Sign up to our newsletter and become a Club Huck member.

Stay informed with the cutting edge of sport, music and counterculture

The boombox is making a comeback

Did it ever really go away? — A recent wave of books and exhibitions – including Tom Sachs' new Boombox Retrospective 1999-2015 – is bringing the 80s icon back to the public's attention.

The boombox – the ultimate 80s icon of hip hop – is making a comeback. A recent wave of exhibitions and books – including the success of events like Cassette Store Day – has brought them back to the public’s attention, and the latest, Tom Sachs’ Boombox Retrospective 1999-2015, is perhaps the most extensive.

Known for his unique DIY aesthetic, the master of bricolage’s latest show blends working ceramic boombox sculptures and other outmoded listening devices with a collection of playlists curated by pop icons and friends of the artist, continuing along Sachs’ vein of interactivity.

The exhibition, which is on show at The Contemporary Austin, is the first time the artist has presented his work in Texas. “I have been making boomboxes since childhood,” said Sachs on his website. “I hooked my Sony Walkman up to a set of mini speakers and velcroed them to a block of scrap plywood. It was a clusterfuck of wires. In 8th grade woodshop, I made a box for the whole mess out of pine. It had a knob to hang the headphones that was made out of a broomstick.

“The 15 sculptures in this exhibition represent a survey of boomboxes and sound systems that I’ve made since 1999. The accompanying catalogue attempts to include each one but so many have been lost over the years, the components recycled into newer better systems. Each stereo has always been in support of an activity, event or ritual. From dance party, to road trip, to poche vide (a place to empty your pockets as you enter your home), to laboratory, to bachelor pad, to iPhone dock, sound systems have always been a part of my work and will be as long as I continue to love music.”

Highlights of the show include ‘Guru’s Yardstyle’, a vertical stack of audio equipment — speakers, a turntable, a sequencer, an old CD Walkman — crowned with an umbrella, and ‘Toyan’s’, a colossal collection of speakers piled eight feet tall and 12 feet across, based on the sound systems used at Jamaican carnivals.

Sachs and his studio are known for subverting corporate and cultural icons – from Tiffany & Co. and Chanel to Hello Kitty and McDonald’s, tackling consumerism and capitalism at its core. He celebrates the technology of the recent past, a tribute to popular culture, while deconstructing it.

Their recent works include tackling space exploration in Space Program: Mars (2012), a massive installation that transformed the New York Armory into Sachs’s vision of a space mission to Mars. The brightly lit, surreal 55,000 square-foot space recasts space, giving visitors a warped glance at astronauts.

Other recent projects which have taken a look at the ‘dead’ format of cassettes include Jocko Weyland’s Crackle, Hiss and Scrawl at Ever Gold in San Francisco, which featured a collection of approximately 200 of his cassette tapes, from 1980-2005, playing on an old Sony boombox.

Photographer Lyle Owerko also compiled an extensive history of boomboxes in his 2010 book The Boombox Project: The Machines, the Music and the Urban Underground, in which he labelled them “the eighties equivalent of Spotify – a conduit through which music was shared”.

Boombox Retrospective 1999-2015 will be at The Contemporary Austin until April 19, 2015.


You might like

Music

Master Peace: “A Black guy making indie still makes people look at you sideways”

What Made Me — In this series, we ask artists and rebels about the forces and experiences that shaped who they are. Today, it’s indie sleaze revivalist Master Peace.

Written by: Master Peace

Culture

Inside Bombay Beach, California’s ‘Rotting Riviera’

Man-made decay — The Salton Sea was created by accident after a failed attempt to divert the Colorado River in the early 20th century. Jack Burke reports from its post-apocalyptic shores, where DIY art and ecological collapse meet.

Written by: Jack Burke

© Mitsutoshi Hanaga. Courtesy of Mitsutoshi Hanaga Project Committee
Culture

How Japan revolutionised art & photography in the ’60s and ’70s

From Angura to Provoke — A new photobook chronicles the radical avant-garde scene of the postwar period, whose subversion of the medium of image making remains shocking and groundbreaking to this day.

Written by: Miss Rosen

Culture

The lacerating catharsis of body suspension in Hong Kong

Self-Ferrying — In one of the world’s most densely packed cities, an underground group of young people are piercing their skin and hanging their bodies with hooks in a shocking exploration of pain and pleasure. Sophie Liu goes to a session to understand why they partake in the extreme underground practice.

Written by: Sophie Liu

Culture

What we’re excited for at SXSW 2026

Austin 40 — For the festival’s 40th anniversary edition, we are heading to Texas to join one of the biggest global meetups of the year. We’ve selected a few things to highlight on your schedules.

Written by: Huck

Huck 83: Life Is A Journey Issue

Wu-Tang Clan forever, and ever

The Final Chamber — RZA, the spiritual leader of one of the most important hip hop groups of all time explains why they won’t rest until their legacy is secured.

Written by: Yoh Phillips

Huck is supported by our readers, subscribers and Club Huck members.

You've read articles this month Thanks for reading

Join Club Huck — it's free!

Valued Huck reader, thank you for engaging with our journalism and taking an interest in our dispatches from the sharp edge of culture, sport, music and rebellion.

We want to offer you the chance to join Club Huck [it's free!] where you will receive exclusive newsletters, including personal takes on the state of pop culture and media from columnist Emma Garland, culture recommendations, interviews and dispatches straight to your inbox.

You'll also get priority access to Huck events, merch discounts, and more fun surprises.

Already part of the club? Enter your email above and we'll get you logged in.