Thompson, Marie-2017-Beyond Unwanted Sound. Noise Affect and Aesthetic Moralism PDF
Thompson, Marie-2017-Beyond Unwanted Sound. Noise Affect and Aesthetic Moralism PDF
Thompson, Marie-2017-Beyond Unwanted Sound. Noise Affect and Aesthetic Moralism PDF
MARIE THOMPSON
Bloomsbury Academic
An imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Inc
N E W YO LO N
OX
SY DN EY
Bloomsbury Academic
An imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Inc
www.bloomsbury.com
BLOOMSBURY and the Diana logo are trademarks of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Acknowledgements viii
List of Figures ix
Bibliography 181
Index 193
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
There are many people to whom I owe a great deal of thanks for their
kindness and support while I have been working on this book. I would
like to thank my colleagues at the University of Lincoln for their words
of encouragement. My thanks go to the reviewers for their constructive
feedback and to the editorial team at Bloomsbury for all their help. Thank
you to Carolyn Pedwell, David Clarke, Michael Goddard, Will Edmondes,
Daniel Wilson, Annie Goh and David Schafer for their incredibly useful
comments on various versions of this book. Thank you to Helen, Alessandro,
Julia, Alex, Marika, Lalya, Charlie and everyone else who has been there
throughout; thank you to my family for everything; and thank you to David
for his love and support during the writing of this book and beyond.
LIST OF FIGURES
In his essay ‘Let’s have done with the notion of “Noise,”’ the composer
Michel Chion asserts that ‘noise’ (or, rather, its French counterpart, bruit) is
no longer a useful concept.1 First, it is unclear what it is that noise denotes.
Chion points to two, often overlapping, meanings of the term: noise in the
sense of unwanted sound, such as music played too loud or too late in the
evening; and noise in the sense of non-musical or non-linguistic sound, such
as that produced by animals. Yet, what counts as unwanted or non-musical
sound can vary drastically according to context. Second, noise relies on a
separation of the sonic universe into categories of the meaningful and non-
meaningful; the desirable and undesirable; and the musical and non-musical.
As a result, noise is simultaneously too vague and too ‘segregationist’ –
it is too ambiguous with regard to what it signifies, and too rigid in the
distinctions it requires.2 Chion thus proposes that noise should be preserved
for referring specifically to environmental noise pollution; beyond this,
the word should be disposed of and replaced with the more neutral son
(‘sound’), so as to liberate sounds from the stigma of noise.
Chion’s frustration with the concept of noise is understandable. Noise is
both obvious and evasive. It is something that many of us regularly encounter
and yet, as is often claimed, remains stubbornly resistant to theorization.
Noise slips between different disciplinary fields: it carries through the walls
that separate science, acoustics, economics, politics, art, information theory
and law. And what constitutes noise can vary considerably between these
2 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
the unwanted. This line has been reinforced by noise music’s poetics of
transgression, which emerges from (unwanted) noise’s association with sonic
and social taboo. While notions of line-crossing have been important for a
number of artists, when taken as the approach (rather than an approach),
the poetics of transgression tends to reduce noise music to its most ‘extreme’
and excessive manifestations, drowning out quieter, more subtle alternatives
that do not comfortably fit with these rhetorical figurations. Here, I discuss
the quiet noise of Japanese onkyô, which draws out the immanent noise
of the medium/milieu, before proposing an alternative understanding of
noise music that is in keeping with the ethico-affective approach to noise
outlined over the course of this book. With reference to a conceptually
and sonically varied set of musical examples (Hype Williams, Reynols,
Diamanda Galás, Merzbow), I argue for noise music to be understood as
an act of ‘exposure’. Rather than bringing noise into music, noise music
is thought of as amplifying, extending and foregrounding the noise that is
always already within the techno-musical system. This approach, I assert,
allows for a broader range of artistic practices and aesthetics – from the ‘full
noise’ of Merzbow and Incapacitants to the subtle ‘crackle dub’ of German
electronic music producer Pole.
The proposed ethico-affective approach outlined in this book is intended
to facilitate a number of key conceptual shifts. These can be summarized as
follows:
from the signal, destroys the ‘goodness’ of silence and is to be excluded from
the realm of the musical.
I assert that noise betrays the binary; it is unfaithful to dualistic thinking,
perturbing neat categorizations and distinctions. It is not ‘either/or’ but
‘both-and’, traversing distinctions between the natural and unnatural,
analogue and digital, exceptional and quotidian, loud and quiet, audible and
inaudible, intentional and unintentional, positive and negative. Consequently,
I aim to develop an alternative, relational framework that evades these
often reductive dichotomies and permits a more nuanced understanding of
noise that does not reduce it to particular aesthetic qualities (e.g. harshness,
abrasiveness) or moral values (e.g. unwantedness, badness). This is used to
rupture and radically reconfigure the structural oppositions of noise/signal
(Part 2), noise/silence (Part 3) and noise/music (Part 4).
To human beings, some sounds are just noise. Some sounds interrupt
their sleep, damage their hearing, raise their blood pressure, slow their
children’s progress at school, and banish the sweet thoughts and tender
feelings they harbor towards sex. Those sounds are unwanted.15
INTRODUCTION 11
The connection between noise and affectivity is even apparent from the
term’s etymological roots; noise partly stems from the Latin nausea, which
refers to the sensation of seasickness.16 As this suggests, encounters with
noise are transformative, sensuous and intensive: noise is often felt as well
as heard, and known through feeling.
The question remains of what is meant by affect. Like noise, affect is not
a singular concept but rather has numerous connotations, some compatible,
some conflicted. Consequently – and, again, like noise – it is often claimed
that affect remains resistant to definition, since affects have no meaning in
and of themselves: they are both a-objective and a-subjective, a-signifying
and a-representational, existing as part of, but never being fully captured
by, subjects, objects or signifiers.17 In its more anthropological guises, affect
typically concerns the pre- or non-conscious autonomic transformations
of the body-as-subject: ‘Affect … is the name we give to those forces –
visceral forces beneath, alongside, or generally other than conscious
knowing … that can serve to drive us toward movement, toward thought
and extension.’18 Affect is involved in a body’s fluctuations of feeling and
sensation, its intensive rhythms and cycles, while also connecting the body
to its wider milieu. Seigworth and Gregg describe it as ‘persistent proof
of a body’s never less than ongoing immersion in and among the world’s
obstinacies and rhythms, its refusals as much as its invitations’.19 As Teresa
Brennan observes, affect ensures that no rigid distinction can be made
between the ‘individual’ and ‘environment’, since the body (as-subject) is
not ‘affectively contained’.20 Affects can be transmitted between bodies –
one may pick up on the negative ‘vibes’ of another. Alternatively, affects
may come from no body in particular – bodies can enter a room and
just ‘feel the atmosphere’. In such instances, ‘the “atmosphere” or the
environment literally gets into the individual’.21 In doing so, it induces
certain bodily changes – some of which are brief, some of which may be
longer lasting. Affects thus imply an opening up of the body to shared and
collective registers of the experiential.
Here, I primarily refer to a particular notion of affect that can be found
in the work of the seventeenth-century Jewish-Dutch philosopher Baruch
Spinoza. There is not one but many ‘Spinozas’, insofar as his work has been
interpreted in different ways within different disciplines. Here, I refer to
Spinoza’s work as it is ‘appropriated’ by Gilles Deleuze. Indeed, references
to Spinoza should be understood as references to Deleuze’s Spinoza.
Deleuze’s reading of Spinoza is characteristically idiosyncratic, with the
latter being brought into relation with both Henri Bergson and Friedrich
Nietzsche. Indeed, for Deleuze, Spinoza was an exemplary Nietzschean
thinker, where much of Nietzsche’s philosophizing was ‘strictly Spinozan’.22
As shall become apparent, Deleuze’s appropriation of Spinoza facilitates
a departure from a dominant Western philosophical (idealist) lineage that
connects Plato, Descartes, Kant and Hegel.
12 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
An alternative framework
The ethico-affective approach to noise developed over the course of this book
is intended to serve as an alternative, onto-epistemological framework for
thinking through noise, which allows for a broader range of its manifestations
and potentials. In disrupting the constitutive correlation between noise,
unwantedness and badness, I do not deny that noise can be ‘unwanted’
or ‘bad’, nor do I deny that it can be loud and abrasive, or generated by
machines. However, I do argue that these qualities, features and values are
not sufficient as ontological qualifiers: just because noise is often felt to
be negative does not mean that it is definitively so. What is advantageous
about this alternative framework is that it pushes further the open-endedness
of a subject-oriented definition (in that it allows for noise to be good as
well as bad, generative as well as destructive, beneficial as well as harmful,
perceptible as well as imperceptible), while also remaining consistent with
regard to what noise is and what it does. In other words, it seeks to strike a
balance between the vagueness and specificity of the notion of noise.
This book shares with noise its disciplinary messiness, weaving together,
among other things, information theory, philosophy, social history,
government legislation, musicology, acoustics and media theory. And though
this is not a philosophical work, it is undoubtedly theoretical and abstract
in places. However, I endeavour to always return to what this means ‘in
practice’ by explicating these theoretical remarks in relation to empirical
manifestations of noise. Indeed, in many ways, I consider this onto-
epistemological approach to noise to develop out of what is already known
through practice: musicians and sound artists have long worked with, and
not just against, noise, interrogating its positively productive capacity.
To end this introduction by returning to where it began: contra Chion,
this book can be summarized as an argument for the continuing salience of
the notion of noise. Rather than seeing it as a reason to do away with the
term altogether, the perceived insufficiency of noise’s common definitions is
taken as an invitation to think critically and speculatively about what noise
14 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
is and what noise might do – how noise may be defined so as to avoid these
pitfalls, while also maintaining some sense of consistency and specificity. In
any case, attempts to simply do away with noise in its entirety are destined
to fail. There can be no eradication or elimination, only minimization.
This book thus embraces noise as a necessary component of material life,
of existence within an inevitably parasitic milieu. Spinoza’s philosophy of
affects postulates that to exist is to be affected. I assert that to exist is to be
affected by noise.
Notes
1 Noise is not a precise translation of the French term bruit; indeed, this might
be described as a ‘noisy’ translation. However, many of the problems Chion
identifies with the notion of bruit can still be applied to noise. For more on
the translation of bruit in Chion’s work, see James A. Steintrager, ‘Speaking of
noise: from murderous loudness to the crackle of silk’, Differences 22, no. 2
(2011): 249–75.
2 Michel Chion, ‘Let’s have done with the notion of “Noise”’, trans. James
A. Steintrager, Differences 22, no. 2 (2011): 240–8, 242.
3 David Hendy, Noise: A Human History [radio series] (London: British
Broadcasting Corporation, 2013). There is now also an accompanying book
to the series. See David Hendy, Noise: A Human History of Sound and
Listening (London: Profile, 2013).
4 Hillel Schwartz, Making Noise: From Babel to the Big Bang and Beyond
(New York: Zone Books, 2011).
5 For example, see Susan J Smith, ‘Performing the (sound)world’, Environment
and Planning D: Society and Space 18, no. 5 (2000): 615–37; Paul Simpson,
‘Sonic affects and the production of space: “music by handle” and the politics
of street music in London’, Cultural Geographies (2016). Advance online
publication. doi: 10.1177/1474474016649400.
6 Steve Goodman, Sonic Warfare: Sound, Affect and the Ecology of Fear
(Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2010), 191.
7 For example, see David Toop, Ocean of Sound: Aether Talk, Ambient Sound
and Imaginary Worlds (London: Serpent’s Tail, 1995); Tom Kohut, ‘Noise
pollution and the eco-politics of sound: toxicity, nature and culture in the
contemporary soundscape’, Leonardo Music Journal 25 (2015): 5–8.
8 Michael Hardt, ‘Foreword: what affects are good for’, in The Affective Turn:
Theorizing the Social, ed. Patricia Clough and Jean Halley (Durham: Duke
University Press, 2007), ix–xiii, ix.
9 This critique is pertinent with regard to Simon O’Sullivan’s examination of
the role of affects in art. He notes that both Marxist accounts of art, which
are primarily concerned with interpreting art historically (i.e. in relation to
the moment of its production), and deconstructionist accounts of art, which
typically address art as a crisis in representation, entail a rejection of the
INTRODUCTION 15
Subject-oriented noise
Noise is most commonly understood to be an audible problem, referring
to sound that is in some way negative: it is that which is deemed to be
unwanted, unpleasant, undesirable or just ‘bad’. Noise is something that
we do not want to be around: we try to avoid and abate it as much as
possible. It is associated with pollution, disorder and destruction. The British
physicist G. W. C. Kaye, adapting the description of dirt as ‘matter out of
place’, defines noise as ‘sound out of place’ – in space and/or time.2 In being
out of place, noise may inhibit communication, or mask ‘meaningful’ sound.
Alternatively, noise can be sound that is considered meaningless, or whose
meaning is disliked. Noise may be unwanted in the sense that it distorts and
degrades an intended message; in the sense that it is judged to be excessive or
degenerate; or in the sense that it may cause physiological and psychological
harm. Or noise may be unwanted because it is sound that simply annoys us.
To describe noise as unwanted sound requires a listener to hear it as such.
Sounds become noise when they are heard in a particular way – it is a value
ascribed in relation to perception. The task of constituting noise thus lies
with the listener. As Paul Hegarty states:
Noise is not the same as noises. Noises are sounds until further qualified
(e.g. as unpleasant noises, loud noises, and so on) but noise is already that
qualification; it is already a judgement that noise is occurring. Although
noise can occur outside of cognition (i.e. without us understanding its
purpose, form, source), a judgement is made in reaction to it.3
clearly different from that of older generations. This is one reason why
parties are not as annoying for young people as other noises, since the
music style is considered a ‘normal’ social activity. In contrast, modern
music among younger ages – particularly the greater emphasis on base
[sic] – is unfamiliar to older generations.10
Corbin’s account of the growing intolerance towards bell peals also points
towards the broader social shifts that influenced a rising demand to have
control over one’s own sonic environment – the growing emphasis on the
individual’s right to silence and the subsequent increase in noise complaints,
as well as the right to make sound in one’s own home. As the rhetoric of
individual rights indicates, this demand for control over one’s own sonic
environment corresponded with the nineteenth-century expansion of the
bourgeoisie. Indeed, the contemporary notion of the domestic as a personal,
intimate space that is closed off from the ‘outside’ world is largely indebted to
a bourgeois conception of privacy and the subsequent separation of ‘external’
working life from ‘internal’ domestic life. The historian Peter Bailey describes
how the bourgeoisie, following the nobility in their partitioning of domestic
space, created (with)drawing rooms, studies and parlours, quietly set away
from the clamorous work of servants and attendants. Outside the home,
private grounds duplicated ‘the secure and subdued enclosures of the private
house, a noble ideal miniaturized in the innumerable Victorian suburban
villas and back-gardens, hopeful invocations of rural peace and strongholds
against the sounds of the city’.17 Brandon LaBelle notes that the bourgeois
home came to be ‘a place for re-establishing a psychic center’.18 The private,
domestic sphere was a space of individual expression – it ‘became a haven,
refined through object collecting, interior design, furnishing and a general
spatial ordering that might renew a feeling for the material world’.19 In these
domestic constructions, a set of values is expressed through an ordering
of the soundscape. Family life is ‘a ritualized production … what it aims
for is regulated by the notion or image of the individual or family unit,
and the expression of values contained therein’.20 Within the private home,
order is equated with quiet, and the maintenance of domestic order with
audible regulation. Noise as a sonic intrusion from the outside world marks
a transgression of domestic order: ‘To come home is to seek refuge from
the harangue of the exterior. Following the movements of this domestic
imaginary, the home is heard as a set of signals whose disruption suggests
breakdown, neglect or invasion.’21 In such contexts, noise is judged to
be negative in that it is felt to impinge on the liberties of the (bourgeois,
sovereign) individual and the imagined right to control what is heard in
one’s own home. Noise is that which exists beyond our control; it features
as an invasion from the outside that threatens to disrupt the domestic order
as it has been established by those who belong (i.e. the family unit). Noise,
when it breaks the quiet of the orderly home, works to blur liberalism’s
carefully constructed separation between the private and public spheres –
the ‘internal’ home and the ‘external’ world. I will return to this blurring in
Part 3.
From a subject-oriented perspective, noise is the product of the ‘self’ as
much as it is of the ‘other’.22 It is sound that is judged to be bad and is
thus deemed unwanted – it is to be excluded, abated and avoided. This
‘badness’ and ‘unwantedness’ is attributed to sound by the listening subject.
WHAT NOISE HAS BEEN 23
Object-oriented noise
Noise can be a sound judged by a listener as negative but it can also be a
type of sound. Though often implicated in the former, the latter is what
I refer to as an ‘object-oriented’ definition of noise.23 Drawing principally
from acoustics and physics, an object-oriented definition understands noise
in relation to particular sonic qualities, properties or attributes, rather than
in relation to the ear of the beholder. According to the nineteenth-century
physicist Hermann von Helmholtz, noise is one of two categories of sound:
‘The first and principal difference between various sounds experienced by
our ear is that between noises and musical tones.’24 Here, noise is defined as
consisting of non-periodic (which is to say, irregular, or random) vibration.
Consequently, noise lacks a specific pitch. Musical tones, by contrast, are
composed of regular periodic vibrations and thus have a distinguishable
pitch.25 Helmholtz writes:
Time independence explains the peculiar sound of white noise. Each hiss
and pop in white noise is technically independent of the hiss and pop that
preceded it in time and that follows it in time. … The time independence
of white noise holds no matter how infinitesimally close a hiss is in time
to the next hiss or pop.30
In other words, the hisses and pops of white noise are statistically random –
there is no correspondence between what has happened previously and what
will happen next. Each and every occurrence is singular and unpredictable.
The sound of white noise is often associated with the sound of a detuned
radio or waves crashing. However, pure white noise, with an entirely flat
frequency spectrum and time independence, can only exist as a mathematical
abstraction; if it were to exist physically, it would require infinite energy.
‘Real’ noise signals (as opposed to the white noise abstraction) are to some
degree ‘coloured noise’, which is to say that they have a non-flat frequency
spectrum across a bandwidth. Consequently, in actuality ‘white’ noise can
really only ever be an approximation of the flat spectrum ideal. Indeed,
what tends to be labelled white noise is often pink noise. While white
WHAT NOISE HAS BEEN 25
noise has an equal energy across all possible frequencies, pink noise, by
comparison, has equal energy per octave band, with which intensity is
inversely proportional to frequency. Pink noise thus has more low-frequency
components than white noise. There are also a number of other types of
coloured noise, including brown noise, blue noise, grey noise and black
noise (which consists of mostly silence).
Pink noise and approximations of white noise have been used as a
means of minimizing the effects of other, potentially unwanted noises. In
office environments, for example, constant white noise can be used to hide
variations in office noise intensity during the day, creating a consistent
acoustic environment, as well as preventing potentially disruptive sounds
from carrying through the space.31 With this, white noise comes to
function as a form of noise abatement. Noise becomes desirable and useful,
ensuring, rather than encroaching upon, privacy by preventing others from
overhearing. However, though white noise machines, sleep-aids, CDs and
smart phone apps are readily available, such deployments of noise against
noise are not a recent development. In 1958, in Cambridge, Massachusetts,
psychoacoustics researcher J. C. R. Licklider working with the dentist
Wallace Gardener developed a noise masking device, which they labelled the
‘audio analgesiac’. Offering a selection of music and tuned noise (the latter
labelled ‘waterfall sound’), the machine worked to mask the unnerving
sounds of the dentist drill. In doing so, it was said to alleviate patient fear
and minimize procedural pain. As Jonathan Sterne asserts, the use of noise as
an ‘audio analgesiac’ is expressive of ‘a new approach to noise as something
potentially useful’ rather than something that is to be simply abated.32
Subject-oriented definitions recognize noise as a value judgement relating
to a listening subject’s experience of sound. According to this perspective,
any sound can be noise if it is heard as negative (and, thus, by extension,
unwanted). Object-oriented definitions, meanwhile, recognize noise as a type
of sound-signal: it is defined according to particular properties or attributes
(e.g. complexity, non-periodic vibration, flat power spectral density). Such
signals can be thought to have an innate ‘noisiness’ that exists irrespective
of whether they are detrimental to or deemed unwanted by a perceiving
subject – indeed, as the use of noise as a masking device demonstrates,
object-oriented noise might even be considered useful in some contexts.
Non-periodic, coloured and white noise are deemed ‘noisy’ because they
tend to cover a wide band of frequencies. While a subject-oriented definition
places noise in opposition to sound that is wanted, desirable and meaningful,
an object-oriented definition places (complex, wideband, irregular) noise in
opposition to (simple, narrowband, periodic) musical tones. Consequently,
there are a number of tensions between subject-oriented and object-oriented
definitions. An object-oriented definition tends to lack the overt negative
connotations garnered by a subject-oriented definition – pink noise,
for example, does not have to be heard as unwanted or be considered a
nuisance for it to be recognized as noise. Likewise, while a subject-oriented
26 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
definition affords primacy to the listening subject (meaning that any sound
can potentially be heard as noise), for an object-oriented definition, it is first
the sound-signal (object) that is constitutive, irrespective of how it is heard
or – as exemplified by white noise – whether it is heard at all.
There are connections here with both the object-oriented and subject-
oriented definitions I have described. Unlike the distinguishable and clear
sounds of the rural soundscape, the new, ‘unnatural’ noises of the factory
and the machine are complex, disordered and irregular. Similarly, these
novel new noises are heard to be possibly dangerous or detrimental to the
overworked listening subject. The noise of the machine is thus both complex
and unwanted.
Gordon’s account also alludes to one of noise’s oft-repeated origin myths,
which will be explored more fully in Part 3 and 4: noise is born with the
machine and is thus the antithesis of ‘natural’ sound. Indeed, noise has
WHAT NOISE HAS BEEN 27
frequently been located outside the realm of ‘nature’. Dan McKenzie, one
of Britain’s most prominent anti-noise campaigners of the early twentieth
century, claims, ‘Unlike the world of men, the world of nature is not noisy.’34
McKenzie does concede that, under particular circumstances, sounds from
a natural origin can be a ‘weary nuisance’ – the braying of donkeys and the
barking of dogs, for example. However, he argues that when all is considered,
every sound of nature is in essence ‘pleasant and therefore not noise’.35
With this separation of noise and natural sound – and contra the former’s
common association with unpredictability and lack of control – comes
the notion that noise is something that can be controlled, restrained and
prevented. In his Manifesto for Silence, Stuart Sim argues that the sounds of
nature, though potentially unwanted, cannot be abated and must, therefore,
be endured: there is nothing that that can be done to inhibit the howl of the
wind or the clap of thunder. These natural noises are thus different from
the unnatural and often ‘unjustified’ noises of (technology-assisted) human
activity, which could – and often should – be prevented. Noises from natural
sources can never be unjustified even if a listener feels them to be so, because
they cannot be helped.36
From this perspective, unwanted noise is extraneous to the rules of
nature. Yet, this assumed division between the natural and the unnatural,
the necessarily tolerable and the preventable has not always been clear,
with certain sounds from ‘natural’ sources being demoted to the realm
of ‘unnatural’ and abatable noise. In the cities of late-nineteenth-century
America, the birdsong of the English house sparrow, a species introduced to
the United States in the 1850s, was not heard as nature’s music. Rather, its
calls were considered an objectionable and unpleasant racket, and a source
of great irritation for middle-class city dwellers. A ‘leading sparrow critic’
in Washington D.C. remarked that the sparrow’s harsh jabbering nearly
obliterated the ‘Comanche yell of the milkman’ and the ‘newspaper imps that
screech every one deaf on Sunday morning’.37 Similarly, in her 1885 article
‘A Ruffian in Feathers’, Olive Thorne Miller complained of the sparrow’s
calls tarnishing the dawn with its ‘indescribable jangle of harsh sounds’ that
‘harmonizes perfectly with the jarring sounds of man’s contriving; the clatter
of iron-shod wheels over city pavements, the war-whoop of the ferocious
milkman, the unearthly cries of the vendors’.38 As Peter Coates remarks,
citing Miller, this was evidence of the (non-native) bird’s unnatural status,
since the ‘“harshest cries” of “our” [American] native birds, “if not always
musical in themselves” invariably were judged congruent “in some way
with the sounds of nature”’.39 The sparrow’s characterization as a source
of unearthly noise ‘thus allowed its opponents to evict it from the natural
world and lump it together with tainted humanity’.40 Rather than belonging
to the realm of nature’s ultimately pleasant sounds, the ‘foreign’ sparrow
chimed in with the unnatural and unpleasant cacophony of city life.
The noise of the ‘non-native’ sparrow points to the association of noise
with bodies marked as ‘other’. There is, for example, the characterization
28 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
Noise-as-loudness
In addition to source-based definitions of noise, the notion of ‘noise-as-
loudness’ also lies between subject-oriented and object-oriented definitions.
Although the quietest hum or whirr can irritate those reading in silence and
the barely audible bleed of sound from headphones on the bus or train can
irk other travellers, noise is frequently associated with high volumes. At
times, this takes the form of an object-oriented definition, through which
noise or ‘noisy’ becomes synonymous with loud sound. Noise, defined as
loud sound, is placed in opposition to silence. Yet, noise-as-loudness can
also be linked to a subject-oriented definition of noise. Loud sounds, for
example, are likely to travel further and are thus more likely to become
audible in places where they are unwanted and unpermitted (e.g. a music
festival heard in a home two miles away). Alternatively, a sound that might
not ordinarily be heard as noise may be so if it is particularly loud. (e.g. ‘I
wouldn’t ordinarily mind the neighbours doing washing at this time of night
but the noise of their washing machine is ridiculous.’)
