Dokumen - Pub - Experimental Music Since 1970 9781501396328 9781628922479
Dokumen - Pub - Experimental Music Since 1970 9781501396328 9781628922479
Dokumen - Pub - Experimental Music Since 1970 9781501396328 9781628922479
I’m deeply grateful to the people who have helped to make this book happen, generously
answering questions and sharing materials, ideas, and encouragement.
Amy Clark stopped me from giving up on writing the book, Laird Nolan made sure
I fully threw myself into it, and Mary Gottschalk’s rock-solid support made it possible.
My father, Stephen Gottschalk, has not been here to see this project fall into place, but
his passion for finding the connections between and consequences of ideas has had a
lasting impact that I hope is evidenced here.
Elizabeth Latta was an inspiring collaborator on several images, and I want to thank
Chiyoko Szlavnics for letting me use her wonderful drawing on the cover, along with
everyone who allowed me to use images in the text. Huge thanks go to each person
who read the manuscript. It wouldn’t be what it is without your perspective, advice,
and sharp eyes.
The richness of the field of experimental music is evidence of—and evidenced
by—the qualities of the people who participate in it in every capacity. Thank you to all
future readers as well for your willingness to think through these radical approaches in
sound. If you take some time with the work itself (and not just these words about the
work), I hope you’ll find any initial bewilderment to be just one step along the way to
a series of meaningful experiences.
x
1
1.1 Introduction
Experimental music is challenging to pin down because it is not a school or a trend
or even an aesthetic. It is, instead, a position—of openness, of inquiry, of uncertainty,
of discovery. Facts or circumstances or materials are explored for their potential sonic
outcomes through activities including composition, performance, improvisation,
installation, recording, and listening. These explorations are oriented toward that
which is unknown, whether it is remote, complex, opaque, or falsely familiar.
The term “experimental music” has itself been subject to false familiarity, in that
there are many definitions but few correlations between them. It may be helpful to
establish a few points of reference at the outset, one of which is a key example from
the repertoire. John Cage’s 4’33” (1952) is generally known as “the silent piece.” The
performer—normally the center of attention—is tacet (producing no intentional
sound) throughout. Since the performance usually takes place in a concert situation,
the attention of the audience is on sound. As no voluntary sounds are being produced,
involuntary sounds become the focus of attention. This piece is sometimes viewed
as a gimmick, as more of an idea of a piece or a philosophical statement than an
actual “musical” work. What makes it truly innovative is the fact that performance
is transformed into acts of being and listening. Not only despite, but because of its
negation of performative sound, it becomes a compelling listening experience.1
4’33” anticipates and traces five conceptual arcs that cross each other pervasively
in experimental music. These arcs do not mark boundaries—those are always going to
be pressed and crossed—but they wind through various regions of work as recurring
features: indeterminacy, change, experience, research, and non-subjectivity.
Indeterminacy
The application of the term “indeterminacy” has covered more ground in recent
decades than Cage’s “act the outcome of which is unknown.” Brian Eno writes:
Some other terms associated with this definition are chance operations, aleatory,
circumstance, contingency, risk, openness, and uncertainty. The outcome may be
unknown to any agent in the piece—performer, composer, audience—if those roles are
in place, or to anyone in a position to compare the act to the outcome.
In Cage’s formulation, the act is known and the outcome is unknown; but the act and
the outcome could be almost anything, and the distance between the known and the
unknown is as likely to expand as it is to contract. Either an expansion or a contraction is a
change, which alters the experience of the participants. One way to interrogate this distance
is through research, which must be as non-subjective as possible to yield clear results.
Indeterminacy is perhaps the most overt and central trait of experimental music,
and will be further explored in its own section within this chapter. Ironically, it
is uncertainty that provides the most effective orientation when searching for the
experimental qualities of a work. The key consideration is: “Where are the questions?”
Change
In the early decades of experimental music, change often meant doing things in ways they
had not been done before, both in terms of musical creation and performance. In this way
it echoed some of the goals associated with avant-gardism and led to a frequent conflation
of the two terms. At one point, Cage even defined experimentalism as “the introduction of
novel elements into one’s music.”3 Aspects of indeterminacy were adopted by such central
figures of the musical avant-garde as Boulez and Stockhausen, among many others.4
But, although experimentalism offers useful tools and insights that speak to musical
traditions and developments, it operates primarily in relation to basic aspects of human
experience. Avant-garde music (if the term is still relevant) is in a dynamic relationship
with musical tradition. As Joaquim Benitez writes, “Historical directionality gives
meaning to the term avant-garde. . . . The ever continuing search for the new is the
second distinguishing feature of the avant-garde.”5 Many innovative things have been
done in music already, and will continue to be done. But doing something first is not
the type of change that is meant in the context of this study.
In experimental music, real change occurs in the realm of human thought and
experience. The experimentalist is not trying to change the musical world, but to change
the thinking of one or more listeners during—and possibly after—the performance.
As Greg Stuart explains, it “attempts to radically rethink the relationship between
composition, performance and listening.”6 There are limitless possibilities for how that
rethinking can occur, one of which is a shift in the listener’s perception.7
Christian Wolff has underlined the difficulty of an approach that favors novelty and
takes nothing for granted, and offers a more currently applicable definition:
Experimental in music seems to me, it should be something that through the music,
through the way it’s performed, possibly though the way it’s presented . . . socially
and in concert situations . . . suggests the possibility of change. . . . The music
becomes a kind of metaphor, if you will, for a social situation, that it suggests a way
of organizing your thinking, your attitude towards the world, which suggests that
Defining Features of Experimental Music 3
the world could be different. . . . So that would seem to me now what experimental
is about, providing a kind of model, an incentive for the notion of change.8
For Wolff, an experimental work can expand the listener’s perception of possibilities.
It can function as an analogy to suggest that other things, too—our lives as they are
lived and the politics that shape them—could be different. But if music can, as Michael
Pisaro suggests, “change thought,”9 then the analogy takes on the full dimensions of
reality. Thought affects experience, and thought is experience. If a sound work has
a transformative impact on the perception or cognition of one person, it has truly
affected change.
Non-subjectivity
The Dutch visual and sound artist Paul Panhuysen writes:
I never express my individuality per se, nor that environment as such, it’s the
relationships between these two and the proportions that are pivotal.10
One of the points that initially seems most contradictory is that in order for a listener
to have a rich, subjective, differentiated experience, a composer of experimental
music often feels a necessity to remove her own subjectivity—tastes, associations,
discernment, emotions—as much as possible from the process of making the work.
David Dunn writes of experimental music as a paradigm that “bifurcated away from
the predominantly European 19th-century belief that music must express ‘self ’ and
‘emotion,’” and instead employs “active creative strategies that emphasize the materiality
of sound, listening, environment, perception, and socio-political engagement.”11
Robert Ashley, who rejected the term experimental music despite his association
with its broader meaning, spoke of this music as “sound-as-more-important-(for the
moment)-than-what-the-composer-does-with-the-sound.”12 The listener’s focus is
directed toward the behavior of sound itself under the given circumstances, rather
than the decisions or expressivity of the composer.
Research
A composer of experimental work will often design a process or an interaction through
which a particular question can be, if not answered, at least more directly considered.
There is no need for this process to be thrown away each time a new piece or series
is begun. Larry Austin writes, “I still have the attitude of experiment. In the piece I’m
doing, I am excited to be discovering new possibilities, even with techniques I’ve used
extensively.”13 James Tenney took a related approach. In the useful “Five Maps of the
Experimental World” essay, Bob Gilmore summarized this point of view:
Tenney believed that “experimental” in music should mean more or less what it
does in the sciences. The composer would write a piece of music, try certain things
4 Experimental Music Since 1970
out, and judge if they worked, didn’t work, or only partly worked. Then in the next
piece, that experiment could be followed up: like a scientist, one could go further
down the same line. “I guess all of my music can really be called experimental,”
he told an interviewer, “but in a sense different from how John Cage uses the
word, and a bit different from how it’s been used to describe the experimental
tradition . . . It’s more literally an experiment, like a scientific experiment. And in
science, in scientific work, one experiment always does lead to another one. . . .
There is no such thing as post-experimental. . . . My sense of ‘experimental’ is
just ongoing research”14
Experience
I’ll set up the usage of this term with a few moments out of my own experience. The
sound works that first drew me to experimental music are more grounded in actual
lived experience than in musical tradition. The composer (and by natural extension the
performer and listener) is drawing from the well of what they know and live outside of
music. The things that happen in the cracks, in the transitions we barely notice as we
go about our business, are elevated to a position of attention.
I had very little exposure to experimental music through my undergraduate years
as a composer. When I arrived at graduate school, like many young composers, I was
facing some fundamental questions about the kind of music I wanted to write. At the
intermission of a concert that fall I wrote a note to myself, saying that the piece was
beautiful and well crafted, but it was about a world that didn’t exist. Something became
clear to me at that point in time: I wanted to write nonfictional music. But what did
that mean?
It wasn’t until I engaged with two particular pieces several years later that I started
to glimpse an answer. The first of these was Alvin Lucier’s In Memoriam Jon Higgins
(1985). Not knowing what the instrumentation was (in fact it was a single clarinet
and a sine tone), I heard an unbelievably complex interaction looping around the
classroom. The second piece was a live performance of Michael Pisaro’s rapport abstrait
(2003–04). The neighborhood, a persistently barking dog, and the traffic going by were
every bit as much of a presence as the soft, occasional notes and chords played by the
two guitarists. An idea gradually but powerfully took hold of me that here I had finally
found my nonfictional music. This is music that is about the time and place in which
it occurs. It is transparent to it, responsive to it, and frames it in a way that makes the
familiar seem very special.
When experimental music is effectively made and presented, it speaks to our
interaction with the world. It goes from the center—what we already know—to the
margin—what we don’t know—and back again, so that new realities are present
along with, or sometimes even in place of, our previous perceptions of our own lives.
This work does not suggest “other” worlds, but instead strengthens relations with
this world.
For me, the experiential nature of this music gives structural integrity to all of
the other arcs. A music that is open to experience is contingent, or indeterminate.
Defining Features of Experimental Music 5
Ongoing research is carried out within the realm of realities external to the subjectivity
of the composer. If the maker of the work resists expressing her own subjectivity, the
piece has greater potential to resonate with the unique experience of each listener.
By touching on the life of the listener as it extends beyond the scope of the concert hall
or living room, such a work brings about lasting change. This approach to sound has
the potential to speak, both directly and by analogy, to life as it is lived.
Here are some examples of how the test case of 4’33” traces these arcs:
Indeterminacy: The piece is overtly indeterminate, in that only unintentional sounds
are heard. Cage has not determined what actual sounds will occur.
Change: The inversion of the performance experience, placing attention on the
entire body of the concert hall rather than simply on the stage or the performer, is
transformative.
Experience: The focus is ontological, on being in that collective space and what
transpires in the place and time of the performance, and in the minds of those who
attend.
Non-Subjectivity: Cage does not instruct the performer or the audience on how to
approach this event. In the absence of such direction, one’s own thoughts and
perceptions become primary.
Research: No one knows what will happen. There is a simple question: What sounds
will occur? That question is answered uniquely in each performance.
Various equations could be proposed out of these component arcs to emulate my
image of experimental music’s nature and potential:
research + indeterminacy + change = experience
research + indeterminacy + experience = change
experience + change = indeterminacy
research + non-subjectivity = indeterminacy
non-subjectivity + change = research
None of these formulations seems more or less true than the others, but taken together,
they begin to reveal a field in a way that is neither reductive nor unspecific. I believe
there have been negative consequences to the vagueness of this field that are worth
briefly outlining.
Difficulties of definition
The ambiguity of the words “experimental” and “music” tend to complicate attempts to
define the broader term. “Experimental” implies a specific type of scientific procedure,
and while this is relevant in some aspects of this work, it doesn’t fully fit. Robert Ashley
wrote, “Composition is anything but experimental. It is the epitome of expertise. It
may be aleatoric or purposefully unpredictable in its specific sounds, or purposefully
exploratory of the sounds. But experimental is the wrong word.”15 Harry Partch
applauded a statement by “some famous painter” who attempted to distance himself
from the term by saying, “You never see my experiments.”16
6 Experimental Music Since 1970
Hundreds of bands are tagged as experimental, implying that they are edgy,
alternative, or pushing boundaries. While these attributes are often shared with the
work under consideration, they don’t constitute a meaningful definition. As a result
this term seems to apply to a sprawling galaxy of unrelated activities. There is no rule
against the direct equation of alternative, electronic, or just plain weird music with
the term experimental, but there is a genuine risk that by having so many different
applications, the term will lose any meaning at all.
In a similarly misleading way, “music” usually references a rich set of historical
traditions that only partially relate to this subject.
As a unified phrase, the term stands for a constellation of practices that deal in sound
and fact and contingency. But because such concerns are insufficiently articulated to
“outsider” audiences, experimental music is sometimes viewed as a tiny field limited
to specialists.
People’s relationship to experimental music seems to fall into one of several
categories:
●● Total lack of information. This must be, by far, the largest category.
●● Dismissiveness. Experimental work is valued or devalued according to its novelty.
●● A general cultural awareness of movements, such as New York School, Fluxus,
Wandelweiser.
●● Some interest. This usually comes from musicians or other listeners who find
certain ideas to be useful and some of the work to be inviting. There are many
musicians who are glad to learn about it and perhaps incorporate some aspects of
it into their practices.
●● Engagement. Those who have found a home in this area of work and have
explored it to a significant degree.
Even for this last group, it is difficult to piece information together in a meaningful
way, let alone explain it to those with a friendly interest. There is rich documentation
of work by many composers and sound artists, but they tend to be associated more
through networks of people (who knows who) than through the concerns explored
in their work. Often the former leads to the latter, but not always, and because of the
informal way that information travels in this field, the associations based on networks
have been far more prevalent. My own view of experimental music has grown
through what seems like a series of chance encounters, casual mentions, and a gradual
connecting of the dots. For over ten years, I have been trying to figure out what it is, if
it is, and who is engaged in it. It still feels like an underground activity, and often people
with directly related concerns have never heard of each other.
from a maker’s perspective. The most frequently quoted people are composers writing
about their own work, or sometimes about other people’s work. A survey from a
performative, historical, or theoretical standpoint could be a useful contribution.
Finally, I’ll offer two possible views of what this term, experimental music, represents
below. The first is a narrow field of activity that is only available to specialists.
As a tiny subset of musical activity, this field could represent a closing off, a type of
cultural enclave. But that is not how I have seen it in operation. The second view is an
opening between music and the broader field of sound.
1.2 Indeterminacy
Indeterminacy is not a word that is typically thrown around in other contexts. Some of
the more relevant dictionary definitions include “not precisely fixed,” “not settled,” “not
fixed beforehand: not known in advance,” “not leading to a definite end or result.” In
horticulture, indeterminate growth is “not limited by development of a terminal flower
bud or other reproductive structure and so continues to elongate indefinitely.”20 Oddly
enough, the horticultural definition may provide the most useful analogy. A plant is
affected by soil, water, temperature, and light, and can live or die, wither or prosper
according to these specific conditions. A piece of music is subject to the technique
of the performer(s), their work with the piece, the properties of the instrument, the
Defining Features of Experimental Music 9
performance space, the attentiveness of the audience, and more. All of these factors
influence the outcome, regardless of the style of the music.
All that is still true of indeterminate works, but what sets them apart is the openness
of the end result. To continue the horticultural analogy, a given determinate variety
of a tomato plant can be planted in a pot and will grow to a certain dimension if it
thrives. There may be more or fewer tomatoes depending on the growing conditions,
but the approximate height, width, and yield can be gaged over a few growth cycles.
An indeterminate variety needs the space of the outdoors, a big plot of soil, and lots
of staking for its continual spreading. It will land on any post, fence, or plant in sight,
and its growth habit will be shaped by whatever it rubs against until it is killed off by
the frost.
In discussing indeterminate music, John Cage says, “A recording of such a work has
no more value than a postcard; it provides a knowledge of something that happened,
whereas the action was a non-knowledge of something that had not yet happened.”21 Just
as a gardener can’t really know what that tomato plant will do in outdoor conditions, an
indeterminate piece has factors that cannot be known before a performance. Cage lists
examples of the use of indeterminacy in past and then-current repertoire, including
Bach, Stockhausen, Brown, and Wolff, in his essay, “Indeterminacy.”22
The Swiss composer Manfred Werder writes about indeterminacy as “intrinsic
unavailability . . . of world.” At the time of the creation of a score, the condition of the
world—or the condition of the exact segment of the world at the exact time at which
the score will be actualized—is not yet present. Werder continues:
But Indeterminacy has become an artistic strategy, and the resultant practice of
producing musical situations (encounters referring rather to sound) reflects these
efforts of the potentiality of the score, though in a rather chaotic and unpredict-
able way.
What is this artistic strategy? It could be simply said that some composers prefer to
know little about the possible outcomes of their work (relative to those who develop
a more complete description in the score). They may also be interested in embedding
their work with the potential of multiple outcomes. Werder closes his statement on
indeterminacy with a poem of sorts that captures something essential about this type
of exploration.
Release of control
Cage uses indeterminate timespans in the latitude given to musicians in the flexible
time brackets of the Number Pieces series. In a number of examples from Two (1987),
10 Experimental Music Since 1970
the flutist can begin at any point within a span of forty-five seconds, and end the note
within a different forty-five-second span that overlaps with the first. It is therefore
possible either to play nothing or to play for well over a minute.24 The structure is
parallel to that in the dozens of other pieces in the series, ranging from solo works to
orchestral versions. Music For (1984–87) also uses flexible time brackets, and the quiet,
sustained tones in the pieces can be repeated any number of times.25
Christian Wolff has developed an approach to indeterminacy that he describes as
primarily taking two forms:
(1) allowing performers space and freedom in the use of notated material and, at
the same time, (2) interdependence among performers, requiring them to play in
some specific way specifically because someone else has, unpredictably, played in
some specific way.26
The second of these ways is discussed specifically in Chapter 5, and is closely linked to
the first. Wolff ’s work has much to do with sharing agency with the people enacting the
work. As they operate in a non-hierarchical, responsive way, this spreading of agency
becomes interaction. A loss of composer control becomes collective decision-making.
The cellist and composer Stefan Thut’s scores tend to give such agency to the
performers without setting up a framework for deliberate interaction. In many,
1-4 (2009), each player reads from the same page and chooses one of four available
combinations of a noise and a note and plays it “within quite some time.”27 The
performers’ decisions are all made separately but emerge in sound as a collective result,
an “outcome of multiple readings.”28 Thut’s scores deal with the interplay of freedom
and structure in ways that seem so simple as to barely contain any content, and yet
they are carefully tuned to the performative situation. The performances offer glimpses
not only of the actual choices that were made but also of numerous other choices that
could have been made.
Machine behaviors
As Cage and Wolff have ceded aspects of control to performers, others have searched
for aspects of machine behavior that will yield unexpected results. Maria Chavez—
a turntablist, DJ, and sound artist from Peru—writes that she sees herself as “an
instigator of chance” in her turntable practice, making a “collapsible structure” in
sound and rebuilding it after its collapse. The turntables yield unstable sounds, and
their components—especially the needle—offer fragility and sensitivity that are
integral to her practice.29 As she explains, she relies on these fragilities and accidents:
Objects deteriorate and as a result, new sound opportunities exist. And the rest
writes itself. . . .
By experiencing chance situations during performance, this created the basis
of developing my vocabulary with the turntable. The more that “went wrong” the
more I learned about new sound possibilities, i.e. when a needle broke a certain
Defining Features of Experimental Music 11
way it began making interesting sounds on different records. The more they
broke, the more sounds began to emerge that wouldn’t have without accidents and
damage. And now since I understand where all of those sounds came from and
how, I can make them on my own whenever I sense that it is the right moment for
that specific sound. Accidents, chance, coincidences, to me, are the root of new
beginnings in anything, in this case it was with the turntable.30
After integrating these techniques into her practice, she created a book illustrating
them called Of Technique: Chance Procedures on Turntable.31 The Hovercraft Technique
involves skimming the vinyl with the needle. In one application, the needle responds to
random points of the record. In another, the sounds of the record are barely caught.32
The Dragging Dagger involves scraping the needle across the record from outside to
inside and back, going against the grain (or the grooves) of the record. The deliberate
sounds imprinted on the vinyl are subverted into a different order, and the friction
is not gently responsive but abrasive.33 Chavez’s techniques play with and against the
material on the records. Sometimes she allows the original sounds of the record to
sound, but she is every bit as likely to disrupt it beyond recognition. It is a sounding
body, articulated as percussion.34
Chavez exploits the geographies of the record to purposes unintended by the
manufacturer. Christian Marclay also uses records toward indeterminate results, but
perhaps in part because of his background as a visual artist, much of his work occurs
as physical manipulation of the records in advance of performance. He affixes tape in
various shapes, scratches and buffs the records, and, in Recycled Records (1980–86),
slices them into pie slices or other geometric patterns, making a new record out of
pieces of separate LPs.35 There is a crack apparent in the sound as it transitions from
part of one record to the next.
In Cracked Media: The Sound of Malfunction, Caleb Kelly defines the crack as
“a point of rupture or a place of chance occurrence, where unique events take place that
are ripe for exploitation toward new creative possibilities.”36 Yasunao Tone, an original
member of the Fluxus group, began damaging CDs in 1984 to the point that the CD
player emitted sounds of errors in playback, where “the level of the error is so great
that the error-correction software built in to the digital system is not able to cope.”37
He describes his earliest experiments:
Tone found that the CD would yield different results every time. The CD player and its
sound emission becomes the site of indeterminacy, faced with such a damaged piece
12 Experimental Music Since 1970
of media. The stutterings and haltings of the player are unpredictable from one playing
to the next.39
Where Chavez, Marclay, and Tone have worked on the media devices themselves,
Nicolas Collins goes deeper into the mechanism, into the control chip of the CD player,
and removes the mute pin. His description of the results makes this normally reliable
machine seem like a lively character in a comedy.
With this pin removed, the CD player never shuts up, and one can hear the sound
as the laser “scratches” (a magnificent, cartoonish ripping noise) or “pauses” (fast
looping rhythms, possessed of a peculiar stutter and swing).
In working with an engineer he was pleased to find even worse “aberrations of digital
misbehavior.”40
Imitating nature
The indeterminacies of nature are inexhaustible in their potential for inspiration,
study, and emulation. David Tudor and David Dunn have both used technology to
replicate the complexity of nature, setting up situations that quickly spiral out of con-
trol. The differentiation from the machine experiments just discussed might at first
seem subtle, but it is fundamental. In the earlier examples, the machine itself or its
associated media is the site of investigation. For Tudor and Dunn, technologies are
built as simulations of chaotic systems. These technologies in turn develop their own
uncontrollable systems.
One of David Tudor’s key interests was transferring agency from himself as creator
to the sounding materials. He clarifies this point of view in a quote about Alvin
Lucier’s work:
My experience with Alvin is that he approaches things more like a romantic, so that
he’s an appreciator of these phenomena, and he appreciates their specific beauty.
Then, when he goes to compose the work, he wants to display those characteristics,
which seem beautiful to him. Whereas, in my case, I want to show it as something
in nature. You know, I don’t want to display it, I want it to display itself, you see.41
When he was asked why he wanted to work in nature, he responded, “It’s a part of my
being. It’s a question I can’t answer because I can’t get away from it.”42
Untitled (1972) uses “sixty components with their associated possibilities,” and
requires multiple phases of realization. The recording reveals a sort of hyperdimensional
counterpoint and interplay of behaviors and has an astonishing variety of forces and
energies. Tudor continues to use the language of nature to describe it, saying it was “one of
the high points in my electronic music career. . . . Even for me it was unimaginably wild.”43
Matt Rogalsky differentiates Tudor’s conception of chance from Cage’s. “The
composer is not standing back to appreciate the mountain; he is the mountain, or at least
is on the mountain, ready to explore all its aspects.”44 What is the mountain? Abstractly,
Defining Features of Experimental Music 13
This language echoes Rogalsky’s image of Tudor’s mountain and Tudor’s own char-
acterization of his precarious relationship to the output of the machinery he sets in
motion. Neither Dunn nor Tudor has willed their circuits or systems to do any par-
ticular thing. They have created Frankensteins that will work according to their own
agency. The systems contain incomprehensible possibilities of operation, especially in
the combinations that have been set up for them.
Pleroma 1 sets up “cross-coupled chaotic states” along the nonlinear feedback
path of three oscillators. “These sounds excite me,” writes Dunn, “because they are
so physically reminiscent of the global sound behaviors that emerge from natural
habitats such as swamps, forests and oceans.”47 Nature is not captured here, as it could
be through a field recording, but modeled. The behaviors are explored through the
modelings of these circuits and trajectories. Dunn also describes Wildflowers (1994) as
being inspired by “non-simulated sources of ‘chaos.’”48
Dunn refers to several of his pieces as sonifications of the “global behavior of
hyper-chaotic analog circuits modeled in the digital domain.”49 The Theater of Pattern
Formation (2002–05) is a live electronic performance that extends his studies of the
sound patterns formed in nature.50 This piece was made in collaboration with James
P. Crutchfield, a physicist who deals with themes of chaos and pattern formation.51
Together, they have worked to understand and model these patterns and to convey
them as sonic behaviors.
The attractors in Lorenz (2005) are counterbalanced, and behave autonomously.52
Three Dynamical Systems (1999) is also set up to behave without intervention. “All
other events were emergent properties of the system.”53 These emergent properties—
the patterns and behaviors that arise from a given setup—are of central interest to
Dunn. Where Tudor sets up systems remarkable for their complexity, Dunn generates
interactions based, in various degrees of rigidity, on scientific principles of chaos. Both
have demonstrated their interest in setting something in motion and letting it loose,
rather than in controlling it.
Feedback loops, where output becomes input becomes output, etc., are pervasive
natural phenomena, and are common in both Tudor’s and Dunn’s explorations.
They have also become increasingly popular among younger composers. Entire
trajectories are determined by the specific behaviors of sounds in the moment. The
Chinese improviser Yan Jun uses feedback in improvisation, subtly altering the sound
14 Experimental Music Since 1970
through body movement, and also incorporating the sounds of the audience. His Noise
Hypnotizing (Micro Feedback) project is transmitted to listeners through headphones,
again incorporating the sounds of the audience, the space, and his own breath.54 Scott
Cazan’s Network Injection (2011) begins with a network of “machines.”
The machines listen to both themselves and the others, and “the source of any one
interaction cannot be determined.” Adam Basanta’s A Room Listening to Itself (2015)
is a sound installation that includes software controlling a feedback network involving
microphones, speakers, and gallery visitors. Similar to Cazan’s piece, “The system
reaches an equilibrium in which notions of cause and effect are rendered meaningless.”56
Despite the common reference point of feedback loops, the sounds produced by these
artists could hardly be more different.
The singers worked with Gaburo refining the performance, discovering new
areas of microscopic concern, until they felt that they’d explored as much as they
could, resulting in this most “electronic”-sounding piece, which is in fact simply a
recording of three people singing!61
harmonics, as “lower partials can often require great subtlety of bowing to reveal.”) The
pitches are not defined on this staff, but it is a suggestion of direction. The accumulation
of all of these instabilities across the instruments compounds the variation in results
from one performance to another.64
Non-selectiveness
Parameters or processes that are determined will inevitably offset the indeterminate
aspects of a composed work. But if a composer has committed to indeterminacy in
any particular aspect, within those coordinates it should be immune to subsequent
adjustment or decisions. Non-selectiveness is a trait that can be located at the
intersection of indeterminacy and non-subjectivity.
Michael Pisaro is an American composer who is a member of the international
collective of composers known as Wandelweiser. He has an active and wide-ranging
interest in the various forms experimental music can assume. His harmony series
(2004–06) has that name precisely because the harmonies are open. The typical pitch
instruction in the thirty-four-piece set is some variant of “any pitch, any tuning of that
pitch.” Durations of tones are long and are determined not by counting beats or seconds,
but by the task of fitting a certain number of tones into a duration. The indeterminacy
of the harmony is established in nearly every piece as two or more players each choose
their own pitches. “The rain of alphabets” calls for fourteen players, and an increasing
number play in each section, producing unique yet still undefined tones. The character
of the harmony is not prescribed, but the density is clear. The only piece which has only
one player is “Only.” The score reads:
The nature of the space and the listening attitude ensures that there will be other tones
present to form a harmony. In an outdoor space sound is not isolated, and a resonant
space will pick up the other tones that are present, as well as the “long, quiet tone.”
This piece, which was realized by twenty-one musicians in a 2009 project curated by
Defining Features of Experimental Music 17
Jason Brogan, extends the work from a performative act to one that can be solitary
and contemplative. Along with his own realization, Pisaro contributed this note to
the project:
Each of the other pieces in the series tries to understand harmony as the sum
of potential relationships between (human) performers. Consequently in these
works, the actual harmonic relations are not prescribed, just the structure for
these relationships. “Only” attempts to reframe this question in a different context.
Here one is asked . . . to listen to an environment for a long time, occasionally
responding (by making a long tone). In performing the piece, I encounter the
following questions: “What, in the sum of things occurring now, do I hear, and
how do these things harmonize themselves? How can I express my relation to this
harmony as a tone? What effect does this have on my continued listening? How
will I spend my time? Do I experience the void or just imagine it?”65
The realizations take place in both indoor and outdoor environments. The documen-
tation includes videos, recordings, photos, locations, drawings, temperature read-
ings, descriptions, stories, and reflections. The decisions and results of execution vary
widely, and they are all faithful to the score.66
The rehearsal process tests this value of faithfulness to a score. Pisaro says this of
Christian Wolff:
Over the years of watching him interact with people, I’ve really come [to] appreciate
how Christian usually steps back from offering his idea of how something should
be done or how it should sound. It’s not that he doesn’t have preferences, but
even those are overruled by his commitment to the score itself as a process of
discovery—for the person and for the collective. I think he knows that as soon as
he starts discussing how he thinks something should be done, people will defer,
sooner or later, to his judgement. But that runs the risk of negating the whole
reason he wrote this score and so many others. I have tremendous admiration for
his discipline.67
Alvin Lucier has stronger words on this subject, making it clear that the discipline of a
composer with these interests is not limited to restraint in the rehearsal situation but
extends to the treatment of a score.
Once the score is fixed you don’t alter it. Cage would never throw out something
he didn’t like on the basis of taste. Other composers have worked this way. They’ve
used chance procedures to make material that they would otherwise not make;
then they choose what they like and make the piece the way they would make
it anyway. That’s a half-baked way of working, don’t you think? Cage doesn’t use
chance procedures to get interesting material that he may or may not choose to
like or dislike; he simply accepts it all. Once he sets up his chance procedures, he
follows them to the nth degree.
18 Experimental Music Since 1970
The easy interactions between composers and performers in this field can challenge
this discipline. When there are fewer social barriers, it is easy to make informal
changes to a score. This happens often with any new work, but the curiosity to see what
the musicians have made within a piece’s original parameters is equally motivating.
Composers who work in this way often enjoy the unexpected outcomes of their pieces.
. . . Unpredictable content
Fixed to a time and a place
. . . Allows vulgar materials to be incorporated into the performance
Difficult to determine whether it elevates, degenerates or celebrates the sources of
the materials
Additional multiplicity
Creativity at the point of juxtaposition
Integration of another media
. . . Reproduces certain aspects of daily life
. . . Has its own unique texture
A question of reality and a question of art: the artistic fact
. . . Replaces the exterior contribution of the composer in some aspects.
Environment and noise69
Christian Wolff describes Rowe’s use of the radio as part of “an invented instrument . . .
working as one entity, organic as well as agglomerated . . . an intricate relay of feed-
backs.” Rowe’s simultaneous control of the radio, guitar, and various objects is drasti-
cally and deliberately limited. Wolff continues that the radio “flickers between sound
as sound and sound as representation of meaning, with a general effect, at once dis-
turbing and energizing, of chunks of current (England, 1989) history caught up in a
musical process.”70 For Rowe, letting this other, real-time media in creates a dynamic
situation, a means of engagement that ensures that there will be significant unknowns
in the performance.
