0
Psyclones
Psyclones
experimental industrial musical band
1
Chris Carter
Chris Carter
English musician
2
Skeleton Crew
Skeleton Crew
American experimental rock and jazz group
3
Chris Brown
Chris Brown
American composer, pianist and electronic musician
4
yelworC
yelworC
band
5
Tom Cora
Tom Cora
American cellist and composer
6
The Evolution Control Committee
The Evolution Control Committee
Experimental music band
7
Controlled Bleeding
Controlled Bleeding
American band
8
Spahn Ranch
Spahn Ranch
American industrial band
9
Bob Ostertag
Bob Ostertag
American musician
10
Tim Hodgkinson
Tim Hodgkinson
English experimental music composer and performer
11
Alvin Lucier
Alvin Lucier
American composer of experimental music and sound installations
12
Ruth White
Ruth White
composer
13
Ikue Mori
Ikue Mori
Japanese drummer
14
Fred Frith
Fred Frith
English musician, composer and improvisor
15
Iris
Iris
American synthpop band
16
Brad Laner
Brad Laner
musician
17
The Gerogerigegege
The Gerogerigegege
Japanese band
18
Randy Greif
Randy Greif
composer
19
Jonn Serrie
Jonn Serrie
American electronic music composer
20
Alvin Curran
Alvin Curran
American musician and composer
21
No-Man
No-Man
English art-pop duo
22
Chris Cutler
Chris Cutler
English percussionist, composer, lyricist and music theorist
23
Nicolas Collins
Nicolas Collins
American composer
24
Robert Schneider
Robert Schneider
biography of musician and mathematician
25
Jean-Baptiste Favory
Jean-Baptiste Favory
French composer, radio host and audio engineer
26
Keiji Haino
Keiji Haino
Japanese musician
27
Voice of Eye
Voice of Eye
American experimental music duo
28
The Haters
The Haters
American noise music collective
29
Raymond Scott
Raymond Scott
American composer, bandleader, pianist, record producer and inventor (1908-1994)
30
Miya Masaoka
Miya Masaoka
American composer
31
David Tudor
David Tudor
American pianist and composer
32
David Toop
David Toop
British musician
Intro
American musician
Music

Qubais Reed Ghazala (born 1953), an American author, photographer, composer, musician and experimental instrument builder, is recognized as the "father of circuit bending," having discovered the technique in 1966, pioneered it, named it, and taught it ever since.

Ghazala, who is from Cincinnati, Ohio, has built experimental instruments and/or consulted for many prominent musicians and media companies including Tom Waits, Peter Gabriel, King Crimson, the Rolling Stones, Faust, Blur, Chris Cutler (the Residents, Henry Cow, Art Bears), Sri Chinmoy, Rob Schwimmer (Simon and Garfunkel), Nine Inch Nails, Towa Tei, Blue Man Group, Yann Tomita and MTV, among others.

Ghazala's work has been covered globally in the press including the New York Times's declaration of circuit-bending as part of the fine arts movement (April 8, 2004, Technology Section, Matthew Mirapaul), and can be found being taught world-wide.

Ghazala's work is held in various galleries internationally including the permanent collections of New York City's Museum of Modern Art, the Guggenheim and the Whitney Museum of American Art as part of the Fusion Arts compendium.

Ghazala's influence upon creative electronic design is global, having originated the planet's first "grassroots electronic art movement" (while Ghazala has noted that he was not the lone, or first, experimenter in the field, it should be recognized that his contemporaries’ work, regardless of date, did not spawn an international and specific art movement replete with original terminology, processes and an ever-increasing fellowship).

Ghazala's practice with chance art (the root of circuit-bending) also involves studies in dye migration materials [1] and Japanese suminagashi [2], as well as liquid, gel and smoke chambers, mobiles and pyrotechnics.