Loud noises are often assumed to be ‘unnatural’ inasmuch as they are
generated and/or amplified by technologies. It is clear from Mel Gordon’s
description of the ‘ear-splitting’ blasts of whistles and the clamour and clash
of metal that he understands the sonic environment to have grown louder
with the Industrial Revolution and the subsequent birth of noise. Indeed,
from Gordon’s perspective, what was so new about the noise of the Industrial
Revolution was its volume and intensity. In Capital, Marx describes the
‘noise and turmoil’ of the new system of production that came with the birth
of the machine and modern industry, which, for him, led to the domination
of the senses in the factory working environment by ‘the deafening noise’.51
Yet, while unpleasant and potentially damaging for the worker, the noise
of industry was also applauded by some. As Emily Thompson argues,
‘Generally speaking, most nineteenth-century Americans celebrated the hum
of industry as an unambivalent symbol of material progress. Complaints
might be voiced, but few were willing to slow the machines of progress to
appease the complainants.’52 For many nineteenth-century Americans, noise
WHAT NOISE HAS BEEN 31
It is generally believed that the louder a sound is, the more unacceptable,
or noisy that it is. While this is generally true, it does not follow that
34 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
noise allows for some of its qualitative variety: by rendering the listener
constitutive, it remains open to which sounds can become noise. From this
perspective, a sound’s ‘noisiness’ does not rely on its source nor on its sonic
qualities: what matters is that sound is perceived as negative. Consequently,
what is considered noise may vary between individual listeners, contexts
and cultures. As unwanted sound, noise might be in-your-face but it may
also niggle at the thresholds of audibility; it may be the sound of traffic or
drilling, but it may also be the sound of vacuum cleaners or music next door.
However, understanding noise as a subjective judgement can lead to an
unsatisfactory relativist end point, where noise can be anything to anyone:
as a definition, it risks being too broad and too vague.
An object-oriented definition is comparatively more specific, in that it
defines noise in relation to particular sonic qualities and acoustic properties.
This approach divorces noise from its function, limiting it to a particular set
of sounds. Certain types of sound are noise, or noisy, irrespective of what
they do, how they are perceived, whether they are judged to be unwanted,
damaging, bad or even pleasant and enjoyable. An object-oriented definition
does not take into account the listener’s experience of noise, beyond his or
her perception of particular sonic qualities (e.g. lack of discrete pitch). So,
while a subject-oriented definition risks being too broad, an object-oriented
definition risks being too narrow and abstract.
There are also aspects of a subject-oriented definition that are too
restrictive when applied more generally: namely, the assertion that noise is
always negative and that noise is always heard by a listener. As shall be seen,
there is much of noise that evades the ear. Moreover, noise’s constitutive
‘unwantedness’ can be questioned: just because noise is often felt to be
unwanted, does it mean it is definitively so?
The ethico-affective approach to noise outlined in the rest of this book
seeks to overcome what I understand to be some of the shortcomings of
subject-oriented and object-oriented definitions when they are applied
more generally, avoiding both the relativist end point of the former and the
restrictiveness of the latter. I aim to extend the open-endedness of a subject-
oriented definition and the variety it allows in terms of noise’s sonic qualities
and sources. However, I also challenge its reliance upon a constitutive
listening subject and the definitive correlation it draws between noise,
unwantedness and badness. With regard to an object-oriented definition of
noise, I look to share its lack of (overtly) negative connotations; but I also
reject the notion that certain sounds are innately noisy irrespective of what
they do.
If noise betrays the binary, then this suggests that it requires us to move
beyond human subject and sonic object, and towards a more complex field
of relations. This relational perspective is required by another type of noise, a
noise that is neither of the subject nor of the object: the noise of information
theory and the cybernetic parasite.
36 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
Notes
1 Douglas Kahn, Noise, Water Meat: A History of Sound in the Arts
(Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1999), 25.
2 For Kaye, sound can become unhelpfully displaced by its ‘excessive loudness,
its composition, its persistency or frequency of occurrence (or alternatively,
its intermittency, its unexpectedness, untimeliness, or unfamiliarity, its
redundancy, inappropriateness, or unreasonableness, its suggestion of
intimidation, arrogance, malice, or thoughtlessness … and so on’. G. W. C.
Kaye, ‘Noise and its measurement’, Proceedings of the Institution of Great
Britain (1931): 435–88, 443–5.
3 Paul Hegarty, Noise/Music: A History (London: Continuum, 2007), 3.
4 Ibid.
5 Environmental Resources Management, Noise and Neighbourhood Noise –
A Review of European Legislation and Practices (Environmental Resources
Management, 2002), http://archive.defra.gov.uk/environment/quality/noise/
research/euroreview/documents/noise_euro_review.pdf (accessed May 2012),
47. The report notes the important difference between neighbour noise,
defined as noise produced by a person’s neighbours and noise that is produced
in the neighbourhood, such as noise from pubs, commercial or local industry
and construction sites (but not from transportation).
6 MORI Social Research Institute, Neighbour Noise: Public Opinion Research
to Assess its Nature, Extent and Significance (London: MORI, 2003), http://
archive.defra.gov.uk/environment/quality/noise/research/mori/documents/
mori.pdf (accessed May 2012), 6.
7 Ibid.
8 Ibid., 7.
9 Ibid., 8.
10 ibid., 40.
11 Alain Corbin, Village Bells: Sound and Meaning in Nineteenth Century France
(London: Papermac, 1999), 301.
12 Ibid., 302.
13 Ibid.
14 Ibid., 303.
15 Ibid.
16 Ibid., 304.
17 Peter Bailey, ‘Breaking the sound barrier’, in Hearing History: A Reader, ed.
Mark M. Smith (Georgia: University of Georgia Press, 2004), 23–35, 28.
18 Brandon LaBelle, Acoustic Territories: Sound, Culture and Everyday Life
(London and New York: Continuum, 2010), 50.
19 Ibid.
20 Ibid., 51.
WHAT NOISE HAS BEEN 37
21 Ibid.
22 In her historical account of noise, technology and society, Karin Bijesterveld
describes how in the early twentieth century, influenced by developments in
science and psychoacoustics, noise changed from being simply a problem
created by the other to a problem caused (in part) by one’s state of mind.
She states: ‘This new notion of the subjectivity of sound perception made it
increasingly difficult to decide which sounds could or could not be treated as
a nuisance. It had previously been acknowledged that some individuals were
more sensitive to noise than others, but sensitivity was no longer considered
a mark of social superiority – rather, it was viewed as something problematic:
the result of a troubled personality or a strained mental health.’ Karin
Bijsterveld, Mechanical Sound: Technology, Culture and Public Problems of
Noise in the Twentieth Century (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2008), 173.
23 Though there might be resonances with them, describing such approaches
to noise as ‘object-oriented’ refers neither to object-oriented ontology nor
to Schaeffer’s objet sonore; rather, it refers more broadly to the treatment of
noise as a thing with qualities.
24 Hermann von Helmholtz, On the Sensations of Tone as a Physiological Basis
for Music (New York: Cosimo, 2007), 7.
25 Helmholtz states: ‘The regular motions which produce musical tones have
been exactly investigated by physicists. They are oscillations, vibrations or
swings, that is, up and down, or to and fro motions of sonorous bodies, and it
is necessary that these oscillations should be regularly periodic. By a periodic
motion we mean one which constantly returns to the same condition after
exactly equal intervals of time.’ Ibid., 8.
26 Ibid., 7–8.
27 Although noise’s ‘unwantedness’ is primarily associated with a subject-
oriented definition, this valuation of noise as ‘bad’ sound can also bleed
into an object-oriented definition, such that musical sounds are prioritized
over non-musical noises. As Michel Chion notes, to define non-musical or
complex sounds as noise is to associate them with a stigma of being somehow
irritating, inferior and extraneous, even if they are heard as pleasant. See
Michel Chion, ‘Let’s have done with the notion of “Noise”’, trans. James A.
Steintrager, Differences 22, no. 2 (2011): 240–8, 242.
28 Helmholtz, On the Sensations of Tone, 7–8.
29 Ibid., 7.
30 Bart Kosko, Noise (New York: Viking Books, 2006), 69–70.
31 See Manna Navai and Jennifer A. Veitch, Acoustic Satisfaction in Open-Plan
Offices: Review and Recommendations (Ottawa: National Research Council
Canada, 2003), http://www.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/obj/irc/doc/pubs/rr/rr151/rr151.pdf
(accessed March 2012).
32 Jonathan Sterne, MP3: The Meaning of a Format (Durham: Duke University
Press, 2012), 137.
33 Mel Gordon, ‘Songs from the museum of the future: Russian sound creation
(1910–1930)’, in Wireless Imagination: Sound, Radio and the Avant-Garde,
38 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
ed. Douglas Kahn and Gregory Whitehead (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press,
1994), 197–243, 197–8.
34 Dan McKenzie, quoted in Peter A. Coates, ‘The strange stillness of the past:
towards an environmental history of sound and noise’, Environmental
History 10, no. 4 (2005): 636–65, 647.
35 Ibid.
36 Stuart Sim, Manifesto for Silence: Confronting the Politics and Culture of
Noise (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2007), 14.
37 Coates, ‘The strange stillness of the past: towards an environmental history of
sound and noise’, 649.
38 Ibid.
39 Ibid.
40 Ibid.
41 For a discussion of the relationship between noise and cultural constructions
of femininity, see Marie Thompson, ‘Gossips, sirens, hi-fi wives: feminizing the
threat of noise’, in Resonances: Noise and Contemporary Music, ed. Michael
Goddard, Ben Halligan and Nicola Spelman (New York: Bloomsbury, 2013),
297–311.
42 See Ana María Ochoa Gautier, Aurality: Listening and Knowledge in
Nineteenth-Century Columbia (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2014).
43 George Lewis, A Power Stronger than Itself: The AACM and American
Experimental Music (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2008), 44.
44 Jon Cruz, Culture on the Margins: The Black Spiritual and the Rise of
American Cultural Interpretation (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press,
1999), 48.
45 Lewis, A Power Stronger than Itself, 44.
46 Megan Sullivan, ‘African-American music as rebellion: from slave song to
hip-hop’, Discoveries 3 (2001): 21–39, 21. Jon Cruz also describes how
noise (understood as meaningless sound) was also incorporated into the
system of slave domination, with slaves being forced to make noise by
overseers. From their very earliest moments of capture aboard slave ships,
slaves were forced to make sounds, to move and to jump in their chains.
The ‘silent’ slave was deemed untrustworthy and thus slaves were required
to ‘make a noise’ during work. Cruz argues that ‘sound making was a
requisite to appease the discomfort of owners who preferred to know
that whatever occupied the slave’s mind was not inimical to the well-
being of overseers’. Coerced soundings were also designed to limit slave
communication, blocking dialogue and displacing talk. See Cruz, Culture on
the Margins, 51–2.
47 Martin Wainwright, ‘On the trail of the mysterious Durham hum’, The
Guardian, 9 June 2001, http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/the-northerner/2011/
jun/09/hum-woodlands-durham-hamsterley-bristol-largs-gateshead-newcastle-
cakebook-surtees (accessed March 2012).
48 Ibid.
WHAT NOISE HAS BEEN 39
49 For more on this, see British Broadcasting Corporation, ‘Who, what, why:
why is “the hum” such a mystery’, BBC News Magazine, 13 June 2011,
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-13752688 (accessed March 2012);
David Deming, ‘The hum: an anomalous sound heard around the world’,
Journal of Scientific Exploration 18, no. 4 (2004): 571–95; James P. Cowan,
The Kokomo Hum Investigation (Cambridge, MA: Acentech, 2003).
50 James Alexander, ‘Have you heard the hum?’, BBC News, 19 May 2009,
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8056284.stm (accessed March 2012).
51 Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels (eds), Capital: A Critique of Political
Economy Vol.1 Part 1 (New York: Cosimo, 2007), 304–5.
52 Emily Thompson, The Soundscape of Modernity: Architectural Acoustics and
the Culture of Listening in America, 1900-1933 (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press,
2004), 120.
53 Jamie C. Kasser, ‘Musicology and the problem of sonic abuse’, in Music,
Sensation, and Sensuality, ed. Linda Phyllis Austern (New York and London:
Routledge, 2001), 321–34, 325.
54 Keizer, The Unwanted Sound of Everything We Want, 30.
55 Donna Haraway, ‘A cyborg manifesto: science, technology, and socialist-
feminism in the late twentieth century’, in Simians, Cyborgs and Women: The
Reinvention of Nature (New York: Routledge, 1991), 149–81, 153.
56 Sim states: ‘Noise is used extensively as a marketing tool (bars, restaurants,
public spaces in general, radio, television, film) as a way of stimulating
consumption. Put crudely, noise sells and the corporate world is very aware
of this and concerned to exploit it to the full.’ There is, for example, the noise
created by all-night opening hours and the ‘raucous hedonism’ that comes
with the hugely profitable and noisy combination of alcohol and popular
music. Sims offers the caveat that noise has often been on the side of rebellion
and resistance, as a metaphor for the disruption of social norms. However,
this ethos has been readily exploited ‘by the business world for its own,
anything but rebellious, ends. The grand narrative of “big business” has a
practised ability to commercialise, and thus neutralise, rebellious behaviour
and lifestyles.’ Sim, Manifesto for Silence, 30–1.
57 For more on ‘monastery chic’, see Sara Lipton, ‘Monastery chic: the ascetic
retreat in a neoliberal age’, in Evil Paradises: Dreamworlds of Neoliberalism,
ed. Mike Davis and Daniel Bertrand Monk (New York: The New York Press,
2007), 241–50.
58 See Oliver Kmiecik, ‘New Yaris Hybrid TV ad: “silence the city”’, Toyota
Blog, 2 June 2012, http://blog.toyota.co.uk/new-yaris-hybrid-tv-ad-silence-
the-city (accessed May 2012).
59 Jacques Attali, Noise: The Political Economy of Music, trans. Brian Massumi
(Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2003), 27.
60 Stephen A. Stansfeld and Mark P. Matheson, ‘Noise pollution: non-auditory
effects on health’, British Medical Bulletin 68, no. 1 (2003): 243–57, 248.
61 Ibid.
62 Kosko, Noise, 56.
40 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
advances in recording technologies that have taken place over the past
century. This noisy, lo-fi recording sounds very distant from contemporary
recording culture. Indeed, it might sometimes seem as if noise is a thing of
the past, having been banished to the archives by the ever-greater fidelity
of sound reproduction. But noise still lurks in even the most perfect of
recordings. Not all noise is as obvious to modern ears as that of Edison’s
recording: while its semblance may change and while its presence may
remain unnoticed, noise can never be fully conquered.
To call Edison’s recording noisy is not simply to assert that it contains
sounds that are unwanted, nor is it to assert a division between regular
and irregular sounds. Rather, noise, as I understand it here, pertains to
the presence of the invention – the medium and means of the recording’s
existence. In this section, I introduce a materialist, relational and affective
understanding of noise. Drawing upon Spinoza’s philosophy of affects, in
combination with Claude Shannon’s general model of communication and
Michel Serres’s cybernetic figure of the disruptive, transformative parasite,
I instigate a disruption of the definitive correlation of noise, ‘unwantedness’
and ‘badness’. What characterizes noise, I argue, is not negativity but
affectivity. By drawing together these bodies of thought via noise, moreover,
I make apparent the latent connections between Spinozist notions of affect
and cybernetics.
Thinking noise through affect is useful inasmuch as the latter encourages
a relational, non-dualistic and process-oriented perspective, focusing on the
formative and transformative influence of the relations between entities,
backgrounds and environments. Given that affect traverses disciplinary
distinctions, it can also help to connect technological, informational, social,
artistic and acoustic notions of noise. Rather than characterizing noise as a
type of sound or a value judgement that is made of sound, I recognize noise
as a perturbing force-relation that, for better or for worse, induces a change.
This understanding of noise stems from Shannon and Weaver’s information
theory. However, Shannon maintains that noise is a ‘necessary evil’, insofar
as he prioritizes stasis, accuracy and efficiency in communication systems.
By recognizing these seemingly a priori values as contextual and thus
contingent, a space opens up for noise to be something other than unwanted.
Furthermore, picking up on Serres’s wordplay between the middle, medium,
milieu and means, it is also shown how noise is a necessary component
of material relations: there can be no relation, no mediation without it.
To describe noise as necessary refutes noise’s subordinate positioning as
accidental, secondary and contingent. Consequently, the hierarchical and
dichotomous relationship between ‘wanted’ signal and ‘unwanted’ noise is
complicated.
I explicate this understanding of noise in relation to two key examples.
First, I examine the affective ‘microdisruptions’ that occur at the level of
the material medium. The medium stores and carries information but also
leaves a noisy trace upon it. This noisy imprint often becomes more prevalent
THE PARASITE AND ITS MILIEU: NOISE, MATERIALITY, AFFECTIVITY 43
as the storage media are affected by the forces of the milieu over time. I
explore how media/milieu noise and the question of ‘what a medium can do’
have been utilized by three artists – Christian Marclay, Maria Chavez and
Yasunao Tone. For Marclay, Chavez and Tone, the noise of the medium is a
source of creative potential – a means of discovering new sonic expressions.
Second, I consider the ‘macrodisruptions’ of sonic weapons that are
intended to disrupt – and thus diminish – the collective power of crowds,
groups and populations. This affective logic connects the use of sonic booms
in Gaza to subtler means of audio-affective control, such as the Mosquito
device and the broadcasting of classical music at public transport stations.
While these two examples draw from very different contexts, neither the
noise of the medium nor the noise of sonic weapons can be fully grasped
through a consideration of the personal affections of a listening body-as-
subject. Rather, they show noise to be affective in the broadest sense – of one
entity acting upon another. As this suggests, an affective understanding of
noise can allow for a fuller range of perturbations that range from the barely
noticeable to the overwhelming.
Finally, I turn to another, seemingly distinct, notion of noise, which posits
it as an inaudible but affective, transcendental1 background. It is this noise
that is brought to the fore in the ‘creation story’ that is John Cage’s 4’33”.
Returning once again to Serres’s wordplay on the milieu/medium/means, I
connect parasitic noise and background noise to each other: while the former
names a relation with the medium/milieu, the latter names the vibrational
medium/milieu from which the signal emerges and travels through.
Signal Noise
Music Noise
Silence Noise
Wanted Unwanted
Intended Unintended
44 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
Desirable Undesirable
Order Disorder
Natural Unnatural
Necessary Contingent
Normal Accidental
Meaningful Meaningless
Comprehensible Incomprehensible
Norm Taboo
Good Bad
Affect and extension thus traverse the imagined distinction between the
organic and non-organic, the natural and artificial, inanimate ‘things’ and
animate ‘beings’. A body is not simply that of the human or an animal,
nor is it a fixed, immutable unit. Rather, it is that which exists in dynamic,
affective and only temporarily stable relationships. As Deleuze states: ‘A
[Spinozist] body can be anything; it can be an animal, a body of sounds, a
mind or an idea; it can be a linguistic corpus, a social body, a collectivity.’22
A body can also be understood as a heterogeneous composition of different
types of bodies. A computer network, a telecommunications channel or a
sound system could be understood as composite bodies of smaller bodies
that exist in relations of motion and rest and can each ‘do’ a particular
thing (or things). Even a sound wave can be conceived of as a body, in that
it is composed of dynamic relations of motion and rest (i.e. the movement
of the air particles or another medium in a particular pattern) and has
a certain capacity for modification (by, for example, other sounds and
vibrations).
Understood via this Spinozist notion of affect, which approaches the
experiential and its extra – in terms of relations, forces, capacities and
powers – noise can be thought of as an a-signifying force-relation. This is
not quite the same as positing noise as the absence of meaning or a gap in the
semantic. Rather, it is to suggest that noise does not in and of itself function
in accordance with meaning or signification: it operates according to rules
other than those of the Symbolic. In other words, I maintain that noise (and
with this, affect) is primarily positioned outside of language, meaning and
signification, while also looking to push beyond a somewhat unsatisfactory
end point of describing noise as non-meaning to a message’s meaning. This
is by no means to deny that noise (and affect) is frequently entangled with
signifying registers: noise often has an impact on how a sonic event is heard,
understood and interpreted. Nor is to deny that the presence of noise might
convey meaning: as shall be seen, noise can often tell the listener something
about the means or context of communication. However, these semantic
attachments arise as an effect or outcome, rather than being a constitutive
feature of the noise force-relation itself.
THE PARASITE AND ITS MILIEU: NOISE, MATERIALITY, AFFECTIVITY 49
affects transmission; (5) a receiver, which converts the signals into a message,
and (6) a destination where the message arrives (Figure 1).
Shannon’s general schematic was popularized by the mathematician
Warren Weaver. In his introductory essay for their joint publication The
Mathematical Theory of Communication, published the year after Shannon’s
article, Weaver considers the implications of Shannon’s model beyond an
engineering context. Although it was initially intended to represent the
communicative process in relation to telegraphy and telephony, Weaver
discusses its broader application:
Hainge’s argument into the sonic realm, the crackle of the vinyl record or
the fuzz and hum of the cassette tape are often recognized (and sometimes
fetishized) as authentic analogue ‘warmth’. These nostalgic characterizations,
however, are embedded in a contradiction: though the noise of the medium
carries significance for current users of older technologies, its presence and
effects would not have been noticed, at least to the same degree, by their
original users – just as the ‘noisiness’ of contemporary technologies tends
not to be perceived by current users. The noise of the medium is what is
valued, celebrated and foregrounded by technostalgia and yet it was never
meant to be noticed. Media noise is ‘only recognized after the fact, and thus
nostalgia is turned on its head; for no longer being simply a return to the
past it becomes a premonition of the future also, a noisy proclamation that
today’s PC is tomorrow’s typewriter’.37 It is not known quite how noisy a
cassette tape is until it is heard in comparison to a CD, just as the extent of
the noise of a two-megapixel image is only really seen when it is brought
into relation with a five-megapixel image. The listener or viewer, then, is not
always a reliable judge of noise.
In defining noise as an affective force-relation, it is not assumed that noise
affects a listener, or only acts upon, and is perceptible to, the ‘human’. As shall
become more apparent throughout, noise also acts within and in relation to
that which is designated the ‘non-human’: both noise and affect, and noise as
affect traverse the distinctions drawn between organic and machinic, natural
and ‘unnatural’, acoustic and electric, analogue and digital. Following
Spinoza, noise might be thus described as non-anthropocentric in that it acts
within registers other than the ‘human’ (such as with the CD player system).
Indeed, Shannon’s information theory and the cybernetic models that
follow it share something of Spinoza’s non-anthropocentrism: it does not
matter to his general model whether noise effects communication between
two humans, between two machines, or between a human and machine.
Likewise, to cybernetics, which approaches life in terms of informational
exchange and transmission, the distinction between people, animals and
machines, and, by extension, between consciousness, unconsciousness
and pre-consciousness is of little relevance.38 To describe noise as non-
anthropocentric is not to dispose of the human listening subject – of course,
noise is frequently perceptible to human listeners, and frequently acts upon
human bodies and relations. Rather, it decentres the listening subjects in that
they are no longer the privileged constitutors of noise. Noise might affect
but it doesn’t ‘need me’.
As an affective force-relation that perturbs a signal or operations of a
system, noise can be thought of as productive in that it generates some kind
of change, no matter how minor or fleeting. It is important to note, however,
that to describe noise as productive is not the same as referring to noise
as positive or beneficial. As will be discussed in more detail in Part 3, in a
Spinozist framework, the terms ‘good’ and ‘bad’ describe the nature of an
affective encounter from the perspective of the affected entity. If it is to be
THE PARASITE AND ITS MILIEU: NOISE, MATERIALITY, AFFECTIVITY 55
asserted that noise is always negative, then this means that the affective
relation between signal and noise source is always detrimental to the former.
Shannon maintains such a view. As N. Katherine Hayles argues, Shannon’s
theory of communication and his characterization of the relationship
between noise and signal is informed by ‘a conservative bias that privileges
stasis over change. Noise interferes with the message’s exact replication,
which is presumed to be the desired result. The structure of the theory
implied that change was deviation and that deviation should be corrected.’39
Noise is a necessary evil: it is ‘bad’ to the desirable signal’s ‘good’. It takes
communication off track and obstructs the perfect transmission of the
message. It is a hindrance to communication efficiency. Consequently,
Shannon’s information theory is marked by a desire to have mastery over
noise. Noise’s affective power should be minimized and pre-empted; its
effects should be concealed or corrected so as to maintain accuracy and
efficiency. However, if noise’s characterization as a necessary evil that needs
to be controlled is underlined by the financial (i.e. capitalist) motivations of
the American telephone company, then this suggests that Shannon’s general
model might not be so ‘general’ after all. In a context in which accuracy,
efficiency and stasis are not prioritized as imperative, noise might be
something other than detrimental.
Even within the context of cybernetics, the prioritization of system stasis
was called into question. The biophysicist Hentri Atlan revised Shannon’s
classical perspective of noise in order to allow for noise’s seemingly
paradoxical potential to be beneficial. Atlan sought to apply the observations
of information theory and cybernetics to living organisms and their ecological
systems. Though frequently associated with cyberneticists such as Heinz von
Foerester, Atlan’s work on complexity and self-organization is also indebted
to Spinoza’s non-anthropocentrism, monism and his particular concept of
an immanent, processual and self-causing Nature.40
Noise and its effects are integral to Atlan’s (Spinozist) concepts of self-
organization and complexity. While Shannon’s information theory and
the early cybernetic paradigms of Norbert Weiner prioritized stasis and
stability, Atlan’s work (among others) challenges this view by drawing
attention to the ways in which change, adaptability and variability are
beneficial to certain systems. As that which results in change and requires
adaptability, Atlan argues, it is possible to imagine a perspective from which
noise is viewed as constructive and generative. For Atlan, whether noise is
considered useful or destructive, good or bad, positive or negative relates
to the position occupied within a system of relations. In a communication
system, noise will result in a deviation from an intended message for the
sender. However, for the receiver, noise may play an alternative role – it may
be a source of new information that is of potential interest. The noisiness
of Edison’s recording to modern ears, for instance, expresses its temporal
distance and is made meaningful accordingly: its lack of fidelity serves as
a reminder of the changes that have occurred in recording practices since
56 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
The two companions scurry off when they hear a noise at the door. It was
only a noise, but it was also a message, a bit of information producing
panic: an interruption a corruption, a rupture of information. Was the
noise really a message? Wasn’t it, rather, static, a parasite? A parasite
58 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
who has the last word, who produces disorder and who generates a
different order.44
In French, the term ‘parasite’ has three distinct but related meanings. It
may name a relation with which one entity hosts another, such as a cat
hosting a flea. The parasitic organism feeds at the expense of the host but
gives nothing in return. Second, parasite may be a pejorative term used
to refer to those branded as social scroungers – those who ‘feed off’ the
state but ‘contribute’ nothing in return. The social parasite may also be the
uninvited guest, who charms his or her way onto the host’s dinner table
and who eats for free, taking something for nothing, or, alternatively, who
makes an unequal exchange; trading food for stories. These two usages of
parasite will be familiar to English speakers. However, the third parasite is
obscured with the translation of French to English. The third parasite is an
informational parasite, which takes the form of static or interference in a
channel. The figure of the parasite connects the biological, the social and
the informational. These three parasites – the biological feeder; the social
scapegoat or uninvited guest; and the noise of communication – are all
thought of as interferences within a system. They interrupt the usual flow
of things, disrupting pre-existing relations and, in turn, transforming them.