Like that infiltration of the radio into the concert environment, the British composer
Tim Parkinson’s music mirrors the juxtapositions of everyday life. People and objects,
sounds and images are thrown together without having any existing relationship to
Defining Features of Experimental Music 19
I like clear and direct thoughts or images, presented individually, one after
another, each one a self-contained centre. I like the music to move and change by
itself, like the weather. I like the poetry of the limitless everyday, and the quality of
“anything,” contained within a frame of time.71
Parkinson’s music makes no attempt to justify itself, and is open to all sorts of unrefined
elements. In writing about some of his musical interests, he says, “Life is exploration
and discovery. I’m alive now and the world is huge.”72 This statement applies equally
well to his compositional process.
Some days more than others it excites me very much how the world is a collage
or composite. When I see very clearly the separateness of each and every thing.
Just glancing at things in my room now I can see a piano, five rocks from a beach,
a carpet, a box, a teaspoon, a calculator. . . . What actually have they all got to do
with each other?73
For Parkinson, juxtaposition is perhaps the most compelling and pervasive type
of realism. Everything is thrown together to transpire as it will. His double quartet
(2004–05) sets a quartet for strings alongside a quartet for trombones, to be played
simultaneously. There are eleven movements in each piece, but the breaks between
them do not coincide, so there are frequent moments where one or the other
quartet will play alone. When the two parts do sound as if they belong together,
there is satisfaction in knowing that this cohesion is found or imagined, rather than
constructed. The trombones are instructed in some movements, “At all times make a
conscious attempt not to coordinate with any other player.”74 It feels very true to life,
where “the separateness of each thing is forgotten because one’s brain orders it all into
degrees of importance, into categories, seeks patterns, reasons and so forth.”75
The collage is the form that rings truest to Parkinson’s musical values. In no piece to
date is this form realized so fully as in his opera, Time With People (2013). The stage is
filled with objects of all kinds:
A wide variety of materials, e.g. wood, metal, plastic. Variety of sizes, e.g. from
pencils to dustbins. Variety of textures, e.g. solid, hollow, plastic bags, polystyrene,
etc (e.g. any food or product packaging, plastic bottles, cardboard boxes, plastic/
paper bags, newspapers, toys (balls, old plastic dolls, light things, etc), twigs,
leaves, branches, kitchenware, plastic household or other domestic items, glass
bottles, shoes, and similar.)76
“Opus 1” (the first section of the opera) is a rude interview format. Two people
are onstage, each with a shuffled deck of question cards. Each person responds
20 Experimental Music Since 1970
autobiographically until a beep interrupts his or her answer and Rossini plays in its
place. At the sound of another beep, the respondent starts to answer a new question
until another interrupting beep, and then stays silent until a third beep signals
them to answer a third question. They go on in this way as the “chorus” starts in on
“Opus 2.” Parkinson has created a multidimensional counterpoint that is basically
nonmusical. Each of the interviewees at the opening is speaking without reference to
the other, much like a scene Parkinson has recalled in relation to his musical practice:
“I remember being captivated by watching two people in back-to-back adjoining phone
boxes standing next to each other having separate conversations.”77 These snippets
of dialogue are also juxtaposed in time with the silences and the Rossini clips. That
whole assemblage is lumped into a new ensemble with the roughly percussive sounds
of people walking slowly back and forth across the object-filled stage at individually
calculated paces through masses of objects. Walking, speech, clapping, humming, and
musical recordings all become parts of the sound assemblage.
“Opus 4” consists of three layers, the first of which involves “Multiple Individual
Activities to be performed simultaneously.” These activities generally involve either
futile acts (“Try to suspend a piece of newspaper in the air with an electric fan.
(It will continually fall, but believe that it is possible . . .)”) or making more of a mess
than is already onstage: (“Empty bag of leaves/rice/beans/pasta on the floor/over other
objects/people slowly/quickly.”) These individual actions are interrupted by alarms
that signal group actions.
In “Opus 5,” the materials of the collage are completely different, with one performer
playing a drum set (“Medium tempo groove. (c.80bpm) Background. Nothing too
interesting”) and others listening to separate tracks on headphones and saying or
singing back some of what they hear. Some of the chorus breaks off and begins to
dance in time with the drums. In the Huddersfield premiere performance, the Edges
Ensemble developed a dance that has an 80s flair, complete with aerobic moves and
jazz hands. The drummer is still playing his set, other chorus members are singing at
the back of the stage, and two guitarists are picking out tunes. The lack of coordination
between most of these activities, the simplicity of the musical material, and the eerie
forward stares of the dancers, combined with the masses of crumpled objects on the
stage, suggest a postapocalyptic wasteland. By setting such commonplace activity in
the foreground and basking in its cacophony, Parkinson seems to have achieved one of
his goals as a composer:
I suppose ultimately I’m thinking of a situation which, rather than being “a piece
of music” or “work of art,” is more like some kind of natural experience, which for
me is my preferred experience above all, which is full of this actuality, but which
mostly is elusive because one is often too preoccupied and distracted with one’s
thoughts all the time.78
The score of Time With People suggests normal activities, brings them to the foreground,
and collapses them on top of each other, until normalcy becomes subsumed in
strangeness. By letting everything in—all the mess and chaos and individual agency
Defining Features of Experimental Music 21
of real life—the door is opened in the other direction too, and a startling new image of
ordinary life experience comes into view.79
1.3 Silence
As influential as John Cage has been, 4’33” and his famous visit to the anechoic
chamber only provide the barest hints of the vast range of approaches to silence that
have unfolded in recent decades.
Suzuki explained: if somebody felt the desire to walk over Pyramid, they should
be allowed to do so. Some people, he said, would take off their shoes and step
carefully, and these people would hear the faint, sighing, friction sound of paper
on paper. Others, particularly small children, would be more uninhibited, or less
sensitive, and so the piece would be destroyed during the course of the exhibition,
in the way that pyramids gradually erode and empty over centuries, either from
weathering, plunder by robbers, or excavation by scholars. To discover the
meaning of Pyramid, its sound and process, required the courage or insensitivity
to walk through, to go beyond ways of seeing in order to be a part of the process
of making and unmaking, to hear sound within the apparent silence of the piece.82
To hear this sound piece is to help to bring about its destruction. The type of motion
and the care of the listener are directly reflected in the sounds produced. At the center
of the pyramid, the ear sits as a simple suggestion to listen.83
Thresholds of perception
A threshold is primarily defined as “the sill of a doorway,” and secondarily as “the
entrance to a house or building.” Further abstracted, it is “any place or point of entering
or beginning.” Finally, it is associated with the limen, a term from psychology and
physiology for “the point at which a stimulus is of sufficient intensity to begin to
produce an effect.”84 A number of experimental works operate at the threshold between
audibility and inaudibility, which has as much to do with perception and cognition as
it does with volume.
In Listening for Bats (2002), Sam Ashley works with what he calls an “experimental
trance-mysticism”85 by creating “an extremely soft synthetic sonic environment.”
Ashley writes, “In my experience an extremely soft real sound and an imaginary
version of that sound can occasionally be so identical that it is not possible to tell them
apart.” Listeners can imagine that they are hearing the installation when in fact nothing
is playing. “It is a musical experiment,” he writes, “in the experience of trance.”86
This work invites the listener to question the relationship between hearing and
listening. If we listen hard enough, can we hear things that are not there? If a sound is
heard without having been produced, was the intended silence an actual silence? These
Defining Features of Experimental Music 23
questions dance around the edge of audibility, playing on either side of it and teasing
apart the sensory activity of hearing and the cognitive activity of listening. Burkhard
Schlothauer writes of his work for piano, ab tasten (1995) that a precise moment of
decay cannot be determined: “I noticed, that at some point it is not longer possible to
assess whether the strings are still vibrating audibly, or whether it is only the image of
the sound which is still in the mind.”87
There are countless ways of playing with audibility, and countless reactions brought
about by these methods. The harpist and improviser Rhodri Davies recalls a 1998 tour
with the Phil Durrant Quartet when they made the conscious, collective choice to
play most quietly in the noisiest venues. “In fact we found that playing quieter has the
potential to draw the listener in.” Davies continues:
Instead of the musician projecting the sound towards the audience, the audience
would move towards the player. The possibility for a wider range of quieter
dynamics opened up, from silence to the barely perceptible and onwards. We
took this a step further at the Fundbureau in Hamburg, where the trains passing
over the venue were so loud that we decided to play only when we heard a train
approach and stop playing when the train disappeared.88
It is not always a literal question of whether a performed sound can be heard. In the
French composer and improviser Bruno Duplant’s a field, next to nothing (2014), there is
a clearly audible floor of sound, but the subtlety lies in the minimal variations within each
part. Tones are minutely inflected on the instruments over a vast twenty-five minutes,
inviting the listener to register slight changes. “My idea,” he writes, “was to try to express
what could exist, or what can be found ‘next to nothing.’”89 Duplant is not dealing with
silence, per se, but with instabilities and changes at the threshold of audibility.
Alvin Lucier, who is preoccupied with such small shifts in his own compositional
work, describes his experience of James Tenney’s KOAN for String Quartet (1984):
“I could hear the small things that were happening in the music. Once you accepted the
fact that it wasn’t going to change, and there was no story, no climax, you began to hear
the acoustical phenomena.”90 Tenney based this piece on another Koan, written in 1971
for solo violin “to explore the perceptual effects of an absolutely linear and predictable
formal process.” The entire piece progresses upward through small intervals. The string
quartet version gives this progression a context, revealing the harmonic consequences
of these small shifts.91
People who discuss a liminal quality in music often refer to a refocusing of attention.
Many such examples are to be found in the comments on this subject compiled by
Catherine Lamb and Bryan Eubanks.92 In both her electroacoustic and instrumental
work, Éliane Radigue uses sustained tones over significant durations to help bring out
these shifts. Her thought is consonant with Lucier’s when she says:
I would say that the common ear would say “but it’s nothing,” these sustained
tones, but it’s not true at all, through these sustained tones, so many things are so
rich, the vocabulary is so rich.
24 Experimental Music Since 1970
She gives an example of how these sounds need to be approached and registered, and
how they might otherwise be obscured.
If something just pump! into your ear, it takes time after, just to listen. The best
example is when (les cloches) bells, are, say, in the mountains—after they stop, you
can hear all the shimmering aspects of all the partials, overtones, harmonics, and
all that . . . but as long as you have the bong! in the ear, you can’t hear all of that.93
In both her electronic works of previous decades and the recent acoustic projects,
Radigue gives the listener the necessary durations—temporal space—to engage with
these subtly developing sounds.94
Jakob Ullmann’s music is known for its extreme quietude. He has articulated what
the two sides of the threshold are in his compositional concerns, “between listening
to what we want to hear and what we must hear,” and further explains that in order to
spend time at this threshold, “we have to first push what we must hear to the outside
of our perception.”95 On listening to A catalogue of sounds (1995–), one hears shadings,
gradations, instabilities. Event and form take place at the most microscopic of levels.
Shapes are perpetually being drawn in sound. No moment is static, and yet everything
happens well under a decibel level that is considered commercially acceptable. The
liner notes contain the instruction: “To achieve the original sound quality of this live
recording it is suggested to listen to this CD at the lowest possible volume.” Another
recording asks that the volume be adjusted “so as to just barely mask the ambient
sounds in the room.”96 This is music of gradations, of “small irritations” and of tiny
but significant formations—the most beautiful anthills you have ever heard. “That the
music of the ‘catalogue’ is nearly always played very softly,” Albert Breier writes, “leads
to the ear noticing the smallest differentiations.”97
In writing about a composition seminar with the theme of quiet music, Ullmann’s
fellow jury member Christian Wolff wrote:
To be with this music is to find a kind of refuge from the violence of the times. But
then the real strength of quiet music would be to make that refuge a waystation
(there are no refuges): to begin to undo and unmask that violence.98
Bernhard Günter has made extremely quiet electronic music that operates as just such
a waystation. He outlines his project as being one of creating a space of resistance
toward aggressive sound.
“Whiteout,” one of the four tracks on un peu de neige salie (1993), causes an attentive
listener to perpetually question whether sound is present or absent, when it entered,
when it exits: the location of those thresholds. It is often unclear whether the sounds
heard take place in one’s own environment or on the recording. This is another
threshold, between the listener’s environment and the recording. Some sounds are
more natural or ambient sounding than others. Of the hums, pops, clicks, and rumbles,
one texture just barely cuts in on another. Small sounds seem to resonate tremendously.
They are minimal in terms of volume but once they grab attention, they hold it in a
way far more reminiscent of natural processes than of musical forms. The lack of any
divisions by pulse or beat increases this sense of naturalness and aligns with Günter’s
larger purpose:
I think music should be like a tree . . . standing there without wanting to tell you
something, it has developed out of its own laws to a complex structure influenced
by complex causality. It exists. Yet, when one looks at it and gets involved in its
manifold forms, the sound that it makes with the wind, etc., one may experience
a lot of feelings, thoughts, etc., finally getting to an intuitive perception of its
existence. . . .100
The fact of the matter is that there are actually long passages of silence, which
I try to make active parts of the piece, not just some sort of absence of sound. . . .
very often they are intended to function as a kind of projection surface for the
listener’s recollections of what he has heard so far, and his extrapolations as to
what he will hear as the piece goes on, or a quiet time for him to calm and focus
his concentration. I believe that silence is an integral part of music, just as shadow
is necessary to perceive the quality of light.101
Joe Panzner poetically describes the work on this release as “an intuitive, organic
web of sound held together by long strands of silence.”102 The entrances and exits are
always surprising, always testing one’s grip on the work and demanding that it be tight.
In focusing in this way, as Panzner writes, “One gains not only an awareness of the
music, but a privileged awareness of the act of listening itself.”103
When I first listened through this piece, there were several moments when I thought
my computer had lost its charge and I had lost the track entirely. The final time this
occurred I was surprised to learn that the piece had reached its end far more quickly
than I could have anticipated. It is quietly subversive work, teaching the listener how
to turn every corner and look just far enough ahead and behind in what feels like an
entirely new aural and mental space.
26 Experimental Music Since 1970
Little to no input
A key question when considering silence in music is, who or what is it that is silent?
If sound is not produced in a direct way, what is the material of the piece? There are a
number of ways to consider the sound that is already present in a given situation.
When people are interviewed for an audio or video recording, it is common to
ask for thirty seconds or more of room tone. This uninterrupted sound of the space
is essential to capture for any overdubbing that might need to occur; any cut from
one environment to another would be obvious because of the sound of the room
itself. Among Steve Peters’ site-specific sound installations is a series of pieces called
Chamber Music, each of which is derived from a single recording of an empty space.
He filters the recording heavily to find the drones of the room’s resonant frequencies
as they develop in response to sound that leaks into the space. Each piece is then
presented in that same space.
One of these pieces, significantly called Two Ways of Listening to Nothing (2009), is
an installation of two separate interactions (by Peters and René Barge) with a single field
recording of a large elevator at the Bass Museum in Miami, played back simultaneously
in the elevator.104 In Filtered Light (2008), Peters extracted fourteen frequencies from
an hour-long recording of an unoccupied room at the UNM Art Museum. The
recording was divided into segments that were overlaid in a four-channel continuous
installation.105 Peters writes of this series that it has “as much to do with light as with
sound—the way natural light changes and moves through a space, the hue of the room
shifting subtly throughout the day.” Each piece in the series takes a slightly different
approach, but consistently derives all the material from the room tone itself.106
In contrast with Peters’ use of recordings of room tone, Agostino Di Scipio explores
his ongoing interest in the interaction with environment by live processing a single,
barely audible background. hörbare ökosysteme nr. 3a: studie über hintergrundgeräusche
(2002–05) amplifies and processes this noise live, “and attempts to make ‘something’
with it.” Because of the behavior of the process, the texture of the sound gets progressively
thicker, until it “builds up to a point of saturation . . . and is then restarted.” Each
process leaves “sonic waste” behind that affects the next iterations. This piece is just one
of many examples of Di Scipio’s work with background noise and room response.107
Toshimaru Nakamura’s processing also takes place live, and the site of the sounding
activity is tightly contained in his mixing board. The no-input mixing board he has
adopted as his primary instrument is essentially a feedback loop. The output of the
board itself is fed back into the board as input. The sound develops as an accumulation
of that input over time, filtered by Nakamura through the mixer.
This piece of sound technology hears itself; tones generated inside the mixer are
sustained and eventually generate new tones in the prolonged loop. Just as they
Defining Features of Experimental Music 27
accumulate, they are gradually removed, either through filtering or as they cease to
be an active presence to be fed back into the mixer. 2nd Rhythm Guitar (2003) reveals
a smooth accumulation and gradual reduction of these sounds. Discrete events are
audible in 3rd Rhythm Guitar (2003)—infinitesimal grains of sound juxtaposed with
larger cycles of activity that seem to rise and fall and eventually flatten, making room
for new textures and cycles and pulses. Crucially, none of these sounds are made by
him. They are filtered on the mixing board, and he selectively allows them to propagate
themselves further, but nothing is “played.” He describes his instrument simply as “an
audio mixer with some effect pedals to obtain feedback sounds.”109
In listening to Nakamura’s work, it becomes interesting to focus on the entrance
and emergence of sound. When a sound appears, does it take root? How does it
take shape? How does it relate to the other sounds? The subtleties of such a listening
experience become intensified in the longer tracks, such as the single-track release
maruto (2011). These issues of the development of sound take on additional weight
and interest because of Nakamura’s fully shared agency with his instrument.
The relationship between my instrument and myself is pretty much equal. I have
to resign a great deal of determinacy in the music to the system of the instrument,
be obedient to the result and accept it.110
He does not create the sounds, and by design he has limited means with which to control
them. Whatever sounds are produced are a result of the ongoing collaboration between
Nakamura and his technology. When asked about his as yet unrealizable musical
ambitions, Nakamura’s response seems to encapsulate his attitude toward making sound.
No, I do not have such things. I don’t jump from one place to anywhere too high.
I have been gradually changing, I keep going with tiny steps. Or perhaps I am
moving around but staying in a very small area while doing so.111
Another way of focusing on sound that has not been propagated but already exists is
through a pure and focused act of attention. In the case of David Dunn’s Purposeful
Listening in Complex States of Time (1997–98), there is no sound that is purposely
emitted from the person executing this score. The piece is an “organization of
perception rather than the manipulation of the material basis of sound” that asks for
active listening to the immediate outdoor surroundings. For Dunn, it is a personal
response to the dilemma posed by 4’33”.
Rather than following such a retreat, Dunn uses this model, as well as what he
recognizes as the demand of Feldman’s music to listen to oneself listening, as a basis
28 Experimental Music Since 1970
of his project. As Nakamura’s no-input mixing board listens to itself through the
looped circuitry, the soloist in Purposeful Listening focuses on her own perceptions
of real-time, imagined, and remembered sound events within the given situation. The
listening positions are sky, body, and ground level, and the proximity of sound to the
listener is at adjacent, moderate, or far distance. Additionally, every sound is placed
forward, back, left, right, or omni-directionally. But to say it is placed is simply to say
that attention is directed in those ways. Neither Dunn nor the listener is making the
sound. Every sound is related to the listener in position. She herself is the focal point
of the listening experience, but only as the point to which (not from which) all the
sounds are directed.
G. Douglas Barrett is pursuing a critical sound practice, both as a writer and as a
composer.113 A Few Silence (2007) is, like the previous examples, focused on unintended
environmental sounds. It takes place over ten minutes. For the first five minutes, “the
performers listen to the ‘silence’ of the performance space while creating written scores
based on their observations of sounds that occur within this time span.” In the next
five minutes each performer executes these sounds. The collective aspect of the work
makes the subjectivity of both hearing and listening apparent. What each performer
hears depends on position, focus, and hearing. How he or she performs depends on
instrument, facility, and imagination. The audience is also present, engaging in the
direct listening experience first, and then the filtered, transcribed mirror to it. They
can compare their own listening experience of “silence” with that of the performers.
Some sounds are heard by everyone, and others are heard by only one listener—such
as the scratching of a neighboring performer’s pen. The silence of the performance
situation becomes the not-silence of everything that has infiltrated that space and been
heard.114
I remember Leo [Smith] telling me that at the beginning they did these pieces in all
kinds of space, including traditional jazz clubs. They would do these silent pieces,
and at some point somebody just said, “Play something or get off the stage!”
Now that’s a voluntary silence that’s deafening, if you want to look at it that way.
The person just couldn’t take it.115
“emotional strain” and “spiritual concentration” that most tangibly finds its form in
“motionlessness . . . the silence of gesture.” For him, gesture is on an equal level with
sound, and an audible silence is also a visual silence.117 Sound, image, and the sense of
time are frozen.
In November Morphology II (1999) he describes the extreme tension to be
maintained by the cellist, as if the bow is stuck to the instrument, which she must
overcome “with extreme tension.”118 As Eugenie Brinkema writes, “It is the performer’s
body under the strain of this suspension that constitutes the expressive possibilities of
the piece.”119 The performer’s expression in the work is “utter inward concentration and
emotional stamina.”120
What is it that requires such concentration and endurance? Total stillness is not
associated with either a restful or a performative state, but with the absence or loss of
life. A rock expends no effort in being still, but a person does. It is an interruption of the
breathing mechanism, of any quest for comfort, and of muscular tendencies. Both total
stillness and total silence are antithetical to the human condition, and when viewed
closely, actually impossible; yet both are demanded in Karassikov’s work. The tension
of the performer becomes the tension of the observer in their shared experience. To
breathe normally is to risk competing with the loudest sounds of the work.
One of the dynamic markings in November Morphology II is “ppppppppp (practically/
almost inaudible).”121 The tension of this silence also rests on its liminal qualities. As
motionlessness and soundlessness cannot be absolute in human performance, so too
the sounds are never clearly made on one side or the other of audibility. He writes of
The vectors of the echo Slipping Away (2001) that “most of the piece’s ‘events’ are being
deployed on the verge of silence,” and that is true of most of his work.122
What matters here is not the mere fact of the absence of what commonly used to
function as material for music (4’33”), but precisely the rare graspability of the
verge where music is given its birth and leaves the domain of the present.123
For Karassikov, silence is full of content. “This silence, as I perceive it, has the power of
a continuum: in its apparent absence of sound, it emphasizes every sound possible.”124
Brinkema clarifies this difference: “What is absolute is the imperceptible but positive
difference between silence and the inaudible.” For Karassikov, silence is absolute and
inclusive: the limit to which his music aspires.
notes nor rests, but is filled with the potential of contingency. “But in this situation,”
writes Sugimoto, “the ‘unintentional sounds’ are actually intended by incorporating
the silent space into the music intentionally.”126 Unintentional sound is the intention,
so the unwritten page is actually written by the circumstance, by the environmental
sounds in the event.
Silence is both contextual and relative. In the situation of a musical performance,
it is controlled by the presence and choices of the musicians. It also depends on the
perception of the listeners. In Sugimoto’s STAY IV (2003), the unvoiced durations
between the statements of the four guitarists are so substantial and so variable that
they each take on a new character. The silence is anticipated, seems to grow bigger as it
is prolonged, and is released with each new articulation. Each silence carries a distinct
quality.
This expansion and contraction of the silences is essential to the work, and to a
larger project of Sugimoto’s. A silence can be musical: It can be filled with intention, it
can be measured, and it can have character. It does not need to be brief to be endowed
with musical properties.
Logically, the length of a quarter note can be one second or even one hour, so we
could claim and understand the music has a certain pattern, even in an extreme
situation where a one-hour rest follows a one-hour continuous note. However,
is the silence during the one-hour rest always the same? Of course, nothing is
different in an audio point of view. But when a certain context is predominant, if we
replace it with some other context, there will be some change in our recognition.
This recognition, whether it is an overall way of thinking or the specific act of listening
to a musical performance, is fundamental to the conception of silence. Passivity is
the ultimate negation, far more than a performance without articulations could be.
Sugimoto continues:
I think it is now about time to bring a reinvention to our ways of recognition. This
reinvention will come from the issue of how to face the silence in this contemporary
time. It is a result from Cage’s idea of silence, which has developed more intricately
than his original contemplation—which should be a blessing to us.127
After hearing a performance by Sugimoto’s guitar quartet at the AMPLIFY 2002 festival
in Tokyo, Yuko Zama wrote:
The set began with a long, perfect silence, followed by a single note from an
acoustic guitar. After the lingering sound of that first note disappeared, another
note was cast out, followed by another perfect silence. The silence held a powerful
attraction, and listeners found that they heard each silence slightly differently, just
as one hears changes in the flow of music. Despite the fact the silences are often
much longer than the stretches containing sound, the music created by the four
artists is overwhelmingly substantial. Most of the music is inaudible in a physical
Defining Features of Experimental Music 31
sense, but in it one can undeniably “hear” the musicians’ inner worlds. This super-
quiet quartet opened listeners’ ears wide, and prepared their minds to hear the
ensuing music better.
Matt Rogalsky’s S (2002) is a compilation of all the silences in a day of BBC broadcasts.
“Radio silence” is explored in its actual, specific qualities. Rogalsky subsequently
released a “best of ” album with only the quietest of the silences.130 But that raises
a question: Is a quiet silence better than a loud one? If there is no sound intended,
does unintended sound constitute a disruption? It might instead be a welcome
inevitability.
Antoine Beuger is one of the founders of the Wandelweiser collective, an
international group of musicians that has been working together closely over two
decades. While each member has a unique perspective, the group’s overall contribution
to the consideration of silence is especially significant.131 In Beuger’s dialogues (silence)
(1993), sound structures appear, played by the clarinet, in the midst of silence.
Between the silence after a sound structure and the silence before the next one,
one hears the sound of a page being turned: the sound of silence between the
silences.132
(2002) is dedicated to the artist Marcia Hafif, who Beuger describes as an “american
painter of monochrome paintings.” Beuger’s sonic analogue to Hafif ’s monochrome
series is found through “stationary, quiet, pure waves.” These sounds are produced
electronically, so they are not subject to the instabilities of bodily performance. Each
sound lasts for three minutes and suggests broadness and depth, in that it uses one
frequency each from eight octave ranges. The second clear parallel to Hafif ’s work is in
the setting of containers of equivalent dimensions next to one another. One sound ends
and another one begins. The difference between the sounds is clear, but any attempt to
describe the difference seems shallow. Beuger writes:
Nobody will hear the difference between a sound lasting 20 seconds and 19 sec-
onds. but a careful and attentive listener will certainly realize: “. . . the sound seems
much shorter then [sic] the ones before . . .” and the two minutes pause is just
about long enough to keep the memory of the last soundings in mind and realize
that this sound is in a way different. if you play the two sounds immediately one
after the other, then you and everybody else hears the obvious change.134
These silences operate as durations and demarcations, obscuring the perception of one
sound from another.
Rhodri Davies describes the use of silence among improvisers as a means of
collectively shaping the music and examining the sounds more closely:
We looked at what happened when a sound stopped, how it stopped, how long the
sound would last before it stopped in the music. A beautiful heavy silence would
engulf the space after a sound stopped. And the listener would often only fully
become aware of the presence and density of a sound after it had stopped.135
Sounds are heard not only in their presence, but also—and sometimes more
powerfully—in memory, in their recent absence. These silences invite a retrospective
listening that is distinct from the previous types described.
Defining Features of Experimental Music 33
As a composer and musicologist with an interest in hearing both old and new music
with “new ears,”136 Eva-Maria Houben has written about the uses of silence in music of
the past. Her book on Berlioz summarizes some of her findings:
His scores often show the annotation: “presque rien” (“nearly nothing”). This
annotation may be found in combination with extremely reduced dynamics.
Sound may become nearly inaudible.
Similar instructions are to be found in Schoenberg’s and Webern’s scores. She continues:
I may read the annotation “nearly nothing” in a second way: there nearly is no
composition. There are some vibrations, some noises, some fragments in the air—
nearly nothing.
Her own work deals with these questions of presence and absence. Sounds “appear
while disappearing, they disappear while appearing. . . . Presence that lasts.”137 The
organ, Houben’s main instrument, has proven very useful in considering these issues.
In Houben’s work, silence often is equated with an act: a disappearance. The first
track on the verschwindungen release (2014) overlays two different recordings. One of
these is a pair of pieces for organ and one other wind instrument—in this performance
a tuba. The other layer is sounds of the environment. She calls these “different processes
of disappearance.”138 Another example is still werden (becoming silent) (2002). She
writes,
In this gradual reduction from twelve-note chords to one to zero, zero proves itself not
to be zero, because the space of the hall remains. A silent organ still occurs within a
space that has its own sound. This silence feels rich and deep, more so than the organ
tones that precede it. It is a silence that embraces all of those possible sounds and more.
It fills the space with an actual presence, rather than with an absence. This silence is
not a void, but openness to circumstance. The presence of such background noise is
more apparent in yosemite (2007), in the ongoing drone of the factory hall that is the
site of the performance.140 Here the silences are much more brief—simply short rests
between statements—but the presence of the space asserts itself more readily than the
space of still werden.
aeolina (2013) operates in a liminal space. The aeolian sounds of the organ are hardly
more present than the sound of the space. “There is hardly anything you may hear,”
writes Houben. “The organ—its windness being rediscovered over and over again—
releases as a jewel each single sound; each stream of air; each noise: disappearing
into the space of the hall.”141 These sounds seem never to announce their arrival or
departure, but appear and evaporate in the most elusive of moments. The range of hues
34 Experimental Music Since 1970
within this muted color palette is surprising and absorbing. It seems that every possible
color is presented in its lightest possible shade.
Where Houben tends to associate silence with disappearance, Taylan Susam’s for
maaike schoorel (2009) gives it quite the opposite function. Schoorel is a painter “whose
landscapes radiate a sense of contingency, a feeling that something may emerge at any
given moment.”142 Susam’s silence here is a potentiality that includes all sounds. The
musicians each choose among clusters of numbers that indicate how loudly and how
frequently to play. Dominic Lash, who played the piece, explains that it will “pull the
music made into small swells of extremely quiet sounds, some of them repeating slowly
within little windows of time.”143 The instruction to cluster these activities leaves other
spans of time empty, but all of these durations are filled with the potential for musical
activity. The way these clusters of activity emerge enforces that sense of potential
throughout the piece, and in the minutes after it is played as well.
There is more to silence than meets the ear. To put it more exactly, when silence
actually does meet the ear, it can have an infinite variety of qualities.
Notes
1 For a rewarding consideration of Cage’s thought and work, see Joe Panzner,
The Process That Is the World: Cage/Deleuze/Events/Performances (New York:
Bloomsbury, 2015).
2 Christoph Cox and Daniel Warner, eds., Audio Culture: Readings in Modern Music
(New York: Continuum, 2004), 227.
3 John Cage, Silence (Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 2011), 13.
4 See Martin Iddon, New Music at Darmstadt: Nono, Stockhausen, Cage, and Boulez
(Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2013).
5 See, Joaquim M. Benítez, “Avant-Garde or Experimental?: Classifying Contemporary
Music,” International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music 9, no. 1 (June,
1978): 53–77. This article is useful in drawing these distinctions.
6 “Experimental Music Concerts Return to Columbia,” http://www.sc.edu/uofsc/
announcements/2015/experimental_music_concerts.php#.VYqrzBNViko.
7 See Chapter 4, The Position of the Listener.
8 Christian Wolff, “Experimental Music,” Lecture, University of London, May 12,
2014. Podcast, 22:00, http://www.sas.ac.uk/videos-and-podcasts/music/prof-
christian-wolff-lecture-experimental-music.
9 Michael Pisaro, Lecture, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, September 8th, 2014.
10 Paul Panhuysen, Partitas for Long Strings, XI Records, 1998, compact disc. Liner
notes, 10.
