing.
According to Herndon, "The more comfortable we get with these devices, the more vulnerable we are. We are learning more and more about the NSA revelations; I think it is really interesting that we have never been more intimate with these machines, and at the same time have never had such cause to be suspicious of them. We wanted to capture both of those sides."
The full Chorus EP was also released in January both on vinyl and digitally, and it received an 8.0 and positive review in Pitchfork.
According to Create Digital Music, "few artists have managed to meld the dark thump of techno with the intricate constructions of post-minimalist new music quite like Holly Herndon. Her rapid-punctuated, ethereal vocals... float above complex, dance music-inspired machinery, producing an effect that is arrestingly gorgeous and frightening all at once."
Herndon released the single "Home" on September 16, 2014, with a video directed by Dutch design studio Metahaven.
According to Herndon, it captures her feeling of losing trust in electronics after the revelations the NSA monitors what some Americans do online.
"Home" continues "Chorus"'s theme of surveillance: "It is a love song for prying eyes (an agent / a critic), and also a break up song with the devices with which I shared a naive relationship."
2015
Herndon's second full-length album, Platform, was released on May 19, 2015.
Guest artists include Dryhurst, the Dutch design studio Metahaven, Spencer Longo, and Claire Tolan.
The album explores a complicated relationship with technology, and includes a track titled "Lonely at the Top" that is intended to trigger Autonomous sensory meridian response (ASMR).
Addressing themes of internet decentralization by actively exploring the concept of decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs), Platform was created through the Internet in collaboration between Dryhurst and Herndon and strangers from all over the world.
In 2015, Dryhurst and Herndon released an eleven minute long track called "Recruit", which they made for British menswear line Cottweiler.
2019
Her third full-length album, Proto, was released on May 10, 2019.
In addition to her solo work, Herndon has been involved in numerous artistic collaborations, including projects with Iranian writer Reza Negarestani, Chicago-based producer Jlin and Dutch design studio Metahaven.
Her long standing collaborator is Mathew Dryhurst.
Herndon and Dryhurst are notable for their work exploring the possibilities of creating content using technologies, such as AI, Web 3.0, and blockchain.
Herndon and Dryhurst host a podcast called Interdependence, where they discuss technology and the arts with guests who are working at the forefront of integrating arts and technology in their work.
Herndon successfully defended her dissertation in 2019.
While attending Mills she began developing her debut album Movement.