The parasite is the ‘excluded middle’ that exists as the intermediary
between entities A and B: ‘The position of the parasite is to be between.’45
The parasite can thus be understood as structurally analogous to affect,
insofar as ‘in-betweenness’ characterizes them both. Serres, moreover, does
not understand the parasite as a discrete entity – it is not a type of being or
organism. His focus is on parasitism as a particular kind of asymmetrical,
disruptive and affective relation. Parasites are not a type of organism;
rather, organisms are defined as such when they take up a parasitic relation
with another organism: the parasite is what the parasite does. As the third
term, it is neither in the place of the subject nor in the place of the object.
Rather, it is the relation to relations: it takes up a perturbing relation to the
relations between subjects and objects. In the case of the country rat and
the city rat, the disruptive noise acts upon the relation between the rats,
transforming the encounter: ‘The banquet is a relation of the two rats …
and the third person intercepts it, parasites it by means of parasitic noise.
He makes it stop.’46
Where Shannon’s general model represents communication as a linear
process, in Serres’s schema, the system of relations is non-linear and fluid,
with entities changing between the positions of sender, receiver and noise;
or guest, host and parasite: ‘The guest becomes the interrupter, the noise
becomes the interlocutor; part of the channel becomes an obstacle and
vice-versa. … The same and the other change places with the third.’47
Consequently, the relationship between the role of host and parasite is not
always clear: who is a parasite on whom? In the case of the rat’s feast, for
example, there is a chain of parasitic relations: the country rat parasites the
THE PARASITE AND ITS MILIEU: NOISE, MATERIALITY, AFFECTIVITY 59
city rat, the city rat parasites the tax farmer, and the tax farmer parasites
the land. So, the parasites (i.e. the rats) parasite (i.e. the parasitic relation)
the parasite (i.e. the city farmer). For Serres, the problem of the parasite – of
‘parasites parasite parasites’ – is very different from the Hegelian master-
slave dialectic. Hegel’s dialectic describes how the subject becomes the object
or vice versa. However, the parasite is neither subject nor object: it is the
means by which subjects relate to objects, or how subjects are transformed
into objects.48 Both the tax farmer and the city rats simultaneously act as
hosts and parasites, or, rather, they occupy the position of host and parasite
in a different series of relations; the tax farmer is a parasite of the land
but a host to the city rat, the city rat is a parasite to the tax farmer and
his larder, but a host to the country rat. This chain of relations, however,
is broken by the appearance of another interrupting parasite. This final
parasite is thought to be the noise of the tax farmer-parasite: the return of
the parasited-parasite:
Who is the parasite here, who is the interrupter? It is the noise, the
creaking floorboards of the floor or of the door? Of course. It upsets
the game and the system collapses. If it stops, everything comes back
and is reformed and the meal continued. Think of another noise: the
chain is broken again and everything vanishes in the bewildered flight. …
Theorem: noise gives rise to a new system, an order that is more complex
than the simple chain.49
The chain of parasitic relations (the tax farmer parasited by the city rat,
the city rat parasited by the country rat) is disrupted as the first host (the
tax farmer) counter-parasites his guests, ‘not by taking away his food from
them … but by making noise’.50 The noise interrupts the meal of the country
rat and the city rat, changing their relation. In this scene, the affective power
of noise is foregrounded once again. The noise acts upon the country rat – it
startles the rat, causing it to flee. The city rat, however, remains unaffected
by the noise: ‘The city rat gets used to it, is vaccinated, becomes immune.’51
The city rat urges the terrified country rat to return, but he cannot bear
the noise of the unfamiliar environment: ‘Let us go to the country where
we eat only soup, but quietly and without interruption.’52 But the country
rat, it transpires, is also responsible for the disturbing, parasitic noise that
frightens it. Noise moves round the tax farmer’s house – the noise of the
tax farmer that disturbs the feast comes because the tax farmer is disturbed
by the noise of the feast. The rats disturb the tax farmer and the tax farmer
disturbs the rats, both parasite one another. Relations between host and
parasite are formed and reformed and one interrupts the other but never
exactly in the same way.
Serres asserts that there are two primary responses to a parasite’s
intrusion: incorporation or expulsion. The two parties – guest and host;
sender and receiver – may adapt in order to accommodate the parasite’s
60 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
middle, or mid-place. In its more common usage in both French and English,
a milieu refers to an environment or context: a set of framing circumstances
that envelops a stance, or a standing point.56 The medium is the middle – the
milieu that necessarily stands between sender and receiver, and any other
relation between seemingly free and discrete entities.
In communication, messages pass through a material middle. It is
this material middle that constitutes mediation, by standing in the way
of immediacy. The material middle – the medium – is the third position,
the excluded middle that must be included. If noise is understood as a
transformative force-relation that induces a change, then the medium is
always noisy insofar as it acts upon the signal, transforming it in some way.
Relations require a medium, and so communication systems are noisy by
definition – hence noise’s inclusion in Shannon’s diagram alongside sender,
receiver, transmitter and signal. The ‘noise source’ that acts upon the signal
pertains to the medium. While its presence often remains unnoticeable,
overshadowed by the symbolic or meaningful content of a message, the
medium is, nevertheless, influential: it always leaves a noisy ‘trace’. In
other words, the medium is affective: it does something, as well as having
something done to it. It pushes back, modifying that which it carries or
contains. Noise is what marks this affective interaction between medium
and content, between the signal transmitted and the material means.
Different media act upon the information they store or carry in
particular ways, according to their affective capacity: what a medium is or
is not affected by; what relations it can or cannot form with other bodies;
and which impressions it may or may not retain. A recording played
from a vinyl record is different to a recording played from a compact
disc, partly because of the alternate ways in which the analogue medium
and the digital medium affect the signal. However, apropos of Serres’s
wordplay, the medium of communication is not only that which signals,
information and messages pass through and across but also refers to the
environment – the milieu – within which communication occurs (or fails
to occur). As Steven Connor states: ‘The milieu mediates between channel
and environment.’57 The parasitic interruption makes the medium/milieu
appear, pointing to the wider context within which relations take place.
The noise of the tax farmer that disturbs the two rats indicates the
broader context of the feast, just as interference on a phone line draws
attention to the material means through which communication is taking
place. The disruptive noise of a neighbour points to the wider milieu
that surrounds the four walls of ‘our’ home. The intermittent satellite
transmissions of television and broadband services caused by adverse
weather conditions are expressive of the environment within which such
technologies operate.
Communicators must do battle with the effects of the noisy milieu/
medium in order for communication to take place. However, the noisy
medium/milieu must exist for there to be any passage at all. With no
62 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
I realized that when I listened to a record, there were all these unwanted
sounds, clicks and pops, because of the deterioration of the record, the
surface noise, scratches. Instead of rejecting these residual sounds, I’ve
tried to use them, bringing them to the foreground to make people aware
that they’re listening to a recording and not live music. These sounds
make people aware of the medium, of the vinyl, a cheap slab of plastic. …
We usually make abstractions of the medium. For me, it was important
to have this awareness and underline it, to give it a voice. It has an
expressive power in itself. When something goes wrong, like when the
needle skips, something unpredictable happens, that wasn’t the intention
of the recording artist. In that incident, something new and exciting
happens. For me, it has creative potential.71
Here, Marclay emphasizes that the medium is neither passive nor abstract.
Rather, it has, in Marclay’s words a ‘voice’, an ‘expressive power’ – that
is, the capacity to affect and to act. In doing so, the medium can produce
something new and potentially interesting. The noisy affectivity of the vinyl
record transforms the sonic content when played: it may work to modify
the flow of music by jumping and skipping, or introduce new, unusual
combinations of sound. The medium is inventive.
The temporal degradation and expressive capacity of the medium is
central to Marclay’s first solo release: Record Without a Cover (1985).72 The
release was recorded on a four-track and constructed from samples taken
from other records: it features classical music, film scores, jazz, military
fanfares and salsa, as well as various sound effects. However, as the title
66 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
suggests, the record is sold without any protective covering: it carries the
instruction: ‘Do not store in a protective packaging.’ This means that the
vinyl disc is left completely exposed to the affective, transformative forces
of the milieu as it is stored and used. Marclay’s record thus goes against the
normative ideals of audio techno-culture – the aspiration to preserve sounds
with maximum fidelity and minimal noise. The record is not conceived of as
a document of a live performance but rather as ‘a record that could change
with time, and would be different from one copy to the next’.73 These noisy
‘battlescars’ that arise from exposure are intended to modify the recording
over time, so that each pressing is unique. They become part of the record’s
music, as Liz Kotz notes: ‘The collision or layering of real-time and recorded
traces leaves us unable to distinguish between original record and surface
damage.’74 The markings of the record – the traces of its particular affective
encounters – give rise to a noise that ensures that no two versions of Record
Without a Cover are the same. It is these noises, furthermore, that draw
attention to the underlying materiality of the record. As Marclay states:
‘With Record Without a Cover you can’t ignore the medium. You can’t
ignore that you are listening to a recording. There is confusion between
what is intentionally recorded and what is damage to the surface of the
disc.’75 In this instance, noise and its effects are not simply extraneous or
detractive. Rather, they help to determine the music heard. The (intended)
sonic content of Record Without a Cover exists as a combination of sounds
selected, produced and recorded by Marclay, and the effects of media noise.
The noise of the vinyl record takes on a similar function in the work of
improvisatory turntablist Maria Chavez. Like Marclay, Chavez utilizes the
affective potentials of ‘damaged’ records in order to discover new sounds
and sonic affectations. She describes her practice as considering the creative
possibilities of the vinyl record, of unlocking previously unconsidered
modes of expression: ‘As a 21st century artist I feel l’m listening to vinyl
in a different manner, in a different language, and I’m bringing out specific
characteristics that people … maybe don’t think about or … wouldn’t
consider even existed within the realm of vinyl.’76 Unlike Record Without
a Cover, however, which was produced and sold as a record, Chavez uses
scratched and worn records as a component of her live performances.
As a turntablist, Chavez is concerned with drawing a wide range of
sounds and textures from a limited number of records in various conditions
ranging from ‘immaculate’ to ‘ruined’. In live performance, she typically
uses one turntable and focuses on a small number of grooves. For Chavez,
scratches and noise are markers of the record’s ongoing mutability as it
affects and is affected by other entities. She describes the destruction of her
records as a ‘very organic process’. Though she has some records that have
been intentionally scratched or ‘damaged’ by others, Chavez notes that she
does not use those records very often. Rather:
The records that I actually use the most are ones that have been naturally
ruined on their own. Because I keep them all in my backpack without
THE PARASITE AND ITS MILIEU: NOISE, MATERIALITY, AFFECTIVITY 67
their sleeves, so they’re in and out, they move around, they touch each
other. So there’s always new scratches. Sometimes I’ll leave them outside,
or leave them in the car, just so they can kind of mould into each other.
Some will stay out, some will warp around it.77
Chavez’s creative practice draws upon the noisy, affective relations between
the environment, medium and sonic content. As the material record is
transformed over time by the forces of the milieu (for example, the heat
that warps the plastic) and the encounters it has with other material bodies
(records touching and rubbing against one another, gathering of dust and
dirt), the record will move differently in the playback. The scratches on the
surface can cause the record to skip, or allow locked grooves to develop so
that the same short segment of recorded sound is repeated. In this context,
these affective relations between milieu, medium and sonic content are not
seen as inhibitive or degrading, insofar as they result in a corruption or
loss of information, or prevent ‘normal’ playback. Rather, for Chavez, this
processual approach to the material record and the noises that arise ensures
that there is always something new to be heard; new sounds, textures and
rhythms are generated as the record is ‘damaged’ by the forces of the world.
While Marclay and Chavez explore the potentials of an ‘outmoded’
medium that is already obviously noisy to contemporary ears, Yasunao
Tone’s experimentations with compact discs used – and ‘abused’ – state-
of-the-art technology. Formerly an active member of the Tokyo Fluxus
movement and the free improvisation collective Group Ongaku, Tone began
to experiment with CD technologies in the early 1980s. At the time of its
emergence, the CD was advertised as a noiseless and timeless technology;
Sony and Philips notoriously promoted the new medium under the tagline
‘Perfect Sound Forever’. As noted earlier in this section, the CD is designed
with the concealment of noise in mind: the effects of noise and error are
minimized by an error correction system before they can reach the ears of
the listener. It is these hidden, inaudible noises that Tone sought to unlock
by overriding the error correction system of the CD player. By modifying the
surface of the disc, the CD began to act differently in the playback in ways
that had not been intended by its designers:
A new technology, a new medium appears, and the artist usually enlarges
the use of the technology. … Deviates. … The manufacturers always force
us to use a product their way. … However people occasionally find a way
to deviate from the original purpose of the medium and develop a totally
new field.78
In 1984, Tone started using scotch tape with pinholes to affect the playback of
compact disc recordings. His first attempt involved a recording of Debussy’s
Preludes. The modification of the CD surface affected the pitch, rhythm and
speed of the original recording, as well as introducing a stuttering effect that
was different with each playback of the CD. Tone recalls: ‘I was pleased with
68 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
the result because the CD player behaved frantically and out of control.
That was a perfect device for performance.’79
Tone’s first release involving modified CDs was the 1986 Music for 2
CD Players, for which he used ‘famous music, so you recognized parts
of Beethoven and Tchaikovsky tunes but very much distorted’.80 This
was followed in 1997 with the recorded release Solo for Wounded CD.81
This was a studio version of his 1995 performance of Musica Iconologos
(1993) – a media-specific piece created for CD.82 Tone had wanted to
perform Musica Iconologos live, without simply replaying what already
existed on the disc. In order to do this, he prepared the CD of the piece
using his scotch tape technique, which produced an indeterminate and
unpredictable outcome. The transmission of information between medium,
machine and output was disrupted, causing the disc to indeterminately
stutter, jam and glitch during live performance, ‘remixing’ Musica
Iconologos in the process.
Tone’s prepared discs work by disrupting the communication process
between the CD and the playback device. The scotch tape was carefully
placed where the laser hit the disc surface, resulting in a modified reading of
the digital signal. As Tone remarks:
to affected Palestinians, these sonic booms are often indiscernible from the
sound of a missile strike or bomb explosion. They describe the experience as
being hit by a wall of air that is painful to the ears, that ‘leaves you shaking
inside’. Stress, panic attacks, heart problems and nosebleeds were also
attributed to the booms.93 Children were said to be particularly affected by
the attacks, with reported symptoms including bed-wetting, anxiety attacks,
concentration problems, loss of hearing and breathing difficulties.94
Israeli and Palestinian human rights groups described such attacks as
the ‘collective punishment’ of civilians and as constituting a breach of
international law. However, Israeli officials have denied the severity of such
tactics, insofar as they are not thought to cause any ‘real’ or lethal damage –
in short, sound bombs are considered preferable to ‘actual’ bombs.95 In 2005,
The Guardian cited an anonymous Israeli intelligence source as stating that
the attacks were designed to encourage civilians to withdraw their support
for armed Palestinian groups: ‘We are trying to send a message in a way
that doesn’t harm people. We want to encourage the Palestinian public to
do something about the terror situation. … What are the alternatives? We
are not like the terrorists who shoot civilians. We are cautious. We make
sure nobody is really hurt.’96 The claim that sonic booms are preferable to
‘actual’ attacks is echoed by Rannan Gissin – an advisor to Ariel Sharon:
‘The inconvenience that it [sonic booms] causes the Palestinian population
cannot be measured against the question of life or death for Israelis on the
other side.’97 Sonic booms were thus argued to be less ‘damaging’ than a
physical attack: while they may negatively affect the bodies of the victims
who experience it, the ‘discomfort’ they caused was deemed temporary.
Both Israeli and Palestinian accounts understand sonic booms to
disturb, disrupt and negatively affect targeted civilians – though, as is clear,
the extent to which civilians are negatively affected is disputed. In 2005,
Israel’s Prime Minister Ehud Olmert claimed that ‘thousands of residents
in southern Israel live in fear and discomfort, so I gave instructions that
nobody will sleep at night in the meantime in Gaza’.98 The logic behind
the use of sonic booms was to (re)create an atmosphere of ‘fear and
discomfort’ through the disturbance and disruption of the people’s lives,
inhibiting the usual functioning of the social. More generally, the purpose
of sonic booms is to weaken the morale of populations – to decrease their
capacity to act through the induction of a particular collective affectation.
By indiscriminately disturbing smaller bodies – of individuals, families,
schools, and local communities – sonic booms act upon the larger, collective,
Palestinian population-body through inducing a particular, negative
ambience or vibe.99 In other words, the affective registers of the Palestinian
population-body, and, specifically, the nameable affective experience of
‘fear and discomfort’, are rendered object-targets of the Israeli military
apparatus. However, as Goodman notes, the deployment of sonic booms
‘threatens not just the traumatized emotional disposition and physiology of
the population but the very structure of the built environment’.100 Following
72 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
the 2005 attacks in Gaza, there were reports of broken windows, cracked
walls and structural damage to buildings.101 This suggests that sonic booms
not only disrupt and subsequently (negatively) transform the affective lives
of individual and collective civilian bodies, but also transform the broader,
architectural milieu.
In addition to these more obvious, overtly militarized uses of sound and
vibration as a force of disruption, the deployment of sound as a way to
affectively police social space and target enemy bodies has been used in
‘everyday’ power struggles that occur on the high street, in bus shelters
and outside of libraries. In 2006, the ‘Mosquito’ device became audible (to
some) in what might have once been considered public spaces. Operating
according to similar principles as ultrasonic pest controls, this ‘anti-
loitering’ device emits an uncomfortable, pulsing, high-pitched frequency
around seventeen kilohertz, at a thirty-five to forty metre range, and at
a maximum volume of one hundred and eight decibels. It aims to dispel
what are deemed to be socially ‘undesirable’ groups of young people and
prevent them from congregating in particular areas – outside shops, fast
food outlets, building foyers and housing estates – without the need for
face-to-face confrontation.
The Mosquito targets a particular demographic according to age and
affective capacity. The high-frequency sound is designed to be heard only by
those under twenty-five, since the higher bandwidth of audible frequencies
ordinarily deteriorates with age. For those who are able to hear it, the
Mosquito makes a space uncomfortable to occupy for a sustained period of
time. Those who cannot hear it (i.e. those over twenty-five, or those whose
hearing bandwidth has sufficiently deteriorated) remain unaffected by the
device. The Mosquito’s ‘power’ does not come from the ‘inherently’ noisy
frequency it emits. Rather, it is intended to affect targeted bodies as noise.
As with other forms of weaponized sounds, the Mosquito is designed to
interfere in its targets’ lives, making a space uncomfortable to occupy and,
in turn, disrupting and inhibiting the formation of crowd-bodies. In other
words, like sonic booms, the device negatively affects both ‘individual’ and
‘collective’: it acts upon both the body of a young person under the age of
twenty-five and the composite body of ‘youths’ that it seeks to dispel.102
The deployment of the Mosquito device has been controversial and has
faced significant opposition – namely, because it indiscriminately affects
children and young adults, and is argued to impinge on their human rights.103
Consequently, a subtler audio-affective deterrent has emerged that no longer
relies on generating physical discomfort in order to inhibit the occupation
of particular social spaces. Since 2010, Compound Security Systems – the
original manufacturer of the Mosquito device – has been offering a ‘Music
Player’ device for those who feel they are no longer able to use the Mosquito
device because of ‘local public youth pressure’.104 Rather than emitting loud
and uncomfortable high-frequency tones, this system plays either ‘royalty
free Classical or Chill-out music’.105 The premise behind the device is simple:
THE PARASITE AND ITS MILIEU: NOISE, MATERIALITY, AFFECTIVITY 73
‘youths’, ‘hoodies’ and other ‘loiterers’ are understood to find classical music
unpleasant or irritating. Subsequently, playing it outside shops, at public
transport stations or even in library foyers deters them from occupying
those spaces.
While proposed as an alternative, the use of classical music as an audio-
affective deterrent actually predates the Mosquito. North East England’s
Tyne and Wear Metro became one of the first companies in the United
Kingdom to employ such tactics, broadcasting Fredrick Delius’s incidental
music for the play Hassan (1923) at their stations in 1997. Speaking in
2005, Mike Palmer, the General Director of Tyne and Wear Passenger
Transport Executive (Nexus), asserts that the introduction of the music is
not intended to soothe and calm passengers, ‘but to provide a background
of music that people who we are aiming at [“troublemakers”] don’t actually
like and so they move away’.106 The music was principally understood to
target ‘low level antisocial behaviour’, including swearing and smoking at
stations. While not criminal in and of itself, this behaviour was thought to
create a fear of crime: Tom Yeoman, a spokesperson for Nexus, states that
‘even if they [loitering “youths”] didn’t have a violent agenda, they looked
like they might have’.107 The groups congregating in stations were felt to be
menacing by some passengers and so inhibiting their presence, via music,
was understood to make passengers feel more secure. Furthermore, like
the mosquito, the piped classical music is thought to target only a certain
demographic. The BBC reporter Melissa Jackson states: ‘It’s a win-win
situation. Troublemakers have been driven out, but the music continues by
popular demand because passengers say it helps pass the time while they are
waiting for their train.’108 The piped music is thought to be disturbing only for
menacing social ‘undesirables’, while the ‘right’ clientele remain unaffected
as they are thought to find the music pleasant. Indeed, the organization of
social space through such tactics – the attraction of certain bodies and the
repelling of others according to age and social status – can be thought of as
a form of ‘low-intensity class warfare’,109 in which the music of the elite is
deployed against the young, the poor and the bored.
Classical music’s deployment as an everyday sonic weapon exemplifies
the entanglement of affective, discursive and semantic registers: its extra-
musical associations and symbolic connotations (e.g. of ‘propriety’, ‘civility’,
‘oldness’) both inform and are reinforced by classical music’s use as an
audio-affective deterrent.110 However, affective states and bodily capacities
are ‘not linear effects of apparatuses and the ideas and intentions that make
them’.111 As Michael Gallagher has shown apropos of the habituation of
birds to gas gun bird-scarers (i.e. avian sonic warfare), it is not inevitable
that particular sounds will generate particular affects: sound’s affectivity
is neither subjective nor objective but contextual, arising in situ.112 By
extension, there is no guarantee that this music will generate the affections it
is intended to in the bodies that it targets – that is, irritation and annoyance.
Affect exceeds such determinations.
74 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
In Genesis (1982), which was published two years after The Parasite,
Serres describes a noise that is the ‘the ground of our perception, absolutely
uninterrupted, it is our perennial sustenance … the residue and cesspool of
our message’.113 While noise is often thought of as distracting – it diverts
attention away from a particular activity and towards itself – in this instance,
it goes largely unnoticed, overshadowed by the presence of discrete signals.
This continuous background noise inaudibly fills the silence of the absent
sound-signal:
Background noise may well be the ground of our being. … Noise cannot
be a phenomenon; every phenomenon is separated from it, a silhouette on
a background, like a beacon against the fog, as every message, every cry,
every call, every signal must be separated from the hubbub that occupies
silence in order to be perceived, to be known, to be exchanged. As soon
as a phenomenon appears it leaves the noise; as soon as a form looms up
or pokes through, it reveals itself by veiling noise. So noise is not a matter
of phenomenology, so it is a matter of being itself. It settles in subjects as
well as in objects, in hearing as well as in space, in the observers as well as
in the observed, it moves through the means and the tools of observation,
whether material or logical, hardware or software, constructed channels
or languages; it is part of the in-itself, part of the for-itself, it cuts across
the oldest and surest philosophical divisions, yes, noise is metaphysical.114
Noise, from this perspective, is not just necessary in the sense that it
is inevitable (that is, a signal will inevitably encounter interference),
but necessary in the sense that it is foundational. There is no escaping
background noise; it cannot be abated – it has no outside, no antithesis, no
contrary: ‘The background noise is permanent, it is the ground of the world,
the backdrop of the universe.’115 Nor is this noise defined in opposition to
signal but, rather, exists in itself: as noise itself. It is not signal’s antithesis
but its precursor: ‘the originating rumor and murmuring’.116 It is noise that
is continuous and the signal that is intermittent.
It is this noise that is gestured towards but never truly grasped in John
Cage’s notorious ‘silent’ piece: 4’33” (1952). The piece famously exemplifies
the impossibility of absolute silence by foregrounding the background noise
that occupies every silence, or, rather, is silence. 4’33” draws the listener’s
attention towards the sonic base that hearing usually ignores but which
accompanies every sound and musical performance. The piece shows that,
contrary to popular belief, music cannot and does not begin in silence because
the concert hall is already full of sound – the sound of the wind outside, the
gentle hum of an air conditioning unit or the drone of the distant traffic. It
is this noise that Cage primarily refers to in his 1937 essay, ‘The Future of
Music: Credo’: ‘Wherever we are, what we hear is mostly noise. When we
ignore it, it disturbs us. When we listen to it, we find it fascinating. The sound
of a truck at fifty miles per hour. Static between the stations. Rain.’117 Yet,
76 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
and are animated, by the vibrational plane. Background noise and sound-
signal are co-productive: sounds transform the noisy, vibrational medium/
milieu as they emerge and return to it, while the noisy, vibrational medium/
milieu helps to shape the sound, contributing to its timbral quality and
undertone. The timbre of a violin or piano tone, for example, involves not
only the wave components issued by the instrument but also the incidental
vibrations that already animate a space.125 In short, noise contributes to a
sound’s qualitative particularity: though it is imperceptible and inaudible in
itself, it has perceptible and audible effects.