11 David Dunn, “Acoustic Ecology and the Experimental Music Tradition,” http://
www.newmusicbox.org/articles/Acoustic-Ecology-and-the-Experimental-Music-
Tradition.
12 Alvin Lucier, Music 109: Notes on Experimental Music (Middletown, CT: Wesleyan
University Press, 2014), xi.
13 Thomas S. Clark, Larry Austin: Life and Works of an Experimental Composer
(Raleigh, NC: Borik Press, 2012), 27.
Defining Features of Experimental Music 35
100 Ibid.
101 Ibid.
102 “On second thought: Bernhard Guenter—un peu de neige salie,” http://www.
stylusmagazine.com/articles/on_second_thought/bernhard-guenter-un-peu-de-
neige-salie.htm.
103 Ibid.
104 “Chamber Music 4: Filtered Light (2008),” http://steve-peters.blogspot.com/2013/03/
chamber-music-2005-2012.html.
105 Steve Peters, Filtered Light, Dragon’s Eye Recordings 5017, 2008, compact disc, liner
notes, https://dragonseyerecordings.bandcamp.com/album/filtered-light-chamber-
music-4
106 Clips and more information about the series are available at https://stevepeters.
bandcamp.com/album/chamber-music.
107 Agostino Di Scipio, hörbare ökosysteme: live-elektronische kompositionen 1993–2005,
Edition RZ, ed. RZ 10015, 2005. Liner notes. See Contemporary Music Review 33,
no. 1 (2014) for more writing on Di Scipio’s work.
108 “Profile,” http://www.japanimprov.com/tnakamura/profile.html.
109 “Fifteen Questions Interview with Toshimaru Nakamura: Free from any System,”
http://15questions.net/interview/fifteen-questions-interview-toshimaru-nakamura/
page-1/.
110 Ibid.
111 Ibid.
112 David Dunn, Purposeful Listening In Complex States of Time (unpublished score,
1997–98), 2.
113 See G. Douglas Barrett, After Sound: Toward a Critical Music (New York:
Bloomsbury Academic, 2016).
114 G. Douglas Barrett, A Few Silence, http://gdouglasbarrett.com/music/A_Few_
Silence_score.
115 “George Lewis Interview,” http://www.afropop.org/2752/george-lewis-interview/.
116 Beins, Echtzeitmusik, 72.
117 “Vadim Karassikov,” https://www.baerenreiter.com/en/program/20th21st-century-
music/contemporary-music/vadim-karassikov.
118 Vadim Karassikov, November Morphology II (Kasssel: Bärenreiter, 2003), 1.
119 Eugenie Brinkema, “Critique of Silence,” Differences 22, no. 2–3 (2011): 226.
120 Karassikov, November Morphology, 1.
121 Ibid.
122 “Questionnaire Vadim Karassikov,” https://www.ensemble-modern.com/en/press/
press_archive/interviews/2002/471.
123 “Vadim Karassikov,” https://www.baerenreiter.com/en/program/20th21st-century-
music/contemporary-music/vadim-karassikov.
124 Ibid.
125 Michael Pisaro, “Wandelweiser,” http://erstwords.blogspot.com/2009/09/
wandelweiser.html.
126 Taku Sugimoto, “A Philosophical Approach to Silence,” trans. Yuko Zama, http://
erstwords.blogspot.com/2015/07/a-philosophical-approach-to-silence.html.
127 Ibid.
Defining Features of Experimental Music 39
128 Yuko Zama, “Fresh Excitement on the Scene: A Unique Melding of Electronics
and Improvisation,” http://www.erstwhilerecords.com/articles/amplify02_
improvised.html.
129 Johnny Chang, “The New Silence,” https://soundcloud.com/johnnychchang/sets/the-
new-silence.
130 Ibid., 165.
131 The inclusion of Wandelweiser members Pisaro, Werder, Houben, and Malfatti along
with Beuger is no accident in this section on silence.
132 “Beuger.Cage,” http://www.wandelweiser.de/_e-w-records/_ewr-catalogue/
ewr9607.html.
133 Antoine Beuger, “Silent Harmonies in Discrete Continuity (Fifth Music for Marcia
Hafif), series I,” http://www.wandelweiser.de/_e-w-records/_ewr-catalogue/
ewr0402.html.
134 “a short email conversation between radu malfatti and rhodri davies,” http://www.
rhodridavies.com/words/malfatti.htm.
135 Beins, Echtzeitmusik, 71.
136 “Biographische Notiz,” http://www.evamariahouben.de/inhalt/bio.html.
137 Eva-Maria Houben, “Presence—Silence—Disappearance,” http://www.wandelweiser.
de/_eva-maria-houben/texts-e.html#Houben_Presence. The book is Hector Berlioz.
Verschwindungen: Anstiftungen zum Hören (2006).
138 Eva-Maria Houben, “Verschwindungen—Disappearances,” http://www.diafani.
de/?product=verschwindungen-stilleben-cd.
139 Eva-Maria Houben, “Organ Works,” http://www.diafani.de/?product=organ-
works-cd.
140 Eva-Maria Houben, “Yosemite (2007)—Duo I/II (2007),” http://www.diafani.
de/?product=yosemite-duo-i-duo-ii-cd.
141 Eva-Maria Houben, “Aeolina (2013),” http://www.diafani.de/?product=aeolina-cd.
142 wandelweiser und so weiter, 14.
143 “Interview with Dominic Lash,” http://www.anothertimbre.com/page94.html.
40
2
Scientific Approaches
Laurence’s music is that of a clear obviousness, most often using extremely familiar
and well-used musical building blocks, like tonic triads for example, divorced
from any functional harmony, but used again like found objects; triads, the
sound of which have been dulled by familiarity, now being placed in simple, clear,
reiterating structures, to be heard afresh. . . . Encapsulated within that sound is the
elementary world of childhood wonder and clarity.2
To make one limited analogy, Crane knows very well that bricks can be used to build a
house or a wall, and that people will generally think of these applications when they look
at bricks. But he would prefer to take a few of them, stack them up, spend some time
looking at them, and then slightly change their configuration. In their more functional
uses, only one side of each of them can be seen, and its position is fixed. He explains:
In what may be Crane’s simplest piece, 20th Century Music (1999) for solo piano, there
is absolutely no rhythmic variation. Every chord is a whole note. The ear is directed to
the scale of repetition, whether it be of a pair of chords, an eight-chord phrase, or a
reprise, and the particular qualities of what is being repeated in its first and second, or
sometimes third and fourth statements. The piece is a single page, and just under three
minutes long. There is great economy of material that can be considered in detail.4
Speaking of his working process, and of Movement for 10 Musicians (2003) in
particular, Crane says, “What I’m trying to achieve is to do as little as possible with
the material. I’m concentrating on these things in extreme close up and I’m trying
to eliminate multiple possibilities.”5 In this piece, these elements are a set of three
ascending chords and a pair of chords in which only one note changes. These simple,
even rudimentary, materials become objects of fascination, and are handled over and
over again with the greatest care and attention.
Sparling is a piece that exists in several different versions spanning over a decade.
The melodic material is mainly two pitches a whole tone apart, presented in one
register by the clarinet. This material carries over from one version of the piece to
another, but differences in acoustics and instrumentation yield different pacing and
a very different flavor to each of the three versions on a single release.6 One of the
features that figures most differently between them is how the bass register is added
in each accompaniment. Crane says, “I like to explore material in different contexts, it
sounds different, it’s not an arrangement of the same piece, but I’ll rework it in some
way, extend it maybe.”7 In the first part of See Our Lake (1999), the melodic activity
takes place among three adjacent notes. In the second part, it is reduced to two notes.
Crane takes what seems not to be enough, and then reduces it. Michael Pisaro writes
of Crane’s work,
This is not minimalism. It does not take justification in “less is more” or “only
what is necessary.” It takes us beyond those points: it is less than necessary. It says,
basically, nothing is necessary. And perhaps, also, “let’s be happy with this.”8
The word “minimalism” has had two somewhat distinct applications within music.
The best-known use applies to composers such as Philip Glass, Steve Reich, and John
Adams, who use clear-cut harmonic materials and enliven their use through processes.
The other application is more casual, and relates to the classification of visual artists
such as Agnes Martin, Ad Reinhardt, and Mark Rothko. The composers who receive
this label—more in reviews than in scholarly publications—include Alvin Lucier,
Howard Skempton, Arvo Pärt, Chiyoko Szlavnics, composers of the Wandelweiser
Scientific Approaches 43
collective, and Crane. The aesthetics of this grouping of composers are diverse, and
this usage implies that they tend to use a small number of musical materials, inviting
greater attention to the nature of those materials and the subtle differences in their
presentation.
It is unlikely that any more humble music could be found than Crane’s; yet it is
extremely refined. This refining process is a major part of Crane’s compositional work.
As he describes his pre-compositional process, “I try and refine everything so that I’m
just working with the most basic elements and it’s just a question of working away at
those and making sure that they’re definitely going to stand the test of time.”9
This care is evident in an unusual way in Come back to the old specimen cabinet
John Vigani, John Vigani, Part 3 (2007), for cello and auxiliary instruments.10 These
auxiliaries are the sorts of things anyone might find lying around the house—tin cans,
plastic bags, stones, etc. The sounds of these materials are matched with the cello in
unlikely and yet entirely convincing pairings. In the opening, each auxiliary player
hits two stones together, and the cellist plays a light, sustained harmonic. There is
no apparent reason these things should keep good company. The cello gesture, as
sustained and pitched as it is, seems to grow out of this basic knocking together of
stones. It is the farthest thing from textbook orchestration. This relationship is one
that Crane discovered and revealed. Later in the piece, the cello plays a casual melody
that travels up and down a scale, and the auxiliary players rub plastic grocery bags
together. The melody in the cello seems to evoke a melody in the plastic, in what would
normally be simple, familiar noise. There is no mirroring of types of action on the
auxiliaries with the actions on the cello. Later, it again doesn’t make sense that chords
strummed on the cello are echoed by a simple hand tremolo on the outer surface of
a tin can. But Crane has found a relationship between these sounds that it seems was
his alone to find.
How did Crane arrive at these pairings, which work so strangely well? How does he
present such familiar materials as beautiful objects? It is a process of asking, thinking,
reducing, testing, listening, considering, and more listening. Crane’s commitment to
this way of doing things is of long standing, and it paves the way for a deeply rewarding
listening experience. Crane’s acts of discovery have much to do with an intensity of
concentration, a willingness to consider and reconsider the most basic elements and
their relation to one another.
The Canadian composer Martin Arnold’s music has much in common with Crane’s,
though the way it plays out over time (and the average duration of his pieces) is quite
different. Both composers seem to have gone against the idea that music should go
further and further afield, and stay close to their own circumscribed regions. These
areas are, by and large, quite tonal, or at least diatonic, in content. It is as if they have
stubbornly said, you can go anywhere you like, but I’m going to stay right here and see
what I can find by treading over the same ground. The ground may change slightly over
decades, but the shifts within pieces are incremental. Many people find it contradictory
to think of such work as experimental. It doesn’t go outward or seem to advance, but
rather seems to study a territory exhaustively. In doing so, it reveals the great distances
to be found within this apparently small space. The apparent simplicity of musical
44 Experimental Music Since 1970
materials only initially obscures the fact that there is discipline and research here, and
genuine discovery within these familiar musical confines. There is little material, but
there is room for transformation, not of the material in any developmental sense, but
in the discovery of it by everyone involved.
If Crane’s work can be likened to sculpture, Arnold’s is more like a line or a path.
He writes extended melodies that seem to wander around a contained space. He writes:
I care about continuation, not progression. I love music that continues; but, as my
listening imagination moves through this continuum, it’s the detail that engages
me, the specificity of how the melody meanders within the perpetual, continuing
present; present because I’m not concerned with where things are going to go,
what they’re going to become. And melody here isn’t just a succession of pitches;
it’s texture—intentional and indeterminate—folding and unfolding.11
The melodies seem to go on, perhaps stop for a moment, and then pick up again. There
is no defining moment. This terrain is flat, and the music seems to simply meander (to
use Arnold’s term) around this area. While a specific example might be helpful, it’s hard
to isolate just one. It’s true of all of the pieces on the Bozzini Quartet’s Aberrare portrait
CD, and of nearly every other piece of Arnold’s that I have heard. The somewhat long
stretches of his pieces seem initially to betray a lack of economy, but on finding the right
sort of attention, and learning to meander along with these modest lines, they offer a
practical suggestion of a way of being that is neither goal-oriented nor magnificent, but
settles into something patient and clear.
There is very little motion in terms of pitch, rhythm, dynamics, or instrumentation
in the music of the German composer Ernstalbrecht Stiebler, but that very limitation,
combined with the sustained quality of the work, focuses attention on the variations
in performance. Christian Wolff writes, “The quiet of this music requires, or at least
invites, you to listen actively.” This is true of Three in One (1992) for bass flute, overlaid
with two prerecorded bass flute parts, “selectively and at fluidly varying distances
echoing it.” All of the material takes place within a very narrow pitch register over
eighteen minutes. The length of time, combined with this limited palette and Eberhard
Blum’s calm, measured performance, gives room for the listener to hear the listening
process itself. Sequenz II (1984) uses a similar set of devices, this time for three
overlaid performances on cello. Each of the performances involves double stops, and
the sustained quality of the performance fills the musical space. While bow changes
are audible, the ear is drawn to shifting hues in the dynamics and harmonic content.
Stiebler has compared his work to the seemingly all-black paintings of Ad Reinhart
that reveal other colors when examined closely.12
Klaus Lang’s einfalt.stille (1999) has a different kind of self-similarity, in that it seems
never to move. Long notes, repeated notes, and tiny increments of motion nevertheless
usher the listener into a new situation every so often. It is as difficult to track these
changes as it would be to count small tiles that are out of reach. Lang writes of another
piece, “The dome of the mosque of Isfahan does not force us to direct our eyes to a
specific point or direction, it stands before us as a whole. One can regard it as a whole,
Scientific Approaches 45
as a unity, one can lose oneself in the shimmering turquoise of the tiles.”13 The near
impossibility of focus is a state that his work brings about, and that state is thoroughly
intended on his part. He writes:
When concentrating on the flow of music we can reach an inner state: The inner
silence which is the simultaneity of stasis and flow. This paradoxical situation
poses the question: Is the flow of music passing us, is music flowing through us
thus evoking this inner stasis or is it not a state at all what we experience: should
we not most seriously take into consideration the possibility that it is us who are
flowing through the sound?14
In listening to Lang’s work, the discovery is not of material, but of a way of being in
relation to this fluid voicing of the flow of time. He views musical material as “time
perceived through sound, the object of music is the experience of time through
listening.” “Music,” writes Lang, “is seen as a free and selfstanding acoustical object.”15
Linda Catlin Smith sees her work in terms of “ambiguity of harmony and narra-
tive.”16 The subtly varied repetitions in Through the Low Hills (1994) are meditations on
an evolving idea. They never wander away from a single purpose, but offer continual
reorientation in their manner of travel through these simple musical shapes, finding
new properties within them at every turn.17
Crane, Arnold, Stiebler, Lang, and Smith discover the qualities and potential of
limited material, and in so doing enable the listener to engage in unfamiliar forms of
reflection. Many of their pieces might be likened to a quiet friend who listens carefully
and asks a few pointed questions. As you respond, you learn more about yourself
and hear your own thoughts within the context of their care and intelligence. The
experience of these pieces folds back on itself, so that you—the listener—distinctly
hear yourself listening.
By far the oldest and most widespread application of mathematics to music is the
derivation of pitch scales and rhythmic proportions by means of whole-number
fractions referring either to frequency or to tempo ratios. The Chinese, the Indian,
the Islamic, and the ancient Greek pitch systems were derived in this way. The
medieval western European pitch system was similarly based upon modes derived
from Pythagorean traditions.18
46 Experimental Music Since 1970
The decision to step back from the familiar and examine a subject afresh is supported
by historical and experimental perspectives simultaneously. A discontent with equal
temperament has led a number of composers to develop new instruments, notations,
and models to support explorations of harmony that are accurate rather than
approximate, and reveal a limitless potential of relationships.
Larry Polansky is an American composer, guitarist, and theorist, and his publishing
work with Frog Peak Music is a reflection and perpetuation of his engagement
with current experimental work. He dedicated for jim, ben, and lou (1995) to three
composers who made significant explorations of harmonic relationships: James
Tenney, Ben Johnston, and Lou Harrison. The first piece, “Preamble,” is an exploration
of the harmonic series, a preoccupation of Tenney’s. “The piece,” Polansky writes, “is a
continual modulation through the three harmonic series, achieved by ‘replacing’ notes
from one series with those of the other.” The specific tunings within one harmonic
series are explored and made to interlock with another. These replacements have an
effect that is in some ways analogous to a tonal modulation, but the change is based on
retuning notes to conform to a new fundamental, rather than recentering within the
same tuning. These shifts have a refreshing effect. The entire ground of the harmony
has shifted, like a wind that has changed directions. The same musical materials are at
play, but they are being moved differently. “The World’s Longest Melody (‘The Ever-
Widening Halfstep’)” relates to Harrison’s work with precise tuning ratios. The two
pages of tuning charts, showing the ratios and cents for each note to be played by the
guitar and the harp, lay out the project clearly. Within the piece there is no alteration
of tuning, but the focus is instead on the melody, which carries on unbroken for six
minutes in the recorded version. The second piece in the set is also tuned according to
ratios and their corresponding cent measurements, but the focus is on the theme and
variations form that is favored by Ben Johnston.19
Johnston’s work reveals a love for melody—seemingly endless, spun-out melodies
of his own creation, as well as familiar tunes. His innovations in harmonic language
interlock with these tunes with astonishing results. String Quartet No. 4 (The Ascent,
“Amazing Grace”) (1973) is a theme and variations form that explores multiple types
of tuning, presenting and juxtaposing them based on increasingly complex ratio
relationships. In the first variation, using Pythagorean tuning, harmonic resources are
determined according to pure octave and 5th relationships—frequency proportions of
two and three. The third variation adds in the frequency ratios roughly corresponding
to the major third, minor third, major sixth, and minor sixth as consonances. Variation
IV introduces eight ratios that depart from the commonly understood intervals in
equal temperament, and the sound world is perceptibly expanded.
Johnston mirrors the pitch relationships with rhythmic relationships, transparently
mapping both based on proportions.20 The theme and variations form lends itself well
to this harmonic alternation between familiarity and difference. It flickers between
those states, mirroring the well-known line of “Amazing Grace,” “I once was lost but
now I’m found,” with its recurrent melodic wayposts, and more significantly, “was
blind but now I see,” in its revealing of harmonic relationships that have been obscured
through the prevalent use of equal temperament.
Scientific Approaches 47
James Tenney’s Diapason (1996) for chamber orchestra is named in relation to the
Webster definition, “a burst of harmonious sound . . . a full deep outburst of sound,”
and an earlier definition of a set of pitches that might fill an octave. Tenney’s means of
filling the octave is with seventeen partials of a low fundamental. There is a radiance
and inevitability in Tenney’s presentation of this material, descending at the climax
into lower partials and gradually returning to the opening high register at the end.21
Many of Tenney’s other works use just intonation in various ways, including the less
transparent Spectrum Pieces (1995, 2001) that are composed algorithmically through
software that he designed.22
Spectral CANON for CONLON Nancarrow (1974), for player piano, equates pitch
and rhythmic relationships in a highly systematic and discernible way.23 The voices
of the canon each contain a harmonic of A1. The piano has been retuned so that
these harmonic relationships will be accurate. As Robert Wannamaker explains, “The
music undergoes a gradual progression from stark simplicity to chaotic complexity
via concurrent increases in tempo, registral compass, number of sounding voices,
polyrhythmic complexity, and harmonic complexity.”24 The perfectly synchronized
acceleration of harmonic and rhythmic complexity is compelling.
Philip Corner developed a musical vocabulary that derived from his fascination
with the gamelan. Gamelan CONCERT!O (1987), like Tenney’s Spectral CANON,
equates pitch ratios with rhythmic ratios in exhilarating, layered accelerations. “Well
laid out keys, systematically tuned scales, seemed to ask for something comparably
structured. Thus rational timings were introduced, leading to an intricate web
connecting pitches and durations—and sometimes other parameters.” These
principles are further abstracted in Gamelan ANTIPODE (1984), which operates
through the juxtaposition of extremes: high and low, short and long, soft and loud.
Each player independently juxtaposes these attributes at will in given combinations.
Corner writes that this piece “shows the clearest, and most austere, manifestation of
its principles.”25
Julius Eastman’s Crazy Nigger (1978) is for any number of similar instruments, and
is organized throughout its nearly hour-long duration as a type of “organic music.”
Eastman clarifies his use of the term organic: “There’s an attempt to make every section
contain all of the information of the previous sections, or else taking out information at
a gradual and logical rate.”26 The last section of the piece is a vertical presentation of this
organicism using a harmonic series built on a low C#. The C# fundamental includes
all of the eighteen overtones which are sequentially presented above it. (Additional
musicians arrive onstage to fill out the ensemble for this section.) Furthermore, the
rhythmic ratios of the repeated notes are (like the Tenney and Corner examples)
analogous to the pitch relationships. These pitch and rhythmic relationships are
unlikely to be precise, given the logistics of the performance, but the approximation in
this rich context is stunning in its textural effect. Eastman defended his controversial
title (and those of two other pieces in the 1980 Northwestern concert) saying:
The reason I use that particular word is because for me it has a . . . basicness
about it. . . . that thing which is fundamental, that person or thing that attains to a
48 Experimental Music Since 1970
basicness, a fundamentalness, and eschews that thing which is superficial or, can
we say, elegant.
The piece is a kind of analysis of the overtone region from the fifth to the seventh
partials and the corresponding regions one and two octaves above (10th to 14th,
20th to 28th partials).28
There is one solo flute, and some of its tones are played back at defined intervals. Möller
calls for these sounds to be amplified, which makes difference and additive tones clear,
putting these “sonic peculiarities . . . under a magnifying glass.” The generative material
is simply stated, but a startlingly complex cloud of harmonies develops.29
musik für orgel und eine(n) tonsetzer(in) (2003) also uses sustained tones in whole-
numbered ratios, but with the organ it is possible to include lower frequencies as well.
The chords are massively sustained, and are drawn from the pitches that are six or fewer
cents from a whole-number ratio with a 32Hz C fundamental. The organ’s pitches, even
on a single tone, seem to pulsate in degrees of presence, and the complex of pitches that
results from the interaction of pitches never loses its richness over the full duration of
the CD.30 Brian Olewnick writes:
The harmonies derived through these natural relationships have a powerful and
visceral impact.
Catherine Lamb has studied both experimental and Hindustani classical music in
relation to “elemental tonal material” and just intonation.32 Singing by Numbers was
a collective formed between 2009 and 2011 in Los Angeles to find ways of exploring
harmonic ratio relationships between female voices.33 Lamb’s Shapes of 3 and 5 (2010)
begins with a unison tuning between two singers, then a movement away from one
another within the space. Each of the other singers approaches one of the first two
singers and sings in a 5:4 or a 3:2 relationship to the fundamental before moving to a new
Scientific Approaches 49
location. That singer’s pitch then becomes the new fundamental in their new site. The
physical and harmonic space is mapped according to these old and new fundamentals.34
John P. Hastings describes The Rocketship in Langley Park (2009) as “a kind of
reverse engineering of branching harmony.” The fundamental of A is finally presented
alone in its 440Hz register and tuning. A compositional decision to funnel down to
the low register of the actual fundamental would have limited the instrumentation to
only the lowest instruments, where with this approach, the center of the tree is in a
neutral range and can be spun out by almost any of the participating instruments. The
opening of this piece is a complex and vibrant chord, and the gradual removal of these
harmonic branches seems only to increase that vibrancy over the course of the piece.35
Walter Zimmermann, who published a book of interviews with American
composers aligned with the experimental tradition called Desert Plants (1976),36 has
an active interest in other musical traditions as well, and combines these pursuits in his
work. The 10 Frankische Tänze (1977) are “sublimated” transcriptions of Franconian
dances for string quartet using only natural harmonics. Zimmermann set up this
brittle yet oddly pleasing sound through the use of scordatura (retuning) on the four
strings, by which he was able to use 64 natural harmonics. The discipline and care
involved from both composer and performers create a reproduction of sorts that is,
depending on the listening perspective, either distorted or purified. It is distorted in
the sense that the melodies are now shrill and seem to come from a new and strange
location. They would likely be quite difficult to dance to, unlike the original folk music.
They are purified in a harmonic sense: the melodies now conform to just intonation.
Zimmermann calls the result a “nature-culture friction.”37
In material/highlight (2013/14), Catherine Lamb sets up a separate scordatura for
each of the string instruments and then notates their parts solely as natural harmonics.
While this approach seems to be parallel to Zimmermann’s approach, it is not done
in relation to existing melodies, but instead to establish other harmonic relationships,
which are further enhanced by a pedal tone and a “highlighting ensemble.”38
While much has been done (and remains to be done) with the harmonic series,
Extended Just Intonation (EJI) is an exploration of the possibilities of harmony when
considered as precise but malleable proportional relationships among frequencies. It is
essentially affirmative, warm, and inviting in its character, and open to an apparently
infinite range of new developments. The one thing that is directly negated in its
explanations is equal temperament. To briefly explain, the division of the octave into
twelve equal parts is a more or less arbitrary compromise to allow for easy modulation
on an instrument such as the piano. Harry Partch was a huge influence on this set of
practices. He built his own instruments to include a forty-three-note scale, reflecting
a type of just intonation. These instruments were part of his solution to the tuning
constraints of keyboard instruments, but they posed many challenges of their own in
transport, maintenance, and replication. Lou Harrison followed his lead in building
his own gamelans in just intonation, which he would often pair with specially tuned
Western instruments. Ben Johnston also worked with Partch, but was attempting to do
something very different.
50 Experimental Music Since 1970
Harry was out to prove to me that if I tried to adapt the tuning of early music,
that is, music composed some centuries ago, but within the European tradition of
writing music . . . that I would get bad results. And I said, why? And he said, well,
you take this and set it to music, and use your just intonation and try to do it the
way you told me, and we’ll see what happens. So I did that. And I discovered that
I was going to be dropping by a syntonic comma fairly often. But I figured out a
way to get around that, by using oblique connections between one note of one
chord and another note of the next chord, and connecting the chords in such a way
as to bypass that problem.39
Unlike Spectralism and other related works that start with the analysis of the
harmonic components of particular sounds, or the use, as in La Monte Young’s The
Well-Tuned Piano, of the extended harmonic series based on a very low fundamental,
the practitioners of EJI approach harmony as a changing and developing harmonic
landscape. The iconic and practical representation of this approach is a lattice. The
function of the lattice is succinctly explained by James Tenney:
While in tempered music the lattice will quickly and inevitably loop back to include
the same pitch classes, this is not the case in EJI. The scope of harmonic relationships
Figure 2.1 James Tenney: John Cage and the Theory of Harmony, figure 1
“The 2,3 plane of harmonic space, showing the pitch-height projection axis.”
© James Tenney Estate
Scientific Approaches 51
Figure 2.2 James Tenney: John Cage and the Theory of Harmony, figure 2
“The 2,3 plane of harmonic space, showing the pitch-class projection axis.”
© James Tenney Estate
Figure 2.3 Screenshot of the Hayward Tuning Vine. This software is downloadable
at http://www.tuningvine.com.
© Robin Hayward
One model of this tuning vine is made with a children’s construction toy called
Zometool. “Each ball is fixed with an radio frequency identification (RFID) tag, which
may be triggered by an RFID ‘sound wand’ receiver.”43 The second major version of
the tuning vine is a software interface. Each prime number has a unique angle and
color, and pitch-height maps to vertical height of the model onscreen. Chords can be
constructed, changed, or transposed within the software.44
Some of the images developed through this system are used as scores in themselves.
Stop Time (2013) is a structured improvisation that calls for the musicians to explore
the harmonic space of the score. Additionally, through the use of surround-sound,
“Harmonic space is projected over time onto physical space, thus ‘stopping time’.”45
Hayward makes the harmonic lattice similarly tangible in performance in two
pieces that are precursors of the Tuning Vine. Stained Glass Music (2011) models the
harmonic space in three dimensions through the seating of musicians throughout
the performance space. The pitches they play mirror their physical placement in
the hall. Plateau Square (2011) uses a similar configuration based on the lattice
and sends the pitches produced through Hayward’s microtonal tuba to one of four
speakers according to the prime number basis of their ratio. He explains that in this
spatialized lattice,
Intervals based on the prime number 3 are aligned horizontally, those based on
the prime number 5 are aligned vertically, and those based on the prime number
7 are aligned diagonally. The space between prime number 3 and 7, lying between
the horizontal and diagonal axes, is therefore depicted as a series of ascending
plateaus. Plateau Square explores the harmonic space implicit within one of these
plateaus, whilst projecting it onto the physical space of the performance area.46
Where the Hayward Tuning Vine is an aid to performers and composers in microtonal
practices, these pieces key into the harmonic structure as a listening experience.
One of the premises of equal temperament’s widespread adoption is that it allows
for easy modulation between keys. Any note can function in various keys and operate
as a pivot between keys. In Plainsound Glissando Modulation (2006–07), Wolfgang
von Schweinitz has established another method of changing pitch centers, in which
a frequency that operates as a partial of one fundamental pivots to become a different
partial of a different fundamental.47 This method is analogous to pivot tones in tonal
music, but by employing these pivots as overtones of two different fundamentals,
rather than as members of two keys, they set up a change in context that has far more
possibilities. While a harmonic pivot tone could lead to about six other major or minor
keys, an overtone pivot could become anything from overtone two to twenty-one (the
highest harmonic von Schweinitz employs on the double bass) of the new fundamental.
Frank Reinecke, who has played and recorded both this piece and Plainsound
Counterpoint (2010–11), writes that the requirement of this music is “to become
radically sensitized to a new quality of conscious intonational listening,” and that in
doing so we are led into “new harmonic dimensions.”48 It is not only the number of
possible changes, but also the magnitude of these shifts in context that is so compelling.
Throughout the entire piece, the listener is invited into a recurrently liminal state. There
are short snippets of material—usually alternating between two notes—that operate at
thresholds. We have paused. Where are we going now, and where will we be positioned
within that new space? Landscapes and climates open up from one moment to the next.
James Tenney’s last work, Arbor Vitae (2006), is not such an open landscape, but
draws on the image of a tree. As Michael Winter explains, it “explores the progression
of single tonalities expanding into multiple tonalities. The harmonic structure of the
piece is similar to the way tree branches emanate from other branches.”49 This structure
is presented in reverse: the most distant harmonic areas, or branches, open the piece.
The whole tree, with all of its harmonic complexity, is presented by the end of the
work. Something is glimpsed, and then presented more fully. The chords at the end of
the piece are more sonically complex than the opening, and at the same time they are
more coherent.
This contradiction is symbolic of the broader trends of thinking behind EJI.50
Consonance and harmonic relationships are often associated with simplicity,
conservatism, or even naïveté. What these composers have done is to address harmony
from a mathematical standpoint without compromising based on traditional Western
notation or resources.51 In 2004, Sabat and von Schweinitz developed a system of
accidentals called The Extended Helmholtz-Ellis JI Pitch Notation that wraps around
traditional notation but accommodates the heightened specificity of EJI.52 New
approaches are outlined and developed to make this specificity possible. Subject to
such rigor, pitch and harmony become fertile grounds for imagination. It’s like the
difference between making forms out of red, yellow, and blue building blocks and
mixing oil paints. New schemes of colors and relationships become possible.