It is the notion of the noisy medium/milieu, moreover, that connects
parasitic noise to background noise. Parasitic noise is considered to be
an effect of the medium, while background noise is a medium: it is the
vibrational milieu that sound emerges from but also travels across and
through. So, if the medium exposes the signal to noise, and background
noise functions as a medium, then the latter (the vibrational milieu) can
be understood to expose the signal to the former (the parasitic relation).
Understood in this way, parasitic noise (the relation to relations) and
background noise (the vibrational milieu) become two distinct dimensions
of one type of noise.
noisy medium, which underlines, affects and persists in the absence of the
signal. Both noise and Cros have played important roles in the history of
sound recording but are often sidelined: just as the sound of Edison’s voice
overshadows the noisy presence of the material medium, Edison’s successful
invention overshadows Cros’s alternative medium.
Understood as an affective, transformative relation between entities, or
between entities and milieus, noise is detached from both the constitutive
listening subject and particular acoustic qualities: it names a relational
force, rather than a judgement or thing. It is also detached from a
constitutive series of hierarchical dualisms. Noise is the ‘excluded middle’
that must be included. It is not secondary and contingent but necessary and
unavoidable. Hence this relational, affective understanding of noise assumes
no correlation between noise and unwantedness; it does not suppose that
noise only induces ‘negative’ effects, or affections. Noise is constituted by its
affectivity rather than its negativity.
At first glance, it would seem unlikely that skipping records and sonic
weapons would have much in common. However, these examples helpfully
demonstrate noise’s affectivity. For Marclay, Chavez and Tone, the disruptive,
transformative relations between milieu, medium and sonic content generate
new creative potentials, allowing the artist and his or her audience to discover
more of what a medium-body can do. Their work reveals the a priori values
of information theory – stasis, clarity and accuracy – to be contextual and
contingent, thus opening up a space for noise to be something other than a
‘necessary evil’. For the collective-bodies targeted by sonic booms, mosquito
devices or even classical music, noise is also disruptive and transformative.
However, in this instance, the transformation involves a weakening of a
collectivized enemy or opponent – a diminishment of what its body can do.
Neither of these examples, moreover, can be grasped by thinking of noise
in terms of a subjective, personal event – as something that happens to, and
acts upon, an individual listener. Rather, they require us to take affect in
its broadest, Spinozist sense – of one entity acting upon another: be it an
engagement between two signals; the milieu, medium and its content; or
the relationship between a mass of vibrations and a population. Thus, just
as Serres understands there to be a relational connection between social,
biological and informational parasites, affect can be used to connect the
noise that occurs on informational, artistic and sociopolitical registers, while
also allowing for the aesthetic, ethical and contextual differences between
these manifestations.
Notes
1 I am using the term ‘transcendental’ as it is defined by Deleuze, referring to
an impersonal and pre-individual field that provides the genetic conditions
THE PARASITE AND ITS MILIEU: NOISE, MATERIALITY, AFFECTIVITY 79
52 Ibid., 3.
53 Ibid., 77. The French Chasser means both hunt and chase. Serres plays on this
definition by taking up the parasitic relation of the hare and the gardener:
‘The hare is in the third position, and thus, he must be excluded. He must be
chased, hunted down. I fear that this is the origin of hunting. The only things
that are hunted are those that have to be chased away. In the end, there are
two kinds of animals: those that are invited and those that are hunted. Guests
and quarry. Tame and wild.’ Ibid.
54 Ibid., 14.
55 ‘A trunk, the tail the head: the trunk of the relation between head and tail.
The milieu, the mediate. What is between, what exists between. The middle
term. The means and the means to an end. The means and the tool; the tool
and its use; the means and its use.’ Ibid., 65.
56 See Steven Connor, ‘Michel Serres’s milieux’, ALBRALIC ‘Meditations’
Conference, Belo Horizonete, 23–26 July (2002), http://www.stevenconnor.
com/milieux/ (accessed March 2011).
57 Ibid.
58 Serres, The Parasite, 70.
59 Ibid., 79.
60 Ibid.
61 Ibid., 63.
62 Connor, ‘Michel Serres’s milieux’.
63 Serres’s understanding of noise in The Parasite marks a significant departure
from its theorization in earlier works, such as Hermes. Prior to the Parasite,
Serres primarily recognizes noise as the enemy of communication. Variations
and errors in communication were seen as extraneous and required removal.
See Michel Serres, Hermes: Literature, Science, Philosophy (Baltimore: John
Hopkins University, 1982).
64 Zoe Sofia, ‘Container technologies’, Hypatia 15, no. 2 (2000): 181–201.
65 Paul DeMarinis, ‘Erased dots and rotten dashes, or how to wire your head
for preservation’, in Media Archaeology: Approaches, Applications and
Implications, ed. Erkki Huhtamo and Jussi Parikka (Berkley and Los Angeles:
University of California Press, 2011), 211–38, 211.
66 Ibid.
67 Anne Laforet, Aymeric Mansoux and Marloes de Valk, ‘Rock, paper, scissors
and floppy disks’, http://pi.kuri.mu/rock/ (accessed November 2015).
68 Martha Buskirk, ‘Bit rot: the limits of conservation’, Hyperallergic (2014),
http://hyperallergic.com/131304/bit-rot-the-limits-of-conservation/ (accessed
November 2015).
69 See Liz Kotz, ‘Marked records/program for activity’, Christian Marclay:
Festival issue 1 (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2010), 10–21.
70 Jason Gross, ‘Christian Marclay: Interview’, Perfect Sound Forever (1998),
http://www.furious.com/perfect/christianmarclay.html (accessed March 2012).
71 Ibid., My emphasis.
THE PARASITE AND ITS MILIEU: NOISE, MATERIALITY, AFFECTIVITY 83
93 Chris McGreal, ‘Palestinians hit by sonic boom air raids’, The Guardian,
3 November 2005, http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2005/nov/03/israel
(accessed October 2012).
94 Associated Press, ‘Human rights groups sue to stop Israeli sonic booms over
Gaza’, Haaretz (2005), http://www.haaretz.com/news/human-rights-groups-
sue-to-stop-israeli-sonic-booms-over-gaza-1.173053 (accessed January 2013).
95 See Goodman, Sonic Warfare, xiv.
96 McGreal, ‘Palestinians hit by sonic boom air raids’.
97 Wilf Dinnik, ‘Israel’s sonic booms terrifies Gaza children’, ABC News, 29
December 2005, http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/story?id=1453692 (accessed
October 2012).
98 B’Tselem, ‘The sonic booms in the sky over Gaza’, B’Tselem (2010), http://
www.btselem.org/gaza_strip/supersonic_booms (accessed October 2012).
99 I use negative here in its Spinozist sense, insofar as sonic booms inhibit the
affective power of a body. For more on what constitutes a positive/negative
encounter from a Spinozist perspective, see Part 3.
100 Goodman, Sonic Warfare, xiv.
101 McGreal, ‘Palestinians hit by sonic boom air raids’.
102 The Mosquito device has also been innovatively appropriated by its target
demographic. In 2006, it was reported that schoolchildren had adapted the
frequency used by the Mosquito device into a mobile phone ringtone that
could be heard only by students and not by teachers. Consequently, students
could hear phone call and text message alerts in class without their teachers
noticing. See Valerie Strauss, ‘The Mosquito ringtone: kids hear it, adults
can’t’, The Washington Post, 19 March 2010, http://voices.washingtonpost.
com/answer-sheet/student-life/the-mosquito-ring-tone-kids-ca.html
(accessed October 2012).
103 The joint campaign ‘Buzz off’, which involves Liberty and the National Youth
Agency, has called for the Mosquito device to be banned. See http://www.
liberty-human-rights.org.uk/campaigns/buzz-off/ (accessed July 2013).
104 Compound Security Systems Limited, ‘The CSS music player’, Compound
Security Systems, http://www.compoundsecurity.co.uk/sites/default/files/css-
music-player-03.pdf (accessed October 2012).
105 Ibid.
106 Melissa Jackson, ‘Music to deter yobs by’, BBC News Magazine (2005),
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/magazine/4154711.stm (accessed January 2013).
107 Ibid.
108 Ibid.
109 Theo Kindynis, ‘Weaponising classical music: waging class warfare beneath
our streets’, Ceasefire Magazine (2012), http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/
weaponising-classical-music-class-warfare-waged-beneath-cities-streets/
(accessed January 2013).
110 See Lily Hirsch, ‘Weaponizing classical music: crime prevention and symbolic
power in the age of repetition’, Journal of Popular Music Studies 19, no. 4
342–58.
THE PARASITE AND ITS MILIEU: NOISE, MATERIALITY, AFFECTIVITY 85
Acoustic ecology,
aesthetic moralism and
the politics of silence
us ‘how man creates ideal soundscapes for that other life, the life of the
imagination and psychic reflection’.7 For Schafer, these three disciplinary
strands are the foundation for what he refers to as ‘acoustic design’: an
interdisciplinary field in which musicians, acousticians, psychologists,
sociologists and others would study the world soundscape together in order
to make intelligent recommendations for its improvement at both local and
global registers. This collaborative approach would involve the assessment
of sound’s influence and impact upon the behaviour of listeners within a
particular milieu – for example, acoustic design would study ‘the effects
of new sounds before they were released into the environment’, as well as
‘human behaviour patterns in different sonic environments in order to use
these insights in planning future environments for man’.8 Thus, central to
the Schaferian model of acoustic ecology is a recognition of the affective
dimensions of environmental sound and a consideration of its capacity to
harm or uplift, disturb or comfort, or to encourage or inhibit thought and
contemplation.
Schafer understands environmental sound to be an active component
in the formation of social, political and cultural relations; it influences
the way in which a society or community takes shape and the behaviour
and activities of its inhabitants. Similarly, a society’s soundscape – the
prominence, frequency and order of certain sounds and the absence of
others in a particular setting – is taken to be an indicator of the social
conditions that produce it, insofar as the soundscape both effects and is
an effect of social practices, power relations and ideologies. Echoing a
Platonic concept of musical mediation, Schafer posits that the soundscape
can reveal the ‘sickness’ or ‘well-being’ of a society. Where an ordered and
harmonious soundscape reflects an ordered and harmonious society, a
disordered and dissonant soundscape is revealing of social disorder and
disharmony: ‘When the rhythms of the soundscape become confused
and erratic, society sinks to a slovenly and imperilled condition.’9 The
deafening cacophony of our contemporary soundscape is both a damaging
force within and a signifier of our destructive, urbanized epoch, which
negatively affects the health of both the individual and collective. Thus,
from a ‘bottom-up’ perspective, the noise of the urban milieu shapes the
ways in which inhabitants behave and engage with the world. From a
‘top-down’ perspective, the prevalence of noise within contemporary
life communicates the purported decline in social and moral values: it is
expressive of (metaphorical and literal) illness. Through his notion of sonic
mediation, Schafer problematically conflates the aesthetic with the moral,
the political and the medical.
With the establishment of an ‘imperialist urbanism’ has come the death of
a ‘natural’ quietness. Schafer laments the loss of, sonically speaking, a better
time, during which silence was prevalent within everyday life:
In the past there were muted sanctuaries where anyone suffering from
sound fatigue could go into retirement for recomposure of the psyche.
92 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
are certain machine sounds that Schafer sees as worthy of preservation: there
are the ‘rich and characteristic’ sounds of early steam locomotives and the
whistle of the Canadian Pacific Railway engine.13 Rather, the prioritization of
silence over noise (and correspondingly, the rural over the urban, the natural
over the synthetic, the human over the machine) is primarily articulated
through Schafer’s analytical classifications of hi-fi and lo-fi soundscapes.
Just as a hi-fi sound system possesses a favourable signal-to-noise ratio,
Schafer’s hi-fi soundscape ‘is one in which discrete sounds can be heard
clearly because of low ambient noise level. The country is generally more
hi-fi than the city; night more than day; ancient times more than modern.’14
In a hi-fi soundscape, sounds overlap and interrupt one another less
frequently; sounds are uncrowded, separated from one another by pools
of silence. The quietness and clarity of the hi-fi soundscape is conducive
to an attentive and detailed listening: ‘From the nearest details to the most
distant horizon, the ears operated with seismographic delicacy.’15 Without
inhibiting levels of background noise, the listener is able to hear further into
the distance, just as the viewer is able to see further into the distance in the
countryside. Even the slightest sonic disturbance can communicate vital or
interesting information: the implications of sound are well known to the
open and trained ears of the hi-fi soundscape. For the characters of the rural
landscape – the shepherd, the woodsman and the farmer – the minutest
sounds have significance, providing clues to the changes in the environment.
For Schafer, these acoustic qualities pertain to the ‘original’ or ‘natural’
soundscape of the ancient and pre-modern world. This was a time during
which humans lived largely in isolation or in small communities and listened
with an ‘animal alertness’.16 Life was generally quiet and tranquillity was the
status quo, other than in exceptional circumstances – such as the outbreak
of war, or religious celebration. These outbursts – the aberrational noise of
war or the sacred noise of religious activity – stood in direct and purposeful
contrast to the minimal sounds of everyday life.17
The antithesis of the hi-fi soundscape is the lo-fi soundscape. If the
former is characterized by silence, stillness and clarity, then the latter is
characterized by noise, messiness and confusion. Schafer states that in a
lo-fi soundscape ‘individual acoustic signals are obscured in an overdense
population of sound’. Discrete sounds – ‘a footstep in the snow, a church
bell across the valley or an animal scurrying in the bush’ – are ‘masked
by broadband noise. Perspective is lost.’18 In comparison to the distance
afforded by the hi-fi soundscape of the pre-modern, rural milieu, the modern
city ‘abbreviates this facility for distant hearing (and seeing), marking one
of the more important changes in the history of perception’.19 And while the
hi-fi soundscape allows both foreground and background, this distinction
is eradicated in the lo-fi soundscape: ‘On a downtown street corner of the
modern city there is no distance; there is only presence. There is cross-
talk on all the channels, and in order for the most ordinary sounds to be
heard they have to be increasingly amplified.’20 The loss of perspective as
94 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
Silence’s virtue
In Schaferian and Schaferian-inspired narratives of acoustic ecology, silence
counters the toxicity of noise. It is characterized as having a beneficial and
reviving effect; it has the power to rejuvenate the body, mind and soul of
the listening subject. It is construed as fundamental to the health and well-
being of the individual and, by extension, to the health and well-being of a
society. Yet, this prioritization of silence as ‘good’ is largely reactionary – it is
often claimed that the benefits of silence (and its necessity for the well-being
of the listening subject) have become most apparent with its destruction.
Ursula Franklin, for example, claims that there is a need for silence within
a community just as there is a need for other basic, uncontaminated
resources: ‘Silence possesses striking similarities with those aspects of life
and community such as unpolluted water, air or soil, that were once taken as
normal and given, but have become special and precious in technologically
mediated environments.’28 Drawing upon the spiritual use of silence within
Quaker meetings, she argues that collective silence is ‘an enabling condition
that opens up the possibility of unplanned and the unprogrammable
happenings’.29 Silence allows the unexpected to emerge and in doing so
allows listeners (or worshippers) to get in touch with themselves; it leaves
our ears open to something new. However, this ‘enabling’ silence, which
once belonged to the commons and was experienced as a common good,
is at odds with the privatized, social values of modern technology: ‘Present
technological trends drive us towards a decrease in the space – be it in the
soundscape, in the landscape and in the mindscape – for the unplanned and
the unplannable to happen.’30 As this makes clear, Franklin, like Schafer,
associates technology with noise and the destruction of silence. Just as ‘the
commons’ of the land has been destroyed through enclosure, the common
availability of silence has been ‘privatized’ by the amplified sounds of
technology. The monotonous, programmed noise of our contemporary
96 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
While Schafer, Franklin and Sim assert that silence plays a fundamental
and beneficial role, they argue that it is silence – rather than noise – that is
often felt to be unwanted and undesirable by the modern listener. Schafer
claims that the failure to preserve silence is partly due to the negative
connotations it has in ‘Western’ society and the feelings of fear, isolation or
terror it may induce for the listener unfamiliar with its presence. In a world
of ceaseless sound, where noise has been able to reign supreme, the ‘Western
listener’ has come to be scared of silence.36 Of particular significance is the
association of silence with death: ‘Man fears the absence of sound as he fears
the absence of life. … Since modern man fears death as none before him,
he avoids silence to nourish his fantasy of perpetual life.’37 The presence of
sound reassures the modern listeners that they are – and remain – connected
to the world and others that occupy it. Consequently, when the listeners are
plunged into silence, they desperately try to find sound. Within the anechoic
chamber, famously utilized by John Cage in his pursuit of silence, ‘The ears
strain to pick up evidence that there is still life in the world.’38 According
to the oft-repeated creation story of Cagean aesthetics, two sounds were
heard within the chamber: the high-frequency sound of his nervous system
in operation, and the low-frequency sound of his blood in circulation. For
Cage, this encounter revealed the continual presence of sound in life: ‘Until
I die there will be sounds. And they will continue after my death. One need
not fear the future of music.’39 The inexhaustible possibility to always hear
something allows the listening subjects to reassure themselves that silence is
relative, since the contemplation of an absolute silence strikes the listeners as
a terrifying prospect: ‘When man regards himself as central in the universe,
silence can only be considered as approximate, never absolute.’40 So long as
the listening subjects consider their hearing to be the judge of silence – as
definitive of the presence or absence of sound – total silence will be impossible.
As opposed to simply understanding silence as a negative phenomenon –
as the absence or abatement of sound – Schafer proposes the recovery of a
positive silence, through a revival of the spiritual value of stillness. If there is
to be an improvement to the soundscape, then this will only be possible once
silence has been (re)discovered as a positive force within our lives. Schafer
asserts that in our modern epoch, contemplation has been lost as a habit and
a skill, since it is inhibited by noise. If silence is necessary for contemplation,
then a ‘recovery of contemplation would teach us how to regard silence as
a positive and felicitous state in itself, as the great and beautiful backdrop
over which our actions are sketched and without which they would be
incomprehensible, indeed could not even exist’.41 Thus, with the move from
a negative silence understood as the absence or suppression of sound to a
positive silence that facilitates contemplation and thought, another concept
of silence emerges – one that is no longer demarcated according to the
threshold between noticeable and unnoticeable sound; the sounds we listen
to and the sounds we ordinarily ignore. Rather, underneath the clamour of
the perceptible soundscape lies an absolute, unbroken and ideal silence.
98 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
urban ones, the rainforest can be as lo-fi as the city. López’s piece also
effectively calls into question the characterization of noise as unnatural – it
suggests that noise is as much of the ‘natural’ (if not more so) as silence.45
Yet, within the framework of Schaferian acoustic ecology, noise can only
ever really be that which is to be prevented, in that it is defined in relation
to negative transformations, affections and effects – be it ‘imperfect’ sound,
damaged environments, or ‘universal deafness’. Indeed, Schafer’s acoustic
ecology does not only share the terminology of information theory; it also
shares its a priori values of stasis, clarity and fidelity. Where Shannon’s
absolute prioritization of these qualities and subsequent negative valuation
of noise stems from and is expressive of the economic imperatives of the
phone company (see Part 2), Schafer’s stems from and is expressive of his
aesthetic moralism and conservative politics of silence. This is a politics that
is underlined by ‘a distinctly authoritarian preference for the voice of the
one over the noise of the many’: it advocates for the purported quietude of
the singular over and above the cacophony of the collective.46
In resting upon an overarching distinction between a positive, pure
and natural silence that is therefore good and a negative, unnatural and
impure noise that is therefore bad, Schafer’s politics of silence clashes with
his own attempt at a pragmatic and pedagogical approach to acoustic
environments. There is a tension between the underlying and universalizing
belief in a transcendent, harmonic order, which is the primary origin or
‘truth’ of all sound, and Schafer’s documentation and analysis of context-
specific sounds and their transformation over time. Schafer emphasizes
that acoustic ecology’s assessment of the soundscape should not take place
within an abstract laboratory, but that an assessment of the effects of the
acoustic environment upon its inhabitants must take place within the milieu
itself, insofar as the affectivity and significance of sonic events can only be
understood as they happen within a particular time and space, embedded
and occurring within a wider series of relations. Yet, this approach –
which recognizes the soundscape as a complex field of interactions – is
countered by an ahistorical underpinning that determines not only what
sonic environments are loud and quiet; positive and negative; beneficial
and harmful, but also what it means to be human and, by extension,
what it means to listen.47 This tension between the universal and the
particular means that while The Soundscape is steeped in a wealth of
historical information from a range of cultural contexts, this is used to
construct a general, universalizing narrative in which the soundscape of
the world has gone from quiet to noise, from harmony to dissonance, from
clarity to confusion, from the human to the machine, and from good to
bad. Consequently – and against acoustic ecology’s own ambitions – the
complexity, heterogeneity and mutability of the soundscape is reduced to a
series of simplistic polarities.
In erasing the contextual specificity of sonic events and their affectivity,
acoustic ecology’s moral definitions of ‘good’ silence and ‘bad’ noise also
102 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
The end and design of the law is the prevention of crimes, through fear of
punishment, the reformation of offenders being of minor consideration.
… Let the most obdurate and guilty felons be immured in solitary cells and
dungeons; let them have pure air, wholesome food, comfortable clothing,
and medical aid when necessary; cut them off from all intercourse with
men; let not the voice of a friend ever cheer them; let them walk their
gloomy abodes, and commune with their corrupt hearts and guilty
consciences in silence, and brood over the horrors of their solitude, and
the enormity of their crimes, without the hope of executive pardon.49
Silence served as a means of cutting the prisoners off from the world, forcing
them to focus their minds on their alleged crimes and thus removing any
hope of forgiveness or release. The use of ‘silence and solace’ continues
today in prisons and detention camps. For instance, solitary confinement
has been repurposed to manage ‘non-compliant’ detainees held at
Guantánamo Bay, reportedly contributing to short-term and long-term
psychological problems.50 In such contexts, silence can induce the negative
affective responses typically ascribed to noise. For the prisoner incarcerated
within the ‘hi-fi’ cell, silence is experienced – and is intended to be felt – as
unpleasant, disturbing, alienating and even terrifying. Silence, then, is part
of a repertoire of auditory ‘no-touch’ torture techniques that have been used
in ‘the war on terror’.
ACOUSTIC ECOLOGY, AESTHETIC MORALISM 103
In his Manifesto for Silence, Stuart Sim briefly concedes that in the context
of solitary confinement, silence has a sinister potential. For him, however,
this constitutes an exceptional and anomalous instance, in which silence’s
goodness is undermined through its misuse. By contrast, he considers noise
to be ‘inherently aggressive’ and can thus be more effectively weaponized.
This appeal to the innate qualities of noise and silence – noise’s inherent
aggression and silence’s benefits to psychological well-being – allows
Sim to make the seemingly baseless judgement that the silence of solitary
confinement is less severe than weaponized uses of sound and noise:
From the Schaferian perspective, such uses of silence run against its ‘true’
character, capitalizing on the negative but ultimately false connotations it
holds within Western society (i.e. isolation and death). However, though
Sim’s manifesto is decidedly polemical (its explicit purpose being to
speak up for the need for silence), it seems unsatisfactory to dismiss such
utilizations of silence as exceptional and anomalous ‘misuses’. Even in more
everyday scenarios, silence may elicit responses of fear, unease and isolation.
There are, for example, those who use sound and music to (borrowing from
Muzak) ‘fill the deadly silences’ of a dauntingly empty house.52 There are
even those who prefer to sleep with sound – as testified by the abundance
of ‘sleep sound’ devices, CDs and Smartphone apps marketed as helping
the listener fall asleep, and combating insomnia by inducing a state of
relaxation and meditative calm.53 Along with the predictable repertoire of
‘natural’ soothing sounds – whale song, rainforest sounds, waves crashing,
stream sounds – many of these devices allow the listener to select sounds
that are altogether ‘unnatural’, and might typically be thought of as a noisy
hindrance to sleep – the sound of fans, highway traffic and air conditioning
units, for example. For the tinnitus sufferer, silence can be unbearable in
that it maximizes the audibility of the sounds induced by the condition,
while background noise and drones can help minimize and mask tinnitus’s
disturbing presence. While sound and affect are intimately entangled, their
relationship is not straightforwardly causal: as was noted in Part 2, there
are no guarantees as to sound’s affectivity. Rather, sound’s affects and
effects are context-specific, unfolding in situ. A more satisfactory approach,
then, would be to suggest that both silence and noise have the capacity to
negatively affect listening bodies, and this capacity is actualized in certain
situations and contexts.
104 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
associate the rise in noise and the corresponding loss of silence with the rise
of capitalism and the prioritization of private over public interests. However,
their accounts do not relate their calls for resistance to the damaging effects
of noise with an overtly anti-capitalist politics. Although they gesture
towards capitalism as the driving force of ever-increasing noise levels, the
methods they suggest for tackling this – careful listening practices and the
reintroduction of silence and quietude into everyday life – are ultimately
ameliorative: they focus on the ‘symptom’ (i.e. excessive levels of noise
pollution) rather than what is alluded to as the ‘root cause’ (i.e. the socio-
economic structures and ideological values of capitalism).
If silence and quietness have become increasingly scarce with growing
urbanization, then this has enabled silence to become a lucrative commodity.