Scientific Approaches 55
alternates between two pairs of notes every four bars. In the upper part, a four-note
melodic configuration is presented in four bars and repeated. Two bars from the
accompaniment offset those eight bars, so the relationship between the melody and
accompaniment changes at every repetition of the melodic phrase. There are three of
these two-note descending melodic figures, each picking up exactly where the last one
left off. This piece, in its brevity and its harmonic and rhythmic simplicity, gives the
impression of being a simple surface. But as Michael Parsons writes, “The simplicity
is deceptive: correspondences and distinctions are revealed precisely because the
material is so limited.”55
Within each of Parsons’ Six Pieces in Counterrhythm (1974), each section has a
fixed number of beats, which is the meter multiplied by the number of bars and the
number of repetitions. Each part has the same number of beats per section, but all of
the component parts (meter, bars, repetitions) are different. As a result, the alignment
between the parts shifts with each repetition, and what appears on the page to be
repetition actually includes no repetition in the aggregate. Starting with the initial
calculation of the total number of beats, Parsons has used apparently simple means to
achieve a complex, constantly evolving set of rhythmic relationships between the parts.
Parsons writes that there is “no planned coordination of details,” but the system allows
this complexity to reveal itself throughout each section.56
The form of a piece is often determined in such a way by these composers.
A particular process plays out with a defined set of objects, and that is the work.
Christopher Hobbs describes his sudoku pieces, including Sudoku 82 (2008), in this
way. “I choose the sounds I want and the overall duration, but then let the numbers
determine what goes where, how many times, how long, how much silence, and so
on.”57 The Sudoku series takes these numbers from hexadecimal (sixteen-number)
sudoku puzzles, in combination with random number generators. The sonic result,
especially in the case of Sudoku 82, is not tethered to a sense of form or unfolding or
moment-to-moment intention, but seems to swim freely within the pool of materials
that were initially chosen. Since all of the local decisions are made by the numbers or
grids, which in their own internal systems allow for virtually any possibility, attention
is directed away from the local to the global.
Two other British composers of a younger generation share this interest in process,
but have conversely used its clarity of direction to focus attention on unstable details of
execution. In discussing his Logical Harmonies release, Richard Glover writes:
In terms of the realisation of these processes, I only ever anticipate for them to
be performed by human performers (on specific sound sources), such that the
individual nature of that performer/ensemble’s approach will be revealed, and
become a central focus of the experience.58
John Lely describes The Harmonics of Real Strings (2006/13) as “a very slow glissando
along the full length of one bowed string” with light finger pressure. His interest is
in “the variety of sounds, correspondences and experiences that can emerge through
Scientific Approaches 57
the use of limited sets of musical building blocks,”59 and that is demonstrated in the
multiple realizations of this piece.60
Another application of mathematical practices is in the use of combinatoriality
to determine what pitches should be presented, and in some cases, in what order.
Combinatoriality is a known practice in 12-tone techniques, and that is mostly distinct
from these uses since it is overlaid on an entirely different systemic construction of tone
rows. The analyses within musical set theory often look similar to these explanations,
but their application is different.
Permutations are used in a different way in Tom Johnson’s piece for organ called
55 Chords (2009), which he writes was “based on the combinatorial design (11,4,6). As
one can determine from the numbers, it involves 11 elements (11 notes in the scale), four
elements (four notes in each chord), and each pair comes together six times.”61 From this
starting point, Johnson goes on to make eighteen speculative drawings of the possible
relationships between these chords. Each of these drawings has a distinct pattern and
methodology, and is carefully described in Playing with Numbers.62 As he later discovered,
Each drawing could be somehow pushed and pulled and twisted into one of the
other drawings. Mathematically they are all equal, which is to say that they are
all morphisms of one another. If this were a mathematics book, I would have to
eliminate 10 of these 11 drawings, but since we are just “looking at numbers,” I’ll
leave them all in. It’s not only the truth that matters. Variations of the truth are
fascinating as well.63
My problem was this: all the motives in The Weather Riots (each with its own
contour & metrical feel) have a similar harmonic structure, being all based on
five notes. The time structure in The Weather Riots was supposed not to be
about hierarchical relations between the harmonies. That being given, how could
I find harmonic families that would relate chords to one another in a minimally
hierarchical way—i.e. no two chords were supposed to have a “stronger” relation
than any other pair, so that any progression would have the same structural
meaning—while also allowing for a maximum of variation of harmonic quality—
so that the harmonic feel of the piece would have something “chancy” about it?
58 Experimental Music Since 1970
Block designs were the solution to the problem. In The Weather Riots, everything
is based on eleven sets of five pitch classes (you could say “chords”), with every two
such chords having exactly two notes in common.65
In this piece, then, the block design serves as an equalizer among harmonic
relationships. Tom Johnson describes a distinct benefit of this sort of mathematical
solution: “The nice thing about this arrangement for a composer is the way the music
stays on an even keel. It just keeps flying along at one altitude.”66 The musical flow of
The Weather Riots has a trajectory that is determined, not by harmony, but instead by
elements like articulation and texture, which are more spontaneously in the hands of
the performers and their local-level decisions.67
Johnson relates that after hearing The Weather Riots, he spoke with Vriezen about
the resources he had used, and then was directed by a mathematician friend to
combinatorial and block designs. The first musical result of his own investigation was
a piece called Kirkman’s Ladies (2005), named after a mathematical problem with the
same name:
Fifteen young ladies in a school walk out three abreast for seven days in succession;
it is required to arrange them daily so that no two shall walk twice abreast.68
The problem was subsequently extended to ask if all 455 three-lady combinations (5 per
day) could be achieved over thirteen weeks. Johnson took this solution and translated
it into musical figures. Each lady became a note of a fifteen-note scale, and the three-
lady groupings became three-note chords in a five-chord phrase. Each new week,
and then day, is announced by the narrator, followed by each of these sets of unique
chords.69 An earlier piece of Johnson’s, The Chord Catalogue (1985) explores a more
straightforward question: How many chords are there within an octave? The answer
is 8,178. These chords are methodically presented in a solo piano piece. For almost
twenty years, Johnson was the only pianist to touch the piece, and after much practice
got the performance down to an hour. Vriezen, in what proved to be the beginning of
their friendship, learned the piece and performed it in under half an hour, in what he
refers to as “a spectacular roller-coaster ride.” Johnson relates:
I’ve often said, I don’t want to compose the music. I want to find it. And The
Chord Catalogue is maybe the very best example of that, because I didn’t find the
chromatic scale of 13 notes. I didn’t find that all the combinations add up to 8,178.
I just got interested in this phenomenon and wanted to learn how to play it.70
Numbers are both fascinating and useful in their representations of behaviors and
possibilities. The approaches that each of these composers take to using numerical
patterns for composition are distinct, and the musical games and processes that
numbers allow are essentially infinite.
Scientific Approaches 59
The rapid advance of technology has been both a help and a challenge to musical
exploration. Processes can now be easily automated that had not been dreamed of in
prior decades. But where does that leave people who are interested in the questions,
instabilities, and challenges at the heart of the construction process? They turn
away from given solutions, opting to be makers rather than consumers. In doing so,
they locate much of the creative process in the construction or repurposing of their
instruments.
David Behrman was a member of a group that was active from 1966 to 1976 called
the Sonic Arts Union, along with Alvin Lucier, Gordon Mumma, and Robert Ashley.
They each had different projects, but worked collaboratively to see each other’s work
through. Behrman is committed to a do-it-yourself model. He writes:
One of the earliest lessons I learned—it was back in the Nineteen-Fifties and it came
from John Cage and David Tudor—was that the distinction between instrument-
builders and performing musicians could be erased altogether. Some of the early
pieces by John Cage, like Water Walk and Cartridge Music, used instruments that
were either newly-invented or “borrowed” from the everyday world. And in the
Sixties, from David Tudor and Gordon Mumma I learned that you didn’t have to
have an engineering degree to build transistorized music circuits. David Tudor’s
amazing music was based partly on circuits he didn’t even understand. He liked
the sounds they made, and that was enough.72
There are two key points here: (1) In Behrman’s view, making is making, whether it is
making music or making an instrument. The construction of an instrument can be a
significant part of the musical process. (2) You don’t have to know what you’re doing.
The process and the result are not invalidated by an initial lack of expertise, but can
become even more interesting as a result of behaviors that are not fully understood.
It’s fine to be an amateur builder, or to make something that will behave in unforeseen
ways.
Gordon Mumma was a pioneer in building circuitry for musical performance.
In addition to his own work, he created these kinds of systems for John Cage and David
Tudor, and instructed Behrman on how to make his own. He was well aware that in
many of these cases, what he built was not used as designed.
I made . . . a circuit for David Tudor once. . . . He didn’t know what that was, but
he had used one that I had made for somebody else and he wanted me to make
him one. . . . And he had this thing, and he wasn’t using it the way it was designed
for use. There were a certain number of inputs and a certain number of outputs,
60 Experimental Music Since 1970
and he had outputs plugged into inputs, and he had inputs going into outputs, and
other things that had nothing to do with the original conception of it, of what it
was for. But he had a whole thing going. He had a spectacular musical thing going.
And it’s not that he misunderstood me. There was no misunderstanding at all.73
Mumma was no more interested than Tudor was in doing something “correctly,” and
he dwelled on the drastic misuse of the materials he had handed over as a positive
development. The circuits, whether used in a textbook way or not, offer an array of
possible combinations and interactions. As Michael Nyman writes of Mumma’s piece
called Hornpipe (1967), the role of the console circuitry is to
monitor the horn resonances in the performance space and adjust itself to
complement these resonances. During this adjustment certain circuits become
unbalanced and attempt to rebalance themselves; and in the process various
combinations occur which produce purely electronic sound responses. . . .
. . . this musical result is not programmed definitively but depends finally on the
interaction of the openness of the (gate-controlled) circuits and the unaccountable
acoustics of the concert hall, the whole chain being set in motion by the sounds of
the horn, which are heard in their turn transformed.74
As Mumma explains it, the construction of this piece began with the sound of the horn.
The electronic things that came from that were somewhat coincidental until the
piece got underway. Then from one performance to another, I began to understand
what I could do elaborately with the electronic circuitry.75
The process is one of trial and error, seeing what works most effectively in a given
configuration based on the materials that are already at hand.
David Behrman says of his Music with Melody-Driven Instruments (1976) that the
custom-built circuitry engages in a cycle of reactions with the pitches that are present.
“The form of the music is kind of a slow unfolding of the possibilities in the system,
starting with less possibilities and ending up with the most.”76 As it unfolds in the
performance documented in Music with Roots in the Aether, the musicians become
more and more attuned to the workings of this system, and are carried along with the
transformation to a greater complexity. But there is a kind of stillness or stasis in
the performance too, as if the performers are more involved in listening to results, to
the operation of the system, than they are in actually producing sound. The participants
are discovering the behavior of the entirety of the system together.
Behrman quickly learned the value of such handmade music in his life as a
composer. Rather than “asking favors” of other musicians, he much preferred “the self-
reliant feeling of performing oneself, and of using homemade instruments to create
sounds that no human ears had ever before experienced!”77 He recalls being told by
an engineer that his work with circuits to make music was foolish, because “without
an engineering background, I couldn’t possibly work with those things.”78 The crucial
Scientific Approaches 61
difference between Behrman’s work and this viewpoint is that Behrman was not looking
for a specific cause and effect or predictable outcome. “Haruna Miyake once spoke of
my pieces as ‘unfinished compositions’ and I think that’s an insightful description,”
he says.79 Figure in a Clearing (1977) set up a set of interactions between a Kim-1
(a precursor to the Apple II), a homemade synthesizer, and a live musician. He wrote
that the musician’s “only ‘score’ was a list of 6 pitches to be used in performance, and
a request that he not speed up when the computer-controlled rhythm did.”80 Miyake’s
quote is accurate, in the sense that the piece is finished, or at least advanced, through
the circumstances of its performance. The choices of the performer, within certain
restrictions, can be made spontaneously, and the interactions with the electronics are
also spontaneous. The results would likely have been far less interesting—both more
restricted and more predictable—with a commercial synthesizer. Runthrough (1967–68)
is another piece that exists only in its setup. Tom Johnson referred to the piece as
“actually just a complicated set of cheap circuitry,” and described it as follows.
The making of one’s own instruments has gone on for ages at various levels of skill
and complexity. Bart Hopkin ran the Experimental Musical Instruments journal from
1985–99, documenting a vast amount of the work that has been done along these lines
by professional musicians, and during that time and since has published instructional
books including Musical Instrument Design (1999), Making Musical Instruments with
Kids (2009), and Slap Tubes and Other Plosive Aerophones (2007).
Hopkin has created hundreds of instruments, and has been engaged in the
exploration of that entire universe of possibilities. Not as much time can be devoted
to refining a technique, but that is not his focus. Conversely, Ellen Fullman’s practice
revolves completely around the “long string instrument” which she has developed.
Wires are stretched across a space between two resonators, and she plays them with
rosined fingers as she slowly walks down the path of the instrument. Its development
involved numerous collaborations over more than a decade, all of which are credited in
her artist statement. The refinement of her technique, the refinement of the instrument,
and her practice as a composer are closely intertwined activities. She writes, “Practicing
on my own instrument and with no tradition to follow, I discovered a new sound.”82
A number of people have engaged in creating or modifying instruments as acts of
combination. Sometimes the mechanism of an existing instrument is replicated with
new sets of materials, as Frédéric Le Junter does with his machines sonores installation
pieces, emulating objects such as record players and xylophones with rough, automated
mechanisms and a variety of materials. His carillon uses record players to spin
suspended pieces of wood, causing them to strike flower pots. “The whole is carried
out with a nonadvanced technology,” he writes, “in a rather rough and dubious way.”83
These replications are not meant to be efficient, but to yield unpredictable results out
62 Experimental Music Since 1970
of basic materials. He adds, “I can not play as a master with but rather with a kind of
instability, surprises.”84
Laurie Anderson’s tape-bow violin is a hybrid of the structure of the traditional
violin with magnetic cassette tape used in place of bow hair, and the tape head
mechanism used as the bridge.85 Akio Suzuki has made instruments out of basic
materials. The Anapalos is made out of spiral cords and cylinders, and he uses it as
a unique and surprising resonator. De Koolmees is a reconceived xylophone—glass
tubes suspended over a frame that he activates through rubbing and spinning.86
Hugh Davies created his own instruments out of everyday objects, and then ampli-
fied them in the context of improvisation. Davies is also known for his documentation
of early electronic music, but “the only ‘electronics’ involved in the vast majority of his
instruments was amplification.”87 Davies taught workshops to children on how to build
their own instruments, and encouraged members of the public to play the instruments
he had made.88 His interest was not only in building within his own practice, but also in
developing that type of agency in others, discovering cause and effect and the surpris-
ing features that emerge in the process of making one’s own instruments.
Related approaches have been outlined in Nicolas Collins’ book, Handmade
Electronic Music: The Art of Hardware Hacking (2006/09), which is filled with
instructions and video demonstrations on how to create or repurpose hardware for
musical purposes. It assumes no proficiency on the part of the reader, but gives detailed
instructions, along with musical examples to illustrate each section. Collins makes the
point repeatedly that there is no incorrect implementation of these instructions if the
results are interesting. Mistakes, other than those that compromise the maker’s safety,
are encouraged. Collins writes this of his own work:
I think that a lot of my music has had to do with the implications present in a
piece of technology, even very common circuits, consumer electronics: I take a CD
player, I modify a radio or a walkman, trying to work at a very low technological
level and then customize it a little bit, cannibalize it. But I’ve also built machines up
from scratch, and have also done a fair amount of work with computer programs.
It’s all part of the same stream flowing from the notion of compositions or
implications present in technology.89
Because no one can predict the outcome of circuit-bending, you’re taking a journey
into unknown territory here. All you can do is approach with the right attitude and
tools to get the best shot at good results.91
The ability to play with sound, whether in electronic or acoustic media, no longer
requires (and perhaps never required) significant training or financial resources. There
is a strong strand of DIY in the field of experimental music. An interest in making one’s
Scientific Approaches 63
own materials tends to lead toward this kind of innovation, and in turn an interest in
such innovation often requires making one’s own materials. Sometimes a simple lack
of financial resources can push a composer to build materials rather than buy them. If
success is found in doing so, it makes very little sense to become more of a consumer
when circumstances improve. Handmade instruments tend to be far more malleable
to one’s intentions than commercial products, which are designed for more general
use cases.
Synthesizer innovations at a professional level were in their formative stages before
1970, but in this context an active DIY culture is relevant. Lintang Radittya echoes both
Collins’s and Behrman’s findings when he reflects on the reasons he got into building
his own synthesizers. “Not only were they too expensive, but there were sounds that
I couldn’t make using those synths.”92 He is self-taught, and built up his skills through
resources he found online. In addition to a few makers he names, he has found many
anonymous designs to be equally useful. “I don’t know their names, because they
don’t give them on their websites, but I love the designs they’ve uploaded.”93 Radittya
documents these innovations and activities in Indonesia on his blog, Synthesia-id.94
Apart from the financial benefits of a DIY approach, there is often an interest in a
more dynamic input/output relationship than can be found in instruments that would
be commercially attractive. Founded by Michel Waisvisz in Amsterdam, the Studio
for Electro-Instrumental Music (STEIM) is a major hub of such activity. Waisvisz
and many others at the center have developed instruments particularly for the use
of children, such as the Crackle Box and the LiSa, as well as various interfaces and
software applications. They also host regular residencies for composers, musicians,
and inventors to help them realize their particular musical intentions. While other
institutions offer a similar array of resources and programs, STEIM is particularly
aligned to this way of thinking, in that their events and ideology circle around the
notion of Touch, which was articulated for their first events in 1998 in a rousing essay
called “Touchstone.”
While the IT majors steamroll their digital tool kits to produce perfectly ISO-
normalized outputs, a race of stubborn artist-engineers remains bent on designing
instruments to elicit decidedly abnormal performances.
At STEIM we have come to the conclusion that the resultant streamlined
aesthetics, purged of the seamy residues of physical exertion, is totally artless:
unfelt execution has given rise to unfelt and unfeeling work. One man’s ergonomics
is another man’s boredom. . . . A vital area of creative exploration is being opened
up, as we fight to reinject friction, constraints, in short, a sense of effort, into our
tools.95
Perfection is devalued in these cases, along with any commercial sense of value. The
effort that goes into making something is rewarded by the unreliability, inconsistency,
and mysteriousness of the musical activity the product enables.
64 Experimental Music Since 1970
The composition was organized around the idea that it would be possible to hear
all of these sounds within one large tree if enough sensors could be simultaneously
placed throughout its myriad branching structures.
Dunn uses this one tree to stand for many trees, or, in fact, any tree, and the depth and
dimensions of its sound world.
My intention in the composing of this collage was to convince the listener of the
surprising complexity of sound occurring within one species of tree as emblematic
of the interior sound worlds of trees in general.100
Scientific Approaches 65
He explains his reasoning for presenting this material in collage form, rather than in a
linear fashion. A direct recording might seem to be more informative, but it would fail
to effectively suggest the dynamics of activity.
When strung out in a linear fashion, two years of field recordings only allow the
listener to focus on their immediate nature and not their interaction over time.
By juxtaposing them, while respecting their local sonic integrity, we perceive the
richness of how they reside within a more complex and resonant context. We
become much more aware of their true interrelationship and diversity within their
arboreal environment.101
The resulting release, The Sound of Light in Trees (2006) sounds like a terrifying drama—
a whole world of interactions that is strange and magnificent in its accumulation, and
astonishing in its complexity. Dunn has also recorded ants, underwater insects, and
bats, which share the trait of emitting sounds that are difficult to access.102 But the
beetle project has taken on a life of its own in its fulfillment of Dunn’s belief that “it is
essential at this point that artists take a role in collaboration with the scientific world—
that artists and scientists work together towards real-world problem solving.” His
investigations were practical, first of all, in identifying infested trees for landowners,
and secondly, in finding a novel solution to this problem. “We altered beetle behavior
by playing back their own sound. . . . We managed to turn them into cannibals. We
created unprecedented behaviors.”103
In all of these cases, the source of the sound is identified, but when hearing its
hidden dimensions it is natural to want to see the specific conditions from which these
sounds emerge. John Grzinich, an American mixed media artist based in Estonia, has
anticipated that urge beautifully with Sound Aspects of Material Elements (2006–10)
included on the visually stunning Two Films release.104 The first of these films is in
black and white, and directs focus on the forms and shapes of the materials that are
producing sound. These environments seem to be still, even silent, but the sound
worlds revealed in them each have a distinct richness. Reflecting on his practice,
Grzinich says,
There are many levels to the forces that shape our world, yet we tend to focus on
the most dramatic elements, the ones that affect us immediately or are useful in
some form. I’m generally interested to go beyond the ordinary levels of perception
or at least to exercise the abilities we have, be it with or without technological
enhancements. This also applies to time and timing, to question the chronological
ordering of events or usual breaking of processes into segmented or repetitive
structures. There is always a challenge to surprise myself which I often do even
with locations I’ve visited many times.105
The exact pairing of the image with the sound draws the listener further into the details
of the scene. If the sound is being drawn out through some sort of action, we see it
happening. If not, we understand that it is hidden within its normal functioning.
66 Experimental Music Since 1970
Peter Cusack thinks of his work as “Sonic Journalism . . . the aural equivalent to
photojournalism,”106 and has made a compendium of sounds and texts called Sounds
From Dangerous Places (2012). On a different project, the longest track on Baikal Ice:
Spring 2002 is an underwater recording of icicles hitting each other in the enormous
Lake Baikal in Siberia, creating astonishingly complex layerings of rhythm, timbre,
texture, activity, and resonance. While someone standing at the edge of the lake could
hear some of this sound, its complexity is far more effectively captured through the use
of the hydrophone. Several later tracks on the album, the icicles are splitting off from
each other. The observation and timing required to differentiate the moments when the
icicles were breaking up from those when the icicles were hitting each other is crucial,
and this difference is apparent through sound. Cusack’s project is not a recording of
icicles. Rather, it is a documentation of processes—verbs, rather than nouns. Apart
from the internal differentiation within each recording, these two processes (breaking
up and bumping together) are documented as having vastly different sonic profiles.
Field recording emphasizes that sounds happen in space every bit as much as they
happen in time. Geographical locations are often included, particularly for outdoor
recordings. The CD tray of Baikal Ice shows a map of the lake. The images conjured
up in the first moments of listening are likely to be memories or imaginations of the
location of the recording. But a sustained study of a place through field recording again
makes time the primary axis. What is present in one moment is absent in another, or a
shift in the interaction between elements has a drastic impact on the sound.
Jana Winderen writes that “She is concerned with finding and revealing sounds
from hidden sources, both inaudible for the human senses and sounds from places and
creatures difficult to access.”107 The sounds of the title track of her Evaporation (2009)
release were found through the use of hydrophones inside and under the ice on a site in
Greenland, and reveal a universe so rich with dimension, so alien to human experience
that it could not have been imagined or constructed, but must have been found.108
While Cusack and Winderen traveled to record their sounds, Marc Namblard
recorded the sounds of Lac de Pierre Percée close to his own home. His observations
over time of the lake and its surroundings helped him to determine the particular
day to record it. The sonic activity of the lake on January 16, 2006 is compressed onto
the single track of Chants of Frozen Lakes (2008). A frozen lake evokes images of
desolation, stillness, and a stark natural condition. Surprisingly, that is not at all what
it sounds like. More than one reviewer has compared the characteristic sounds on this
recording to lasers. These sounds result from the conditions of the ice: “The tiniest
crackles inside the ice of frozen lakes produce mechanical vibrations. Under specific
atmospheric conditions, these impulses propagate in the ice, whose tension makes it
similar to the skin of a drum. The acoustic result is an unbelievable blend of drumming
sounds and etheral [sic] resonances.”109
Lee Patterson has also done most of his recording work close to home, taking a
special interest in the ponds that are closest to where he lives in northern England. He
has found that they have a foreign quality of sound, even when they are very local. “In
contrast to the road, rail, and air traffic sounds of north Manchester, the aquatic sound
world sometimes seemed more like that of a tropical rain forest, dense and busy with
Scientific Approaches 67
a variety of sonic activities, albeit on a very small scale with many sounds possessing
low amplitudes.”110 The sounds in the foreground of “Pond Weed” (2005) are caused
by the release of “thousands of tiny oxygen bubbles” from the hornwort in an old mill
lodge near Manchester. Some of the background sounds are familiarly aquatic, or
may be coming from the surrounding environment, but the complex rhythms of the
interlocking squeaking and clicking sounds have been sourced to the hornwort that
is growing in the water. Patterson explains, “Each pulse or click is produced when a
plant releases a bubble, and with greater light, the frequency of the bubbles increases
resulting in a variety of sounds or sequence of tones.”111
Patterson has been fascinated by the vast difference between the sound of one pond
and another,
with each body of water being a self-contained sound world dependent upon
the resident flora and fauna. Various water bodies, sometimes in close proximity
to each other, possessed very different sound environments, some being rather
sparse in comparison to others only metres away.112
On the other hand, he has often found similarities between these aquatic environments
and the sounds he can pick up with a contact microphone. He has an interest in what
he terms “bubble musics,” whether emitted from plants underwater or in the process of
an egg frying or a peanut or hazelnut burning. “Often, when I place the hydrophones
into an underwater thicket of Hornwort and turn up the pre-amps, I’m presented with
a dense field of ticks and clicks, sounding not unlike a fry up, and occasionally I’ll
hear drones, alarm-like repeated phrases, even tonal sequences amongst the seething
mass of sounds.”113 Patterson has used very small contact microphones to amplify the
sounds of objects in states of transition. On the Seven Vignettes (2009) album, Egg
Fry #2 includes sounds that are similar in their trajectory to those in Pondweed. The
amplification of these small objects in transformation offers a sense of entering into
an environment at least as capacious and compelling as a much larger body of water.
“Two peanuts burn” sounds like a threatened environment, which in its own way
it is. The sounds of this action, taking place within a very small space and captured
with specially prepared contact microphones, evoke wind, traffic, wildlife, and falling
water. In fact, it evokes all sorts of sounds other than the burning of two peanuts—
because who until hearing this recording has in fact heard the burning of two peanuts?
Only in the last two minutes does it really start to sound like the typical sounds of
a fire that is dying down. The notes on the piece simply read, “Peanuts on specially
prepared contact microphones, heated and burned. One left, one right. Unprocessed,
save for some shaping of the volume envelope.”114 A similar process is applied in Three
Hazelnuts Burn, and the extended squeaks, varied pops, and low-frequency rumbling
tell their own story of increased activity, destruction, and finally stasis.
When such sounds are made audible, their level of interest strikes a balance
between familiarity (yes, those sounds make sense under that circumstance) and a
foreign quality (what is that? how can it be?). Something too small or too quiet or
too distant to notice has been transformed through technology into an immersive
68 Experimental Music Since 1970
sonic environment, and the listener is asked to reorient herself toward this drastic
shift in perspective. The French composer and sound artist Emmanuel Holterbach
used induction coils to record the electromagnetic auras of electrical equipment in
a gallery office. “Invisible to our eyes, inaudible to our ears, it is a shimmering aura
which surrounds all our items that function on electricity.” The recording process of
Mouvements dans une Aura Ionique (2010) is a slow motion from one device to another,
revealing the transition of sound within and between devices.115 The methodology of
the steady motion of the microphone makes the listening process transparent. It is not
known what machine or device is being recorded, but the transitions are clear, and the
even pacing gives a sense of the relative scale of each item.
In Stereo Bugscope 00 (2004), the Japanese sound artist Haco (formerly vocalist
for the After Dinner band) also records machinery, including laptops, cell phones,
wifi routers, and subway cars. “What interests me,” she writes, “is the psychological
mechanism that is triggered in us through the extraction of these sounds.” Some of
these devices are almost attached to us for most of the day, operating, as Haco puts it, as
“an extension of our brain and body.” The specific sounds they emit, when revealed at
such amplification and with such clarity, are somewhat distressing in their familiarity
and complexity. A simple hum would be a much simpler thing to process. But to witness
so directly the sonic results of the machines in operation for our personal convenience
is unsettling. Haco writes:
The name “Stereo Bugscope” refers to a performance system that detects oscillating
sounds emitted by the circuitry inside electronic devices. . . . All of these signals are
ordinarily so faint as to be inaudible. According to one’s position in relation to and
distance from the source, changes in the sound can be observed.116
This last observation about changes according to position is not just a side comment.
In her performances with the Bugscope in TramVibration (2013), a collaboration with
Toshiya Tsunoda, the microphones are rarely stationary. There is a constant exploration
of the sound source, as if trying to get to know it by touch. Tsunoda’s approach is
very different. Using a piezo-ceramic sensor and a stethoscope, he would sit for long
intervals, just listening, occasionally shifting positions to try a new location within
the tram.117 Haco wrote of the experience, “Perhaps because we used the latest model
of tram, the electromagnetic sounds seemed to fly through the air. I hadn’t imagined
that I’d be able to detect so much. It was like being immersed in a colorful sea of
electromagnetic sound. I felt like a full-body recorder and experienced a very intense
movement through time and place.”118
Christina Kubisch has also been involved in a long-term project of making
electromagnetic fields audible. But where Haco listens to personal devices, Kubisch is
oriented toward public spaces. Several of the tracks on the Five Electrical Walks (2007)
release involve multiple recordings of similar spaces from all over the world. Security
(2005) combines recordings of security gates in “Madrid, Berlin, Paris, Tokyo, London
and Taipei.” The sounds the gates of the fashion shops emit, she writes, are “just as dull
as most of the merchandise behind the gates.” Homage with Minimal Disinformation
Scientific Approaches 69
(2006), on the other hand, is made up of recordings made in Times Square, resulting
from “flashing neon advertisements, scrolling LED tickers, information screens and
illuminated signs, all of them pulsating, flickering and moving constantly.” In her
installations, Kubisch will make headphones available to visitors so they can hear the
electromagnetic waves as they trace their own path through the space she has mapped.119
Electricity is not necessary for such emissions, as Michael Prime and Miya Masaoka
have both made apparent through their projects. Prime gathered recordings of the
bioelectrical field emitted by a peyote cactus in his One Hour as a Plant (2003) release.
The range of sounds is surprising, and depends on the plant’s being alive. “A dead plant,
or a fruit or vegetable that has been picked, produces only a static tone.” This piece
recalls John Cage’s work with an amplified cactus, but the sounds are obtained and
treated in distinct ways. Prime comments on the responsiveness of plants to external
events and natural cycles, as evidenced by the sounds they emit.120
Masaoka has explored this type of responsiveness in her Pieces for Plants (2001–)
installations by first attaching sensitive electrodes to the leaves and then monitoring
their responses to motion and contact. “The ‘plant player’s’ proximity, touch and
interactions with the plant are then expressed in sound via MIDI and synthesizer.
During the piece, the plant is brought through a range of physical/psychological
states, from calm to agitation.”121 Masaoka has found this configuration useful as an
instrument in improvisation settings, as well as in public interactions.
Some sounds require advanced scientific equipment to be registered, and may
need to be altered to fall within human hearing range. The most frequent of these
transformations is the speeding up or slowing down of a recording, which not only
affects any rhythmic activity but can also bring the recording into the pitch range
of human hearing. John Bullitt writes of his “earth sound” project, “I transpose
seismographic recordings of the Earth’s vibrations into the range of human ears, to lift
the deepest sounds of Earth into the field of human perception.” This transposition is
quite extreme. The first track of Earth Sound is played at 2,450 times the original speed.
One second of the track equals forty minutes of real time that was recorded, and twenty
minutes cover the span of thirty-three days. The second recording is accelerated more
than four times as much as the first—10,000 times. The third track is a reflection on
the devastating tsunami that took place on December 26, 2004, in the Indian Ocean.
Bullitt offers a specific reason for the rate of acceleration:
The surface of the entire planet expands and contracts rhythmically about once
every 20 minutes. Seismologists call this the Earth’s “breathing mode.” Speeding
up the recording 245-fold brings the Earth’s breathing mode (one “breath” every
1,227 seconds) in sync with the average human respiration rate (one breath every
5 seconds). This affords the listener an immediate, interior frame of reference with
which to assimilate and understand these sounds, one in which the most basic
rhythms of the human body are tuned to those of the planet itself.122
What seems to be an event at the opening of the recording is dwarfed by the magnitude
of what happens forty seconds later, and its repercussions ripple out over twenty
70 Experimental Music Since 1970
minutes. It is some of the most compelling listening one can find, and it is a faithful
transposition of actual scientific data.123
Bullitt acknowledges that he could not have made this piece without the material
he received from scientists. The International Deployment of Accelerometers (IDA)
network continuously operates seismometers in boreholes 100 meters underground. It
takes resources of knowledge, equipment, and personnel to obtain this data. He went
through a process of deciding what material to present, how much of it, and at what
rate, in addition to stitching together the files and cleaning them up.124 The result is
a document that anyone can approach, without any prior expertise, to gain a richer
understanding of these tectonic processes.
Annea Lockwood, a sound artist originally from New Zealand, collaborated with
Bob Bielecki, a sound designer,125 on the Wild Energy installation, which also relies on
recordings gathered through scientific research.
Wild Energy gives access to the inaudible, vibrations in the ultra and infra ranges
emanating from sources which affect us fundamentally, but which are beyond our
audio perception, many of which are creating our planet’s environment: the sun,
the troposphere and ionosphere, the earth’s crust and core, the oxygen-generating
trees—everything deeply integrated, forming an inaudible web in which we move,
through which we live and on which, therefore, we depend.126
The installation runs on a loop, which begins with solar oscillations recorded by a
spacecraft, presented here at 42,000 times the speed of the recording. Other sounds,
each at a specifically chosen rate, include volcano gas vents and tremors, earthquakes,
ultrasound emissions of trees, and auroral kilometric radiation waves.
After an unsuccessful effort with Pauline Oliveros to capture ionospheric sounds,
called Whistlers (1968), Alvin Lucier tried a similar project over a decade later in Sferics
(1981). For the month of August, 1981, he went through a process of trial and error in
order to capture some of these sounds, testing out various locations and configurations,
until he got a recording between midnight and dawn of August 27th that he found
usable. In his diary entry the next day, he reflected on the recording, saying, “Faintness
of whistlers charming.”127 On the recording, these whistlers come through as brief,
faint, but clear overtones.
These projects have varied degrees of success in terms of documented results, but
they operate first and foremost as acts of speculation. “What does X sound like?” is
already a prompt for research, whether X is the inner workings of one’s own refrigerator
or the sound of a comet traveling through space. (At the time of this writing, the
European Space Agency generated a lot of attention by releasing a recording of a
comet sped up to a factor of 10,000 times.128) The effort that goes into finding a real, if
momentary, answer to such speculation is an experimental act. Whatever the outcome,
new questions arise out of that act. Are the technology and methodology adequate
to the task? If there are documented results, how could they have been different a
moment, a season, a year, or a decade earlier or later, an inch or a mile to the north or
the west, if the temperature had been a few degrees colder or warmer? These acts and
Scientific Approaches 71
resulting questions begin to reveal just how little is known of the sonic activity of the
world, and invite us to inhabit it on a more perceptive and less habitual basis.
Notes
1 James Saunders, ed., The Ashgate Research Companion to Experimental Music
(Farnham, UK: Ashgate, 2009), 244.
2 Tim Parkinson, “A Clear Apparence,” http://www.timescraper.de/_texte/texts-
parkinson.html.
3 Saunders, Ashgate, 244.
4 Laurence Crane, Piano Music (20th Century Solo Piano Pieces, 1985-1999), Naxos,
MSV28506, 2010, compact disc.
5 Saunders, Ashgate, 248.
6 Laurence Crane, Chamber Works 1992–2009, Another Timbre, at74, 2014, 2 compact
discs.
7 “Laurence Crane by Tim Parkinson,” http://www.untitledwebsite.com/words/53.
8 “Laurence Crane—Chamber Works 1992-2009,” http://www.anothertimbre.com/
laurencecrane.html.
9 Saunders, Ashgate, 247.
10 Videos of this piece as performed by the Plus Minus ensemble are available at http://
youtu.be/SaNYtatzFbw and http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=btL3oTrMf6s.
11 Martin Arnold, Aberrare, Collection QB, CQB 1112, 2011, compact disc. Liner
notes, http://www.quatuorbozzini.ca/en/discographie/cqb_1112.
12 Ernstalbrecht Stiebler, Three in One, hat ART 6169, 1996, compact disc. Liner notes.
13 Klaus Lang, “königin ök,” http://klang.weblog.mur.at/?page_id=33.
14 Lang, einfalt.stille, Edition RZ, ed. RZ 4007, 2007, compact disc. Liner notes.
15 Lang, “Biography,” http://klang.mur.at/?page_id=119.
16 “Linda Catlin Smith—composer,” http://www.catlinsmith.com.
17 Linda Catlin Smith, Memory Forms, Artifact Music 024, 2001, compact disc.
18 Ben Johnston, Maximum Clarity (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2006), 57.
See, for example, Wolfgang von Schweinitz’s transcription of The Classical Indian
Just Intonation Tuning System in Extended Helmholtz-Ellis JI Pitch Notation in
reference to Prof. P. Sambamurthy, “Early Experiments in Music,” in South Indian
Music (Chennai: The Indian Music Publishing House, 1999), http://www.plainsound.
org/pdfs/srutis.pdf.
19 Larry Polansky, for jim, ben and lou (Lebanon, NH: Frog Peak Music, 1995), http://
aum.dartmouth.edu/~larry/scores/for_jim_ben_and_lou. Larry Polansky, The
World’s Longest Melody, New World Records 80700, 2010, compact disc.
20 See Randall Shinn, “Ben Johnston’s Fourth String Quartet,” Perspectives of New
Music 15, no. 2 (Spring—Summer 1977): 145–73, for an in-depth analysis of
the corresponding pitch and rhythmic relationships of the fourth quartet. Much
of the score is also reproduced in this article, which includes Johnston’s careful
explanations of the pitch ratios.
21 James Tenney, From Scratch: Writings in Music Theory (Urbana: University of Illinois
Press, 2015), 394. Tenney, “Diapason,” on Donaueschinger Musiktage, 1996, Col
Legno 20008, 1997, 3 compact discs.
72 Experimental Music Since 1970
22 Tenney, Spectrum Pieces, New World Records 80,692, 2009, 2 compact discs. Liner
notes, 8.
23 A video available on YouTube shows the player piano in action and makes the
fundamental structure of the piece clear. See “James Tenney—Spectral Canon for
Conlon Nancarrow,” 4:03, posted by “Juergen Hocker,” September 17, 2010, http://
www.youtube.com/watch?v=hUrfKBnQ9a4.
24 See Robert Wannamaker, “Rhythmicon Relationships, Farey Sequences, and
James Tenney’s Spectral CANON for CONLON Nancarrow (1974),” Music Theory
Spectrum 34, no. 2 (Fall 2012): 48–70 for a detailed analysis of this piece.
25 Philip Corner, Life Work: A Unity 3. Mind. Umlaut Records, UMFRCD11, compact
disc. Liner notes.
26 “Julius Eastman’s spoken introduction to the Northwestern University concert,”
Julius Eastman, Unjust Malaise. New World Records 80,628-2, 2005, 3 compact discs.
27 Julius Eastman, “Crazy Nigger,” Ibid. Original and annotated scores and a schemata
are available at http://www.mjleach.com/EastmanScores.htm. See also Andrew
Hanson-Dvoracek, “A Postminimalist Analysis of Julius Eastman’s Crazy Nigger,” in
Gay Guerrilla: Julius Eastman and His Music, ed. Renée Levine Packer and Mary Jane
Leach (Rochester: University of Rochester Press, 2015), 140–50.
28 André O. Möller, blue/dense. Edition Wandelweiser Records, EWR 0411, 2005,
compact disc. Liner notes, http://www.wandelweiser.de/_e-w-records/_ewr-
catalogue/ewr0411.html.
29 Möller, blue/dense.
30 André O. Möller, musik für orgel und eine(n) tonsetzer(in). Edition Wandelweiser
Records, EWR 0702, 2007, compact disc. Liner notes, http://www.wandelweiser.
de/_e-w-records/_ewr-catalogue/ewr0702.html.
31 Brian Olewnick, “Friday, April 10, 2015,” http://olewnick.blogspot.com/2015/04/
andre-o.html.
32 http://www.sacredrealism.org/catlamb/index.html.
33 “singing by numbers,” http://sacredrealism.org/catlamb/projects/singingbynumbers.
html.
34 Catherine Lamb, “Shapes of 3 and 5,” http://www.experimentalmusicyearbook.com/
Shapes-of-3-and-5.
35 John P. Hastings, “The Rocketship in Langley Park,” http://www.
experimentalmusicyearbook.com/The-Rocketship-in-Langley-Park.
36 This book is out of print, but is now available at http://home.snafu.de/walterz/
bibliographie.html.
37 Walter Zimmermann, Songs of Innocence & Experience. Mode 245/6, 2 compact
discs. “Songs of Innocence & Experience,” http://www.moderecords.com/
catalog/245_246_zimmermann.html.
38 See http://www.sacredrealism.org/catlamb/works/scores/2014/Lamb_
materialhighlight_aug14.pdfand https://soundcloud.com/catherine-lamb/areas-of-
presence-material.
39 “Ben Johnston: From Helmholtz to Harry Partch.” Vimeo video, 10:58. April 11,
2011, http://vimeo.com/22246762.
40 James Tenney, John Cage and the Theory of Harmony, 1983, 11, http://www.
plainsound.org/pdfs/JC&ToH.pdf.
41 Marc Sabat, Euler Lattice Spirals Scenery, score, 2011/12, http://www.marcsabat.com/
pdfs/Euler.pdf.
Scientific Approaches 73
Physicalities
This chapter focuses on the physical properties or behaviors of four distinct components
of musical work. The first of these is the physical mechanism of the performer and the
choreographic aspects of performance. The second section deals with the resonances
of the spaces in which sounds are emitted. The instruments themselves are derived
from objects in the third section, inviting new modes of consideration of the properties
of the things we encounter on a daily basis. In the last section of the chapter, musical
behaviors, trajectories, and forms are derived from physical shapes.
there’s a lot of things that can’t be predicted, or a lot of things that are dependent on
existing, for real. It’s getting less and less abstract, what I do. And so it needs a body.” The
scores are prompts to actions that vary by performer, instrument, and circumstance.
“It needs a performance before it can exist, and before you can actually see if some
things work. It needs a situation. It needs an audience. It needs a time and a place.”3
Only under these circumstances does the piece truly take shape.
In Study for string instrument #1 (2007), the right and left arms, normally distant
from each other in function and type of motion, are assigned actions that are physically
parallel. The left arm moves up or down the string as the right arm travels upbow or
downbow. This premise is almost immediately clear while watching a performance,
and draws fresh attention to the nature of these two motions, both separately and in
relation to one another.4
The Next to Beside Besides series (2003–06), which he calls “Choreographic
Translations,” assigns nearly identical motions to different instruments. Steen-
Andersen asks, “What if the composition was thought of as a choreography for
musician and instrument—with sound as a consequence? Then the same piece would
sound completely different on instruments with different relations between movement
and sound. And would it then be the same piece at all?”5 In a traditional model, faithful
performances are recognizable for their derivation from the same source. That is no
longer the case when motion is translated from one instrument to another independent
of function. It is suggested that multiple versions of the piece be played at the same time,
side by side. In a simultaneous performance of #0 and #4 of the set, the choreography
is strikingly similar and well-coordinated, leading a viewer to almost conceive of the
snare drum as a new form of a cello.6 The rhythms and gestures are absolutely loyal
to the original cello version. Sometimes they produce similar sounds, but at other
times the motions have completely different impacts on the instruments. It is through
performance that these translations reveal both their choreographic equivalence and
their essential difference. The performance instructions for each piece often involve
muffling some part of the instrument, such as stuffing the saxophone with a piece of
cloth, inserting folded paper into the accordion, and fixing the piano’s una corda pedal
down, covering the instrument, and damping it further with a cloth. In this way the
individual sound characteristics of each instrument are obscured, focusing attention
on the choreographies, convergences, and divergences of sound.
Steen-Andersen has found another way of focusing attention on choreography
in his Study for string instrument #3. A prerecorded video of a performer doing one
version of the piece is literally projected onto that same performer doing a slightly
different version of the piece. The sound is also projected over the live performance,
and the listener is left to disentangle the two or let them both assume equal weight in
the moment. As Rasmus Holmboe writes:
With the sound so closely shown as a result of the movement producing it, the
basic musical material, then, is the movement of the musician, which throughout
the piece is treated with consequent compositional methods such as variation,
imitation, inversion, mirroring etc., applied to the movement of the musician and
Physicalities 79
For Steen-Andersen, the visibility of intention is essential. He asks that the musicians
keep their music stands low enough that their actions can be seen. In rerendered
(2003/04), Run Time Error (2009–) and a number of other pieces, there is an active
video component that correlates to the sound performance. He wants his audience to
be aware of what is going on, processing it and considering it, so that it is not a self-
contained situation, but has other resonances.
I’m actually interested in keeping that special space of experience that we call
musical experience, or listening, and then at the same time to establish these
arrows pointing out of that world, or establishing connections from this parallel,
abstract fantasy world, music world through the real world.8
The video image (or live performance) is crucial to the clarity of many of these
encounters between the music world and the real world.
Video is also essential to an understanding of Liaison (2013) for bowed piano and
dancer, a collaboration between the composer Megan Beugger and dancer and choreogra-
pher Melanie Aceto. A pulley system is built around the piano, and fishing wire runs under
several piano strings, up through the pulleys, and to braces on each of the dancer’s limbs.
For over a minute, the dancer sways toward and away from the piano without causing
the strings to be bowed. These futile efforts set the scene for the rest of the piece, during
which the effort and exertion is rarely proportional to its sonic gratification. Sometimes
the smallest, least noticeable gesture has a strong effect, while at other times, the most
dramatic trajectories yield no sound. The sounding depends on the tension of each fishing
line, but other tensions play out in the body of the dancer. This interplay between body
and instrument, motion and sound is compelling as it plays out in the piece.9
In Aaron Cassidy’s work, effort is not always rewarded with sounding results either.
Cassidy separately notates multiple parameters of playing as independent streams
of action that act variously with or against each other as obstruction, tension, or
confluence. His work operates in a network of force fields, energy, effort, rawness, and
exposure. Where artifice, control, and conventional beauty are lost, broken textures,
interrupted flows, wasted efforts, and awkward constrictions are found instead,
revealing a raw power of their own.
One of the clearest illustrations of these multiple streams of activity is the wind duo,
Being itself a catastrophe, the diagram must not create a catastrophe (2007–09), which
has separate staves for embouchure and for each hand. In the video, it is possible to see
many of these actions, only some of which result in audible sound and none of which
offer a stable sound result.10 Cassidy writes of this piece:
The changes in embouchure tension or reed placement have a certain general set of
tendencies, but the interaction with the instabilities of the finger movements will
often create quite dramatically different results from iteration to iteration.) This is,
80 Experimental Music Since 1970
In this work, notation stands in a dynamic relationship with the performance and
sound of a piece. What you see is definitely not what you hear, but it still is what the
performer is to do. The notation does not describe a sound result, but rather prescribes
the actions of the performer on numerous independent levels.12 The sonic result on the
recording of solo string piece, The Crutch of Memory (2004), is one of splintered and
interrupted flows of energy.13 One action is as likely to stifle another as it is to amplify
it. As Mieko Kanno describes it:
Cassidy has changed his notation practices from one phase of his work to another, some-
times finding new ways of representing individual parameters, but more importantly,
finding new ways to relate those parameters to each other visually. There is a strong prac-
tical concern for how readable a score is for a musician. The issue in many cases is not
one of technique, reflexes, or training, but the simple question of where the eyes need to
be directed on the page. If there are detailed instructions that are not intuitively related
to one another happening in different parameters, it is cognitively difficult to take all that
information in. Cassidy has a second reason for this shift in his notation:
To move from a very digital, stratified notational space—that is, one that predomi-
nately notates discrete points (through numbers, letters, symbols, noteheads, etc.)—
to a smooth, continuous notational space that better represents the actual topogra-
phy of the instrument and the fluidity of possible motion across that space.15
But despite these changes in the appearance of a score, for example from The Crutch
of Memory to Second String Quartet (2009–10), his musical concerns have carried
over very strongly, placing a high value on the “unexpected conflicts, frictions, and
‘accidents’ that lead to unique sonic outcomes.”16 In both cases, the locus point of such
a work, what makes it what it is, is not revealed on the page, but is totally dependent on
its specific enactment. While this may sound like a vague truism for all notated music,
many scores can be effectively studied on sight alone. Cassidy’s scores reveal multiple
82 Experimental Music Since 1970
strands of activity that could be separately analyzed, but the piece does not really exist
until these parameters are physically intercutting one another.
This need for a physical enactment takes on a new dimension in A Painter of Figures
in Rooms (2011–12), for eight voices. Reflecting on his collaboration with the EXAUDI
ensemble, Cassidy recalls “the efforts of eight different singers to reproduce exactly
the same notation with exactly the same set of instructions generate wildly different
results.”17 The voices themselves are of course different, but each singer’s understanding
of his or her own vocal mechanism also proved to be unique in the workshopping
process. For this most subjective of instruments, the move away from both a
conventionally desirable sound and a sound that can be imitated is quite disorienting,
even for a professional group that has worked with a vast swath of new and challenging
music. Cassidy notates the actions in five different physiological categories: vocal fold
tension (pitch), air pressure (volume), mouth shape, glottis position/tension, and
tongue position. The tablature notation and prescriptive (rather than descriptive)
approach to this notation has another clear impact in the recorded performance.
Singers are engaged with their voices in an audibly curious, almost childlike manner.
There is no particular vocal quality to strive for or imitate, but instead a combination of
approaches to the vocal mechanism unearths its native resources.18 Each singer has to
bring these elements out simultaneously, and in so doing they each find a “fundamental,
bare, exposed, expressive voice.”19
Cassidy’s writing for the voice is clearly an extension of his instrumental writing,
but there is one vocalist in particular who is a beacon of what is possible in a series
of encounters with the voice that is based on the physicality of the mechanism rather
than an established technique. Cassidy writes this of the vocal improviser Phil Minton:
I am struck by the disparity between how I listen to Minton’s work when I can
see him, either in person or on video, and when I cannot. It reveals a curious gap
between the pure physiology of the voice and the physiology of the voiced body,
that is, the gap between the actual sound production mechanism of larynx, breath,
tongue, and mouth versus “the voice” as the representation of human physicality
and expression.20
Minton’s extended vocal technique is that of the scream. He’ll belt out incredibly
long-winded, saliva-drenched marathon shouts that seem to last an eternity;
instead of trying for the usual clarity of tone or preciseness of pitch, he’ll let his
voice warble ’till its raw. After taking a deep breath in (breathing, too, becomes part
of his compositions) he’ll start up again until it sounds like he’s going to collapse.22
Physicalities 83
The solo album likely to provoke the strongest reaction from a listener is A Doughnut
in Both Hands (1998), in which Minton transgresses an astonishing number of vocal
boundaries. As memorable as the transgressions themselves is the audible recovery
from them. We know what he has done, that he has gone too far, and we hear him
finding his way back to a more controlled, tolerable state. Much of the power of his work
has to do with the sympathy or empathy one feels with the act of vocalization in all its
forms. We all have made sounds, whether in illness or aggravation or fear or abandon,
that we would rather keep private. Minton takes those sounds and makes them public,
inspiring a unique cocktail of a reaction—amazement, familiarity, and disgust.
The American composer Evan Johnson also works with the vocal mechanism in
A general interrupter to ongoing activity (2011), though he works in terms of restraint, in
contrast with Minton’s testing of boundaries. This piece, he writes, is “a study of the voice
as an instrument that is uniquely capable of occluding itself.” The tongue blocks the airflow
of consonants, whistles and hisses block the delivery of text, and “almost every physical
effort partially overwrites every other.”23 Carl Rosman’s live recording from the 2011
TRANSIT festival carries this sense of perpetually interrupting itself, and seems strangely
suppressed and unavailable, as is its intent: “A navigation of the boundary between audible
and inaudible, communicable and private, vocal and muscular.” Obstruction is part of the
work—it would not be what it is without these impediments. It is, in Johnson’s words,
“a very limited and quiet sonic universe that is itself full of communicative potential.”24
Fragility and obscurity are recurrent themes in Johnson’s work. The opening
instruction of “atendant, souffrir,” lists, little stars (2013) is “Cautious and circumspect—
as if everything were breakable.”25 In the vocal ensemble piece vo mesurando (2012),
phrases are “separated by . . . impossibly slow silent glissandi.”26 In die bewegung der
augen (2012), “The constant tendency is to fade: into silence, into noise, into regularity,
into impassivity.”27 “Active negative space” is the material of the string quartet,
inscribed, in the center: “1520, Antorff ” (2014). He describes the inspiration for the
quartet as “a riot of indiscernible detail” found in the background of a Dürer sketch
that is “rendered indistinct by the actively pressing weight of the untouched expanses
of paper delimiting it.”28 The piece sounds on the edge of a silence parallel to those
untouched expanses of paper, frequently not sounding at all. When it does sound, it is
threadbare and obscure. In the live situation, it might be imagined that the performer
holds the only fair listening perspective, and yet the performer is faced with the task of
constantly impeding the delivery.
While the performers are faced with numerous impediments to any clear
articulation of so much as a phrase, the audience is in a much less privileged position
still. In my pouert and goyng ouer (2014), “The space of the work is the air directly in
front of the performers’ bodies; it is not a space shared with the audience. . . . Whatever
reaches the audience should be overheard.”29 Similar instructions and descriptions are
given in other pieces, such as the pointed program note of vo mesurando: “These are all
madrigalian figures that you are overhearing, but they are not for you.”30
In Apostrophe 2 (pressing down on my sternum) (2009), the two brass players are
asked to face away from the audience for a “significantly more attenuated sound
picture for the audience than the standard layout.”31 Johnson warns in this piece and
84 Experimental Music Since 1970
others against any degree of theatricality. These arrangements and impediments are
devised for sonic purposes, not for a display—quite the opposite. They are the means
to the habitation of a particular sound world that has a veiled, remote quality. Even in
the midst of it, one doesn’t quite know what it is.
Despite its low amplitude, this music requires a tremendous amount of physical
exertion from the performers. They are required to enact both force and resistance,
counterbalancing these weights against each other with no external assistance. While
the music itself is covered, the performer is highly exposed. This vulnerable position
creates a tension and energy that greatly enlivens these performances.
The vulnerability of the performative situation also comes through in listening to
pianist Kate Ledger’s recording of Ben Isaacs’ piece, All the things inside me are doing
what they need to be doing (2010). The volume has to be turned way up, and it is best
heard, not on a good speaker system, but with headphones. This is the first means for a
non-live listener to engage with the piece’s processes of magnification. The mechanism
of the piano is at least as audible as any typical piano sound, in that there is more
percussive sound than pitch. Isaacs refers to the sounding result as “a continuous
succession of brief kinetic flickers.” Only the top seven notes on the piano are used. The
whole focus of attention, for eyes and fingers and listeners, is directed to one of the least
used areas of the piano in this “rigorous examination of a tightly constricted space.”
The dynamic constriction for the pianist is at least as crucial as the pitch constraint,
involving “both extreme control and extreme risk, and an improbably dynamic range in
which the loudest note is ‘as quiet as possible.’”32 The musical material itself is severely
restricted and repeated. What lends such dynamism to the performance of this piece,
and to Isaacs’ other works, is how he weaves these various constrictions together with
the vulnerabilities of physical, human performance.
The counterbalance of energies takes a different shape in the form of Kunsu
Shim’s Happy for No Reason (2000). Shim is a Korean composer based in Germany,
who was a member of the Wandelweiser collective in its early years. He cofounded a
venue for new music with Gerhard Stäbler called EarPort in Duisburg, and they have
collaborated on countless performances and projects. For the first three minutes of
Happy for No Reason, each player repeats a sound several times that is “short and very
loud.” “A combination of these sounds should be a mixture of extremely rugged, crystal
clear, scrappy, yelling, screaming, sharp knife, explosive, tough, noisy, etc.” One player
is instructed to “kick a metal bucket with full force so that it rolls away.” Following this
uproar is a full minute of stillness and silence. For the next five minutes, the players
sustain fragile, quiet sounds. Another player stretches a roll of paper tape across the
room during this time. These three kinds of energy—loudness, stillness, and a fragile
sustain, set each other off with a powerful effect.33
In marimba, bow, stone, player (1993), pebbles are placed on only a few bars of the
marimba. The process for choosing the bars is separate from the choice of which bars
are to be bowed. The bowed sounds without pebbles on the bars are not as present as
those with them, since the pebbles cause gentle vibrations that enrich the sound. The
delicacy required to perform this piece is tremendous, as each of four sections is fifty
minutes long, and the piece depends on not displacing these tiny unsecured stones.
Physicalities 85
The indeterminate aspects of the piece (the chance procedures by which the stones
are placed) create the vulnerability of the situation, and the specialness of those found
moments of vibration.
Michael Pisaro describes a performance of another work of Shim’s in which fragility
is carried to extremes, and “seemed to be putting the world on the head of a pin.”
In expanding space in limited time [1994] the bow sometimes moves only half its
length in five minutes. If you saw the violinist playing you would think he was a
living sculpture installation instead of music. . . . it took 20 minutes for me to hear
any sound from the violin at all. Once I did start to hear it, over the course of the
nearly two hours duration, the music became almost unbelievably rich. . . .34
The exertion of the performer to achieve such an almost-stillness for this duration
requires great strength and discipline. In this recollection, it requires a parallel exertion of
the listener. To hear this sound requires a strain of one’s senses—not only of hearing, but
also watching the bow and viscerally imagining its contact with the string. The listener
almost becomes a part of the performance, helping to bring about the sounds through
attentiveness. The experience of this work also has to do with the magnification and
vulnerability of these sounds in their presentation over time. expanding space in limited
time is not available as a recording, though it has been performed in a number of places.
If it required twenty minutes of one listener’s careful attention to begin to hear any violin
sound in the live event, any document of it would be almost devoid of discernible content.
The performative fragility of these works becomes the fragility of the listening
experience. These two fragilities, instead of actually causing a break, become something
else: a shared effort.
What is the sound of a space? Some of the works in this section are themselves, or are
based upon, analyses of acoustic properties of particular spaces. In other cases, the
nature of the piece is fluid to the particular architecture in which it is performed.
Alvin Lucier was a member of the Sonic Arts Union, and is known for his work
with resonance. In Opera with Objects (1996), various objects on a table are used as
resonators. The tip of a pencil is held to the object, and the pencil is struck repeatedly
with another pencil. As the performer moves from object to object, the vast differences
in the qualities of these sounds are revealed.36
86 Experimental Music Since 1970
In the Austrian composer Peter Ablinger’s Orte (2001), three rooms or halls within
walking distance of each other are selected and analyzed for their acoustics, resulting
in three unique microtonal scales that match the formants of each site. The audience
spends a period of time at each site, where the musicians play the formants back into
the room, and then the audience walks together to the next site. If only one site were
attended, the piece would remain essentially unheard, since the key point is that the
change between sites be registered.37
A vase, like a room, can come in many sizes, shapes, and materials, and have a
distinct resonance as a result. In Lucier’s Music for Cello with One or More Amplified
Vases (1993), the timing of the presentation of different acoustic spaces is not
prescribed or consecutive, but emerges according to their resonant frequencies. The
cellist is instructed to sweep up the range of the instrument, “searching for resonances
in the vases which are picked up by the microphones and made audible for listeners.”38
The vases respond, each in its own time and voice.
While the pieces mentioned so far are comparative by nature, much of Lucier’s work
deals with the resonance of a single space or object. When the resonant frequencies
of the chosen object are sounded by the flute, oboe, and clarinet in Risonanza (1982),
the listener is effectively drawn into the object itself. The thing acted upon becomes
the focus of attention, rather than the agents acting upon it.39 Attaché Case (1988) is
a development of Chambers (1968), in which “Tape recordings of large environments,
such as concert halls, cathedrals and railroad stations, are played into small resonant
chambers, such as teapots, thimbles and suitcases.” In this case, the sound of a train
(specifically on the ride from New Haven, CT to New York) is played on a cassette
player within the briefcase. There is some irony in virtually placing a train into a
briefcase, when briefcases are so typically brought into trains.
Nothing is Real (Strawberry Fields Forever) (1990) is another extension of Chambers.
The melody played on piano is recorded and played back through a teapot, as the pianist
slowly opens and closes the lid to reveal the frequencies emanating from the pot like
steam.40 The saturation of a teapot with a melody is one of many ways to fill a space.
Piper (2000) is a piece that involves filling a room with the full sound of a bagpipe,
which normally finds its place in the outdoors. Lucier writes, “I had always loved the
sound of bagpipes in the open air but thought that in an enclosed space, certain acoustic
characteristics, caused by reflections from the floor, walls and ceiling, might be revealed.”41
A number of improvisational releases show an engagement in similar processes,
including Stuart Dempster’s In the Great Abbey of Clement VI (1987), John Butcher’s
Resonant Spaces (2008), and Michael Francis Duch’s Tomba Emanuelle (2013).42 Yoshi
Wada first recorded Lament for the Rise and Fall of the Elephantine Crocodile (1979–)
after spending several days and nights in a dry pool in Buffalo, New York. He explored
the space both with his voice and with bagpipes, and wrote: “Although I normally do
not like long reverberation added to my music, when I entered the pool I immediately
liked the acoustics of the space, which had very long delay time. The pool gave rich
resonance to the voice & bagpipe sound.”43
Many works that deal with acoustic qualities feature long lines, both visually and
sonically. In Paul Panhuysen’s work, spaces are filled with points and lines. Little
Physicalities 87
Souls Singing in the Sun (2000) is an installation that filled the shaft of Fort IJmuiden
with 48 cooking pans hung on a triangular spiral of steel wires. Panhuysen writes,
“This installation produces continually changing patterns of sound and the loudness
depends of the quantity of sunlight.”44 What is apparent from looking at the images of
the installation is that the structure of the pans echoes the structure of the shaft: a cyl-
inder closed on one side and open on the other. The resonators mirror the resonance
of the enclosing space.
The lines of Ginger Strings (2012) are vast lengths of piano wire. Panhuysen and
another player play the wires, filling the room with sound as it has been filled with
these visible divisors.45 Panhuysen made over 200 such long string installations over
his career, each of them particular to a given space. The first of these, built in Mainz,
Germany in 1982 with his frequent collaborator Johan Goedhart, was initially played
for the purpose of causing visitors to notice it, since it was barely visible. René van
Peer writes:
Moving forward with this knowledge, Panhuysen chose spaces for his installations
which had proportions with rich acoustic properties. The space becomes an instrument,
and a determining factor of the piece. He writes:
On the one hand I choose a certain space because its characteristics make it
suitable for an installation; on the other hand, because these surroundings are
fixed, the installation has to be grafted into them. This enables me to establish a
strong relationship between my work and reality. . . .47
If you talk near the wall of a circular space, the sound goes around and is
understandable for everybody who also stands near the wall. In a dome (regardless
whether it’s a hemisphere or a parabola) all sounds occurring in the space are
reflected to one spot on the floor. In a cube sound becomes a sphere, there are
places that are totally silent, especially the corners.48
In each of these projects, Panhuysen’s goal was to “give voice to a space.” The shifting
harmonics yielded by the long strings offered continuous sounds that operated in
that way very effectively.49 Other long string projects by Ellen Fullman50 and Alvin
Lucier are also linked with Panhuysen’s work through mutual awareness and influence.