Earlier in this book, I highlighted how silence has been used as a marketing
strategy for the Toyota Yaris hybrid car, troubling any simplistic equation
of technology with noise. Silence has been similarly marketed by the home
appliance company AEG-Electrolux, as part of their elaborate ‘noise
awareness’ 2008 marketing campaign. The campaign involved banners that
measured and depicted the local noise levels (measured in decibels) in a
number of European cities. Underneath the decibel meter came the tagline:
‘In a noisy world, appliances that aren’t.’ The quietness of AEG-Electrolux’s
machines was presented as their ‘unique selling point’: the company’s
European brand director Alexander Buhl claimed that the ‘key aim of this
campaign was to create awareness on the issue of noise in and outside of the
people’s homes and offer AEG laundry products as a solution to minimize
it’.56 Thus, although silence has sometimes played an important part in
collective environmental, anti-capitalist and indigenous struggles – there is,
for example, the performative silence of some of the Zapatistas’s actions,
which alludes to both the silence imposed on the indigenous peoples of the
Americas and their strategically ‘silent’ organization of community and
resistance57 – silence’s marketization complicates any simplistic figuration of
it as inherently oppositional to and a mode of resistance against corporate
interests and activities.58
The relationship between exposure to noise, access to silence and socio-
economic power can be clearly exemplified with regard to housing and
neighbourhood noise. Earlier in this book, it was noted that noise from
neighbours was one of the most common causes of environmental noise
complaints. Neighbour noise is taken to be a problem insofar as it traverses
the boundary that separates the private from the public – it comes from
outside and serves to disturb and disrupt the intimate, carefully regulated
and closed system of the home. Consequently, it is often described as an
intrusion or invasion, a violation of privacy. This ‘outside’, however, is not
simply the exterior to the home’s interior. It also pertains to the wider milieu
that the ‘home’ is situated within. Neighbour noise stems from and points to
the context or environment in which the home – as both a material location
and an ideological concept – is situated. These interfering noises of the wider
106 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
milieu can shape the actions and activities of inhabitants; they can take
them from one activity and lead them to the next – from being asleep to
being awake (and subsequently annoyed), from daydreaming to listening
intently, from reading to looking out of the window for the source of the
disturbance. These noises may even encourage the occupants to reach for
the volume knob on the stereo and engage in a ‘noise war’, as they attempt
to counter-disturb a neighbour in order to express their discontent (the
‘parasite’ is ‘parasited’ in return).
The unexpected and unplanned intrusion of noise into the home and
the consequent transgression of the auditory boundary that separates
private from public space raises the issue of control. Schafer sees noise as
undermining the right to protect private property: ‘A property-owner is
permitted by law to restrict entry to his private garden or bedroom. What
rights does he have to resist the sonic intruder? … At the moment a man may
own the ground only.’59 Noise threatens the authority of the homeowners,
invading and transforming their sonic environment against their will. It is
able to ‘break into’ the home without any encroachment upon the physical
parameters of the property. In this context, personal autonomy and the
‘right’ to silence often become closely aligned with property ownership. A
homeowner has – or should have – the ‘right’ to control and regulate the
sounds made and heard within the privatized, domestic milieu, so long as it
does not impeach on the acoustic environments of other property owners.
Of course, not all homes are audibly noisy; and some homes are noisier
than others. In the United Kingdom (and in many other places), the desire
to escape the intrusions of noise and assert sonic control over one’s own
home can be seen to inform a hierarchy of dwelling types. As Gerret
Keizer provocatively claims, you do not need a philosopher to tell you the
value of silence. ‘A real estate agent will do.’60 In terms of noise control,
detached houses are considered most desirable in that they facilitate the
greatest privacy, while flats are taken to be the least desirable, inasmuch as
neighbourly noise comes from three or four directions – through the ceiling,
through the floors, and through the walls (potentially on either side of the
property). Likewise, a home is likely to decrease in value if an airport opens
up within earshot; however, as Keizer notes, it is those who already live in
poorer neighbourhoods who are more likely to have an airport open up next
to them. And such neighbourhoods are also the least likely source of political
resistance to noise-producing developments in that they are less likely to have
access to information, influential connections to social and political figures,
and the leisure time or recourses to organize against such developments.61
It is the urban poor who are most exposed to neighbourhood noise – those
who cannot afford double-glazing or a detached house, or those who cannot
afford to buy their home at all. In short, the people who most frequently
encounter sonic disturbances are typically those who already have the least
control over where they live (with regard to both their housing and their
broader surroundings).
ACOUSTIC ECOLOGY, AESTHETIC MORALISM 107
For those wealthy enough, the ‘quiet’ suburbs have enabled a greater
degree of disconnection from the noises of the world. Emerging with the
migration of white, middle-class families to the outskirts of cities in the late-
nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries and the corresponding infrastructural
developments, and predicated upon classed and racialized exclusions, the
suburbs provide a means of ‘getting away from it all’ – from the dirt, noise,
machines and crowds of the city – while also remaining in close enough
proximity for the purposes of work and entertainment (Figure 2).
FIGURE 2 Emilio Leopoldo Tafani, ‘Ruislip for the quiet English countryside [1916].’
© TfL from the London Transport Museum collection. Ruislip is a suburban area
of North West London that was developed with the expansion of the Metropolitan
railway and the opening of Ruislip railway station in 1904.
108 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
less than a year and came in spite of efforts to soundproof the venue. To
many, the complaint seemed completely unreasonable: nearly seventy-five
thousand people signed a petition in support of the venue that called for the
abatement notice to be dropped. The author of the petition questioned why
anyone who did not want to be disturbed by noise would choose to move
next door to a music venue. The majority of the comments by signatories
echoed this sentiment: one commenter states that ‘if you make the decision to
reside in the city centre, expect to experience noise. If you like the quiet, why
move city centre and not a suburban area??? Utterly ridiculous’.69 However,
the Labour Councillor Kevin Peel, commenting on the case, suggested that
‘the right of venues to operate as they wish has to be balanced with the right
of residents – wherever they live – to peace and quiet in their own home’. He
also notes that ‘as more people move into the city centre there will inevitably
be tensions with new and existing pubs, bars, clubs, music venues and other
premises. Most residents expect and accept a certain level of disruption, but
all licensed premises have a responsibility to be good neighbours.’70
As these remarks make clear, the ‘right’ to quiet in one’s own home exists
in direct conflict with the activities of the ‘creative’ city. The desire for a
quiet home is understandable and yet requires the restriction of the cultural
activities of others and the city as a multipurpose space. The noise generated
by music venues is experienced as negative and disruptive within the home;
but also appeals to those wishing to live in an area with an exciting, creative
‘vibe’. Many of the Night and Day’s petition commentators mention ‘choice’.
Yet, it also needs to be recognized that this ‘choice’ – the choice to live in
well-soundproofed accommodation or within a quiet neighbourhood – is
ultimately restricted to those who have the socio-economic freedom to make
such decisions. In this context, then, the ‘good’ and ‘bad’ of silence and noise
once again become complex and ambivalent.
‘their ears are different.’71 Yet at the same time, it is important to consider
what happens, or what might happen, when the ‘unwanted’ interruptions of
neighbourly noise become a familiar part of everyday life.
Soundscape artist Jacqueline Waldock’s research into domestic auditory
environments in Liverpool goes some way in addressing this question.
Indeed, she has found that within certain communities, disturbances and
disruptions from neighbours are not always experienced and characterized
negatively. Waldock’s work considers how urban and domestic sound
environments contribute to a sense of place and community, particularly
within inner-city areas of Liverpool that have been prone to social change.
Such auditory sites have been ordinarily excluded from acoustic ecology’s
praxis due to its underlying ‘beauty bias’. Waldock has worked with urban
communities in producing sound diaries and portraits, for which residents
have provided their own commentary and analysis. Her approach, moreover,
seeks to avoid proscriptive assumptions of what sounds should be heard as
significant and how they should be understood, focusing, instead, on what
sounds are selected, valued and considered meaningful by participants from
local communities.72
Crucially, Waldock’s work engages with a demographic that typically
remains unheard within contemporary participative soundscaping practices
such as online soundmapping, where contributors upload their own
recordings of sounds and soundscapes to an interactive online platform (as
is the case with Cusack’s Favourite Sounds project). Although they radically
depart from its underlying technophobia, many of these projects share the
participatory ideals of Schaferian acoustic ecology, aiming to engage amateur
sound recordists and make sonic research available to the public. However,
as Waldock notes, participation in such projects is often gendered – the vast
majority of contributors for participatory soundscape research projects such
as UK Soundmap and University of Salford’s Sounds Around You being
men between the ages of twenty and fifty.73 If and how this disparity of
gender influences the recording data gathered from such projects remains
unknown, insofar as soundmaps remain male-dominated, and recordings
by women contributors will likely be influenced by the types and styles
of recordings that are already precedent. Economic factors also influence
participation in these projects, since contribution is predicated upon access
to some form of recording technology and the internet. As with the issue of
gendered participation, Waldock argues that this economic delineation of
participation may subtly influence the types of sounds that are recorded,
or the types of sounds considered worthy of recording. Indeed, these
participatory soundscaping projects rarely contain recordings that are from
the ‘private’ and personal domestic setting; instead, submitted recordings
typically feature the sounds of public or privately owned public spaces, such
as parks, streets or transportation terminals. Waldock suggests that this
notable emphasis on the public as opposed to the private is amplified by the
‘impersonal’ quality of the vast majority of the recordings, with recordists
taking great care to eradicate or limit the audible presence of themselves.74
112 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
I always used to hear the neighbours through the walls. I could hear
them, and they could hear me. It made me feel safe knowing that someone
would hear me if I fell or they would check on me if they couldn’t hear
me moving or I would check on them if I heard a thump or a scream.77
ACOUSTIC ECOLOGY, AESTHETIC MORALISM 113
For Mrs T, the noises travelling through the wall were not a source of
irritation. They did not mark an invasion of the domestic sphere by an
unwanted other. Rather – contra the suburban ideology of separation and
control – being heard and hearing others provided a sense of comfort and
reassurance. If necessary, such disturbances (or lack thereof) could alert a
neighbour’s attention to a potential problem. Similarly, participant N, when
asked about a recording she had made of her neighbour making sounds
through the walls, commented stating: ‘It’s the sound of community and
sharing.’ Thus, as Waldock concludes, the participant’s relationship with the
neighbourly noise ‘differs greatly from the assumed norm of annoyance at
neighbours who invade the private domestic space of others’.78
By exploring certain classed and gendered perspectives that are
often overlooked by soundscape studies, Waldock’s project points to the
problematic nature of generalizations regarding ‘positive’ and ‘negative’
acoustic environments and, by extension, the potential dangers of acoustic
ecology’s aesthetic moralism. In this case, the domestic ideals of the quietness
and sonic control become questionable. For Waldock’s participants, the
noises that seep into the home from the wider milieu stitch inhabitants into
their community: they help to create a sense of belonging. Where the council
considered the new properties to have an ‘improved’ acoustic environment,
insofar as they corresponded to the ideal of domestic privacy, Mrs T’s
remarks suggest that she felt more isolated in her new home. In this regard,
the responses garnered by Waldock make apparent some of the political
implications of an aesthetic moralism that accepts notions of domestic
quietude and control as unquestionable norms.
Such affective associations counter the characterization of noisy
environments as inherently alienating and isolating. However, as noted
before, the perspectives offered by Waldock’s participants should not
be used to construct a crude generalization that claims that all of those
living in inner-city areas ‘like’ the noises of their neighbours. Nor are these
perspectives suggestive that the participants ‘like’ all the noises of their
neighbours, irrespective of context or timing. For example, one can imagine
that loud music late at night would still be experienced as annoying or
stressful, even if the clattering of a next-door neighbour during the day is
felt to be comforting. Nevertheless, a consideration is needed of how these
‘positive’ affective attachments to neighbourly noise can be accounted
for, without recourse to the relativist end point that one person’s noise is
another’s sound.
From a Schaferian perspective, the acceptance of noise relies on a
habituation process, through which listeners get used to interruptions and
interferences. Those who do not respond negatively to noise, or do not
notice it at all, are ultimately failing to notice the damage it is causing,
because of their learnt failure to ‘listen properly’. Barry Truax, for example,
sees habituation arising out of helplessness, apathy and denial: ‘At first they
[listeners] notice an intruding sound, probably find it annoying but too
114 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
much trouble to do anything about, and before long they grow accustomed
to it and accept its presence. Essentially they deny its intrusiveness.’79 This
habituation to noise requires desensitization: listeners come to tolerate
noise by learning to blank it out. In other words, they adapt to the parasitic
presence by failing to respond to it, so that the noise is no longer a source of
annoyance. However, habituation does not sufficiently explain the positive
values ascribed to neighbourly disturbances by Mrs T and N. In this instance,
the noises of neighbours are not merely ignored or tolerated, nor have the
participants become desensitized to the interruptions. Rather, they help
create sensations of comfort and belonging – they affirm connections with
a wider community. Though the case of the Welsh Streets residents should
not be used to create uncritical generalizations regarding class, gender and
experiences of noise, it would seem equally condescending to dismiss the
affective attachments of Waldock’s participants as a kind of sonic ‘Stockholm
syndrome’, through which inhabitants irrationally come to hear annoying
and unwanted noise as positive and desirable. This would seem to be the
only explanation that can be offered by Schaferian acoustic ecology – its
aesthetic moralism means that such affective attachments to noise are, at
best, viewed as an anomalous deviation from a seemingly ahistorical norm.
Subsequently, the overarching dualism between a noise that is bad and a
silence that is good remains intact.
and technology, and the clamour of human activity have perturbed this
equilibrium, transforming it for the worse. Nature is opposed by a synthetic
culture and by (‘Western’) modernity.
Spinoza’s concept of Nature, however, is fundamentally, noisily unnatural,
drawing no such division between organic and inorganic entities. Nature
is an infinite, all-encompassing and ever-changing field of bodies, relations
and interactions that is implicated in and encompasses all entities – ‘natural’
and ‘cultural’, ‘organic’ and ‘artificial’, ‘human’ and ‘machine’. From a
Spinozist perspective, a clay statue belongs to the realm of Nature as much
as a cactus, the city as much as the forest, the loudspeaker as much as the
voice. If Schafer’s nature is one of pure, silent stasis, then Spinoza’s is one
of impure noise – it is a Nature to which interruption, transformation,
modification and change are integral. Spinoza’s nature does not exist ‘as is’;
it is continually composed and recomposed. However, there is no external
composer – a God-like figure, located outside and above the composed.
Nature, as causa sui substance, is self-composing.
In decentring the organic, the ‘natural’ and the human, Spinoza’s view
sharply contrasts with that of Schafer. For instance, Schafer postulates
that the human body is the closest to perfection, since it functions almost
silently – ‘God was a first-rate acoustical engineer. … The perfect machine
would be a silent machine: all energy used efficiently. The human anatomy,
therefore, is the best machine we know.’80 Here, the good of silence is the
marker of the good of the human body-as-machine – it expresses the degree
of its perfection. However, from a Spinozist perspective, it cannot be said
that the human body is the near-perfect body, for it is not yet known what
a body (be it the human body or any other body – ‘natural’ or ‘unnatural’)
can do, what affects it might be capable of and what relations it might form
with other bodies. For Spinoza, perfection does not arise from replication
but through a maximizing of affective power and compatible relational
encounters.
Underlining the difference between Schaferian and Spinozist concepts
of nature – and crucial for the move from the moral to the ethical – is
the distinction between Schafer’s silent Platonic transcendentalism and
Spinoza’s clamorous philosophy of immanence. As noted previously, Schafer
understands the ‘struck’ sound of material reality to be an imperfect copy
of a perfect ‘unstruck’ sound that exists in silence and can only be heard
by the Gods. This transcendentalist principle informs the notion of perfect
silence as the ultimate good, given that it pertains to a foundational order
that is the basis for all that exists. It is also the basis for Schafer’s aesthetic
moralism. In Spinoza’s philosophy, however, there is no such foundational,
moral order. As immanent, infinite and impartial substance, Spinoza’s God/
Nature has no agenda or plan, nor does it intervene or act, since it has no
intellect or will. Consequently, Spinoza does not recognize universal moral
values of Good and Evil, as defined by the judgement of God. The removal
of the laws and judgement of God, however, does not result in a moral
116 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
body’s affective capacity, to maximize the potential of the body to ‘do’ – that
is, to affect and be affected.
A Spinozist ethics thus posits good and bad as relational and partial.
The former describes that which agrees with a body, increasing its power
to affect and be affected, while the latter pertains to that which disagrees
with a body, decreasing its power to affect and be affected. Consequently, no
entity is inherently good or evil; rather the affective relation between entities
is understood to be good or bad from the perspective of the affected body
and in relation to an increase or diminishment in power.
This distinction between good and bad entities and good and bad
affective relations can be clearly demonstrated with reference to food. Take,
for example, an apple. On the one hand, the apple-body may have a positive
relation with the feeding body (be it an animal-body, a human body or
other). As the apple-body is consumed, compounding it with the eating body,
it provides energy and nourishment. Consequently, it increases the feeding
body’s power, inasmuch as the apple-body and the feeding body’s powers
combine. Alternatively, upon consuming it, the feeding body may have a
negative affective encounter with the apple-body. As it consumes the apple-
body, the feeding body may have an allergic reaction. In such instances,
the apple-body functions as a poison, causing the relations of the feeding
body to deteriorate. In doing so, it disrupts the functioning of the body,
weakening the capacity to act and be acted upon. However, while the apple
might function as either nourishing food or dangerous poison, there is
nothing inherently good or bad about the apple, irrespective of the benefit
or harm it may cause. Rather, whether or not the apple is ‘good’ or ‘bad’
(that is, beneficial or harmful, compatible or damaging) is determined by its
relations with other bodies as an encounter unfolds, whether it results in an
increase or decrease in power.84
For Spinoza, what is bad for us as human beings should not be confused
with an innate badness or imperfection:
If all things have followed from the necessity of God’s most perfect nature,
why are there so many imperfections in Nature? Why are things corrupt
to the point where they stink? So ugly that they produce nausea? Why is
there confusion, evil and sin? … Those who argue in this way are easily
answered. For the perfection of things is to be judged solely from their
nature and power; things are not more or less perfect because they please
or offend men’s senses, or because they are of use to, or incompatible
with human nature.85
Here, the sharp contrast between Spinoza’s ethics and Schafer’s anthropo-
centrism becomes apparent once again. An entity or process is not to be
judged in relation to a prioritized human sensibility, its impact on the
human senses or its compatibility with human relations – whether it delights
or repulses, enhances or destroys has little significance with regard to its
118 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
Notes
1 Barry Truax, Acoustic Communication (Norwood, NJ: Ablex Publishing
Corporation, 1984), 58.
122 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
29 Ibid., 15.
30 Ibid.
31 Ibid., 17.
32 Stuart Sim, Manifesto for Silence: Confronting the Politics and Culture of
Noise (Edinburgh: University of Edinburgh Press, 2007), 39.
33 For Sim, the necessity of silence for thought and contemplation, and the
detrimental impact of noise on the activities of the mind can be exemplified
by the changing soundscape of libraries and the debates that have ensued.
In 2005, the British Library in London began to allow the admission of
what Labour MP Tristram Hunt referred to as ‘the Undergraduate masses’
into its reading rooms. Hunt argues that this change in policy has led to
a ‘catastrophic collapse in its working environment’ to the detriment of
scholarly activity. The inclusion of the ‘masses’ has been accompanied by
growing complaints regarding noise. As Hunt argues, ‘The studied calm of the
reading room has given way to a hum of mobile phone ringtones,
chit-chat and pubescent histronics.’ Sim notes that the fate of the British
Library room is symptomatic of a broader trend, in which the quiet of libraries
is negatively affected by new technologies. Again, as with Schafer, this betrays
a nostalgia for an (imagined) quieter time that has been lost to a disobediently
noisy present that is full with the disturbing and distracting sounds of new
technologies. See Tristram Hunt, ‘Scholarly squeeze’, The Guardian, 29 May
2006, http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2006/may/29/comment.
highereducation (accessed February 2013); Sim, Manifesto for Silence, 51.
34 Sim, Manifesto for Silence, 168.
35 Schafer, The Soundscape, 259.
36 Schafer specifically references the ‘Western Man’ in his fear of silence, as well
as referring to ‘Western art’ and ‘Western lexicography’. It remains unclear,
however, who and what is included and excluded by Schafer’s notion of ‘the
West’ and ‘Western culture’ – what and where the geopolitical limitations of
the West/non-West are. Given his references to what he refers to as ‘Eastern’
accounts of ‘positive’ silence (e.g. ancient Hindu texts, Indian Yogi), I would
suggest that Schafer’s binary of ‘good silence/bad noise’ also corresponds to
the (also highly problematic) dichotomy of ‘East/West’.
37 Ibid., 256.
38 Ibid.
39 John Cage, ‘Experimental music [1957]’, in Silence: Lectures and Writings
(London: Marion Boyars Publishers, 2009), 7–12, 8. According to Seth
Kim-Cohen, ‘most knowledgeable audio people’ (he does not give examples)
doubt that the sounds Cage heard were of his blood circulation and nervous
system, suggesting, instead, that Cage heard either tinnitus or the sounds of air
molecules bumping into the eardrums. See Seth Kim-Cohen, In the Blink of an
Ear: Toward a Non-Cochlear Sonic Art (New York: Continuum, 2009), 161.
40 Schafer, The Soundscape, 256.
41 Ibid., 258.
42 Ibid., 262.
43 Ibid., 261–2.
124 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
44 Ibid., 262.
45 López himself has criticized the project of Schaferian acoustic ecology, stating
that the ‘tuning’ of the world that Schafer seeks is essentially a ‘silencing’, ‘as
if “noisy” were an evil condition in itself and also an exclusive feature of the
post-industrial world’. See Francisco López, Schizophonia vs L’objet Sonore:
Soundscapes and Artistic Freedom (1997), http://www.franciscolopez.net/
schizo.html (accessed January 2016).
46 Jonathan Sterne, The Audible Past: Cultural Origins of Sound Reproduction
(Durham: Duke University Press, 2003), 343.
47 In Schafer’s account, human hearing and listening are treated for the most
part as an unchanging given. Jonathan Sterne, however, rejects the notion that
the way in which we listen has remained the same throughout history. Rather,
he views modes of listening as cultural practices that develop in relation to
social, economic and technological changes (Ibid.).
48 Orlando F. Lewis, The Development of American Prisons and Prison
Development Customs 1776 to 1845 (Whitefish and Montana: Kessinger
Publishing LLC, 2005), 14–28.
49 Ibid., 81.
50 Center for Constitutional Rights, Solitary Confinement in Guantanamo
Bay (2012), http://ccrjustice.org/learn-more/faqs/solitary-confinement-
guantanamo-bay (accessed March 2013).
51 Sim, Manifesto for Silence, 60.
52 See Anahid Kassabian, ‘Ubiquitous listening and networked subjectivity’,
ECHO 3, no. 2 (2001), http://www.echo.ucla.edu/Volume3-issue2/kassabian/
index.html (accessed October 2012).
53 For more on this, see Anahid Kassabian, ‘Music for sleeping’, in Sound, Music,
Affect: Theorizing Sonic Experience, ed. Marie Thompson and Ian Biddle
(New York: Bloomsbury, 2013).
54 W. Davies, M. D. Adams, N. S. Bruce, R. Cain, A Carlyle, P. Cusack,
K. I. Hume, P. Jennings and C. J. Plack, ‘The positive soundscapes project’,
19th International Congress on Acoustics, 2–7 September 2007, http://usir.
salford.ac.uk/2460/1/Davies_ICA_2007_soundscapes_paper_v3.pdf (accessed
February 2012).
55 http://favouritesounds.org/ (accessed February 2012).
56 Allgemeine Elektricitäts-Gesellschaft, ‘AEG-Electrolux – campaigning against
noise with giant noise posters’, AEG Noise Awareness Blog (2008), http://
www.noiseawareness.blogspot.co.uk/2008/03/aeg-electrolux-campaigning-
against.html (accessed April 2012).
57 See María Josefina Saldaña-Portillo, ‘Reading a silence: the “Indian” in the era
of the Zapatismo’, in Unbecoming Modern: Colonialism, Modernity, Colonial
Modernities, ed. Saurabh Dube and Ishita Banerjee-Dube (Jor Bagh and
New Delhi: Esha Béteille, 2006), 32–58.
58 Sim states: ‘It is not in our best interests for noise to become our destiny, and
we should actively be resisting those forces which are striving to make it so,
turning urban life into a constant trial for those with any sensitivity at all to
ACOUSTIC ECOLOGY, AESTHETIC MORALISM 125
76 Waldock, ‘Soundmapping’.
77 Ibid.
78 Ibid.
79 Truax, Acoustic Communication, 90.
80 Schafer, The Soundscape, 207.
81 There are clear resonances here with a Nietzschean position that looks to
go ‘beyond Good and Evil’. Indeed, it has already been noted that Deleuze
appropriates Spinoza via Nietzsche. Spinoza: Practical Philosophy begins with
Nietzsche, with Deleuze claiming that ‘Nietzsche understood, having lived it
himself, what constitutes the mystery of a philosopher’s life’. Gilles Deleuze,
Spinoza: Practical Philosophy (San Francisco: City Light Books, 1988), 3.
As this demonstrates, Deleuze understands Spinoza and Nietzsche to have
a special connection. Yet, Nietzsche, too, was aware of this. In a letter to
Franz Oyerbeck, he writes: ‘I am utterly amazed, utterly enchanted! I have a
precursor, and what a precursor! I hardly knew Spinoza: that I should have
turned to him just now, was inspired by “instinct.” Not only is his overall
tendency like mine – namely to make all knowledge the most powerful affect –
but in five main points of his doctrine I recognize myself; this most unusual
and loneliest thinker is closest to me precisely in these matters: he denies the
freedom of the will, teleology, the moral world-order, the unegoistic, and evil.
Even though the divergences are admittedly tremendous, they are due more
to the difference in time, culture, and science.’ Friedrich Nietzsche and Walter
Kaufmann (eds), The Portable Nietzsche (New York: Viking, 1954).
82 Deleuze, Spinoza: Practical Philosophy, 24.
83 Gilles Deleuze, Expressionism in Philosophy: Spinoza (New York: Zone
Books, 1992), 226.
84 Deleuze, drawing upon Spinoza’s example, describes how the apple acts as a
poison for Adam in the biblical origin story. While Adam understands God’s
command of ‘Thou Shalt not eat of the fruit’ as a prohibition, these words
refer to a body that will poison him if he eats it. Adam, ignorant of causes,
believes God to be morally forbidding him from eating the fruit. However,
God only reveals the natural consequence of consuming the fruit. See Deleuze,
Spinoza: Practical Philosophy, 22.
85 Benedict de Spinoza, Ethics, trans. Edwin Curley (London: Penguin Books,
1996), 31.
86 Deleuze, Spinoza: Practical Philosophy, 71.
87 Jacques Derrida, ‘Plato’s pharmacy’, in Dissemination, trans. Barbara Johnson
(London and New York: Continuum, 2004), 67–186.
88 Jacques Attali, Noise: A Political Economy of Music, trans. Brian Massumi
(Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2003).
PA R T F O U R
Be noise or music
Either/or
Noise is not interesting
This makes me want to LEAVE
128 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
For this audience member, our performance failed. We had not sufficiently
committed ourselves to one side or another: our racket was too musical to
be noise, and too noisy to be music. As a consequence, our failings were
doubled: we failed to make either music or noise. Yet, this strange encounter
also resonated with many ‘radical’ imaginaries of noise music: we could
have taken pride in our failure, telling ourselves that our sound was too ‘out
there’, too unusual, too wilfully unsatisfactory for the seemingly disgruntled
listener. It might even be connected in our imaginations with a long lineage
of semi-mythologized noisy performances that have irritated, annoyed and
disappointed audiences.
In this section, I retell a particular story of noise music.1 This story is one
of contradiction, line-crossing and transgression. It is a story that amplifies
noise’s sensuous potential, its capacity to unlock new sonic sensations. Yet,
it is also a story that ultimately relies on the ‘either/or’: the ontological
relationship between noise and music is understood as dynamic, historically
contingent, but nonetheless mutually exclusive. Consequently, theirs is a
relationship formulated in accordance with yet another series of polarities:
noise is negativity to music’s positivity, chaos to music’s order, the exteriority
to music’s interiority, the not-yet-heard to music’s well-established and well-
worn acoustic sensations. Noise music as an aesthetic-discursive paradox is
thus characterized by failure.
Despite being full with noise, I suggest that this narrative enacts a number
of silencings. Aesthetic and artistic interest in noise has been concomitant
with grandiose rhetoric about its nature and potential. While in practice,
noise music is as diverse as noise itself, it has been frequently conceptualized
in relation to a poetics of transgression, according to which the line between
noise and music corresponds with a line dividing the taboo-protected norm
(music) and its transgression (noise). Consequently, noise is imagined to be
ear-splitting, excessive, extreme, overwhelming, sublime, transgressive and
revolutionary. It leaves minds blown and bodies shocked. With reference
to the Tokyo onkyô movement, I argue that the association of noise with
notions of transgression can be reductive, in that it tends to limit noise and
noise music to its most extreme manifestations, drowning out its quieter and
subtler forms.
While Part 2 perturbed the dualism of noise and signal, and Part 3 perturbed
the dualism of noise and silence, this section uses the ethico-affective definition
of noise developed over the course of this book to perturb the dualism of
noise and music, reconfiguring noise music’s poetics of transgression in the
process. From this relational and materialist perspective, noise is understood
not as antithetical to music, but as a crucial and inextinguishable component
of musical materiality. If noise can be separated from a constitutive
unwantedness, moreover, then noise music does not need to be framed as a
making ‘good’ of noise’s ‘bad’. Consequently, I move away from the poetics of
transgression and its rhetoric of failure and contradiction, while maintaining
noise’s capacity to generate new sonic affects and sensations.
NOISE MUSIC, EXPOSURE AND THE POETICS OF TRANSGRESSION 129
Drawing upon the composer Henry Cowell’s essay ‘the Joys of Noise’
and with reference to a conceptually and sonically varied set of musical
examples (Hype Williams, Reynols, Diamanda Galás and Merzbow), I
argue that noise music can be understood as an act of ‘exposure’. Rather
than bringing noise into music, noise music is thought of as amplifying,
extending and foregrounding the noise that is always already within the
techno-musical system. I suggest that this alternative conceptualization of
noise music allows for a broader range of practices, in that it no longer
limits noise music to its harshest, most extreme manifestations. Following
Cowell, I suggest that noise music, through exposure, can reveal ‘hidden
delights’ of sonority, texture and rhythm. This is exemplified by the use of
glitch in the music of Nicolas Collins and within contemporary electronic
dance music, where the exposed noise of the material medium serves as a
force of rhythmic mutation.
processes that generate them by artists such as Royji Ikeda, Oval, Mika
Vainio and Carsten Nicolai works to remind the listener that the perfection
of the digital and our control over technology is an illusion: they reveal that
digital tools are ‘only as perfect, precise, and efficient as the humans who
build them’.3
Various types and ideas of noise have been a key component of a
number of musical genres and practices, including industrial music, power
electronics, harsh noise wall, free jazz, free improvisation, noise rock, no
wave, lo-fi, circuit bending (the creative customization of circuits, ordinarily
of inexpensive household electronics such as children’s toys and radios),
hacking (the manipulation of electronic systems using code) and glitch. These
practices, genres and movements are often placed within the quasi-idiomatic
category of ‘noise music’. Noise music can be understood as a genre in and
of itself – it is sometimes referred to using the proper noun ‘Noise’ and
is often taken to be synonymous with harsh noise or the Japanese noise
‘scene’. Paul Hegarty, for example, argues that ‘in many ways it only makes
sense to talk of noise music since the advent of the various types of noise
produced in Japanese music, and in terms of quantity this is really to do
with the 1990s onwards. … There is, if you like, more noise in Japanese
noise music, whether in terms of volume, distortion, non-musicality, non-
musical elements, music against music and meaning.’4 Yet, it is also very
difficult to talk of a clearly defined Noise ‘scene’, insofar as noise music
largely consists of a network of fragmented and localized ‘micro-scenes’
that are ideologically and aesthetically varied. Noise music, as I use it here,
refers to a number of geographically, historically and stylistically disparate
practices that share common terrain in utilizing noise (as interference,
disruption, loudness, background sound) concepts of noise (for example,
unwanted, abject, shocking, overwhelming, extraneous) and noisy sounds
(complex sounds, irregular sounds, non-musical sounds, coloured noise) as
a primary resource. Noise music does not pertain to one generic lineage but
refers to a diverse and idiosyncratic spectrum of practices.
Noise as a concept, methodology, force and artefact has also been put
to use in other non-auditory artistic mediums. G. X. Jupitter-Larsen of the
Haters, for example, has written a series of ‘noise novels’ that combine
‘the erotic, the exotic and the entropic’, and make use of random bursts
of letters, invented words and onomatopoeic phrasings.5 Other examples
of non-auditory noise art include Randomflux’s collection The Book of
Noise: Visual Interpretations of Noise (2008), which showcases visual
manifestations and representations of noise; artist Rosa Menkman’s video
art that makes use of the glitch and other digital errors; and Ed Ruscha’s
striking painting Noise (1963), which presents the word as an aesthetic
object. Here, however, I remain focused on noise’s use in relation to sound-
based media.
Cascone’s ‘aesthetics of failure’ reflects the prominent role of failure in
discourses of noise music. However, failure as an artistic strategy and rhetorical
NOISE MUSIC, EXPOSURE AND THE POETICS OF TRANSGRESSION 131
device has not been available to all, insofar as the relationship between noise,
error and innovation is frequently gendered as well as racialized (see Part 1).6
Kathleen Hanna and Johanna Fateman of the queer-feminist electroclash
group Le Tigre have remarked on how the erroneous sounds of male artists
are often ‘fetishized as glitch’ and ‘as something beautiful’, whereas the
errors of women are often heard as simply markers of failure, rather than
expressions of innovation, creativity or artistic intent.7 In short, whether or
not ‘failure’ becomes ‘successful’ often corresponds to the perceived gender
of the artist failing. With this in mind, it is perhaps not surprising that while
there are many female, nonbinary and genderqueer practitioners utilizing
noise and error in their work, noise music histories have often centred on a
patrilineal ‘dotted line’ of composers, artists and sound-makers.8
The ‘origin myth’ of noise music centres on Italian Futurism and its
pursuit of an aesthetic revolution through noise. With the publication of the
poet Filippo Tommaso Marinetti’s nationalistic and proto-fascistic founding
manifesto in 1909, Futurism announced that the consecrated, bourgeois
ideals of art and beauty were to be overthrown and replaced with a radical
aesthetic that celebrated the contemporary urban landscape of modernity.
For Marinetti, the ‘contemplative stillness, ecstasy and sleep’ of literature
was to be broken by an exaltation of the violent and chaotic: ‘There is no
beauty that does not consist of struggle. No work that lacks an aggressive
character can be considered a masterpiece.’9 The deathly institutions that
sought to preserve the memories and artefacts of the past – the library and
the museum – were to be destroyed in an attempt to scission the unknown
of the present from the restrictive weight of that which has come before.
Repetitive imitations of the already known and obedience to the pre-existing
rules of art were to cease, while bold and energetic explorations of the new
were to be encouraged. Against transcendental aspirations, art was to be
reunited with life, drawing inspiration from its dynamic fluxes and flows.
Futurism sought to capture the beauty of speed and movement, technology,
science, industrialism, warfare and aggression. It aestheticized the triumph
of man [sic.] and machine over nature; celebrated war as a ‘cleansing’ force;
and chastised the ‘feminine’ and the weak: ‘We intend to glorify war – the
only hygiene of the world – militarism, patriotism, the destructive gesture
of anarchists, beautiful ideas worth dying for, and contempt for woman.’10
These themes are present in Marinetti’s sound poem Zang Tumb Tumb,
in which the onomatopoeic prose and kaleidoscopic typesetting evokes the
clamorous, disruptive soundscape of the Balkan Wars:
Marinetti’s poems infect the flow of language with the eruptive and destructive
noises of military conflict. The sonic environment of the battlefield spills
over into even the more straightforward passages, inhibiting any sense of a
stable, linear narrative or metre. Further interruptions are introduced in the
visual layout of Zang Tumb Tumb: continual shifts in typeface, the poem’s
fragmentary arrangement, and the interjection of musical and mathematical
signs, alongside the onomatopoeic outbursts emulate the fractured, turbulent
atmosphere of war.
Marinetti’s poetic emulations of militaristic noises were a source of
inspiration for painter and musician Luigi Russolo. In 1913, he published
The Art of Noises: A Futurist Manifesto, in which he proposed a Futurist
music fitting for the modern ear. In alignment with Marinetti’s founding
manifesto, Russolo understood conventional musical sounds to have
become outmoded, while noise – as that which lies outside of the rules
and conventions of music – was a reservoir of new artistic potentials.
Consequently, musical sounds and traditional instrumentation were to
be eschewed in favour of an ‘art of noises’ that drew inspiration from the
immanent and ubiquitous noise-sounds of the world.
Russolo begins his manifesto with a history of noise. This largely mirrors
that of R. Murray Schafer outlined in the previous section. For Russolo,
noise – or, more accurately, a new, more prominent noise – arose in the
nineteenth century with the birth of the machine. In previous centuries,
life was generally quiet, while loud, unmuted sounds were exceptional
occurrences. The evolution of the machine produced a great palette of
exciting new noise-sounds, to the point that clean, ‘pure’ sounds were
rendered feeble and monotonous in comparison. By the beginning of the
twentieth century, ‘noise is triumphant and reigns supreme over the sensibility
of men’.12 While Schafer hears this ‘triumph’ as catastrophic, Russolo hears
the cacophonous noisescape of modernity as a source of new acoustical
pleasures for the listener. Noise, rather than being heard as unwanted or
extraneous, has the capacity to produce new sonic sensations. Established
musical conventions – the repetition of traditional timbres, structures and
gestures – no longer provide any real depth of experience, since they look to
invoke the often felt and often known. Russolo asserts that musical sound is
outmoded because it no longer significantly affects the listener, striking the
ear as stale and unmoving:
While the Futurists once loved the works of the ‘great masters’ – ‘Beethoven
and Wagner have stirred our hearts and nerves for many years’ – their
music can no longer compete with the affective intensity of the noise of
the modern era: ‘We derive far more pleasure from ideally combining the
noises of trams, internal combustion engines, carriages, and noisy crowds
than from rehearing, for example, the “Eroica” or the “Pastorale”.’14 While
music remains stuck repeating familiar and predictable affective cycles,
noise unlocks something new for the listener. Russolo thus urges the Futurist
composer to disrupt music’s repetition of clichéd affectations by ‘breaking
out’ of the restricted realm of already-heard musical sound, and embracing
the ‘infinite variety’ of noise-sounds.
For the most part, Russolo employs an acoustic or ‘object-oriented’
definition of noise, with noise referring to rhythmically and harmonically
complex and irregular sounds. Yet, underlying this is a more philosophical
postulation of noise. Russolo characterizes noise as being unknown, in the
sense that it cannot be said what noise might do, the sensations it may
generate. Yet, in its partiality, noise is also familiar, recalling the conditions
of existence. To exist within the immanent, material world is to emit noise,
and so noise, when heard, can evoke life itself:
Noise’s familiarity, its capacity to remind the listener of life itself, relates
to its indiscernibility, complexity and unpredictability. The never-fully-
knowing of noise – what effects and responses it may produce, what orders
it may generate – mirrors the never-fully-knowing of life. By exceeding the
already known, noise has the potential to generate what Russolo hears as
‘innumerable surprises’; in never fully revealing itself to us, noise has hidden
depths – we do not yet know what sounds and affectations it may unlock,
what surprises it may hold for the listener.
134 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
In this fourth stage, the consumer becomes the producer, and the listener
becomes the composer-performer, bringing about the death of the virtuosic
specialist. Attali sees this fourth stage as emerging with the questioning of
repetition’s codes and values – concerns that Attali understands to underline
Russolo’s noise experiments. Of more significance is John Cage’s 4’33”,
which Attali describes as a ‘blasphemous’ act of disruption.25 In opening
up the concert hall to the noises of the world, Cage enacts a criticism of
the code and the network of music in the era of repetition. In remaining
silent as the performer, he gives the right to speak, to make noise, to those
who do not want it – that is, the ‘silenced’ audience. Attali understands
Cage as announcing the disappearance of the centralized and commercial
site of music: the concert hall becomes redundant as music is shown to
be ubiquitous, and thus is something that can be produced and listened
to by anyone who wants to in any way they wish. However, although
Cage’s silence reveals ‘a rupture in the process of musical creation’, it is
‘not a new mode of musical production, but the liquidation of the old’.26 In
other words, Attali sees Cage’s 4’33” as a criticism of the old, rather than
a successful establishment of an alternative musical-social order. Beyond
this Cagian rupture, Attali speculates about the emergence of a radically
different space, ‘within which a different kind of music and different social
relations can arise. A music produced by each individual for himself, for
pleasure outside of meaning, usage and exchange’.27 Rather than trying to
recreate pre-existing musical codes, music-making individuals invent new
codes and communication becomes an act of creation rather than exchange.
In this alternative, socio-musical order, participation and engagement, rather
than the creation of an object, are taken as primary. Music remains in flux
and open-ended, with new orders being continually formed and re-formed.
Attali depicts noise as a force that scrambles socio-musical codes, driving
the movement from one order of relations to the next. The notion of noise
as generative of new orders of music and socio-economic relations resonates
with Michel Serres’s figure of the disruptive, transformative parasite. These
similarities are not entirely surprising given the shared cultural context from
which both these texts emerged. Serres’s The Parasite was first published in
1982 – five years after Attali’s Noise. The intellectual work of both Attali
and Serres, moreover, is influenced by cybernetics. Indeed, Attali, Serres
and cyberneticist Henri Atlan were all members of the Groupe des dix:
a group of ten French intellectuals active in the 1970s, who debated the
political implications and applications of information theory, cybernetics
and artificial intelligence.
However, while in Serres there are three, in Attali there are two: unlike
Serres’s parasitic third term, Attali’s noise perturbs musical orders from an
external position. Despite recognizing noise and music as having a dynamic
relationship, Attali’s account ultimately remains dualist: it rests upon a
series of polarities that separate inside and outside, music and noise, order
and chaos. Noise is violent, uncoded disorder that lies external to social
NOISE MUSIC, EXPOSURE AND THE POETICS OF TRANSGRESSION 139
order. It has the power to disrupt precisely because it comes from outside an
established structure and thus its presence cannot be accounted for within
that structure. However, once it is accumulated into the socio-musical order,
it loses its status as noise: ‘Noise is a weapon and music, primordially, is
the formation, domestication, and ritualization of that weapon.’28 In other
words, noise necessarily loses its noisiness as it is channelized into socio-
musical orders over time, disarmed of its disruptive, transformative potential.
The closest music gets to an ‘untamed’ noise is within the clamorous
experiments and ‘unmusical’ music of a broadly defined avant-garde, which
herald the arrival of new social and musical orders: the emergence of a new
evolutionary cycle. Nonetheless, noise, if it is to exist in or as music, has to
be sacrificed. As it is brought in from the outside, noise becomes a shadow
of itself. The polarity between music and noise is thus maintained: the new
music is the once-was-noise.
hand, they curse and disavow aesthetic norms. Yet, the transgressive act of
blasphemy relies on going against what one holds dearest. For atheists to
curse God is meaningless, a powerless act, for the name of God has no sacred
or divine signification for them. Blasphemy’s transgressive power – the fear
and anguish that arises from it – lies in the significance that is instilled in the
name of God. Attempts at transgression are governed by failure, inasmuch
as transgression relies on the taboo remaining in place. In other words, the
transgressive act remains tied to the prohibition it seeks to break free from,
since it derives its value from the tension that arises between the taboo-
protected norm and its transgression.
Thus, despite descriptions such as ‘anti-music’ (as Throbbing Gristle
labelled themselves) and ‘pure noise’ (the stated aim of Japanese harsh
noise group, Incapacitants), noise-as-transgression remains in some ways
bound to the socio-musical norms and conventions it seeks to oppose. By
extension, noise music – understood from this perspective as a combination
of mutually exclusive terms – can never truly exist; it is a paradox that
cannot succeed. If noise is constituted by its opposition to the musical –
undesirable to desirable, chaos to order, taboo to norm – or, alternatively,
by a listener who judges noise to be unwanted, then when it becomes art, or
music, it is always destined to fail. As Hegarty, echoing Attali, argues:
Failure’ is what defines noise in its encounter with music, for noise must
fail to be noise if it is accepted, and of course it fails if not heard as
well. This failure is where noise resides, the fate it selects for itself, or
has selected for it. Noise must be only as if it were music, not as a new
musicality.45
Whitehouse is clearly not the band for everyone. People who have been
sheltered and comfortable all throughout life will certainly have the most
difficulty sitting through even a few minutes of their music. … While it’s
understandable that people choose to eschew Whitehouse like the plague,
they’re not going away yet, and they are still the same jolting voice from
a pitch-black reality that they were over a decade ago.46
On the one hand, the imagined ‘sheltered’ listeners will struggle with the
extremity of Whitehouse; they are most likely to experience the anguish of
transgression and the group’s aesthetic amoralism at its greatest intensity.
Yet, on the other, as Simon Reynolds highlights, it is problematic to assume
that anyone who would experience noise as transgressive is there to
encounter it in the first place. Reynolds argues that the noise artists aiming
for ‘ye olde “shock effect,” their pure noise laden with content of tediously
“transgressive” nature’, fail to recognize that no one who is likely to be
shocked or to feel the anguish of the broken taboo is within earshot: ‘There’s
no real disruption or challenge in these scenes, because they’re screeching
to the converted.’47 Hence, noise music as transgression fails not so much
in the sense that it seeks to take up a paradoxical existence but rather in
the sense that it fails to sufficiently affect the listening subjects present as
‘shocking’ – if noise is to be transgressive, then it needs to be experienced as
such by a listener/viewer. Yet, just as musical emotions had become tired and
predictable for the Futurists at the beginning of the twentieth century, by
the twenty-first century, the ‘shocking’, taboo-breaking tactics of industrial
music, power electronics and other transgressive noise practices are also
rather tired and predictable, in that they are, somewhat paradoxically,
taken as a generic signifier. Indeed, transgressive content has a tendency to
age quickly, insofar as it becomes assimilated and accepted. As Reynolds
notes, Throbbing Gristle’s grotesque ‘Slug Bait’, which details a psychopath
cutting open a pregnant woman’s stomach and biting off the baby’s head,
may have been shocking when it was released in 1977 (at least inasmuch
as there was very little like it in rock music at the time). However, in our
contemporary musical era, ‘After the schlock-horror tactics of death metal
NOISE MUSIC, EXPOSURE AND THE POETICS OF TRANSGRESSION 145
that are common in, but are by no means definitive of, noise music. When
viewed as transgressive, noise is often taken to be synonymous with loud,
harsh and excessive sound. The prevalence of this poetics means that noise
music is often conceptualized in relation to its most sonically extreme
manifestations. Many accounts of noise music have centred on the prolific
output of Merzbow (Masami Akita). Merzbow has come to be viewed as
the patriarch of contemporary noise music: he is ‘the ultimate example,
the reference point, for Japanese noise music, and for consumption of and
writing on noise’.50 Merzbow takes his name from Dadaist Kurt Schwitters
and his concept of Merz – a nonsense term that Schwitters used to refer
to his practice of making collages and constructions out of found objects,
junk and rubbish. Schwitters’s Merzbau referred to his studio and family
home, which gradually became a Merz construction in and of itself, filled
with grotto-like spaces, columns and sculptures built out of found materials.
Merzbow mirrors Schwitters’s junk art in its gathering of sonic detritus –
found sounds, anomalous sonic artefacts, distortion, feedback, the hums
and buzzes of broken electronics.
Merzbow’s work is excessive both in terms of quantity and in terms of
sonic quality: active since the late 1970s, their oeuvre contains over three
hundred recordings. While Merzbow’s output is varied – compare, for
example, the throbbing Pulse Demon (1995); the rockish Aqua Necromancer
(1998) and Merzbeat (2002); and the meandering Music for Bondage
Performance (1991) – their signature style is the creation of extremely loud,
dense and long-lasting walls of cacophonous sound. With Merzbow, sound
veers towards the threshold of unlistenability. When performed, Merzbow,
or Merzbow-style harsh noise is felt as well as heard: it bombards the
listening body, perturbing the internal organs, the skin and even the eyes. It
transforms the sensory registers of the listening body by turning the stomach
into an ear. This extreme, ‘full noise’ aesthetic lends itself to the polemical
descriptors that characterize noise’s poetics of transgression. Dixon Christie,
for instance, precedes his interview with Akita with a warning to the
uninitiated:
Merzbow and the ‘full noise’ aesthetic have undoubtedly been important
and influential, inasmuch as they are thought to take the noise of noise
music to its logical conclusion. However, the equation of noise music with
its harshest manifestations tends to drown out subtler practices that do
NOISE MUSIC, EXPOSURE AND THE POETICS OF TRANSGRESSION 147
When I play with other musicians, I don’t play with them, I play with the
space including this musician – not directly human to human. If you’re
a musician, okay, let’s play together. But I don’t play with you – I play
with all of the elements around you, around us. So I don’t really confront
you as one individual – you are part of many other elements in the space
around you.54
Improvisers and their instruments are not viewed as the only creative force
in an onkyô performance. Rather, onkyô involves a holistic approach to the
performance space, where the everyday and banal noises of the environment
are afforded an affective agency in generating and shaping improvisations.
Instead of invoking its imagined loudness or abrasiveness, onkyô
works with noise as an inevitable presence within live performance.
148 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
FIGURE 3 Sachiko M at Raum Bologna, 2005. Used with permission from XING.
discovered that noise always already existed within music, as the practices
of Onkyô suggest? Indeed, by cutting noise’s ties to both a constitutive
negativity and a listening subject, the ethico-affective approach to noise
proposed in this book can be used to disrupt and transform the structural
opposition upon which the poetics of transgression and noise music’s other
line-crossing narratives rely. From this relational, materialist perspective,
noise’s presence within music can no longer be assumed to be paradoxical.
As a result, the noise of noise music is not restricted to a simulation of
sounds judged to be noisy; nor does noise need to be ‘sacrificed’ – it can ‘live’
within music. The proposed ethico-affective approach can thus be used to
help formulate an alternative understanding of noise’s use within musical
and sonic art practices that move away from the language of transgression,
failure and contradiction, while also maintaining the notion of noise as a
generative, affective force that can create new sonic sensations.
Hidden delights
Though much of its presence is often overshadowed or inaudible, in its
material reality, music is full of noise. As a recorded artefact, the ‘signal’ of
music is always affected by the noise of the medium. The material means of
music (e.g. audio equipment, performing bodies, instruments, performance
spaces) leave their trace on musical sounds. In live performance, musicians
are tasked with playing with noise – not just against or in spite of it. Noise
is not the antithesis, but a key component, of music.
Of course, to assert that music – all music – is full of noise is to not say
anything particularly new. In his essay ‘The Joys of Noise’, first published
in 1929, the American composer Henry Cowell refutes noise and music’s
dichotomous relationship. Cowell argues that the ‘time-honoured axiom’
dictating that noise and music are opposites – with music taken to be good
and noise to be bad – misses the potential of noise as a musical resource:
‘It remains a much-used but almost unknown element, little developed
from its most primitive usages, perhaps owing to its ill-repute.’60 However,
according to Cowell, a turn to noise would not require an abandonment
of the musical – there need not be a traversal of the imagined border that
distinguishes music from its other. Rather, he argues that the discursive
binary separating noise from music is inaccurate, given that in its material
reality, ‘the “disease” of noise permeates all music’.61 For Cowell, the ‘noise
disease’ is an epidemic – it has a near ubiquitous but largely undiscussed
presence within music: ‘Although existing in all music, the noise-element has
been to music as sex is to humanity, essential to its existence, but impolite to
mention, something to be cloaked by ignorance and silence.’62
Just as R. Murray Schafer observes that all ‘struck’ sounds are to some
degree rendered ‘impure’ in transmission (see Part 3), Cowell argues that
NOISE MUSIC, EXPOSURE AND THE POETICS OF TRANSGRESSION 151
all sounds – including musical sounds – have in some way been affected, or
rather, infected by noise:
it might induce. From this perspective, and following Russolo, Attali and
Cowell, noise music can be heard as an exploration of noise’s potential to
generate new sonic effects, rhythms and textures.