Fullman made her first recording of The Long String Instrument at Het Apollohuis,
an arts platform that was run by Hélène and Paul Panhuysen. In Lucier’s Music on a
Long Thin Wire (1977), the piano wire is activated by oscillators and responds to the
88 Experimental Music Since 1970
Figure 3.3 Paul Panhuysen: Little Souls Singing in the Sun, photograph
© Pieter Boersma
resonant frequencies of the room over an extended period of time, making small shifts
in the atmosphere readily apparent with changes in the sound.51
Filling a space with sound or filling it with sounding objects is an additive process—
learning about its boundaries by saturating it, as one determines the measurements
of a vessel by filling it with water. The German sound artist Rolf Julius referred to
his work as “Small Music.” Music for a Glimpse Inward (2005) is an installation that
lines the outside of a large, empty room with small speakers. “The music played softly,
heightening the listener’s perception of space and stillness.”52 Like much of his other
work, it uses small sounds and small speakers to forge a new relationship for the
listener with the space it fills.53 His aim was to create “spaces into which one can retreat,
where one can find quiet, where one can see, hear, where one is able to concentrate,
where one is isolated from the world around but still is able to participate in it.”54 The
accumulation of small sounds in large spaces forms a mass of sound that engulfs and
redefines the space uniquely for each person who enters it.
Kabir Carter is an American sound artist, whose Report (2010) is an exploration of
the boundaries of a space. Carter uses a microphone to engage in this process live: “By
touching, rubbing, scratching, and striking surfaces within the selected environment,
I generate reverberant, plosive sound events and nodal excitations that form an
acoustic sketch of the room.”55 In quieting rooms (2012), the composer and software
designer Michael Winter is interested, not in the dimensions of the room, but in its
responsiveness. “A very crude genetic algorithm [that] attempts to put two signals out
of phase and quiet the room.” The generation of the signals is responsive to the acoustic
result: a new life cycle starts if the room fails to get quieter.56
Physicalities 89
Figure 3.4 Paul Panhuysen: Little Souls Singing in the Sun, diagram
© Hélène Panhuysen
Sound is always subject to the qualities of the space in which it is performed; but
these pieces are remarkable in that such spaces function not only as the context, but
also as the primary focus of the work.
repertoire uses very simple materials, such as a table, a paper cup, or wind-up toys.
As a composer, Saunders includes cardboard, in both flat and box form, as a score
which itself is meant to sound, as small objects are directed across its networks of lines
and circles. Other scores in the object network (2012) series are made of aluminum
and polystyrene sheets, folders, a padded envelope, and a piece of pine board.58 Object
network is part of a larger series of works Saunders has called “on the sonic properties
of materials.”59 With paper (2006/08, 2009–) uses a similar principle of sounding a
paper score. Depending on the version and the page, the sound of the paper can be
activated with a finger, a pencil, or scissors.60 In all of these cases, the paper itself is
the instrument. The other object is parallel in function to a bow or a mallet. John
Cage’s Cartridge Music (1960), in which sounds of unspecified objects are activated by
a phonographic pick-up, is its antecedent in this respect.
Saunders’ installation called Surfaces (2010–) is an exploration of the sounds made
by flat materials. The score is a stack of 300 cards, each of which suggests an action that
can be performed with materials like cardboard, a saw, paper, and tape. “Instructions
may be repeated, reapplied to the same surface or transferred to a different one.”61
The first performance of this piece was a 24-hour live installation, performed by
Simon Limbrick at the 2011 Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival. At the end
of the performance there was an opportunity for the audience to look at or even
take the materials, inviting analysis or speculation about how the materials had been
transformed and the sounds they had produced in the process.
While the transformation of the flat materials in Surfaces is the result of sound-
making, such materials are first transformed and then used as instruments in a series
of workshops conducted by the British artist and performer Alwynne Pritchard and
two colleagues. Sheets of paper, tin foil, and plastic of several different dimensions
were shaped by participants according to Pritchard’s instructions. Not only the size
but also the texture has a direct impact on the sound production of these instruments.
She writes that
The same scope of variation in sound results from the number of times a sheet is cut,
as well as whether it is loose or attached on one side.
“The aim of the workshops,” Pritchard writes,
Figure 3.5 Paper, 5 x 5 cm rolled Figure 3.6 Paper, 5 x 5 cm, cut into strips
© Alwynne Pritchard © Alwynne Pritchard
Figure 3.7 Paper, 5 x 5 cm, folded Figure 3.8 Paper, 5 x 5 cm, scrunched
© Alwynne Pritchard 100 times
© Alwynne Pritchard
The first performances with these instruments followed Pritchard’s instructions, but
the participants develop their own notation and sound combinations with further
practice.62
Sven-Åke Johansson is a Swedish composer and visual artist whose Harding Greens
(2002) is a forty-six-minute symphony for cardboard boxes, “bowed by 22 players
with bowing techniques that produce a new, almost ‘silent sound’ in all imaginable
nuances.”63 The sound is silent in the sense that it does not voice pitch as clearly or
immediately as conventional bowed instruments would; but there is a significant body
of sound—both pitch and noise—that is drawn from these different-sized boxes. The
visual juxtaposition of the boxes with this organized ensemble of qualified musicians
92 Experimental Music Since 1970
with their bows is fascinating, and the depth and specificity of the sound world drawn
from these simple functional materials is a real surprise.64
A vivid example of the reassessment of the everyday is Giorgio Battistelli’s opera,
Experimentum Mundi (1981). Percussionists and vocalists are onstage, but filling the
foreground are craftsmen engaged in their trades: “A baker, cobblers, knife sharpeners,
carpenters, coopers, blacksmiths, pavers, a stone mason, bricklayers.” These craftsmen
are from Battistelli’s home village in Italy, and go about their work with the precision
and seriousness cultivated by years of experience.
By the end of the performance, each craftsman has produced his own product in
perfect synchrony with the musical and theatrical tempos of the score: a game
of wedging notes and rhythm together that enhances the movements forged by
ancient traditions.65
The construction of these objects—whether they are made of wood, flour, metal, or
stone—has inherent sound and rhythm. There is no strain in their familiar tasks.
Battistelli has not asked them to change the rhythms of their work, but has simply given
them a narrative, a new setting, and cues for when to begin and end their work, as well
as amplifying their sounds.66 What the audience witnesses, both visually and sonically,
is genuine craftsmanship—not a simulation of, but genuine creation of objects and the
sounds associated with these materials and activities.
Physicalities 93
While the previous examples begin with manufactured (or the manufacturing of)
materials, Cheryl Leonard is a composer and instrument builder who draws sound
from natural materials. In Music for Rocks and Water (2007), “Rocks are rolled, rocked,
brushed, rubbed, stacked and even tickled. Water is dripped, drizzled, poured, and has
air bubbles blown in it at varying depths.”67 Instruments in Trees (2003) uses leaves,
driftwood, pine needles, and pinecones alongside—and as preparations of—the
instruments of a string quartet. Han Shan Tree (2004) is an installation of driftwood
mobiles suspended from a tree.68
Alison Knowles is a Fluxus artist who has an interest in the sounds generated by
both natural and handmade instruments. In Play Paper (2003), her instructions are that
the notation (made of fragments of onion skin) should be performed with “handmade
musical instruments and toys.”69 Knowles has a particular interest in using paper that
she has made herself. “I think the main thing I’ve discovered about paper in the past five
years is that it can form itself . . . you get something which you could never predict.”70
Standard manufactured paper is not as likely to fit this description as the irregular,
pulpy material that she has formed. At the same time, she likes to use materials that are
common enough that they will resonate in the experiences of listeners.
I’d like to have people make the jump to going home and listening—you mentioned
Make A Salad [1962]—as they make a salad, or maybe for the first time . . . noticing
the sound as they wrap paper around a box, and saying, “Hmmm, that’s kind of a
wonderful sound, isn’t it?”. . . . I’m trying to inform people to have their own sound
experience.71
Another class of object in Knowles’ arsenal is the dried bean. She has collected various
kinds of beans, many of which have been sent to her from other parts of the world.
Her bean turners combine handmade paper with these different varieties. Two of her
“Paper Weather Instruments” are “The Gray Flax Open Bean Turner with Pigeon Peas”
and “The Red Adzuki Bean Turner.”72 Why beans? She says,
I like to use the beans, because they’re not really an art-connected element . . .
since I’m interested in the sound and the feeling of real materials, it seems very
appropriate to use beans, and then the sound of beans is just great, and it’s . . .
a signature of my work, that I have these beans in these different containers.73
likened to water as it runs through a type of sprinkler system. The use of this comparative
mechanism directs greater attention to both of these elements of the performance, and
endows them with a value that would be lacking for either of them in isolation.75 Hartman
writes of her work that she “seeks to reveal hidden correspondences between the most
diverse auditive impressions and in new constellations she creates extraordinary worlds
of sound.”76 The juxtaposition of conventional instruments with found instruments
establishes the distance needed to create such compelling reconciliations.
Andrea Neumann has developed a practice with the instrument of the inside piano,
and is, with Hartman, part of a group of female composer-musicians based in Berlin
called Les Femmes Savantes.77 Neumann was trained in classical piano, and then her
“exploration of the piano for new sound possibilities . . . led her to reduce the instrument
to its strings, its resonance board and the cast-iron frame.”78 This assemblage of inner
workings—this “leftover,” to use her term—became her instrument, until a piano
maker created a lighter version of the instrument for her. She explains that “the single
parts of an instrument . . . are studied separately and individually and are themselves
examined with regard to their sonic potential.”79 The materials of the instrument are
treated as objects in and of themselves.
Her playing techniques include amplification and electronic manipulation, and she
uses objects in various capacities that function as weights, bows, brushes, plectrums,
and mallets. In one performance, she balances the tines of a fork between the frame
and several strings and lightly pulls it upward in a single motion, causing it to pulsate
rapidly for some time. Then she sets a whisk in motion that is fastened to a shelf by
a clothespin. Some complex chain reaction silently begins as she steps in front of
the instrument, sits, and dances to it with such attention to detail that it seems to be
choreographed.80 But as she explains, “If I do something three times in a row, it sounds
different every time. It is extremely difficult to predict a result and to create structures
where I know exactly when something will happen.”81 She has a deep knowledge of the
behaviors of these objects and instrument in relation to one another, and combines
that knowledge with extremely close, in-the-moment listening.
The decision of how to use objects in one’s practice is highly individual. Two
composer-improvisers, the American Judy Dunaway and the Colombian Ricardo
Arias have each focused for well over a decade on the sounds that can be drawn from
balloons; but beyond the nominal similarity of their instrument and their commitment
to it, their practices have very little in common. Arias’ balloon kit includes rubber
bands and carefully balanced pieces of metal, and he uses accessories like polystyrene
and sponges to play the instruments, as well as his hands.82 Dunaway goes for a much
more sustained sound, often using vibrators as resonators, not shying away from the
suggestive aspects of that choice.83 Jean-François Laporte is a Canadian sound artist
whose Dégonflement (1998) is a piece for twelve balloon players who use it as a wind
instrument as well as percussion. The graphic score gives them instructions to play in
a loosely parallel way, accumulating these sounds together.
Rie Nakajima is a UK-based Japanese artist who also works with basic objects,
putting plastic bags, marbles, and buckets in motion through the use of motors in
a manner reminiscent of a Rube Goldberg machine. In Occasions_002 (2011), the
Physicalities 95
large trash bag, whistle, and fabric are each hung from rods. These rods are rotated
clockwise and periodically sound as they pass one or more obstacles on their path.
These relationships determine the periodicity of the installation, which is at a
threshold between regularity and irregularity. Time functions on many different scales,
depending on the length of the orbit.84
In Occasions_001 (2010), the sound of the irregular surface of the floor is activated
by the rotation of plastic cups, a bucket, a playing card, and a stone. The video of
the installation ends with three slide whistles taped to a trash bag and played directly
with the air escaping through three holes.85 In Pendulums (2009), a space is filled and
discovered, as identical pairs of metallic pendulums and clock movements, at various
heights and within several connected rooms, hit each other as they change directions.86
In an improvised performance on June of 2012, a ball, a marble, and other objects
were caused to rotate, each within its own round space—a bowl, a cooking pot, a
drinking glass. Each of these interactions has its own periodic rhythm that depends on
the relative size of the two objects and the mechanism causing it to rotate.87
In Nakajima’s work, there are three main categories of objects: those that are in
motion, those that propel that motion, and those that form boundaries. Occasionally
the object in motion contains its own propulsion, such as a wind-up toy or a metronome
or a pendulum. In live performance situations, she tends to work in a small space, such
as a modest tabletop. In one well-publicized case she was offered a relatively massive,
traditional stage—Queen Elizabeth Hall in London. She elected not to use the stage
itself, but set objects in motion throughout the auditorium. Two separate accounts
reveal how surprisingly immersive this accumulation was:
From a position within the audience, she filled the hall with a crescendo of quietly
whirring, thrumming, vibrating machines from a table of junk shop ephemera,
her performance characterised by a singleminded focus. . . . She went on to patrol
the aisles and staircases, listening, readjusting, composing as she placed sound
objects among the audience. Starting with a single metronome placed on stage, she
methodically built up an immersive, kinetic soundworld. . . .88
She casts objects all across the auditorium: a tin-foil sheet gasps under motorised
friction in the aisle to my left, a metronome chimes at the edge of the stage, a
wind-up toy writhes upon a glockenspiel somewhere behind me. At one point I
feel as though I could close my eyes and use the proximity and reflections of each
sound to paint the room’s exact dimensions onto my imagination—with lines
springing forth from acoustic response and the unique interrelation between
each of the sounds—but Nakajima keeps building beyond a point where this is
possible.
The noise thickens; individual surfaces become indistinguishable . . . and the
piece moves from what started like wires strung delicately across empty space to
the sensation of being submerged in an aquarium tank full of smog water. . . .
Architecture disappears, and I can no longer hear my hand in front of my face.
Breathtaking in more ways than one.89
96 Experimental Music Since 1970
Nakajima caused these modest objects to sonically fill and ultimately overwhelm the
space.
Pierre Berthet is a Belgian percussionist who, in his words, “Designs and builds sound
objects and installations (steel, plastic, water, magnetic fields . . .).”90 In his Expirateur
series of improvisations, the materials are a reverse vacuum cleaner and its hose, a bicycle
inner tube, metal pipes, and rocks. In the videos of these performances, he stays very
close to the action, constantly rearranging the materials according to their interactions.
The vacuum pushes air out rapidly through the hose and then through the attached
bicycle inner tube. The tube responds by flailing rapidly in one direction and then in
the other. Berthet lines up the pipes, usually four or more of various lengths, to catch
the exhalation of this air. Other objects may be present as interference as well, including
plastic bags and long wooden poles. When the tube goes too wild and is not focused
on the pipes, Berthet puts large rocks on either side of it to constrict its movements. He
constantly intervenes, but his actions are always reactions to the trajectories he has set
in motion.91 This interplay is fascinating because it is always hovering at the threshold of
control and wildness, despite the apparent simplicity of each of the materials in isolation.
An interesting contrast to Berthet’s performative approach is that of Serge
Baghdassarians, whose installation leerlauf (2007) for plastic bottles and glass plates
produces sound for hours as a result of a vacuum formed with contrasting air and
water temperatures. The sound of air is again the focus, but it has no intervention
other than the one that set up the initial situation.92 In kritische masse (2008), the air
is also passively allowed to escape. The airstreams of balloons are “directed against a
gap in a ping pong ball which causes the column of air within the ball to oscillate at a
frequency.” The objects need no intervention in this setup, and the form of the piece
correlates to the deflation of each balloon.93 (This piece, along with aerobic exercise
[2007] forms yet another contrast with the balloon practices mentioned earlier.94)
There is something subversive about a performance that involves no standard
musical instrument. One direction to go is toward rarefaction—creating a new
instrument, modifying an existing one, or using one so rare as to be unfamiliar. The
opposite direction is to make sound through the use of materials so common that they
can hardly be avoided in daily life. Through careful and creative attention, an object
normally used in an office or a kitchen is valued for its properties and behaviors, rather
than just for its function.
A piece of tracing paper with twelve rectangles drawn on it (the rectangles repre-
senting the twelve staves of the etude) was overlaid onto a star map. . . .
These star tracings were then converted to pitch-time events for the violin. . . .
The horizontal placement of the tracings within their rectangles was transferred
directly to the placement of notes, and were notated on the music paper by tick
marks at the tops of the staves. The vertical placement of tracings determined their
pitch class.96
The difficulty of the piece was compounded by the determination of other parameters
through the use of the I Ching. This was by no means Cage’s first use of visual
forms to generate musical material. Winter Music (1957) is an early example. The
Concert for Piano and Orchestra (1957–58) involved an elaborate drawing process,
98 Experimental Music Since 1970
and Atlas Eclipticalis (1961) is a foretaste of the Freeman Etudes in its method of
transformation.97
Cage used a method of drawing around rocks to create pitch curves in the Ryoanji
(1983–85) series. (Ryoanji is a stone garden in Kyoto.) These drawings map directly
onto the notation. The shape of each rock drives the speed and direction of changes of
pitch.98 Alvin Lucier has similarly mapped shapes of real things to a pitch/time graph in
a number of pieces. Still Lives (1995) is a suite with eight movements, each of which is
shaped according to Lucier’s drawings of objects he found around his home, including a
bread knife, ferns, and a lamp shade. These drawings were aligned with pitch information
and converted into recorded sine tones. The piano plays around these tones.99
Two years before Still Lives, Hildegard Kleeb and Roland Dahinden had given Lucier
a panoramic photograph of a mountain range in Zug, Switzerland. Lucier transferred
the outline of the mountain peaks to a new page and had Dahinden, a trombonist,
slide upward and downward on the trombone to trace the peaks. “Roland is a skier,” he
explained, “so I thought that he could slide down the mountains on his trombone.”100
The resulting piece is called Panorama (1993). Coincidentally, the artist Sol Lewitt, a
friend of Lucier’s, was to exhibit a piece in Zug. On learning of Lucier’s piece, he asked
for a copy of the panorama and used it as the basis of his wall drawing. His assistant
drew a section of the panorama on the wall, and others were asked to successively trace
the drawing as closely as possible just below. Nearly twenty years later, Lucier wrote a
new version of the piece to coincide with the filming of a scene in the documentary on
his work, No Ideas but in Things (2013). Panorama 2 (2011) is based on Lewitt’s resulting
wall drawing; many string players try to follow the trombone line as accurately as
possible. In both the visual and musical attempts at imitation, success is more apparent
in the aggregate than in its parts: the lines become imprecise, but form a vibrant whole.
The Welsh violinist and improviser Angharad Davies also used line drawings
in her score for Cofnod Pen Bore/Morning Records (2011), but in this case they are
meant to focus on improvisation, and are “layered and interpreted in any way by the
performers.” Like the Zug mountain range, these lines are taken from factual data (“the
composer’s own body temperature taken over a three year period”). They are presented
on transparency sheets, so that the individual sheets (each representing a month) can
be combined in various ways. In the performance on wandelweiser und so weiter, the
performers do not seem to be following any obvious upward/downward progression,
either in pitch or amplitude, as would be most predictable, but are each finding their
own trajectory through their page or overlaid pages.101
For the Canadian composer and artist Chiyoko Szlavnics, drawing is a fundamental
first step of the compositional process. “It begins with the creation of a drawing—a work
of two-dimensional art, designed to represent the fullness of sound.”102 Visual images
are conceived as and ultimately translated to sound images. Two of the hallmarks of
the resulting sounds are glissandi and beating. The listener is set on a path from one
pitch to another, and the intersections with sine tone that occur create beating which
is part of that journey.
For Szlavnics, this process makes the compositional work at once more abstract (not
dealing with specific pitches or rhythms but working in an entirely different medium)
Physicalities 99
and more concrete (pencil has reached paper, and the result will have a direct effect on
the sound). Once the drawing is complete, she transforms it into a score in four phases:
1. I superimpose horizontal and vertical grids on the image (define global scales),
2. I adjust the drawing and grid (set regions), 3. I name all the pitches (specify just-
intonation ratios; make local decisions) and orchestrate the work (colour and/or
fuse sound), and 4. I produce a score more or less in traditional musical notation.103
For Gradients of Detail (2005–06), Szlavnics had ideas both for the sound and image
of the piece as she began generating the material. The drawing was to be an “organic,
plant-like figure,” and the instruments were to create “unfamiliar chords,” and to play
between several critical bands. “So I began,” she wrote, “by drawing a plant-like figure,
which had two main horizontal lines (an interval), out of which grew small bumps (or
bulges), and which was traversed by two delicate lines, like the tendrils of an ivy.”104
Szlavnics says of the listening perspective that “the music demands full concentra-
tion, but at the same time, requires an openness and an ability to be in the moment,
to let the music happen, to drop expectations.”105 The long duration of each motion
is distinct from stasis; it is not sameness, but slowness. It is through this slowness
that the listener is brought inside the shape. There is nowhere else to go. This sense
of immersion is often suggested by Szlavnics’ work. It is so clear where the sound has
been and where it is going that the repercussions of that motion, both acoustically and
in the psyche of the listener, become the primary considerations. What is happening in
that space? What are the events of the trajectory and its intersections, both with other
instruments and with sine tones? One might think that such consistent motion would
become its own sort of stillness, but the way these components interact creates enough
instability and uncertainty that such a state is not reached.
There are no sounds other than these trajectories and their interactions. Even
silence is only an introductory margin. In (a)long lines: we’ll draw our own lines (2004),
the players begin their sounds after ten seconds. There are no breaks for the rest of the
piece. Lines are perpetually being drawn by the instruments with their slow glissandi,
which interact with other lines drawn by sine tones to create beating patterns. These
beatings are most dynamic when one line is ever so slightly over or under another. In
the slowness of Szlavnics’ work, this audible friction of the impact of one line upon
another opens up a chasm to the unknown. Sonic behavior is no longer only linear, but
a series of intended but unpredictable consequences.
In league with several alter egos in the Grúpat collective, Jennifer Walshe has
developed a number of approaches to musical shapes. Like Szlavnics, she tends to make
or describe these shapes herself as part of the compositional process, rather than using
found shapes. One of Grúpat’s members, Flor Hartigan, “creates staff systems using
materials such as barbed wire, lace, and silly string, and invites the audience to make
notations on them.” The score of Conturador (2007) is described as “intricate weavings
and delineations, contours and finely-graded marks.”106 Scintillia (2007) pays homage
to the stick charts made by Marshall Islanders for canoe navigation in its three scores
made of bamboo, willow, and wicker. Two of the scores are “based on constellation
positions and satellite orbits in the sky over Tallaght on 15 March 2007.”107
Walshe’s most clearly developed shape to sound process is in This is Why People O.D.
on Pills/and Jump from the Golden Gate Bridge (2004). After following instructions to
learn to skateboard, the performer is told:
4. Compose an imaginary path you would like to skate. This path should push and
force you to limits, be rich, beautiful, complicated and stylish, and incorporate
some tricks. . . .
5. Choose a pitch on your instrument. Skate your imagined path on this pitch.
(You may choose to skate the path in slow-motion.) Every micro-detail of the
pitch (tuning, timbre, dynamic, envelope, consistency, colour, texture, weight,
feel, pressure, clarity, strength) should correspond absolutely to the experience of
skating the path in your head.108
The path is an imaginary one, but it is made real through sound, on a single pitch. By
limiting the pitch parameter, Walshe centers the conception and performance of the
piece on its textural rather than typically musical qualities.
Malcolm Goldstein is a composer, violinist, and improviser who worked with James
Tenney and Philip Corner in the Tone Roads Ensemble in the 1960s and 1970s. His
Physicalities 101
graphic score, Jade Mountain Soundings (1983), for bowed string instrument, is similar
in its areas of attention to Walshe’s, though it is more prescriptive in that the score
includes the image that is to be traced and describes in detail how it is to be executed.
The thickness of each line is equated with bow pressure or speed, and its curvature
shows bow placement. These readings are subject to the performer’s interpretation, but
offer specific guidance.109
The path from shape to sound takes various forms in these works. In both the
Goldstein and Davies examples, the physical shape directly becomes the notation of
the piece. Szlavnics translates her shapes into relatively standard notation. Lucier’s
notation of Still Lives incorporates both the shape and aspects of regular notation. The
shape of each object was drawn onto the music paper.110 For Walshe, the performer’s
imagination of a physical act and its resulting shape are evoked in detail, and that result
is then reimagined and performed as sound.
But these translations from shape to sound do not always involve created or drawn
shapes. They can be found in nature, and their motion can be traced. Warren Burt’s
Berries (2011) began with a photograph that he took of berries that had fallen from
a tree. He processed the image and ran it through a piece of software that converts
graphics to sound. After listening to the output, he stretched the duration of the piece
to half an hour, finding that it sounded best in this extended duration. (“I’m nothing if
not generous,” he explains.)111
Software and other technologies create the possibility to translate shapes to sound
with minimal intervention. Burt stretched the duration of his recording, but then
left the result untouched. It is also possible to process such shapes live, even as they
move. Through the use of photoresistors, David Behrman, Bob Diamond, and Robert
Watts sonified a passing cloud formation in Cloud Music (1974–79). The image of the
passing clouds was monitored by video, and the photoresistors were placed on the
video screen. As each photoresistor registers the passing clouds, the resistance changes
and the sound is affected. One remarkable thing about this work is how transparently
the speed of the cloud motion is sonified, not just as a line but also as a complex
natural shape.112
Only a few of these works are represented through graphic scores. Sometimes the
shape itself drives the work, without any score as intermediary. What they have in
common is a quality of imagination that travels freely between physical shapes and
sounds in the air.
Notes
1 “SLAPSNAPSTICKPIZZ,” http://www.arcoarcoarco.com/#!engagement/c1pw4.
2 John Lely and James Saunders, eds., Word Events: Perspectives on Notation
(New York: Continuum, 2012), 133.
3 Daniel Vezza, “podcast 25-Simon Steen-Andersen,” http://composerconversations.
com/2013/03/829.
4 Simon Steen-Andersen, Study for String Instrument #1 (Frederiksburg: Edition-S,
2011). http://www.edition-s.dk/music/simon-steen-andersen/study-for-string-
instrument-1. See one example of performance at https://vimeo.com/62835005.
5 Simon Steen-Andersen, Next to Besides Besides #1 (unpublished score, 2003/2005).
http://www.simonsteenandersen.dk/pdf/NextToBesideBesides1.pdf.
Physicalities 103
Perception
Deep Listening is expanding our attention. In Deep Listening we talk about two
forms: focal attention and global attention. Focus [focal] is more like digital, in that
focused attention needs to be renewed moment by moment, in order to exclusively
follow a stream of some sort. A stream of speech for example; you have to keep
renewing your attention to what is being said. . . . Global attention is expanding
to take in and listen to everything that is around you; inside of you. When we do
this, and we can expand almost infinitely to include, and this is what I call inclusive
listening, everything that is possible to listen to. Most of the time we are discarding
what’s going on as not important, but in order to do what I call Deep Listening we
have to include everything.
The inclusivity of attention, questioning of what we hear and how we hear it, how we
digest or process or remark upon it, is integral to Deep Listening. Oliveros conceives
of her works as “attentional strategies”2 that lead to this approach. Deep Listening:
A Composer’s Sound Practice (2005) is a small book filled with such strategies, including
warm-ups, breathing exercises, and detailed descriptions of each activity, including
journaling, walking, conversing, recording, interacting, and singing.
The exercises were written down for use in workshop situations, but can be done by
anyone with an open attitude. One of the participants in Oliveros’s sessions comments:
When I really listen in this way I hear differently, in the sense that merely being open
to listening changes how I perceive sounds, which in turn changes how I listen, and
so on in an ever expansive fashion. This is where discernment comes into play.3
108 Experimental Music Since 1970
While Oliveros is committed to Deep Listening as a practice, there are all sorts of other
creative ways of focusing attention on the listener’s perceptual experience.
Architectures of sound
Jürg Frey is a Swiss member of the Wandelweiser collective. In his work, the sense
of place is metaphorical. The listener moves around within the space created by his
sounds and silences in a way that has more to do with thought than with acoustics,
physical placement, or the passage of time.
He describes his music as either “completely without individual parts,” or with
sections “tied to each other by an invisible thread,” with as many new beginnings as
there are sections.4 The Streichquartett 2 (1998–2000) is a compelling example of the
first type. A sustained chord is pulled across the strings, followed by a brief pause.
In the Bozzini Quartet’s recording of this piece, the quality of this sound is both
grounded and ethereal, present and otherworldly. There is another break in the sound,
and following this the duration from one chord to the next varies slightly, hovering
between four and eight seconds. The listener is placed in a single, suspended moment
that is expanded—never broken or disrupted—into a duration of thirty minutes.5
Frey could be referring to this piece or many of his other works when he reflects:
The sense of filling the room often translates for Frey into the image of his work as
architecture. There is both structure (a space to occupy) and empty space (room to
move around). Frey explains:
A place or a space is created, and it is essential that it has empty space. The material
will be used to limit this space, and this space will be influenced by the type of use
of the products and the different qualities of these materials. In music there are
then the surface of the sound, scope, its registers and the relationship between the
different levels of the breaks that hold this volume open and permeable.7
In Ohne Titel (2 Violinen) (1995–96) and the first two string quartets, the players act
as a single instrument, always starting a dyad or chord in unison and leaning into that
sound together. This stability of configuration and attack invites a focus of attention on
rhythmic and instrumental instabilities for the duration of the work.
In Frey’s work, the ear is often drawn to the relative states of sounds, from solid,
stable sounds to something with much more delicacy or fluctuation. He tends to
present solidity alongside instability in one of several ways. In Streichtrio (1997), a
technique is described in the score that results in “a mixture of tone and noise.
Emerging overtones open up.”13 Clear pitches may also be placed next to more
amorphous sounds in the orchestration of the piece. In 60 Pieces of Sound (2009), two
instruments play notated pitches, and the third is indeterminate. “The ensemble plays
pitches and/or noises. A rich sound with overtones is possible.”14 One player in Time
Intent Memory (2012) is assigned to non-pitched instruments, and is asked to add
“background and shadows.” But here the contrast between instruments is softened, as
all of the music is to be “lightly touched and sketched.”15 A third means of presentation
of such delicacy unfolds over time. Frey will sometimes embed an extremely delicate
moment between solid sound objects, as if to protect them within a defined space.
110 Experimental Music Since 1970
In effect, the solidity of structure of Frey’s compositional work provides the listener
with a protected space in which to breathe.
Immersions
The American composer Laurie Spiegel is known as the developer of the influential
MusicMouse software, which is just one example of her interest in how people
participate in musical processes. In the notes to The Expanding Universe (1975),
she writes:
In this piece she strives for a “sufficiently supportive continuity” that invites the listener
to let down her guard and be fully attentive.16 She explains further:
It seems that people are fending off a great deal now. The dominant process is
overload compensation: how can I rule out things that I don’t want to focus on
so that I can ingest a manageable amount of information and really be involved
in it. Attention is now the scarce commodity. Information used to be the scarce
commodity, “information” including music of course.17
Like Frey, she creates these spaces out of sound. There is no remarkable physical
component to The Expanding Universe, but tones seem to emanate from one another
under the influence of a powerful gravitational tonality. There is fluidity within the
environment but its dominating principles never shift.
In the American multimedia artist Camille Norment’s work, a different type of
immersion takes place: a participant is often invited into a physical environment that is
delimited in surprising ways. Notes from the Undermind (2001) takes place in a padded
cell—“a hidden space of the social unconscious.” Poles ring at different pitches until
they are grasped by people in the space and muted, and their resonance is affected by
speech and other sounds.18 Conversely, people’s actions or sounds are not disruptive
but disrupted in Dead Room (2000), in which every surface is covered with sound
insulation and subwoofers create “subtle intangible disturbance.”19 Within the Toll
(2011) is an eight-channel sound installation that creates a sound barrier between the
greenery of a sculpture park and a parking area:
Like a shimmering sonic mist, the seductive yet haunting voice of the glass
armonica encircles a “swell” in the landscape that simultaneously recalls a swollen
belly and a burial mound. The hovering compositions and their subtle spatial
dynamics alter the psychology of the space by intermittently echoing layers of
Perception 111
sound as musical fragments across a clearing, like a sonic memory in a call and
response with itself.20
In all of these cases, the participant is informed through both sight and sound that she
is in some sort of bubble—a strange space in which things operate differently.