FIGURE 4 Hype Williams at 2011’s Tusk Festival, the Star and Shadow Cinema,
Newcastle-upon Tyne. Photo and permissions by Mike Winship.
content, Blank Tapes gives voice to the material medium itself: the medium,
quite literally, is the message. However, it is by no means a straightforward
documentation nor a re-presentation of the media noise of different cassettes.
There is, as with all artistic acts of exposure, a creative, compositional
dimension. The tape noise constitutes the base material, which is then
modulated using basic filters and frequency controls. Across six tracks, the
tape noise moves between various degrees of abstraction. In its opening
minutes, the faint hiss is recognizable and familiar as tape noise (albeit
noticeably divorced from its original medium, given that Blank Tapes is a
CD release). However, over the duration of the recording, the sound slips in
and out of recognizability – nine minutes into track 2, for example, sounds
more like a plague of cicadas than a blank cassette. Indeed, the group stated
that the premise behind the project ‘was to use all the possibilities, a lot of
different frequencies’.71 Blank Tapes, then, works to transform the parasitic
third term – the underlying noise of the musical medium/milieu – into the
primary sonic content. The noise without a signal becomes noise as signal,
as it is abstracted and transformed in the recording process.72
A very different act of exposure can be heard in the monstrous, shape-
shifting vocalizations of the composer-performer Diamanda Galás, who
draws out the typically inaudible and/or ignored noise that arises during the
production process. In this instance, however, it is the embodied technology of
the voice that is highlighted as the source of parasitic noise. Born in the United
States to Greek Orthodox parents, Galás’s politically charged music makes
audible her identification with a complex cultural-historical background.
Her work centres on experiences that are so often cloaked in silence – of
persecution, loss of dignity, suffering and injustice – summoning the voices
of the exiled, diasporic and executed. Her 2003 album, Defixiones: Will and
Testament, for example, is based around the Ottoman genocides and draws
extensively from the work of Armenian, Assyrian and Greek artists executed
by the Ottoman empire. Much of Galás’s early work addresses the topic
of HIV/AIDS. Her Masque of the Red Death Trilogy (1986–8) coincides
with Galás’s AIDS activism, addressing political and religious responses to
the epidemic; while album Plague Mass is a eulogy for all victims of AIDS,
including her brother, the playwright Philip-Dimitri Galás. However, despite
sharing a number of aesthetic concerns with transgression-inspired noise
acts (e.g. abjection, genocide, mental illness, death), Galás’s oeuvre does not
comfortably align to the generic features of the industrial and/or harsh noise-
inspired lineages of noise music. Nor are these themes presented ‘neutrally’
or ‘without comment’. Galás’s political position is by no means hidden –
her empathy and identification with the oppressed, exiled and persecuted is
made clear both through her performances and in artist interviews.
Galás brings together a diverse mixture of influences, aesthetics, concepts
and musical styles. Commenting upon her practice, Galás states: ‘I don’t respect
the boundaries of any art form; I certainly don’t respect music’s boundaries.’73
Though she distorts idioms almost beyond recognition, Galás’s work is not
NOISE MUSIC, EXPOSURE AND THE POETICS OF TRANSGRESSION 157
distort its clarity; it remains audibly attached to the confused. After fifty
seconds, the screaming voice and the interfering background of layered
vocals are both suddenly disrupted by a drum blast, which prompts Galás
to begin a furious monologue, the clarity of which sharply contrasts with
the confusion and obscurity of the preceding section. The clarity of Galás’s
monologue, however, is lost once again as other vocal lines and electronic
sounds emerge from the background, and as her voice is distorted and
mutated by electronic processing and effects. At one point, Galás uses EQ
and tone control to lower her register, producing a muffled, alien voice.
With her voice fading in and out of perceptibility and comprehensibility,
combined with the sudden interferences and monstrous sonority, Galás’s
vocal performance is disorienting; it is unclear where the listener is to be
taken next.
By comparison to her more obvious use of noisy elements – the abrasive
noise-sounds and the disruptive and disturbing soundscapes – Galás’s work
also makes use of a more subtly perturbing mechanism in her extreme
vocal performances that corresponds with the notion of noise music-as-
exposure. The second track of The Litanies of Satan, ‘Wild Woman With
Steak-Knives (the Homicidal Love Song for Solo Scream)’, as well as tracks
such as ‘Cunt’ (Schrei X, 1996), brings to the fore the noise of the body-in-
action that is typically excluded from vocal recordings but nevertheless lies
behind the production of the voice. In both these a cappella works, Galás
voice audibly cracks, strains and squeaks, while the gargling sounds of the
larynx, tongue, lips and saliva are amplified. These noises point to a residual
materiality that necessarily infects speech and song, insofar as these parasitic
interferences are derived from the corporeal apparatus of the voice – they
work as a reminder of the singing voice’s necessary mediation and material
means. Yet, there is nothing natural about Galás’s noise-infected voice. Her
vocalizations are not a return to an imagined, pre-symbolic and pre-social
state – an evocation of the ‘untrained’ or ‘uncontrolled’ voice. Although her
vocalizations are riddled with what would be conventionally understood as
‘flaws’, there is nothing accidental or erroneous about these noises – they
are not extraneous to, but an integral part of, Galás’s vocal performances.
These corporeal interferences, combined with the use of sound processing
and effects, work to radically distort Galás’s voice, modulating its timbre.
As Freya Jarman notes, Galás’s use of vocal ‘flaws’ – those sounds that are
usually to be omitted – contributes to a monstrous vocality that is ‘at once
intensely bodily – when we hear orgasmic squeaks, squashed throaty groans,
and breathy whispers – and intensely alien, as those sounds are so beyond
what is normally expected from the voice’.76 Galás maximizes the noise-
element of the voice by amplifying the effects of the corporeal medium, in
order to push beyond the conventions and expectations of vocal expression.
The sonic characteristics of Hype Williams’s fuzzy pop, Reynols’s Blank
Tapes and Diamanda Galás’s extreme vocal works are very different.
Yet, despite their aesthetic and conceptual heterogeneity, all can be heard
NOISE MUSIC, EXPOSURE AND THE POETICS OF TRANSGRESSION 159
Although this new music is being gradually accepted, there are still people
who, while admitting that it is ‘interesting’ say, ‘but is it music?’. … Until
quite recently I used to hear it so often in regard to my own works that, as
far back as the twenties, I decided to call my music ‘organized sound’. …
Indeed, to stubbornly conditioned ears, anything new in music has
always been called noise. … A composer, like all artists, is an organizer
of disparate elements.80
In other words, the glitch’s potential relates to what it disrupts. It is not just
a sound but a transformative force-relation to relations. It is a type of noise.
The glitch’s capacity to generate new rhythms in its disruption of sonic
information – its ability to mutate the flow of temporal events – has made
it an appealing artistic resource. Alongside Yasunao Tone, one of the
earliest practitioners to experiment with the texture-rhythmic potentials of
glitching, stuttering CDs was the US composer Nicolas Collins. Like Tone,
Collins wanted to bring out the noise of the seemingly flawless system:
‘I looked at the CD player as a challenge. … I took it upon myself to try
NOISE MUSIC, EXPOSURE AND THE POETICS OF TRANSGRESSION 163
The pause loop froze the flow of the counterpoint into modal chords
reminiscent of certain styles of 1960s jazz; the glitches that the error
correction occasionally threw onto the loops’ seams contrasted beautifully
with the lush sound of the period instruments, adding floating rhythmic
accents that I dubbed ‘digital claves’. The overall feeling reminded me
vaguely of Terry Riley’s In C, updated for the digital era.89
164 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
This repertory formed the basis for Collins’s 1991 composition, Broken
Light.90 The piece combines his modified CD player ‘remixing’ a disc of
Baroque concerti grossi by Corelli, Torelli and Locatelli with a live string
quartet. The quartet members used footswitches to control the CD player –
they could ‘scratch’ across the disc to generate the ‘needle-drag’ effect
identified by Collins, call up specific tracks or nudge the paused disc forward
through a series of looped phrases. The latter forms the rhythmic and
harmonic basis of the piece for the quartet to improvise around (according
to specific guidelines designated by the score), meaning that the CD thus
functions as an interactive and indeterminate backing track. Although the
performers know the tonal content (i.e. the key) of each of the tracks, it is not
certain what section of the track will play as the performer skips forward.
The live quartet and CD player form a feedback loop: the performers
control (to some degree) the CD player, and respond to its indeterminate
output. For the listener, however, there are times that the recorded and ‘live’
sounds become indiscernible from one another; it is unclear what sounds are
produced by the quartet and what sounds are the recorded strings, mutated
by Collins’s CD player.
In Collins’s work, the skipping, glitching disc and the ordinarily
suppressed noise of the CD playback system become a means of rhythmically
‘remixing’ recordings. In the five years following Collins’s Broken Light,
‘glitch’ came to function as a generic label, as it and other microsounds of
digital ‘malfunction’ were taken up by a number of artists. Most of these
experiments with glitch initially occurred outside of academic musical
spaces, existing on the periphery of electronic dance music, including its
generic forms of techno, drum’n’bass, house and IDM (‘Intelligent Dance
Music’). The German group Oval were among the earliest to take up the
microsounds of the malfunctioning CD, combining luscious ‘clean’ textures
with the rhythmic ticks of a skipping disc.91 Oval generated their glitches by
drawing on the disc’s surface with a non-permanent marker pen. However,
unlike Tone and Collins, the sounds of the (temporarily) damaged disc were
then sampled, looped and sequenced. In other words, Oval’s glitches were
not ‘live’ perturbations but ‘caught’ and ordered. By the turn of the twenty-
first century, the glitch had infiltrated a wide range of musical styles and had
found its way into the mainstream, with tracks like Madonna’s Americana-
pop hit ‘Don’t tell me’ (2000). Glitch aesthetics are now a staple of pop
music – its presence is both audible and visual. The music videos for Kanye
West’s ‘Welcome to Heartbreak’ and Beyoncé’s ‘Video Phone’ (2009), for
example, utilize the visual flicker of the glitch. Likewise, the post-production
‘stutter effect’ that is used on pop vocals, for example, Drake and Nicki
Minaj’s ‘Proud of You’ (2011) and Lady Gaga’s ‘Poker Face’ (2009) emulates
the glitch’s impact upon music’s rhythmic flow.
Steve Goodman has mapped the ‘viral’ nature of the glitch’s infection that
has spread throughout digital music cultures. Picking up on Rob Young’s
description of the influence of glitch as a kind of ‘effluenza’ virus (which, in
NOISE MUSIC, EXPOSURE AND THE POETICS OF TRANSGRESSION 165
turn, resonates with both Cowell’s notion of the noise ‘disease’ and microbe,
and Serres’s parasite), Goodman tracks the glitch as it came to infect the
dance halls of electronic music from ‘acoustic anomaly’ to ‘ubiquitous
strain’.92 However, there has been a tendency for theorists to dismiss glitch’s
infestation of dance music as lacking in interest and potential. The glitch
of the dance hall is heard as a derivative, a watered-down imitation, of its
authentic ‘high art’ origins. William Ashline, for example, argues:
To this, Ashline adds that the glitch was quickly ‘reterritorialized’ in popular
electronica. In language almost parodying the excessive masculinity of the
normative avant-gardist lineage he references, he asserts that ‘there was a
effective detumescence [sic.] of the hyper-intensity that accompanied its
[glitch’s] discovery’.94 These remarks exemplify a clear desire to connect
the glitch to a select, avant-gardist history of artistic practice (e.g. Cage,
musique concrète, Terry Riley, Steve Reich), while also dismissing the
glitch’s manifestation in more popular forms as lacking in artistic interest.
Yet, as Collins’s remarks on his own practice suggest, there is good reason
to connect the glitch to popular music histories, lineages and practices,
including the scratch DJ of hip-hop, which Collins notes was a key influence
for his experimentations with the skipping CD. In short, though it has been
the basis of much experimentation within the field, the glitch has never truly
‘belonged’ to the institutions of high art.
The glitch’s infestation of more popular forms has also been dismissed on
the basis that, once it is recorded, the glitch purportedly loses its mutative
potential. Instead, it becomes an interchangeable sonic effect. In other words,
once recorded, the glitch no longer functions as noise and, subsequently,
fails to generate anything new. Greg Hainge, for example, argues that Oval’s
recorded glitches ‘no longer deploys the resistant qualities of noise … far
from problematising the categorical distinction between noise and music,
the glitch here passes over fully to the side of music’.95 With this, the glitch
becomes overdetermined; rather than pertaining to a productive process of
systemic failure and breakdown, it becomes one sound among others.
Such criticisms prioritize the live musical event over the recorded. While
the live, ‘authentic’ glitch is full of transformative potential, the recorded,
derivative glitch is considered empty. However, what is missed in such
accounts is that the recorded glitch is not just treated as a sonic artefact:
Oval, Madonna and even the stuttering voices of pop also emulate the
glitch’s temporal effect – its mutation of rhythmic flow. Indeed, as Goodman
argues, criticisms of the recorded glitch typically overlook its transformative
166 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
impact upon ‘rhythm and its cultures’: ‘Recorded and resequenced, glitch,
instead of resulting in a mere recuperation, instead functioned as a probe,
prospecting rhythmic mutation in future host bodies.’96 The recorded glitch
was not merely utilized as a sonic flavour but became a parasitic agent
of rhythmic transformation: the glitch’s ‘hidden delights’ came to act as
a force of affective mobilization, snagging and snaring dancing bodies in
new ways.97
The glitch’s asymmetric and irregular swing and stutter have been used
to knock off-balance the regular 4/4 beat of ‘host’ dance music genres. This
destabilizing of rhythm can be heard in the minimal ‘crackle dub’ of Pole
(German electronic music producer Stefan Betke). On his first three albums
1, 2, 3 (1998–2000), delicate polyrhythms consisting of the crackles, pops
and clicks of a damaged Waldorf 4-Pole filter take the place of drum loops.
These ‘noise-rhythms’ are set against dub basslines and waves of static. On
recordings, some of the filter’s snaps, crackles and pops appear random,
while others are looped and repeated, forming asymmetric patterns. Though
the rhythmic irregularity of the glitch is preserved, the effect in Pole’s music
is very different from both Tone’s combination of ‘clean’ sounds with
harsh burst error noise and Collins’s stuttering strings. Patterns continually
evolve, while the tension between dub basslines and the molecular texture-
rhythms creates a subtle push and pull. In ‘Karussell’ (from 3), for example,
a syncopated 4/4 bass motif emerges from polyrhythmic popping and
seemingly random synth stabs, only to be skewed by a multitude of clicks,
crackles and swooshing static. The track juxtaposes rhythmic instability
and stability: the listener of ‘Karussell’ is torn between hanging onto the
repetitive, melodic bassline, and being swept away with the irregular, chaotic
noise-rhythms.98
Noise is used to create a similar destabilizing sensation in the cover of ‘I
Owe It to the Girls’ by the Soft Pink Truth, the solo project of Drew Daniel
(one member of the experimental electronica duo Matmos). Where Pole
harnesses noise’s capacity for rhythmic mutation in order to disorientate
the syncopated grooves of dub, Daniel’s targets the four to the floor of
house music. Featuring on Do You Want New Wave of Do You Want
the Soft Pink Truth?, an album consisting of punk and hardcore covers,
Daniel, in collaboration with Blevin Blectum, transforms the proto-grrrl
angst and gutter-screams of Teddy and the Frat Girls’ ‘I Owe It to the Girls’
into a dark, queer-cyborgian party track. The song’s opening is minimal:
it introduces itself with throbbing kick drum, alien vocals and an offbeat
snare. As the track approaches the first refrain, however, a busy electronic
crackling emerges. This crackling is at odds with the regimented 4/4 of the
rest of the track: it fails to fall in line, remaining unpredictably polyrhythmic
throughout and pushing against the dominant house groove. Even in the
more chaotic ‘breakdown’ section that features bubbling synths, sampled
vocals and turntable scratching sounds, the crackling sound becomes less
obvious but nonetheless drives against the 4/4 beat.
NOISE MUSIC, EXPOSURE AND THE POETICS OF TRANSGRESSION 167
Notes
1 As discussed in the introduction to this book, I approach noise music as a
methodological approach (i.e. broadly speaking, the use of noise in or as
music) rather than a generic category. As shall become clear in this chapter,
the latter tends to be equated with noise music’s harsher, more ‘extreme’
manifestations.
NOISE MUSIC, EXPOSURE AND THE POETICS OF TRANSGRESSION 169
24 For more on the French political context of Noise, see Eric Drott’s ‘Jacques
Attali’s Bruits’, Critical Inquiry 41, no. 4 (2015): 721–56.
25 Attali, Noise, 137.
26 Ibid.
27 Ibid. In the section on ‘Composition’, Attali seems to commit a sleight of
hand, insofar as music is no longer expected to predict new social orders
but enact them. For example, he states that 1960s free jazz failed to create
a truly alternative mode of production, despite its attempts to break away
from the normative economic systems of music; ultimately, free jazz failed
to break with repetition. However, Attali had not previously suggested that
it was music’s role to establish a new order; rather, it was pre-emptive of
alternative orders.
28 Ibid., 28.
29 Joseph Tham, ‘Noise as music: is there a historical continuum? From
historical roots to industrial music’, in Resonances: Noise and Contemporary
Music, ed. Michael Goddard, Benjamin Halligan and Nicola Spelman (New
York: Bloomsbury, 2013), 257–72, 265.
30 Georges Bataille, Eroticism (London: Marion Boyars, 2006), 36.
31 Ibid.
32 Christopher Partridge, ‘Death, transgression and the sacred’, in Mortality and
Music: Popular Music and the Awareness of Death (New York: Bloomsbury,
2015), 37–57.
33 Hegarty, Noise/Music: A History, 119.
34 Simon Ford, Wreckers of Civilization: The Story of Coum Transmissions and
Throbbing Gristle (London: Black Dog, 1999), 6.10.
35 Ibid.
36 Drew Daniel, 20 Jazz Funk Greats (London and New York: Continuum,
2008), 150.
37 Ford, Wreckers of Civilization, 8.15.
38 Though there might be some similarities between the two, Throbbing Gristle’s
‘anti-politics’ should not be conflated with an anarchist-inspired anti-politics,
which marks a rejection of political-institutional reform as a strategy for
radical social change.
39 For more on this, see Greg Steirer, ‘The art and everyday life and death:
Throbbing Gristle and the aesthetics of neoliberalism’, Postmodern
Culture 22, no. 2 (2012). In an interview with Drew Daniel, Peter ‘Sleazy’
Christopherson remarked on their political allegiances, suggesting that at the
time ‘Labour was seen as the bad guy. They had been the cause of many of
the social problems that we railed against. … So when the conservatives first
got into power, nobody really knew who they were aside from the fact that it
was a change from the supposed darkness of the past.’ Daniel, 20 Jazz Funk
Greats, 78.
40 In an interview with Carl Holmes, Bennett briefly confirms this interpretation
of his political viewpoint – he describes himself and Best as ‘the wettest liberals
NOISE MUSIC, EXPOSURE AND THE POETICS OF TRANSGRESSION 171
you could find on this planet’. See Carl Holmes and William Bennett, ‘William
Bennett interview’, Susan Lawley, 14 October 2006, http://www.susanlawly.
freeuk.com/textfiles/wbinterview04.html (accessed 01 October 2015).
41 In an interview with Lisa Blanning, Bennett claims that Whitehouse never
used imagery from Nazi Germany. However, when Blanning points out that
they named an album Buchenwald, Bennett responds: ‘Yeah and so what? It’s
just a name.’ Lisa Blanning, ‘Cut hands has the solution: an interview with
William Bennett’, Electronic Beats 8 August 2013, http://www.electronicbeats.
net/william-bennett/ (accessed 01 October 2015).
42 Ibid.
43 Mat Colegate, ‘“There’s no prescribed reaction”: Consumer Electronics’
Philip Best interviewed’, The Quietus 11 July 2012, http://thequietus.com/
articles/09307-consumer-electronics-philip-best-interview (accessed 01
October 2015).
44 By suggesting that there might be some connections between these performers’
invocations of noise, I do not mean to eradicate the conceptual and aesthetic
differences of these artists: though all in some way focus on the body and
its limits, these three artists (i.e. the Gerogerigegege, Justice Yeldham and
Pharmakon) are sonically distinctive.
45 Hegarty, ‘Just what is it that makes today’s noise music so different, so
appealing?’ Organised Sound 3, no. 1 (2008): 13–20, 15.
46 Tom K. Bailey, ‘Whitehouse article and interview’, Susan Lawley (1996),
http://www.susanlawly.freeuk.com/textfiles/bailey.html (accessed February
2016).
47 Simon Reynolds, Bring the Noise: Twenty Years of Writing About Hip-hop
and Rap (London: Faber and Faber, 2007), xii.
48 Simon Reynolds, Rip It Up and Start Again: Postpunk 1978-1984 (London:
Faber and Faber, 2006), 234.
49 Daniel, 20 Jazz Funk Greats, 160.
50 Hegarty, Noise/Music: A History, 155.
51 Dixon Christie, ‘MERZBOW’S discipline, decibels, and diety Japan’s minister
of sonic terror turns on the feedback’, Stagedive 17, no. 01 (1997), https://
web.archive.org/web/19980201190109/http://www.digi-zine.com/17merz.htm
(accessed 14 June 2015).
52 Michel Henritzi, ‘Extreme contemporary – Japanese music as radical
exoticism’, in Japanese Independent Music, ed. Frank Stofer (Bordeaux:
Sonore, 2001), 31–7, 36.
53 As David Novak suggests, the term onkyô has ambiguous connotations within
a Japanese cultural and linguistic context. The dominance of Western musical
taxonomies in Japanese popular music cultures means that generic terms are
often translations of English terms (e.g. rokyu, jyazu for ‘rock’ and ‘jazz’). To
use a Japanese conceptual term to refer to a style of popular music would
usually connote vernacular, folk music or even pre-modern music. However,
as Novak states, ‘Because onkyô is such a generalized and coldly technical
reference to sound, it does not connote such a relationship to traditional
172 BEYOND UNWANTED SOUND
94 Ibid., 89.
95 Greg Hainge, Noise Matters: Towards an Ontology of Noise (New York:
Bloomsbury, 2013), 137.
96 Goodman, ‘Contagious noise’, 132.
97 Ibid.
98 Goodman also points to Pole’s music in his discussion of the glitch in
electronic dance music. Goodman describes Pole as ‘revolving around a kind
of loud quietness’ submerging Jamaican dub into a ticklish haze, inverting
the relationship between signal and noise, foreground and background, high
resolution and low resolution, surface and depth’. See Goodman, ‘Contagious
noise’, 130.
99 Paul Hegarty makes a similar argument in relation to the excessive output of
Merzbow. See Hegarty, Noise/Music: A History, 157–8.
CO N C LU S I O N
(Dis)connecting noise
All that is not information, not redundancy, not form and not
restraints – is noise, the only possible source of new patterns.
GREGORY BATESON, ‘Cybernetic Explanation’, 32.
A parasitic politics?
Though I have repeatedly discussed noise’s connection to overtly political
thematics (e.g. the rise of the bourgeoisie, urban regeneration and
gentrification, sonic weaponry, the economic and militaristic imperatives
of Bell Labs and cybernetic research), I have avoided outlining an overt
politics of noise. However, describing noise in terms of perturbation,
transformation and relationality would seem to point to an underlying
political dimension. Noise has been understood as that which assures that
things keep changing; it interrupts and transforms relations, and, in doing
so, generates something new. Conversely, a (hypothetical) noise-free system
would remain predictably stuck – there would be no variation, no potential,
no information (as the term is used by Shannon and Weaver). Noise is that
which produces the future; it brings about new relations and connections. A
Spinozist approach also makes noise an issue of power, inasmuch as every
affective encounter is associated with an increment or diminishment in a
body’s power to affect and be affected, to act and be acted upon. There
are good and bad encounters with noise, in the sense that noise increases
or decreases a body’s affective power. So noise can produce good or bad
futures; it can lead to serendipitous as well as unwanted outcomes.
By describing noise in such terms – as that which transforms relations
and, in so doing, brings about the new – it becomes tempting to connect
noise with efforts to bring about the end of a late-capitalist era from which
the future has almost disappeared from perceptibility. Nevertheless, I am
keen to avoid uncritically associating noise with an emancipatory politics.
I have noted that noise has often been ascribed an inherent radicalism,
particularly within musical discourses. From the Futurists’ celebration of
noise as a means of ‘breaking out’ of the stale and tawdry realm of musical
sounds; the marriage of the sonically abject with the socially abject in the
‘anti-music’ of Throbbing Gristle; to the dismissal and/or affirmation of
‘rebellious’ musical genres such as hip-hop as ‘noisy’, noise is never far away
CONCLUSION 177
sense that erroneous and anomalous objects and events may harbour some
kind of political potential, in that, like the parasite, they mark an opportunity
for transformation that comes from within the system itself. Unlike many
accounts of noise music’s political potential, moreover, the discourse of
noise-as-error takes into account the mechanisms and operations of a
‘network’ or ‘control’ society. As Mark Nunes argues, this era is governed
by what Jean-François Lyotard calls a ‘logic of maximum performance’:
a cybernetic ideology of informatic control driven by aspirations of an
error-free world, which is entirely efficient, accurate and predictable.7 In
this epoch, the biopolitical is quantified; life becomes measurable; and
deviation becomes standardized. However, there are those occasions where
the erroneous evades systemic control and slips through – the moments, for
instance, when CD error correction software fails to counter the effects of
noise, allowing it to slip into the registers of audibility. On these occasions,
‘Error calls attention to its etymological roots: a going astray, a wandering
from intended destinations. In its “failure to communicate,” error signals
a path of escape from the predictable confines of informatic control: an
opening, a virtuality, a poiesis.’8 For Nunes, the related concepts of noise
and error provide the possibility of a ‘way out’; as destabilizing events, they
provide an opportunity to evade the predictable and already-known cycles
of control.
A similar proposition is articulated in The Cybernetic Hypothesis by
the French journal Tiqqun. If capitalism and governance have become
cybernetic, subjugating human subjectivity to flows of information and
automation, then noise, as well as panic, invisibility and desire, is proposed
as an anti-capitalist revolutionary strategy. Noise is that which ‘cannot be
handled by the binary machine, reduced to a 0 or a 1. Such noises are the
lines of flight, the wanderings of desires that have still not gone back into
the valorization circuit, the non-enrolled.’9 Noise is a ‘non-conforming
act’ that occurs within the system but cannot be reduced to its logic. With
amplification, noise becomes a revolutionary force capable of destabilizing,
perturbing and overthrowing the mechanisms of control.
Such accounts appear to assume that contemporary socio-economic
orders prioritize metastasis. However, just as cyberneticists such as Atlan
saw the systemic benefit of noise and error, so too have certain forms of
contemporary capitalism. Within neo-liberal economic orders, perturbations,
disruptions, anomalies and excess are not just minimized or controlled but
are also rendered innovative and thus profitable.10 ‘Disaster capitalism’
sees governments and private corporations take advantage of disruptive,
transformative events – be they induced or unplanned. What is a crisis to
those directly affected – be it a ‘natural’ disaster, a financial crash, resource
shortages, a political coup or a combination of these events – is a profitable
opportunity for others. Just as noise brings with it the modification of
relations, these macro-disruptive events are often used to usher in new
liberal economic orders.11 As Steven Shaviro asserts: ‘Crises do not endanger
CONCLUSION 179
the capitalist order; rather, they are occasions for the dramas of “creative
destruction” by means of which, phoenix-like, capitalism repeatedly renews
itself.’12 And just as artists have drawn out, intensified and amplified the
noise of music so as to generate new sensations, dominant forces within
global capitalism have drawn out, intensified and amplified the ‘noise’ of
socio-economic systems, so as to generate profit. Though the use of noise
as an artistic resource and the exploitation of ‘disaster’ by governments
and private corporations should not be simply conflated, the resonances
between these processes serve to warn against equally simplistic assertions
of aesthetic innovation as politically radical.
Notes
1 Ben Anderson, Encountering Affect: Capacities, Apparatuses, Conditions
(Farnham: Ashgate, 2014), 77.
2 Anthony Iles ‘Introduction’, in Noise and Capitalism, ed. Mattin and Anthony
Iles (Sebastián: Gipuzkoako Foru Aldundia-Arteleku, 2008), 9–17, 15.
3 Steven Shaviro, ‘Accelerationist aesthetics: necessary inefficiency in times
of real subsumption’, e-flux (2013), http://www.e-flux.com/journal/
accelerationist-aesthetics-necessary-inefficiency-in-times-of-real-subsumption/
(accessed 16 March 2015).
4 Nick Smith, ‘The splinter in your ear: noise music as the semblance of
critique’, Culture, Theory and Critique 46, no. 1 (2005): 43–59, 54.
5 It is said that the Mercedes belonged to a member of the staff at Releasing
Eskimo (the label that released Noisemybryo) who had been ordered to move
the car by the police. The Merzcar never sold and eventually broke down.
6 See http://www.noisefestival.com/ (accessed March 2012).
7 Mark Nunes, ‘Error, noise and potential: the outside of purpose’, in Error:
Glitch, Noise and Jam in New Media Cultures, ed. Mark Nunes (London
and New York: Continuum, 2011), 3–23, 3; Jean-François Lyotard,
The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge (Manchester:
Manchester University press, 1984).
8 Ibid.
9 Tiqqun, The Cybernetic Hypothesis (2001), https://cybernet.jottit.com/
(accessed January 2016).
10 See Robin James, Resilience and Melancholy: Pop Music, Feminism,
Neoliberalism (Alresford: Zero Books, 2015).
11 See Naomi Klein, The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism
(London: Penguin, 2008).
12 Shaviro, ‘Accelerationist aesthetics: necessary inefficiency in times of real
subsumption’.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Alexander, James. ‘Have you heard the hum?’ BBC News, 19 May 2009,
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8056284.stm (accessed March 2012).
Allgemeine Elektricitäts-Gesellschaft. ‘AEG-Electrolux – campaigning against
noise with giant noise posters’. AEG Noise Awareness Blog (2008),
http://www.noiseawareness.blogspot.co.uk/2008/03/aeg-electrolux-
campaigning-against.html (accessed April 2012).
Anderson, Ben. Encountering Affect: Capacities, Apparatuses, Conditions.
Farnham: Ashgate, 2014.
Armendariz, Kelly. ‘Words of the artist: Maria Chavez and Jen Liu’. Splatterpool,
24 October 2010 [online video] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vEYUilNWg
g0&feature=related (accessed January 2012).
Ashline, William L. ‘Clicky aesthetics: Deleuze, headphonics and the minimalist
assemblage of “aberrations”’. Strategies: Journal of Theory, Culture, and Politics
15, no. 1 (2002): 87–101.
Associated Press. ‘Human rights groups sue to stop Israeli sonic booms over Gaza’.
Haaretz (2005), http://www.haaretz.com/news/human-rights-groups-sue-to-
stop-israeli-sonic-booms-over-gaza-1.173053 (accessed January 2013).
Atlan, Henri. ‘Noise as a principle of self-organization’. In Henri Atlan: Selected
Writings, edited by Stefanos Geroulanos and Todd Meyers, 95–113. New York:
Fordham University Press, 2011.
Attali, Jacques. Noise: The Political Economy of Music. Translated by Brian
Massumi. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2003.
Bailey, Tom K. ‘Whitehouse article and interview’. Susan Lawley (1996), http://
www.susanlawly.freeuk.com/textfiles/bailey.html (accessed February 2016).
Bailey, Peter. ‘Breaking the sound barrier’. in Mark M. Smith (ed.) Hearing History:
A Reader, edited by Mark M. Smith, 23–35. Georgia: University of Georgia
Press, 2004.
Barad, Karen. Meeting the Universe Halfway. Durham: Duke University Press, 2007.
Bataille, Georges. Eroticism. London: Marion Boyars, 2006.
Bateson, Gregory. ‘Cybernetic explanation’. The American Behavioral Scientist 10,
no. 8 (1967): 29–32.
Beaumont-Thomas, Ben. ‘Hype Williams: do they ever speak the truth?’ The
Guardian 5 April 2012, http://www.theguardian.com/music/2012/apr/05/hype-
williams-speak-the-truth (accessed September 2015).
Bell, Clive. ‘Site for sore ears’. The Wire Magazine Issue 223 (2003): 38–44.
Bierce, Ambrose. The Devil’s Dictionary. New York: Dover Publications, 1993.
Bijsterveld, Karin. Mechanical Sound: Technology, Culture and Public Problems of
Noise in the Twentieth Century. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2008.
182 BIBLIOGRAPHY
Blanning, Lisa. ‘Cut hands has the solution: an interview with William Bennett’.
Electronic Beats 8 August 2013, http://www.electronicbeats.net/william-bennett/
(accessed 01 October 2015).
Bowers, J. M. ‘Edison’s Residue by J. M. Bowers’. Onoma Research, http://www.
onoma.co.uk/jmbowers.html (accessed June 2013).
Brennan, Teresa. The Transmission of Affect. New York: Cornell, 2003.
British Broadcasting Corporation. ‘Who, what, why: why is “the hum” such a
mystery’. BBC News Magazine, 13 June 2011, http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/
magazine-13752688 (accessed March 2012).
Brown, Steven D. ‘Michel Serres: science, translation and the logic of the parasite’.
Theory, Culture and Society 19, no. 3 (2002): 1–27.
B’Tselem. ‘The sonic booms in the sky over Gaza’. B’Tselem (2010), http://www.
btselem.org/gaza_strip/supersonic_booms (accessed October 2012).
Buck, Chris. ‘Yasunao Tone: random tone bursts’. The Wire (2011), http://www.
thewire.co.uk/in-writing/interviews/yasunao-tone_random-tone-bursts (accessed
January 2012).
Buskirk, Martha. ‘Bit rot: the limits of conservation’. Hyperallergic (2014),
http://hyperallergic.com/131304/bit-rot-the-limits-of-conservation/ (accessed
November 2015).
Cage, John. ‘The future of music: credo [1937]’. In Silence: Lectures and Writings,
3–6. London: Marion Boyars Publishers, 2009.
Cage, John. ‘Experimental music: doctrine [1955]’. In Silence: Lectures and
Writings, 13–17. London: Marion Boyars Publishers, 2009.
Cage, John. ‘Experimental music [1957]’. In Silence: Lectures and Writings, 7–12.
London: Marion Boyars Publishers, 2009.
Cascone, Kim. ‘The aesthetics of failure: “post-digital” tendencies in contemporary
computer music’. Computer Music Journal 24, no. 4 (2000): 12–18.
Center for Constitutional Rights. Solitary Confinement in Guantanamo Bay
(2012), http://ccrjustice.org/learn-more/faqs/solitary-confinement-guantanamo-
bay (accessed March 2013).
Chandler, Daniel. The Transmission Model of Communication (1994), http://www.
aber.ac.uk/media/Documents/short/trans.html#D (accessed October 2012).
Chion, Michel. ‘Let’s have done with the notion of “Noise”’. Translated by James
A. Steintrager. Differences 22, no. 2 (2011): 240–248.
Christie, Dixon. ‘MERZBOW'S discipline, decibels, and diety Japan’s minister of
sonic terror turns on the feedback’. Stagedive 17, no. 01 (1997), https://web.
archive.org/web/19980201190109/http://www.digi-zine.com/17merz.htm
(accessed 14 June 2015).
City of Santa Clara Government. ‘Chapter 11.44: Noise Limits’. Santa Clara
Municipal Code (2015), http://www.codepublishing.com/CA/SantaClarita/
html/SantaClarita11/SantaClarita1144.html#11.44.094 (accessed
March 2016).
City of Santa Clara Government. ‘Chapter 9.10: Regulation of Noise
and Vibration’. Charter of Santa Clara California (2016), http://www.
codepublishing.com/CA/SantaClara/#!/santaclara09/SantaClara0910.html#9.10
(accessed March 2016).
Coates, Peter A. ‘The strange stillness of the past: towards an environmental history
of sound and noise’. Environmental History 10, no. 4 (2005): 636–65.
BIBLIOGRAPHY 183
Deming, David. ‘The hum: an anomalous sound heard around the world’. Journal
of Scientific Exploration 18, no. 4 (2004): 571–95.
Derrida, Jacques. ‘Plato’s pharmacy’. In Dissemination. Translated by Barbara
Johnson, 67–186. London and New York: Continuum, 2004.
Descartes, René. The Passions of the Soul. Translated by Stephen H. Voss. Indiana:
Hackett Publishing Company, 1989.
Dinnik, Wilf. ‘Israel’s sonic booms terrifies Gaza children’. ABC News, 29 December
2005, http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/story?id=1453692 (accessed October 2012).
Drott, Eric. ‘Jacques Attali’s Bruits’. Critical Inquiry 41, no. 4 (2015): 721–56.
Environmental Resources Management. Noise and Neighbourhood Noise –
A Review of European Legislation and Practices (Environmental Resources
Management, 2002), http://archive.defra.gov.uk/environment/quality/noise/
research/euroreview/documents/noise_euro_review.pdf (accessed May 2012).
Evens, Aden. Sound Ideas: Music, Machines, and Experience. Minneapolis:
University of Minnesota Press, 2005.
Florida, Richard. The Rise of the Creative Class and How its Transforming Work,
Leisure, Community and Everyday life. New York: Basic Books, 2002.
Ford, Simon. Wreckers of Civilization: The Story of Coum Transmissions and
Throbbing Gristle. London: Black Dog, 1999, 6.10.
Franklin, Ursula. ‘Silence and the notion of the commons’. Soundscape: The Journal
of Acoustic Ecology 1, no. 2 (2000): 14–17.
Galás, Diamanda, and Andrea Juno. ‘Diamanda Galás: interview’. In Angry
Women, edited by Andrea Juno and V. Vale, 7–22. San Francisco, CA: Re/Search
Publications, 1991.
Gallagher, Michael. ‘Sound as affect: difference, power and spatiality’. Emotion,
Space and Society (2016), Advance online publication. http://dx.doi.
org/10.1016/j.emospa.2016.02.004.
Geroulanos, Stefanos, and Todd Meyers (eds), Henri Atlan: Selected Writings.
New York: Fordham University Press, 2011.
Goddard, Michael, Benjamin Halligan and Paul Hegarty (eds), Reverberations:
The Philosophy, Politics and Aesthetics of Noise. London and New York:
Continuum, 2012.
Goddard, Michael, Benjamin Halligan and Nicola Spelman (eds), Resonances:
Noise and Contemporary Music. New York: Bloomsbury, 2013.
Goodman, Steve. Sonic Warfare: Sound, Affect and the Ecology of Fear.
Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2010.
Goodman, Steve. ‘Contagious noise: from digital glitches to audio viruses’. In
The Spam Book: On Viruses, Porn and Other Anomalies from the Dark Side
of Digital Culture, edited by Jussi Parikka and Tony D. Sampson, 125–40.
New York: Hampton Press, 2009.
Gordon, Mel. ‘Songs from the museum of the future: Russian sound creation
(1910–1930)’. In Wireless Imagination: Sound, Radio and the Avant-Garde,
edited by Douglas Kahn and Gregory Whitehead, 197–243. Cambridge, MA:
MIT Press, 1994.
Gross, Jason. ‘Christian Marclay: Interview’. Perfect Sound Forever (1998), http://
www.furious.com/perfect/christianmarclay.html (accessed March 2012).
Grundy, David. ‘Listening to Sachiko M’. Eartrip Magazine 7 (2012). https://
eartripmagazine.wordpress.com/articles/articles-issue-7/listening-to-sachiko-m/
(accessed December 2015).
BIBLIOGRAPHY 185
Jackson, Melissa. ‘Music to deter yobs by’. BBC News Magazine (2005),
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/magazine/4154711.stm (accessed January 2013).
James, Robin. Resilience and Melancholy: Pop Music, Feminism, Neoliberalism.
Alresford: Zero Books, 2015.
Jarman, Freya. Queer Voices: Technologies, Vocalities and the Musical Flaw.
Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011.
Kahn, Douglas. Noise Water Meat: A History of Sound in the Arts. Cambridge,
MA: MIT Press, 2001.
Kassabian, Anahid. ‘Ubiquitous listening and networked subjectivity’. ECHO 3,
no. 2 (2001): http://www.echo.ucla.edu/Volume3-issue2/kassabian/index.html
(accessed October 2012).
Kassabian, Anahid. ‘Music for sleeping’. In Sound, Music, Affect: Theorizing Sonic
Experience, edited by Marie Thompson and Ian Biddle, 165–81, New York:
Bloomsbury, 2013.
Kasser, Jamie C. ‘Musicology and the problem of sonic abuse’. In Music, Sensation,
and Sensuality, edited by Linda Phyllis Austern, 321–34. New York and
London: Routledge, 2001.
Kaye, G. W. C. ‘Noise and its measurement’. Proceedings of the Institution of Great
Britain 26 (1931): 435–88.
Keizer, Garret. The Unwanted Sound Of Everything We Want: A Book About
Noise. New York: PublicAffairs, 2010.
Kelly, Caleb. Cracked Media: The Sound of Malfunction. Cambridge, MA: MIT
Press, 2009.
Kim-Cohen, Seth. In the Blink of an Ear: Toward a Non-Cochlear Sonic Art,
New York: Continuum, 2009.
Kindynis, Theo. ‘Weaponising classical music: waging class warfare beneath our
streets’. Ceasefire Magazine (2012), http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/weaponising-
classical-music-class-warfare-waged-beneath-cities-streets/ (accessed
January 2013).
Klein, Naomi. The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism. London:
Penguin, 2008.
Kmiecik, Oliver. ‘New Yaris Hybrid TV ad: “silence the city”’. Toyota Blog, 2 June
2012, http://blog.toyota.co.uk/new-yaris-hybrid-tv-ad-silence-the-city (accessed
May 2012).
Kohut, Tom. ‘Noise pollution and the eco-politics of sound: toxicity, nature and
culture in the contemporary soundscape’. Leonardo Music Journal 25 (2015): 5–8.
Kosko, Bart. Noise. New York: Viking Books, 2006.
Kotz, Liz. ‘Marked records/program for activity’. In Christian Marclay: Festival
issue 1, edited by David Kiehl, 10–21. New Haven, CT: Yale University
Press, 2010.
Kouvaras, Linda. Loading the Silence: Australian Sound Art in the Post-Digital
Age. Farnham: Ashgate, 2013.
Kovacs, Zsuzsi I., Carri J. LeRoy, Dylan G. Fischer, Sandra Lubarsky and
William Burke. ‘How do aesthetics affect our ecology?’ Journal of Ecological
Anthropology 10 (2006): 61–5.
Kryter, Karl D. The Effects of Noise on Man. Orlando: Academic Press, 1985.
LaBelle, Brandon. Acoustic Territories: Sound Culture and Everyday life. London
and New York: Continuum, 2010.
BIBLIOGRAPHY 187
Laforet, Anne, Aymeric Mansoux and Aymeric de Valk. ‘Rock, paper, scissors and
floppy disks’, http://pi.kuri.mu/rock/ (accessed November 2015).
Latour, Bruno. ‘How to talk about the body: the normative dimension of science
Studies’. Body and Society 10, nos. 2–3 (2004): 205–29.
Lewis, George. A Power Stronger than Itself: The AACM and American
Experimental Music. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2008.
Lewis, Orlando F. The development of American Prisons and Prison Development
Customs 1776 to 1845. Whitefish and Montana: Kessinger Publishing
LLC, 2005.
Lipton, Sara. ‘Monastery chic: the ascetic retreat in a neoliberal age’. In Evil
Paradises: Dreamworlds of Neoliberalism, edited by Davis Mike and Daniel
Bertrand Monk, 241–50. New York: The New York Press, 2007.
López, Francisco. ‘Environmental sound matter’. In La Selva: Sound Environments
from the Neotropical Rainforest, V228. Netherlands: V2, 1998.
López, Francisco. Schizophonia vs L’objet Sonore: Soundscapes and Artistic
Freedom (1997), http://www.franciscolopez.net/schizo.html (accessed
January 2016).
Lyotard, Jean-François. The Postmodern Condition: a Report on Knowledge.
Manchester: Manchester University press, 1984.
Marclay, Christian, and Yasunao Tone. ‘Record, CD, analogue, digital’. In Audio
Culture: Readings in Modern Music, edited by Christoph Cox and Daniel
Warner, 341–47, 342. London: Continuum, 2006.
Marinetti, Filippo Tommaso. ‘The founding and manifesto of futurism’ [1909]’.
In Futurism: an Anthology, edited by Lawrence S. Rainey, Christine Poggi and
Laura Wittman, 49–53. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009.
Marinetti, Filippo Tommaso, and Luce Marinetti. F.T. Marinetti: Selected Poems
and Related Prose. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2002.
Marx, Karl, and Friedrich Engels (ed.), Capital: A Critique of Political Economy
Vol. 1 Part 1. New York: Cosimo, 2007.
Massumi, Brian. Parables for the Virtual: Movement, Affect, Sensation. Durham:
Duke University Press, 2002.
McGreal, Chris. ‘Palestinians hit by sonic boom air raids’. The Guardian,
3 November 2005, http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2005/nov/03/israel
(accessed October 2012).
Menkman, Rosa. The Glitch Moment(um). Network Notebooks: Amsterdam, 2011.
MORI Social Research Institute. Neighbour Noise: Public Opinion Research to
Assess its Nature, Extent and Significance. London: MORI, 2003, http://archive.
defra.gov.uk/environment/quality/noise/research/mori/documents/mori.pdf
(accessed May 2012).
Navai, Manna, and Jennifer A. Veitch. Acoustic Satisfaction in Open-Plan Offices:
Review and Recommendations. Ottawa: National Research Council Canada,
2003, http://www.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/obj/irc/doc/pubs/rr/rr151/rr151.pdf (accessed
March 2012).
Nicolaides, Becky, and Andrew Wiese. ‘The transnational origins of the elite
suburb’. In The Suburb Reader, edited by Becky Nicolaides and Andrew Wiese,
13–15. New York and London: Routledge.
Nietzsche, Friedrich, and Walter Kaufmann (ed.), The Portable Nietzsche.
New York: Viking, 1954.
188 BIBLIOGRAPHY
Novak, David. ‘Playing off site: the untranslation of onkyô’. Asian Music 41, no. 1
(2010): 36–59.
Nunes, Mark. ‘Error, noise and potential: the outside of purpose’. In Error: Glitch,
Noise and Jam in New Media Cultures, edited by Mark Nunes, 3–23. New
York: Bloomsbury, 2010.
Nunes, Mark (ed.), Error: Glitch, Noise and Jam in New Media Cultures. London
and New York: Continuum, 2011.
Ochoa Gautier, Ana María. Aurality: Listening and Knowledge in Nineteenth-
Century Columbia. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2014.
O’Sullivan, Simon. ‘The aesthetics of affect’. Angelaki: Journal of the Theoretical
Humanities 6, no. 3 (2001): 125–35.
Oxford University Press. ‘Noise, n.’. OED Online (2012), http://www.oed.com/view/
Entry/127655?rskey=3fdZZa&result=1&isAdvanced=false (accessed July 2012).
Parikka, Jussi. ‘Mapping noise: techniques and tactics of irregularities, interception
and disturbance’. In Media Archaeology: Approaches, Applications and
Implications, ed. Erkki Huhtamo and Jussi Parikka, 256–77. Berkley and Los
Angeles: University of California Press, 2011.
Parikka, Jussi, and Tony D. Sampson (eds), The Spam Book: On Viruses, Porn and
Other Anomalies from the Dark Side of Digital Culture. New York: Hampton
Press, 2009.
Partridge, Christopher. ‘Death, Transgression and the Sacred’. In Mortality
and Music: Popular Music and the Awareness of Death, 37–57. New York:
Bloomsbury, 2015.
Pedwell, Carolyn, and Anne Whitehead. ‘Affecting feminism: questions of feeling in
feminist theory’. Feminist Theory 13, no. 2 (2012): 115–29.
Plato. The Republic. Translated by Robin Waterfield. Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1993.
Proctor, Kate. ‘Ouseburn Valley homes are given the go-ahead’. The Journal,
7 January 2013, http://www.thejournal.co.uk/news/north-east-news/ouseburn-
valley-homes-given-go-ahead-4397726 (accessed January 2016).
Prokhovnik, Raia. Rational Woman: A Feminist Critique of Dichotomy. London
and New York: Routledge, 1999.
Randomflux. The Book of Noise: Visual Interpretations of Noise. Kent Town:
Avance, 2008.
Reynolds, Simon. Rip It Up and Start Again: Postpunk 1978-1984. London: Faber
and Faber, 2006.
Reynolds, Simon. Bring the Noise: Twenty Years of Writing about Hip-hop and
Rap. London: Faber and Faber, 2007.
Rodgers, Tara. Pink Noises: Women on Electronic Music and Sound. Durham:
Duke University Press, 2010.
Rodgers, Tara. ‘“What, for me constitutes life in a sound?”: electronic sounds as
lively and differentiated individuals’. In Sound Clash: Listening to American
Studies, edited by Kara Keeling and Josh Kun, 65–86. Baltimore, MD:
John Hopkins University Press, 2012.
Russell, David F., Lon A. Wilkins and Frank Moss. ‘Use of behavioural stochastic
resonance by paddle fish for feeding’. Nature 402 (1999): 291–4.
Russolo, Luigi. ‘The art of noises’. In Futurism: An Anthology, edited by
Lawrence S. Rainey, Christine Poggi and Laura Wittman, 133–8. New Haven:
Yale University Press, 2009.
BIBLIOGRAPHY 189
Websites
https://www.change.org/p/manchester-city-council-to-remove-our-statutory-
nuisance-abatement-notice (accessed January 2016).
ebooks.jupitter-larsen.com/ (accessed November 2015).
http://favouritesounds.org/ (accessed February 2012).
http://www.liberty-human-rights.org.uk/campaigns/buzz-off/ (accessed July 2013).
http://www.noisefestival.com/ (accessed March 2012).
http://www.soundaroundyou.com/ (accessed February 2013).
http://sounds.bl.uk/Sound-Maps/UK-Soundmap (accessed February 2013).
Discography
Burt Reynols Ensamble. Gordura Vegetal Hidrogenada (self-released, 1995).
Christian Marclay. Record Without a Cover (Recycled Records, 1985).
Dean Blunt and Inga Copeland. Black is Beautiful (Hyperdub,
HDBLP012, 2012).
Diamanda Galás. Plague Mass (Mute: CDSTUMM83, 1991).
Diamanda Galás. The Singer (Mute: CDSTUMM103, 1992).
Diamanda Galás. Schrei X (Mute: CD STUMM146, 1996).
Diamanda Galás. The Litanies of Satan (Mute: IS01CD, 1998).
Diamanda Galás. Guilty! Guilty! Guilty! (Mute: CDSTUMM 274, 2008).
Diamanda Galás, and John Paul Jones. The Sporting Life (Mute: 61672–2, 1994).
Francisco López. La Selva: Sound Environments from the Neotropical Rainforest
(V2: V228, 1998).
Hype Williams. One Nation (Hippos in Tanks, HIT008, 2011).
Incapacitants. Quietus (Alchemy Records, ARCD-059, 1993).
Madonna. Don’t Tell Me (Maverick, Warner Bros. Records: 93 62 44946 2,
W547CD1, 2000).
Merzbow. Music for Bondage Performance (1991).
Merzbow. Noisembryo (Releasing Eskimo, IGLOO 001, 1994).
Merzbow. Pulse Demon (Release Entertainment, RR6937–2, 1996).
192 BIBLIOGRAPHY