Max Neuhaus draws listeners into his work through subtle differences. It is not
loud sound that catches their attention, but a relative silence in the midst of sound
(as in the Times Square installation21) or a sound that was there and suddenly is not
(Eybesfeld) or that shifts almost unnoticeably (Three to One). By filling a space with
sound, however subtle, and equating it with a space to be inhabited, Neuhaus is gently
but effectively immersing the listener in an entirely transformed sense of place. This is
not an attempt at controlling experience, but rather at creating “catalysts for shifts in
frame of mind.”
Sometimes when I finish a work I take several people through it before it opens
to get a sense of the range of what they are hearing, but I am not interested in
knowing what they are experiencing. In a way it is none of my business. I am
concerned with the catalyst, the initiator; their individual pathways are very
private, their own.22
Through such an immersion in sound, he enables the listener to have her own
interaction with time, place, and memory. Phil Julian (aka Cheapmachines) could be
talking about Neuhaus’s work as well as his own when he writes:
What interested me was music that “overwhelms” the listener in some way, or more
specifically that completely inhabits the space it is given. This does not necessarily
have to be achieved via extremes of volume, but can come more via a physical
“presence” to the sound.23
For Neuhaus, the physical presence of sound is more likened to color than it is to any
sort of physical overpowering; yet this color is immersive.
In many of these works, sound colors advance and recede according to the physical
location of the listener. Part of the description of Eybesfeld (2007) reads:
It is not until leaving the sound field that the change is perceptible. What emerges
gradually disappears abruptly. The absence of sound is more apparent than its presence,
and retroactively reframes the last few moments of the listener’s experience.
This momentary shift becomes a more palpable experience in Three to One (1992).
There are three rooms, each connected by a stairway. Each room has a different sound
112 Experimental Music Since 1970
color. According to Neuhaus’s design, the ascent begins without an awareness of the
shift in sound color, but in the listener’s descent, “aural memories begin to fuse the
distinctions into one differentiated whole.”25 Three things that are unknown, each
discovered successively, become one thing that is known in context. The stairways
might have been doorways, but that would erase the physical work involved in creating
such a sense of transition.
A piece that does use doorways as transitional spaces is Untitled (1996), placing a
different sound color in each of the arches:
placing listeners
in their present
in their future
in their past
according to their moment26
By coloring these prominent points of transition with sound, Neuhaus overlays a static
experience (sound in space) with a temporal experience (walking) and complicates the
linearity of the walk. The braids of anticipation, experience, and memory are unraveled
through the fixedness of these sounds in traversable space.
In Neuhaus’s work, the color is present and can be inhabited, while in Peter Ablinger’s
Sehen und Hören (1994–), “movements in space . . . condense into color spectra.” This
process is part of his idea of “verticalization,”27 in which linear time is transformed into
qualitative blocks of sound. The Sehen und Hören pieces are, in Ablinger’s thought,
emphatically musical works that are presented as photographs. They have been taken
with a moving camera with extended exposure time. The motion is a linear process
that maps to a musical conception of time, and the exposure time has an effect that
correlates to the processing techniques used in pieces such as his IEAOV series.28
Figure 4.1 Peter Ablinger: Ohne Titel (2002), Untitled (12 photographs)
© Peter Ablinger
Perception 113
This difference between the horizontal and the vertical can be likened to a traditional
concert experience versus an installation. Linear time becomes navigable space. In the
Ablinger example, the photographs are not an immersion in themselves, but they are
documents of the transition from a narrative experience to a nontemporal experience
of color and form.29
Phill Niblock describes himself as “the forgotten Minimalist.”30 His drones, like
Ablinger’s photograph pieces, suggest a nontemporal experience. They are continuities,
a narrowing of attention to the point that a typical object of focus (surface pitch or
rhythmic movement) does not hold the attention, but instead its results do. It is as if
the tones that are played simply become boundaries or containers in which something
else happens. On the Touch Three release, the breathing and other transitions of the
instrumentalist are edited out. The attack and release of a note are two of the aspects
that define it most clearly, and yet in each of these tracks, Niblock has placed us in the
middle of the sound as quality and accumulation.31 We listen to tones that emanate
from a particular instrument, but somehow we are not really listening to the instrument
itself, just as one doesn’t really see an elephant if all that is visible is a patch of its skin.
Where in Ablinger’s Sehen und Hören pieces, time becomes color, in Niblock’s hands,
instrument becomes color. In Alto Tune (2004) there are very gradual accumulations of
sound. A new tone is introduced after some time, as if the other tones have generated
it. Whether the instruments are saxophones or low brass, as in disseminate (1998), the
experience doesn’t seem to have changed in nature, but to have transposed.32
In every aspect of his work, Niblock is directing attention to the listening experience
itself. In the winter solstice concerts held at Experimental Intermedia, he broadcasts
different videos throughout the space.
As a result, the viewer must make choices about how to focus his or her attentions
on the diverse range of stimuli. . . .
Yet, there is no intended matching of film and recorded sound in exhibition. On
the contrary, it is Niblock’s goal to expand these singular, enigmatic texts outward,
into the register of perceptual experiment in which the audience becomes engaged
in a non-prescriptive form of phenomenological participation in which sound
and image maintain the seemingly paradoxical relationship of simultaneity and
interdependence.33
of people around the world engaged in manual labor is played simultaneously with a
sequence of his musical works. There is a constant effort by many viewers and listeners
to find correlations between the two and to ascribe these correlations to Niblock. We
are conditioned to map sight to sound, both in everyday life and in the media, so
this impulse is a difficult one to break. When Niblock was probed on this point, his
response was definitive.
You told me once before that there’s no relationship in your mind whatsoever
between the images and the music, but I wanted to push the point a little . . .
PN Any relationship is purely bullshit and your problem . . .!36
It is challenging to pull Niblock’s pieces apart for special consideration, and this
challenge seems deliberate in its many dimensions. A number of his works are
presented in The Movement of People Working, but they are part of the fabric of the
whole video work, which is continuous, and emphatically not divided up by section.
In addition to this, Niblock tends to accumulate his pieces as he accumulates his tones,
superimposing one on another. In terms of “hearing a piece,” or hearing Niblock’s
work, the best approach is to give up and immerse oneself in his larger project. “I am
sitting down to learn what X is, what it sounds like and how it behaves,” is an attitude
that will only lead to frustration with this work. There are some simple answers: there
are drones and accumulations of tones and beating. These factors are often present in
his work. But the more interesting aspect comes when you have put yourself in the
type of situation he has made the music for: an engulfment of at least two (and quite
possibly three) of the senses. The third sense comes into play through the fact that the
beating is so much a part of the music, and builds so unremittingly, that it can be felt
as much as it is heard.
For Niblock, it is crucial that the music be heard in multiple dimensions. “I mean,
the whole idea of this music coming out of a stereo system instead of a quad system,
to me is a disaster. Because it isn’t engaging the space of the room, the acoustic
environment.”37 The music is to saturate the space:
I am interested in filling the space and the time so that the music does not have this
kind of pulsing in the air space, this rhythmic pulse. It is very much about filling
the performance space. I am interested in having the space filled with sound waves
so that it gets a different kind of plasticity, not so much more openness, but more
like water.38
In this fluid environment, the listener makes her own experience, choosing how to
track any images, how to associate them with the sound, how to inhabit the space that
is filled with this sound, and how to engage with the beats it produces.
Paul DeMarinis’s Rain Dance (1998) offers a different manner of immersion, one
that he calls an “interactive and literally immersive sound environment.” Water streams
fall onto the umbrellas that the participants are holding. The water passes through
nozzles that affect the vibrations, and specific pitches emerge with the impact of the
Perception 115
drops on the umbrella.39 It is through the impact that only occurs with the listener’s
presence that sound is produced. A different and far more constrictive immersion
takes place in Re-Titled (2006), which takes place in a tunnel under a bridge. Lights are
activated by sound, so the tunnel is entirely dark when the space is quiet. Pulses of light
are excited by momentary sounds, and traffic on the roadway “fills the space with an
enormously loud roar,” as well as with light. The presence and absence of light reveals
“the nodes and nulls in the sound itself.”40 As with Niblock’s work, this piece creates
an immersive experience through a combination of architecture, image, and sound.
The form or development of the work itself is not significant or even trackable. What
changes is the listener’s perception of how one thing relates to another, and the impact
of the entire situation.
In Standing Waves (1976), the composer and trombonist Stuart Dempster creates
an immersive situation by combining a loud note with a particularly reverberant
acoustic—the Grand Chapel in Avignon—in such a way that the note as he plays it is
indistinguishable from its echo.
This single first note, after I stop playing, continues for 14 seconds into silence just
before the next note. You will eventually learn to tell when I quit playing and leave
only the echo, but at first you may be deceived.
the focus of our attention and understanding from representation to being. Or,
in other terms, we should be free to do this. When listening to this CD, I hope
you will desire to be there, in La Selva, but I also -and especially- hope you will be
amazed to be here, in La Selva.42
Distances of sound
Sounds travel and can be heard at various distances. “Spatialization” is a term that
applies to work in which the sound producing elements are deliberately placed
in a way that highlights these variations in distance. This term applies to some,
but not the majority of the works considered in this section. The perception of
increasing and decreasing distance can be accurate and literal. It can also depend
on manipulations, such as John Chowning’s “Simulation of Moving Sound Sources,”
which “controls the distribution and amplitude of direct and reverberant signals
between the loudspeakers to provide the angular and distance information, and
introduces a Doppler shift to enhance velocity information.”43 The physical sense
of distance can be combined with a psychological sense of distance, as in Laetitia
Sonami’s work. In other examples, the use of floating speakers adds an element
of indeterminacy to the distances of sounds. Distance is felt in a very personal
way in the sonic beds conceived by the British composer and sound artist Kaffe
Matthews,44 Pascale Battus’s massages, and in the home environments of Bill Dietz’s
Tutorial Diversions.
Laetitia Sonami has developed an instrument called the Lady’s Glove, with which
she uses MIDI signals to control synthesizers and samples. She writes:
She explains some of her logic and associations. Ease of recognition and quietness
are associated with closeness, and loudness and unintelligibility with distance. “The
rodeo PA’s, the Japanese politician PA’s, the police PA’s: they all speak in the void.” She
writes that she has “the urge to constantly juggle distances by shifting sounds like a
card trickster in the hope that it is the listener who will move freely between imaginary
anchors.”45 She has developed a performance technique that aligns with this conception
of distance. With the Lady’s Glove, a gesture near the body will have a different effect
than the same gesture far from the body, and its distance from the ground will also
Perception 117
affect it.46 Psychological distance and physical distance play together as factors in her
performative practice.47
These distances need not be large to present discernible change. Pascal Battus has
been performing Sound Massages since 2000 using very small sounds and motions.
My aim is to bypass the medium in which the sound wave propagates and
divides—air—and substitute instead skin, bone and flesh. This radically upsets the
listener’s space and inner listening. The interesting point is that I can neither hear
nor feel what the listener hears and feels.
These sounds are heard only by a single individual, and at times “seem to come from
within his or her own head.” In another type of massage, the sounds are made in the air
around the listener’s ears. In both cases, there is an experience of sound that is directed
inward. Sounds are related to the immediate space either just outside of or within the
listener’s own head.48
The dynamics of distance are internalized for the American composer Steven
Kazuo Takasugi. His recommendation of headphones for hearing his work bypasses all
of the apparent visual or physically traceable aspects of distance. The use of close-mic
positions for recording is also part of an “aesthetics of myopia.”
The rapid shifts from one performed sound to another present one form of
disorientation. Another, more visceral type is the use of reverberation as a dynamic
element of the work. Ming Tsao writes, “One is often jolted from that experience,
awakened, through magnified sounds and abrupt shifts of perspective.”50
Reverberations can be “shattered,” as they are in the “Crustacean” sections of
The Jargon of Nothingness (2007). Tsao describes this reverberation as “one in which
slices of the decay of a sound are pasted to others obeying a very different room acoustics
(i.e., transgressing ‘the natural law of uninterrupted decay’).”51 They can also be “infected”
(turned inside out). Magnifications can be projected at an angle, and the level of focus
and distance of the sounds are also variables. There are three such states: “(a) distant/
blurred, (b) distant/crisp (via spectacles) and (c) close/crisp (via magnification).”52
This conception of sound construction in Jargon of Nothingness is not only visual,
but also tactile. Sounds are objects to be manipulated, distorted, and transformed, and
this activity is projected directly into the ears of the listener. The myopic perspective,
brought about both through the close placement of the microphone on acoustic
sounds and by hearing the composition through headphones, places the listener in
118 Experimental Music Since 1970
the midst of a complicated situation. The material must be navigated, but pathways
are only momentary and ultimately illusory. Finally the sound world must be accepted
on its own terms, as a constructed universe that is the real, disorienting experience of
the listener for the fifteen minutes of its duration, and possibly a good amount of time
afterward.
While Takasugi manipulates his recordings to create jarring shifts of perspective,
the Russian composer Dmitri Kourliandski also uses “maximally close” microphones
in his falsa lectio (2013) release, but does not suggest such shifts. “Thus we tried to
gain the effect of entering the instrument, entering the sound anatomy. This effect
permitted us to open up lots of hidden noises which are usually swallowed down by
the concert hall acoustics. While listening with headphones this sound physiology
comes ahead.” The sounds produced by each of the soloists are presented without any
sense of removal. If anything, the listener is closer to the sound than the performer.
The exertions required of the violinist in prePositions (2008) are intensely audible, as
are the mechanisms of the instruments themselves that normally get washed away in
the sheen of acoustics. Both FL (2008) and Voice-off (2008) are called “a trip inside the
interpreter.” The sounding flute and the voice both rely on the vocal mechanism, and
it becomes an experience of vicariously hearing one’s own vocal mechanism in a state
of intense exertion.53
Claudia Molitor is a British composer and artist whose 10 mouth installations
(2011) conflates listening with the act of eating, presenting ten different ways to eat
three different foods: popping sugar, pretzel sticks, and pumpkin seeds.
The aim of the piece was three fold, to create an incredibly intimate piece, one that
only the participating individual could feel, hear and taste; to draw attention to the
fascinating sounds that occur even when engaging in something so every-day as
eating; and of course it was a great way to draw attention to the interconnectedness
of the senses.54
The listening experience is literally inverted. It is directed toward the activity taking
place in a cavity more or less between the ears.
Like Takasugi and Kourliandski, Richard Chartier intends much of his work to
be heard through headphones. He works in a reductionist line, in what has come to
be known as “microsound.” The Series (2000) release55 is “meant to be experienced
at low volumes or on headphones,” but this first option seems unlikely to yield any
but the most faintly perceptible sounds except under the most perfect of conditions.
Will Montgomery writes, “Inevitably, the listener wants to turn up the volume but this
never quite works: the high frequencies hardly seem to get any louder and the low
frequencies are simply too big for domestic speakers.” Even in the headphone situation,
the sounds are elusive. It is only through repetition that it becomes clear that subtle
tones are being emitted. As Montgomery puts it, “The music pulls the ears towards its
own disappearance.”56 Along with Decisive Forms (2001) and Of Surfaces (2002), this
release defies any useful description, except insofar as to underline the necessity of full
attention and carefully considered listening conditions.
Perception 119
Any number of dancers discover troughs of quiet sound along axes of pairs
of loudspeakers which they may follow, changing directions, if they wish, at
intersections. . . .
Close tune any number of oscillators, causing hyperbolas between loudspeakers
to spin in elliptical patterns through space at speeds determined by the tunings
and in directions toward the lower-pitched loudspeakers.60
The motion of these sounds in space is explained simply in relation to Crossings (1982):
“The beats move from instrument to loudspeaker when the instrumental sound
is higher than the pure wave or from the loudspeaker to the instrument when the
instrumental sound is lower.”61
Mary Jane Leach has focused on writing pieces for multiples of the same or similar
instruments, and has configured the sounds in place, time, and pitch so as to place the
listener in a field of beating patterns. Additionally, the timbral equivalencies between
the pitches and instruments offer the semblance that a note is traveling through space,
but is otherwise unaltered in its transfer from one performance site to another. In Note
Passing Note (1981), “Straight lines indicate actual physical movement,” as the singer
passes from one recorded channel to the other on a steady pitch.62 In Trio for Duo
(1985) there are four performance sites in the four corners of the room, surrounding
120 Experimental Music Since 1970
the audience: taped alto flute, taped voice, live flute, and live voice. Leach drew on the
similarity of her own singing voice to the alto flute, and projected the live parts through
speakers to make the four parts sonically equivalent.63 “Lines are passed from voice to
voice, weaving a tapestry of matching and contrasting timbres.”64
Ron Kuivila has said that his own work involves “the creation of sound fields that
are sensitive to movement.”65 To get at this effect, he has transposed ultrasound into a
range audible to humans:
Any time something moves, any sound that happens to bounce off the mover is
shifted slightly in pitch. This doppler shift is normally too small to be heard. The
expansion of pitch intervals just described makes this phenomenon fully audible.
Ultrasound is more easily affected by air currents and changes in temperature and
humidity. The sound retains this imprint as it is transposed, bringing it within
hearing.66
In Untitled (1984), he set up a system that was responsive to people’s movements, and
was most sensitive to movements that were slow and steady. The presence of a barrier
of broken glass enforced a cautious approach. “Visitors literally moved through a
sound world composed for them.”67
Michael Brewster works extensively with sound as it relates to particular spaces,
and speaks of his works as acoustic sculptures:
Sound has properties beyond its considerable powers of evocation that are actual
spacial physical things we can feel and locate with our ears, sometimes with our
bodies. Sound has physical size, actual dimensions in feet or meters, as well as
density, vibrancy, rhythms and textures. Walking through it in its resonant state
provides an experience similar to perusing a landscape but from the inside,
with all of your body instead of from the outside with just your eyes. It shows us
the “near field.” Like a solid it has volumes, edges, planes, fullnesses, flatnesses,
roundnesses, and hollows: the works. It comes “fully equipped” to elaborate our
experience sculpturally.
He uses sustained standing waves to “actually press the object of attention around the
viewer . . . while locating, dislocating, and relocating their awarenesses of the place they
occupy.” It is essential for him that the listener is in a dynamic relationship to the work
from the midst of it.
Usually we listen from afar, like we see, always at a distance. Our attention expands
outward from here to over there. In these acoustic spaces we can hear only here,
from in here. The scope of our attention implodes. The where of the experience
happens here instead of there.
These works are tuned to a particular space, and like Kuivila’s pieces are sensitive to the
movements of their inhabitants, so that someone “could move throughout that space
Perception 121
and cause the whole field to displace itself, and the original quiet area you’d be hiding
out in would suddenly become real loud.”68 This work operates in terms of nearness
and distance, as in the case of slider (1999): “Three modulated tones slid into the room,
blooming into a field of near and distant incidents.”69 Events occur in the space, rather
than over time.
The Dream House of La Monte Young and Marian Zazeela is essentially
detemporalized, in that it has been in operation for over twenty years. This installation
uses a combination of light, acoustics, and tuning to create an utterly immersive
experience. Kyle Gann recounts his experience in the Dream House in 1994:
Walk into The Base 9:7:4 Symmetry and you’ll hear a whirlwind of pitches swirl
around you. Stand still, and the tones suddenly freeze in place. Within the room,
every pitch finds its own little niche where it resonates, and with all those close-
but-no-cigar intervals competing in one space (not to mention their elegantly
calculated sum- and difference-tones), you can alter the harmony you perceive
simply by pulling on your earlobe. . . . Moving your head makes those tones leap
from high to low and back, while that cluster in the seventh octave, with its wild
prime ratios like 269:271, fizzes in and out. Marian Zazeela’s light sculptures in the
same space are the perfect visual analogue.70
The situation created with these tunings and this space invites a dynamic sense of
location, and has caused Gann, among other visitors, to navigate that geography as an
act of exploration.
Bill Dietz writes that his “work has focused on the genealogy of the concert and the
performance of listening.”71 His Tutorial Diversions bring the listener back into a home
environment in presenting a series of navigations through the listener’s own familiar
spaces and materials:
At their core, they’re most effective when used on your own, in your own space,
with your own sound system, and most importantly with your own source material.
There, you’re relating to something you take pleasure in (your favorite song, for
instance) in a different way, a way which (because of your personal investment)
cannot be shared.72
The setup for a number of these pieces involves running the selected track through
specially designed software that alters its dynamic contour. In Lo soffia il cielo . . .
così, the new sound file is played through a single speaker, and the listener is to move
through the room so as to hear the song at a single dynamic. The distance from the
speaker becomes the variable in the control of the listener-performer.73 What would
have been a passive listening experience becomes quite literally an active one, as the
room is navigated in relation to the loudness of the music. 3-Part Dances (2009–10)
uses a parallel concept, but this time the room or even the building can be exited to
maintain the volume level.74 In Home Jetty (2013), a large and unobstructed space is
to be found, and the task is to “discover the PROFILE’s threshold of audibility.” Dietz
122 Experimental Music Since 1970
suggests that a spiral pattern, either clockwise or counterclockwise, will be the most
effective fulfillment of this task.75
A number of methods have been developed to actually move the sound sources.
In Tuning Up (2008), Stephen Cornford, in collaboration with Bill Leslie, sustained a
chord among balloons.76 Casey Farina and James Diomede’s project CONDOR is a six-
channel audio system played via bluetooth in robotic blimps.77 Lucio Capece works with
miniature speakers—sometimes in balloons and at other times in pendulums—that
interfere with each other’s space both audibly and visibly. In Music for PENDULUMS
and SINE WAVES in Different Tuning Systems (2013), these contrasting tunings further
agitate this relationship, as does the feedback emitted by the third speaker.78 Capece
writes of another related piece that it operates as a suggestion “to think and perceive
sound in terms of movement, distance, light and space.”79
In the Australian composer and instrument builder Greg Schiemer’s A Concert on
Bicycles (1983), “an outdoor audience rides bicycles en masse tuned to a radio broadcast
played through moving ghetto-blasters.”80 The cyclists hear the sustained sounds from
their own vehicles, as well as Doppler effects produced on the other bicycles in motion
toward or away from them. Schiemer recalls:
Sound reflections off the ground, off stationary objects alongside the bicycle
path and off the walls of a tunnel near Scrivener Dam accounted for some
interesting effects that had not been anticipated. One of these effects was the
impression of sudden aural activity produced simply by a single strong reflection
off a stationary object such as a large rock or post. The cyclist would simply
experience this as a moving sound whizzing past one’s head as one rode by as if
a magpie swooped by.81
Figure 4.3 Gordon Monahan: Speaker Swinging (1982), photo of performance at the
Music Gallery, Toronto, 1987, photo by Dwight Siegner
© Gordon Monahan
basketball court at Wesleyan. “As the speakers spun around the performers’ heads the
pitches of the waves rose and fell slightly because of the Doppler effect.”82
“Speaker Swinging,” Monahan writes, “was first inspired by hearing Trans Am
automobiles cruising on a hot summer night with Heavy Metal blaring out of the
windows. As the cars cruised by, there was that fleeting moment of wet, fluid music,
when one tonality melts into another.”83 On the video, the first image is of the three
men powerfully swinging these speakers on long lengths of wire. The house lights fade,
and the illuminated speakers draw circles in the air. Gradually the attention is drawn
away from the physical actions and toward the complexity of the Doppler effects as the
three speakers approach and recede in shifting patterns.84
Disembodied sound
Many works discussed so far have removed deliberation from sound production, or have
directed attention to sounds that are being made independently of any performance. But
there are also works that call for no physical production, reproduction, or recognition
of actual sound. They exist solely as internalized aural impressions. More specifically,
they might evoke memories of past sounds, constructions of a present unvoiced sonic
experience, or imaginations of potential future sounds.
Bill Drummond, formerly of the pop group The KLF and now operating in the context
of Penkiln Burn, made a text piece called STOP (2008) that appeals to both memory
and imagination, asking the reader first to “THINK OF A SOUND / EXPERIENCED
124 Experimental Music Since 1970
IN YOUR PAST / THAT HAS AFFECTED YOU / LIKE NO OTHER” and then to
imagine an equivalent sound “TO BE EXPERIENCED IN YOUR FUTURE.”85
IMAGINE (2006) presents a scenario in which there is neither music nor specific
memory of the sound of music, and then continues:
This piece activates the aural imagination, but also a type of imagination involved in
writing or reading fiction. The scene is alternately dystopian and utopian. It illustrates
a void and then repopulates it. It is a speculation. How would you make music if
everything we knew about music was gone, except the simple fact “that it had been
important to you and your civilisation?”86 The association of sound with feeling things
at some level of depth runs through Drummond’s work. In SHOW (2007), 100 residents
of a city are asked to remember and describe a local sound “that evokes emotion.”87
Drummond brings the listener firmly into the present in ON THE MOUNTAIN
(2006). The instruction is to ascend Rescheskogel (a mountain near Salzburg) and “AT
THE TOP / TAKE TIME TO LISTEN / TO WHAT IS INSIDE YOUR HEAD.”88 What
is heard could be related to the past, the present, or the future, but irrespective of that,
it is a present, independent reality that those sounds are occurring to the listener at
that time: It is a present reality. In a related piece, CLIMB (2006), after climbing to the
top of any mountain the listener-performer is to listen to the sound of “The17,” which
is Drummond’s alternately imaginary and ad hoc actual chorus.89 A description of that
sound is to be recorded and e-mailed to a specified address. When the number of such
descriptions reaches 17, they will be compiled into a score.90 That score will likely also
exist in the aural imagination of the listener-performer.
Peter Ablinger’s Weiss/Weisslich 11B (1994–) is a series of instructions to generate
a score based on a transcribed experience. He activates the imagination of the listener
through a series of specific sound descriptions.
Since 1994 a series of scripts have been written for which I would sit for 40 minutes
each and write down what I actually hear. I would love to think about this noise
protocol as music: one imagines the sound which is actually read. The music arises in
the head of each reader or listener. I think “real” music is not too different from that.91
The piece exists in two parts. The first part is not an imagined sound, but a transcription
of sounds that are produced and heard in that forty-minute session. Technically there is
a vocalized performance of the transcription, in that it is read aloud, but Ablinger’s intent
is to elicit a relationship to the described sounds, rather than to the performed text. He
has developed a method of performance to de-emphasize the performative aspect:
audience but only for oneself). Read slowly to give time to imagine the sounds
that appear in the text.92
Ablinger’s instruction that the voice be “like ‘inner’ reading . . . only for oneself ” has
significance that spills over into several other pieces. Michael Pisaro’s braids for (silent)
reader (1997) is scored for just such a voice, but it is never physically voiced. Each
line of text is to be read over six seconds, which are counted internally. “The rate of
reading within each line is determined by the performer; when the end of a line is
reached early, the reader waits until 6 seconds have elapsed before proceeding to the
next line.”93 This temporal stipulation has at least two functions. First, it prevents the
piece from becoming a simple reading exercise, as if it were any other text. Each page,
with these guidelines, lasts for five minutes. Whatever speed of reading someone may
have is likely slowed down. The second function of this six-second rule is to create an
internal counterpoint. The same mind that is reading is also counting. This discipline
is challenging. It might lead to creating or discovering a differentiation between an
internal counting voice and an internal reading voice.
Francesco Gagliardi is a filmmaker and performance artist whose Reading series
(2008) offers various instructions on how to silently read a book, some of which are
mirrored in the instructions, such as:
Reading Reading 66
(silently) (silently) Read read every every word word twice twice. Keep keep track
track of of the the meaning meaning.
Note Note: really really read read each each word word twice; twice; don’t don’t just
just repeat repeat it it in in your your head head.94
Like the Ablinger piece, the image or meaning behind each word is emphasized, but
the double appearance of each word is a type of articulation that has sonic properties.
126 Experimental Music Since 1970
Pisaro’s and Gagliardi’s reading pieces occur in the moment. New information
is presented to the listener-performer that is understood in successive moments
as sound. Ablinger’s Sehen und Hören (discussed earlier in the chapter) and Tom
Johnson’s Imaginary Music (1974) do not unfold in a linear way, but rather as single
images. Where Ablinger uses photographic processes to suggest noise as an excess of
information, Johnson hand-draws his scores using music notation symbols. These
symbols suggest a musical reading, but do not trace a line from one end to another.
Since they exist only in imaginary form, they can remain an abstraction in the mind
of the listener.95
Ablinger’s Die Generalpause (2001) offers an image of removal of persistent sound
for various durations and distances.
This piece could be performed either in relation to heard sounds, using an imaginary
subtractive capacity, or purely in the imagination. It is an interesting question which
would be easier to do, and in the one-minute or one-hour version either one could
easily be attempted. While the cessation of traffic noise carries overtones of bliss,
AUFHÖREN (1995) (translated as both “to cease and to suddenly listen”) presents
three isolated and drastic sound images, two of which promise to be quite loud.
These ellipses in the text can presumably be filled in with whatever object presents the
most vivid or memorable sonic image.
In February 26, 2000, the Israeli sound artist and composer Amnon Wolman
describes an even more dystopian sound:
A new sound, a very nervous, taut and nerve-racking sound. You hear it and almost
want to put your finger in your ear to dampen it, but you hold back, reasoning that
it will mutate, it will turn into something else, but it doesn’t. . . . Every once in a
while the volume seems to have a bearing and it is possible that perhaps it will
disappear, but it doesn’t. . . . When you (and I) spin our heads it seems to alter only
slightly, but then you recognize that it didn’t really change.98
Wolman’s score sounds like an act of hypnosis. It is creating a sound image, describing
its cause, effect, and associations. It plays on the likely past experiences of the listener-
performer. People will often hold out a false hope that a sound nuisance is lessening,
only to find that it has not actually changed. Wolman’s suggestion of this experience
is the lure into a suspension of disbelief, making this fiction sound horribly vibrant.
Perception 127
Pauline Oliveros’s Any Piece of Music (1980) turns imagination again to more
positive ends, and invites a series of speculations, asking the question, “If you could
write any piece of music, what would you write?” The question is to be answered “in as
many ways as possible.” The piece operates as a command to let the aural imagination
overcome any sense of limitation: “Assume that no kind of restraint exists.”99 The
activated aural imagination may be the ultimate music venue, the site of limitless
potential.
Benedict Mason describes the scores in his book, outside sight unseen and unopened
(1999) as existing “in the mind of the reader, whose imagination may well devise
private virtual spaces and scenarios which cannot ever be practically realised.”100 It is
a book of “Texts, images, to read, perform and imagine.” David Toop describes it as
“a kind of book of hushed revelations, to be dipped into, and privately pondered.”101
One of these pieces, telling, asks the reader to “find a simple abstract music,” and keeps
defining that music through both description and negation. There are options, but
there are also limits, and the listener is guided to “the sound the instrument makes /
and what happens when it / activates and energises the acoustical space.”102
The aural imagination is a resource that is tapped by composers in the process
of creation. The use of it as a site for the work itself is a field that invites further
development, and thoroughly negates the passivity so commonly associated with
hearing or listening.
Attali’s reference to Leibniz’s palace of marvels, in which occupants of the house have
no notion that all of their actions are being surveyed.105 Here, the listener hears the
listening process, apparently critically, but arrives at no conclusions. She does not
realize how the forces around her are shaping her experience.
While this work of Schmickler’s plays with perception and memory, psychoacoustic
phenomena such as difference tones and binaural beats create the illusions of sound
traveling in space, and of other resultant tones which are not externally produced but
are distinctly heard by the listener. If two similar, high-frequency sounds are produced
less than 20–30Hz apart, a third tone (a difference tone) will present itself to the listener
which is the subtractive difference between the two high frequencies. This sound is
not being emitted externally, but is clearly, objectively perceived by the listener under
the right conditions. But if it happens only within the hearing mechanism, is it truly
objective? It could be called physically subjective yet mentally objective. The sound is a
computable, mappable phenomenon.
Maryanne Amacher took psychoacoustics to a whole new zone of exploration
with her life’s work on otoacoustic emissions. For her, the science behind them was
critical in establishing that these emissions were not the result of some sort of auditory
hallucination, but were actual, documentable phenomena that occur within the ears of
most humans. In a 1992 New York Times article, Dr. William A. Brownell was quoted
as saying, “Physiologists are still marveling at the discovery that ears produce sound.
It is almost as astonishing as if the eye could produce light or the nose produce odors.”106
This article was a pivotal turn for Amacher, who had been experiencing and exploring
these phenomena with great commitment but had lacked the scientific information to
clarify and justify her work. She found out more about the history of this research, and
that it went at least as far back as a paper written by Thomas Gold in 1984. He wrote:
This line of inquiry often meets with a basic skepticism as to its occurrence. Amacher
used restrained language about these phenomena because of academic reservations.
Otoacoustic emissions are widely recognized in the scientific community now, but
are not usually taken into account in the musical world. In the medical field, this
phenomenon has been used, among other purposes, to test hearing in infants.109 If it
is recognized as being important in the musical world, perhaps others will carry on in
Perception 129
Amacher’s line of work. She herself was puzzled as to the apparent lack of interest in it
among musicians.
This is a mystery to me! And very strange! Hearing plays such a critical role in
composing, that recognizing and acknowledging the range of what our ears do in
response to the music we create would seem to be particularly desirable to pursue
more explicitly and understand further!110
Her two solo CD releases are given this name: Sound Characters and Sound Characters
2, as if to suggest that the listener is not experiencing the entire plot, but only some of
the agents that could be set in motion within a larger narrative. This whole listening
situation involves very carefully tuned installation and “structure-borne sound,” in
which “the sound shapes interact with structural characteristics of the rooms before
reaching the listener.” In these fuller installations, “the audience enters the set and
walks into the ‘world’ of the story.” The spaces are “immersive aural architectures.”113
Within that context, the interaction of the sound characters within the hearing of the
listener is the unfolding drama. The speakers from which the sounds emanate, more
emphatically than in most other contexts, only serve to set other speakers in motion:
the resonances of the architecture, and the internal speakers emanating from the
ears of each listener. Amacher describes that fuller context as another aspect of this
documentation:
In concert my audiences discover music streaming out from their head, popping
and converging with the tones in the room. They discover they are producing a
tonal dimension of the music which interacts melodically, rhythmically, and
spatially with the tones in the room. Tones “dance” in the immediate space of their
body, around them like a sonic wrap, cascade inside ears, and out to space in front
of their eyes, mixing and converging with the sound in the room.114
Amacher’s available releases are limited documents of these fuller experiences, but
even as “artifacts,” they are powerful. In Sound Characters, the individual characters are
130 Experimental Music Since 1970
presented without the types of interaction one would experience in a full installation.
The first track of Sound Characters, “HEAD RHYTHM 1” AND “PLAYTHING 2,”
immediately activates this hearing. Similarly to the way that the feeling of surprise
informs us that we are having a new experience, the introduction of tones that don’t seem
to belong, that are felt deep within our ears rather than simply being projected from the
speakers, signals that something different is happening here. The opening is made up of
high pitches, and a lower tone quickly develops in the inner ear. This is gradually replaced
by lower and grittier interactions that do not fully reveal what they cause us to hear. It
is only when the track ends that it becomes apparent that the earthquake is still going
on in the aural mechanisms that have been activated. In track 4 of the documentation
of the Teo installation, sounds seem to rapidly approach and recede, taking on various
textures of roughness and smoothness, sometimes operating as a sort of threat, and at
other times stabilizing as a drone. Even in the home listening environment, one’s own
physiology is felt to be in dynamic relationship with the recording.115
Ultimately, all of the particularities of Amacher’s installations have a single, clearly
stated purpose: to clarify the aural phenomena occurring within our own ears. “It is a
music which emphatically brings attention to what is happening to us.”116
Mediated hearing
On a balcony over a busy street in Barcelona, Emmanuel Holterbach placed two small
microphones into two carboys. These large, resonant chambers of glass have narrow
necks that “swallow” the normal city sounds. The city, the traffic, and especially the
sirens are ethereal from the new listening position inside these bottles.117
Jacob Kirkegaard made vibration recordings along iron fences as tugboats and wind
pass by on the Rhine. Bands of sound gently emerge and disappear, each in its own
vivid type of motion.118 In a gallery in Copenhagen, Kirkegaard hung three large metal
plates, one made of copper, one brass, and one iron. They all have the same dimensions
and occupy the same room, but the contact microphones and speakers hidden on
the back of each plate tell a different story. Using the plates not only as the source of
recording, but also as projection (the medium through which the speakers play), the
three materials have distinctly different qualities of sound.119
Under a subway bridge in Seoul, Jiyeon Kim attached a contact microphone to
one of its columns, capturing a new perspective on the sound of passing trains.120 Just
outside her home, she attached contact microphones to objects she found nearby,
capturing the sound of the rain from the perspective of a metal door, a clothes dryer,
a wine glass.121
In fifteen locations across four continents, Jodi Rose records the cables of bridges.
The surface and the environment present themselves to the listener in equal measure
for speculation. Can these sounds be associated with anything that is known about
their locations? Are the clear differences in sound obvious because of structure or
setting? To what degree does setting influence structure?122
For Toshiya Tsunoda, a field recording is not expressive of an independent
surrounding reality. It is a mediation that he likens to landscape painting. All human
Perception 131
conceptions of “reality” are mediated by factors too vast and subjective and believable
to be reliable. Our faculties are limited. We only sense our environment from one
position at a time. If we employ technology to circumvent these limitations, we become
more aware that the technology itself is limited in what it can capture and reproduce.
In the face of an honest recognition of how little we can actually know, even of the
places most familiar to us, there are three basic approaches available. One is to stop
trying to know them—or similarly, to continue not to try. A second option is to try
harder, to define a scope and become goal-oriented about widening or deepening a
knowledge base. Tsunoda takes a third approach, which is to thoroughly accept that
limitation and continue to engage with his environment from the most specific and
limited spaces he can find.
Any field recording has numerous aspects of mediation, among which are the
location, the time, the recording technology, microphone placement, editing, and
mastering, as well as the sound system, environment, faculties, education, and
attention of the listener. Tsunoda adds another mediation: the micro-environment
through which the environment is heard. Field recording is often compared to
photography, but in this embrace of limitation Tsunoda has highlighted an advantage
over visual equivalents: sound permeates more effectively than image. This is an
accepted aspect of daily and nightly human experience. You can close your eyes,
but hearing is not effectively stopped. Earplugs and noise canceling headphones are
only partially effective, and night sounds can either wake or infiltrate the dreams
of a sleeper. Walls and fences block vision, but they rarely block sound. Using the
permeability of this medium, Tsunoda has placed his microphones inside bottles and
ducts, downpipes and drain hoses, a crack in a manhole lid, a small opening in a cliff
wall, on a long rope, near an insect, in the sand by the sea.123 These choices are not
calculated to reveal an environment, but to intersect with some of the presences in a
situation in a filtered way.
Tsunoda is preoccupied with the most fundamental aspect of sound: vibration.
Sound travels through the air through vibration, but it is most effectively projected
through surfaces. Sounds are more diffuse outdoors than indoors. Tracks 1 through 4
of The Argyll Recordings (2007) alternate between mic placement on the open ground
and within some tall grass. All four recordings were made at Dunadd, in Scotland.
The alternation between these two environments heightens the sense of difference.
The ground recordings are obscure and practically unvoiced, but palpable. The grass
recordings capture the wind almost as melody, in the “phase shifts created by the
grass shivering in the wind.”124 By constricting his recording environments within
containers, Tsunoda limits the typical connections with visual images, and heightens
the relation to the sense of touch through which vibration is palpable. TramVibration
(2006) captures the vibrations of a subway car, which are felt more than seen by the
passengers.125 For Tsunoda, the vibration is the field that is being recorded.
Defining the “Field” for each recording is an important part of my work. For
example, if there are two big sound sources in a given place, and these two sound
sources were interfering with one another, then the vibration created by this
132 Experimental Music Since 1970
interference is the “Field” for this space. “Field” is always expressed in its entirety,
as a sum of its parts.126
Locating the field at the location of interference adds a whole host of new parameters
to the sound.
The length and material of the fence, as well as the noise of the car, are factors. Not
only that, the size of the tunnel and what kind of material was used to construct it,
also play a part. In addition, the temperature and humidity inside the tunnel. . . .
Though all of these considerations seem objective and technical, Tsunoda uses the
admission of subjectivity (or denial of objectivity) to outline his practice, along with
the language of vision:
These traces are deliberately and consistently differentiated from familiar, seemingly
unencumbered situations. Tsunoda further defamiliarizes many of his recordings by
isolating one channel from the other. What is heard is never two different recordings,
but sometimes silence on one and the recording only on the other, or two different
angles of the same concurrent situation. In Low Frequency Observed At Maguchi Bay
(2007) the recordings are mirrored by a second track that omits any frequency above
20Hz. Michael Pisaro writes:
Thus, for all intents and purposes, you will not hear anything emanating from the
speakers during these mirrored low frequency recordings. But this does not mean
nothing is happening. . . . The bass speaker cone will be moving. Get up close to the
cone and watch—or even touch it. It is vibrating, in a visible and tactile (but for us,
silent) way. Pure vibration, abstracted of sound.128
That differentiation between channels occurred in the mastering situation with a single
recording. In the first part of The Temple Recordings (2013), two identical devices
Perception 133
(stethoscopes with built-in microphones) are placed on the heads (the temples) of
Tsunoda and Koichi Yusa. They stand side by side, facing the same landscape. The
two channels reveal similarity, but invite close listening in order to observe difference.
The pulse in the left channel is much louder than in the right. A wind catches one
microphone before the other. There are slight, compelling differences in the external
sounds. Pisaro writes that this piece conveys “one of the most profound images of
contemporary listening: multiple subjects, diffuse object.” Tsunoda does not claim to
objectively represent the landscape observed by both participants or to represent their
individual experiences of it. There is no commentary, and no decision-making beyond
the initial parameters of the project—the bodies to be recorded, the positions for the
microphones, and the location of the event. The fact of difference between these two
channels invites the listener to observe her own subjectivity in relation to that fact
of differentiation. There is the perpetual option to listen more closely to one person’s
temple and position or the other’s and to speculate about the nature of the experience.
The more one does so, the more clear it becomes that that experience, on a cognitive,
perceptual, emotional, or any other level, is unavailable. About the two people making
the recording, Tsunoda asks:
“What is the experience of the person who is standing by you like?” Then we
may start wondering “Is the same landscape composed in this person’s brain if
our consciousness shares the same landscape?” Obviously, experience is unique
to each person. Even if we can talk about the impression of our own experience
with someone else, we cannot confirm with each other exactly what the experience
was like.
The relationship between two subjects, even faced with the same experience or
landscape, is only one of proximity. Extending this sense of difference, Tsunoda writes,
“There is no relation among temples, air microphones and brain waves. Our brain
waves do not stir the air.”129 None of these elements of the recording process have
anything to do with each other except for their physical proximity in the event. The
listener’s attention creates only an illusion of a relationship with the event, and not an
actual one. That which is unknown becomes even more unknown. Pisaro comments:
“It’s the space between, the place [of] the overlap that concerns him.”130 Tsunoda is
preoccupied with these intersections between subjects, objects, and environments, and
his work allows for richer comprehension through an acceptance of limitation.
It dies of old age.”138 Again, he uses the image of a creature that lives and breathes;
but the creature in this case is not time, but the piece. Feldman’s duration would be
weakened, or cut short, by the presence of too much material. Finally it either collapses
under the weight of the material, or there is no longer enough material to sustain
activity. That breaking point is the threshold that decides Feldman’s durations, rather
than any preconceived idea or imposed requirement for how long the piece should be.
One outcome of Feldman’s sustained interest in the temporal canvas is the long
piece. Listeners who speak about their experiences of these long, late works tend to
reflect on a sense of removal from the normal passage of time. The total duration itself,
and the working process by which Feldman arrived at it, is a major factor in that sense
of removal. The decision to listen through the six hours of Feldman’s String Quartet II
(1983), whether live or on recording, is not made lightly. When asked about its length,
Feldman said, “I think that the piece is so long because our attention span is so short!
Five minutes is too long for most people—it’s a serious problem.”139 Referring to For
Philip Guston (1984), he said, “There is an hour-and-ten-minute piece which is a very
long hour-and-ten-minute piece—but this? This piece doesn’t give you the feeling that
it’s four hours.”140 The scale of the piece was found in the process of writing it. Feldman
acknowledges Mark Rothko’s influence when he writes that “scale is discovered and
contained as an image. It is not form that floats the painting, but Rothko’s finding that
particular scale which suspends all proportions in equilibrium.”141
Michael Pisaro offers an explanation for the quality of transparency that he and
other members of the Wandelweiser collective bring to their temporal canvases. They
are not “telling time,” but creating a space in which the listener can find his or her own
time. The piece becomes, not a duration to mark, but a space to occupy. The sounds
of the piece do not take over that space, but point to its dimensions and to any other
events that may occur within it.
For many years, music concerned itself with forcing a structure onto time.
Beginning with the music of John Cage, it has become possible to see time as
having its own structure: not as something imposed on it from the outside by
music, but something which is already present, which exists alongside the music.
The inner structure of time: time as experienced by the body in a great variety
of ways. Time structured by repetition, by flow, by fatigue, by novelty; time which
is felt only in moments of transition, where duration is only figured in retrospect:
this is the time we know, as opposed to the time which is told.142
The time in which a piece is heard coincides with a place and with the consciousness
of the listener. This coincidence or intersection is acknowledged as containing all
sorts of perceptions, feelings, reactions, and conditions either external or incidental to
the composed work. Rather than telling time, Pisaro approaches it with curiosity. He
writes that the pieces in entre-moments (2006) are “concerned with projecting musical
interludes onto a duration.”143 A projection implies a degree of transparency, and the
sounds of this piece (sustained instrumental tones, soft sine tones, slow and quiet piano
chords) certainly are transparent, in that other sounds can be heard through them.
136 Experimental Music Since 1970
Among many examples of Pisaro’s long pieces, A Transparent Gate (with ten panels)
(2011) lasts for exactly 100 minutes, and entre-moments for five hours. Antoine Beuger,
another member of the Wandelweiser collective, has a number of such long pieces,
including the calme étendue (1996–97) and the silent harmonies in discrete continuity
(2002) series, sections of which could last anywhere from forty-five minutes to nine
hours. When the piece becomes the entire event, it is no longer analogous to one of
several paintings on the wall, or pieces on the program. It is the wall, or even the entire
building into which the listener has walked. The work is immersive in duration but
transparent in quality.
In both Pisaro’s and Feldman’s lines of thought, the composer does not control time,
but acknowledges its conditional ebbs and flows. Sounds come forth and bring their
own logic and necessities, both in the writing process and the listening process. Time
is not told, but occupied and discovered. (Listeners bring their own circumstances and
perceptions to the duration.) The experience of time is a complex phenomenon, and it
is projected as such.
By creating a tangled web of activity at a surface level, both Clementi and Harrison
draw attention to the mystery of what is imperceptible, what lies under the surface. They
weave multiple instruments, lines, and textures so tightly that the images of foreground,
background, and depth are submerged in a single complex surface. The surface itself
becomes an object of focus, of illusions, of perceptions that are questioned and doubted.
Clementi describes the massive tangle of the prerecorded flute parts of Fantasia su
roBErto FABbriCiAni (1980–81) as “an enormous field of vegetation stifling a small
Perception 137
plant.”145 The canonic material spreads through the twenty-four parts in multiple
forms and transpositions, engulfing the live flute part. In Surface Forms (repeating)
(2009), Harrison creates a dense haze of activity by restricting all the instruments to
playing “similar harmonic and rhythmic material within a confined dynamic and pitch
range.”146
Feldman also achieves the flat surface he seeks in part through registral limitations.
“The lower register is gravity,” he writes. “If you omit it and use only higher registers,
there’s no gravity. The music remains suspended and ethereal.”147 This goal is explicit
and overarching, and applies to pitch choices, timbre, and dynamics in addition to
register. He writes of For Frank O’Hara (1973) that “My primary concern (as in all my
music) is to sustain a ‘flat surface’ with a minimum of contrast.”148
Harrison asks, “What happens when time is presented in such a way that it appears
to be drastically slowed down or even momentarily suspended? What happens when a
sense of musical progress becomes redundant and how, as a composer, does this affect
my approach to musical language, form and structure, both on a micro- and macro-
level?”149 In seeking answers to these questions, he has studied Feldman’s late, long
works, Clementi’s ensemble works, and the techniques of visual artists such as Bridget
Riley, Agnes Martin, Mike Walker, and Tim Head. His answers, while synthesizing
ideas from all of those sources, are ultimately his own. While Clementi uses tightly
wound canons and Feldman intuits subtly shifting patterns, Harrison uses pitch cycles
that, always returning and starting again, powerfully suggest to the listener that he
or she has not actually moved anywhere in time or space, but is considering and
reconsidering the same static surface. The extended piano work Vessels (2012/13) seems
never to begin nor to end, but always to be held in a fragile balance. It is inspired by
a Howard Skempton string quartet called Tendrils (2004), which Skempton describes
as “continuous undulating lines that sustain their effect throughout.”150 In Vessels,
processes act upon the pitch material in apparently limitless transformations within a
narrow space, bending these tendrils at every possible angle but never breaking them.151
The “waterfall illusion” is a term used in perceptual psychology that deals with the
confusion between stasis and motion. John Berndt applies this term to the Illuminatory
Sound Environments (ISEs) of Catherine Christer Hennix and Henry Flynt. Hennix’s
The Electric Harpsichord (1976) was seen by Flynt as the inaugural piece of this new
genre, which Berndt describes in a way that mirrors visual illusions: “Grasped by
perception, each detail seems to slip instantly away, the vivid surface contrast of the
piece endlessly dissolving or folding back into a churning vista just outside of clarity.”152
Other pieces in this genre include Flynt’s Glissando No. 1 (1979) and Celestial Power
(1979), as well as Hennix’s Rag Infinity/Rag Cosmosis (1976–2013).153 Through their
particular and complex methods of overlaying and repeating material, these pieces
have the effect of suspending time.
Stephen Snook considers the twin paradoxes of musical stasis and images in motion
when he writes about the influence of M. C. Escher on Aldo Clementi.
Clementi mirrors and reverses this process by so saturating the aural surface
of his works with repetitive moving lines that their intrinsic temporal motion
becomes subsumed into an aural stasis, producing a diffuse sonic “image” within
an indeterminate “frame.”154
In Escher’s visual context, repetition creates a sense of time passing. Gianluigi Mattietti
draws an analogy between Escher’s patterns and Clementi’s canons when he writes,
“Thus the periodised patterns may, just like the circular canon, expand into infinity,
since a small portion of the pattern is able to occupy, by translation, the whole space.”155
In Clementi’s auditory context, and through the very methods he borrows from
Escher, repetition suspends time. Their means are similar, but the effect is superficially
opposite; and yet the real, achieved goal is arguably parallel: to invert the perspective
of the listener.
As she draws it, the grid is half-way between a rectangular system of coordinates
and a veil. It is put down in pencil so that the network consists of marks far less
clearly given than we are accustomed to in American painting with its usual
standard of high emphasis and unrelieved clarity.156
A musical parallel to Martin’s present yet obscured grid is Pisaro’s frequent instruction
to the performer to use a stopwatch, rather than to count and maintain a pulse. Having
this external grid—the stopwatch—in place, the performer is allowed to lose time,
knowing that it is being kept for him. The internal marking of beats is loosened, and is
obscured in the sounding result.
The grid also allows both Martin and Pisaro to transcend the normal margins or
limits of a canvas or a duration.
By removing the internal boundaries of the grid, by which it was seen to stop
and start, Martin emphasizes not the succession of the modular bits from, say, left
to right, but the wholeness of the module, its occupancy of space rather than its
duration in time.157
Despite the difference in mediums, in this case the metaphor is directly analogous.
Alloway suggests that a clearer grid would be countable, and in that way become a
temporal viewing experience. For Pisaro’s performers, sounds are not counted but
placed. Sounds occur over time, but time is not subdivided in a perceivable way.
Perception 139
The even subdivisions that do exist occur at a structural level, and are obscured by the
details of the material. Martin could be writing not only of her own work but Pisaro’s
when she says:
My formats are square, but the grids never are absolutely square; they are
rectangles, a little bit off the square, making a sort of contradiction, a dissonance,
though I didn’t set out to do it that way. When I cover the square surface with
rectangles, it lightens the weight of the square, destroys its power.158
James Hugonin’s paintings are color fields made up of what appears to be intricate
tiling, each piece of which carries one distinct color. His explanation of his working
process has a clear musical influence.
I paint elliptical or oval forms oscillating and fluctuating in different colours within
a very fine linear grid. These forms are located at varying distances apart from each
other creating intricate and subtle rhythms. Using many variations in close tones, it
becomes possible for random movement to evolve and occur within the rectangle.
It is the reflected light pulsating from adjacent colors that creates an indeterminate
and unpredictable color field emanating light. Nothing dominates.159
Bryn Harrison has taken direct inspiration from this process. His work parallels both
Hugonin’s color fields and Clementi’s canons. The textures and pitch cycles work
against the dominance of any instrument.
Harrison’s rhythms are, like Hugonin’s, intricate and subtle, and are derived from
sketching time-space versions of the rhythms and transferring them onto a grid
representing the subdivisions of conventional notation. This grid can be stretched or
contracted to create subtly shifting rhythmic relationships between instruments over
time.160 There is often a discernible pulse within Harrison’s work, but in Surface Forms
(repeating), as performed by the ELISION Ensemble, it is slow and indistinct. The
larger units are the repeating cycles that, according to the composer, repeat every forty
seconds.161 Harrison writes of his use of cycles that “My intention has been to create the
perception of an object that appears both static and in motion, comparable perhaps to
ripples in a stream or watching a torrent of rain.”162 These cycles are incredibly difficult
to discern in the density of activity taking place. While pulse is audible, the larger
organizing principle is not.
For artists such as Martin and Hugonin, the grid is a device or structure that allows
them to transcend the limitations of surface. For composers, the beat, or ictus, tends to
make a grid audible. To zoom in on this contradiction, the grid at work in a painting
can be immediately perceived as a governing structure, absorbed, and forgotten in
observation of finer details and effects. A closer analogy to an unobscured grid in
music might be a process piece by James Tenney or Alvin Lucier, in which the form
is so transparent that other details become the objects of attention. In a musical work
unfolding over time, a pulse is constantly reinforcing itself. The performer is conscious
of it throughout the work, and so too is the listener. Feldman explains,
140 Experimental Music Since 1970
Feldman found a means of veiling the grid, initially in Crippled Symmetry (1983), by
assigning different meters and rhythmic values to each of the three parts. Each part has
its own grid—in this case a pulse—and the differences between them are destabilizing:
They obscure, rather than enforce, one another’s regularity of pulse. The overlaying of
three different grid densities results in shifting temporal relationships that flicker in a
way similar to the effects achieved by Martin or Hugonin, so that the parts “intermingle
in ever-changing alignments.”164
Another approach to temporal containers is adopted by Pisaro, in which he radically
expands the size of the container, often into temporal units with a base of a minute. He
calls it “a set of regular time units whose stability sets the changes of the material in
relief,” citing the examples of Ricefall (2) (2007) and Fields Have Ears (6) (2010–11).165
In both versions of Ricefall, the subdivisions within that time are impossible to align
as pulse. Rice is dropped onto various surfaces, at speeds that change every minute
(measured and coordinated by stopwatch). The relative speed can be controlled, but
not, in the majority of cases, the attack point (the moment at which a grain of rice
hits the surface). All of these varying—and separately unpredictable—parts operate
simultaneously, and then shift in unison. Each performer is suddenly following a
new instruction, and the total level of density changes. There is a perceptible change
at every minute mark, and yet a minute operates very differently from a traditional
pulse. It is equally precise, but the difference occurs in perception. In The Principles of
Psychology (1890), William James cites research that the maximum uncounted time
that can be accurately estimated ranges from five to twelve seconds.166 In Pisaro’s
distance (4) (1997), the challenges of counting are put on the performers, who are to
play the same material—supposedly simultaneously—every forty seconds without
using stopwatches and without cues. By bringing out the variability of temporal
perception, Pisaro again veils the grid, even while apparently using it to structure
the piece.
In practice, the speed of the looping will change throughout a section of a piece by
Lang such as Differenz/Wiederholung 2 (1999), increasing and decreasing the levels of
magnification. This practice is not unlike those of the filmmaker Martin Arnold, who
Lang acknowledges as the “trigger” for the whole Differenz/Wiederholung series. The
previous quote is from an article he wrote on the impact of Arnold’s work on his own. In
the same article, he writes that “The Cut is the Beat.” Citing Gilles Deleuze, he compares
the video cuts that happen within movement to rhythm: They determine the rhythm
of the film. Arnold’s Alone: Life Wastes Andy Hardy (1998) is full of this rhythmic
play with cuts, both audibly and visibly. The length of the fragments and the resultant
speed of the looping keeps shifting within the same scene, treading repetitively over
the same footage and altering its meaning. It is the temporal equivalent of changing
the magnification of a microscope so that tempo and repetition become the dominant
parameters. In Lang’s music, particularly in Differenz/Wiederholung, time suspends
within a moment, things move along more quickly for an unpredictable period of time,
and then it is again suspended.
In O Kokos Tis Anixis (Grains of Spring) (2013), Toshiya Tsunoda follows a procedure
that is in its description somewhat similar to Lang’s, but in effect completely different.
The loops are not written out, but are made with field recordings from the Miura
Peninsula in Japan. These loops often highlight the event that Tsunoda has named as
central to the track, such as “the sounds of small fruits falling in the grass as the wind
shook the tree” or “the sounds of ashes bursting in the fire built by fishermen.” The
material may be looped from 3 to 100 times, and itself might be long enough to sound
each time as a clear event, or so short that the loop becomes, in Tsunoda’s words, “like
a simple electric sound.”168 Apart from those electric sounds, many of the loops are
created so carefully that the repetition sounds for a time as if it occurred in the natural
setting. By establishing these situations so carefully, Tsunoda creates a kind of stasis
that may only be recognized well after it has begun, or only in retrospect as he advances
to new material. Four of the eight tracks, all of which convey “events happening in a
short unit of time,” are over twenty minutes long. The listener is placed in such an
142 Experimental Music Since 1970
intimate relationship with the sounding events that they have no means to judge the
actual scale of their duration.
Lang’s description of his own looping process shows its relevance to Clementi’s
compressed canons:
Since the loop contents mainly refer to small cells, I developed the notion of
cellular counterpoint: there are complex counterpoints contained within each cell,
but this [sic] complex structures are repeated, thereby magnifying and examining
the content of the cell, sometimes changing the original meaning. Due to the
circular structure of the loop I became interested in infinite canons again, but this
is a side effect [sic] of the whole concept, a kind of ironic play.169
We needed to start from a zero point of craft and of stylistic ineffability: an ultra-fine
grain consisting of mixed-up microscopic details, a continuum without direction,
a texture, a material of the highest quality that is guaranteed not only to become
a good suit when entrusted to a skilled tailor (what a contradiction!), but also to
endure despite being torn up. . . . Furthermore, the internal, dense complexity (and
complicatedness) needed to legitimise any external arbitrariness.171
The material itself is carefully made, and is then subjected to automatic processes. The
rhythm and pacing of the piece result from how these processes work on the pre-crafted
material. Automation is appreciated as a means to draw attention to the material and
to the process, rather than to Clementi as the craftsman of the final musical product.
Feldman, on the other hand, writes, “My music is handmade. So I’m like a tailor.
I make my buttonholes by hand. The suit fits better.”172 As discussed earlier, his
compositional method was intuitive. The work was heard and written, by the power of
what he referred to as concentration. Christian Wolff says of Feldman:
The most remarkable thing about him, or about his work was the way he made
it . . . with no discernible system whatsoever. In other words, he wrote entirely, you
might say, by ear, and by the seat of his pants.173
In the same interview, Wolff goes on to consider Feldman’s use of loops. The aesthetic
outcome of Feldman’s looping could hardly be more different from Lang’s in terms of
speed and timbre, but the process is quite similar.
In the later [pieces], one of the ways that he makes things go on is, he repeats a lot.
He gets into loops. He’ll make a kind of musical gesture and just repeat it 4, 5, 6,
7, 8, 10 times.174
Perception 143
The choices of what material to loop and at what speed become major factors in Lang’s
and Feldman’s work. Feldman sets up variation and repetition as dynamic forces at play
with one another. He writes:
You can either do two things with music, you could be involved with variation,
which in simple terms means only vary it, or you could be in repetition. Reiterative.
What my work is, is a synthesis between variation and repetition. However, I might
repeat things that, as it’s going around, is varying itself on one aspect. Or I could
vary repetition.175
Dora Hanninen responds directly to that line of thought and work when she writes of
her experience of Crippled Symmetry, “While I can abstract from the musical surface to
recognize the individual repetitions as repetitions, as a listener I am rather drawn into
their subtle and persistent phenomenal transformation.”176
Clementi goes against this approach, preferring an undifferentiated temporal
universe, a saturation, to such a zooming in on sound objects. His overall concern with
temporal stasis is similar, but his desired end result is, if anything, diametrially opposed
to Feldman’s flickering patterns and Lang’s shifting levels of magnification. His artistic
influences, in addition to Escher, include Piero Dorazio, who fills the canvas with streaks
of interlocking color, and the geometric forms that fill Victor Vasarely’s canvases.
The need not to hear any single interval or any other detail, and the need to
void any type of articulation, led to a kind of static materiality: in this way, a
dense counterpoint around a cluster gives rise to continual total chromaticism,
eliminating the perception of individual internal movements, which in turn
ensured a constant vibrancy. This counterpoint becomes . . . more optical-illusory
than material. . . . Everything flows equally into an absolute stillness.177
Harrison’s approach in this respect is, like Clementi’s, more global than local. In seek-
ing to direct or manipulate the attention of the listener, he cites the influence of Bridget
Riley.
When writing six symmetries [2004] I made a careful analytical study of how
Bridget Riley uses the curve. I wanted to be able to convey in musical terms the
same sense of transition and oscillation that occurs in the paintings of the mid-
seventies. The result was a series of rhythmic canons that I coupled to pitch cycles,
running these backwards or permutating the rhythmic sequences to create the
variations in the piece. . . . Riley herself has spoken of the sensations that arise
when clusters flow into each other along the twists of a curve. In musical terms,
this creates a type of art that is situational—it is not about creating the results but
the things that make up the result.178
These “things that make up the result” are more analogous to Clementi’s machine-
ready fabric than to Feldman’s hand tailoring. Pitch cycles are carefully interlocked
144 Experimental Music Since 1970
with other systematic rhythmic processes in the planning phases of the process.
Repetition is the device used to set up a mode of relating to the material. An earlier
artistic model, and one that was an early influence on Riley, is pointillism. Colors are
separated out but create an aggregate in their repeated usage, and the viewer can look
more closely to see what is going on. It is questionable whether the listener can do the
same thing, even with careful repeated listenings.
What does any artist do when he doesn’t have any problems? He looks for new
ones. . . .
You also have to develop your own paraphernalia to hold it together, rather than
maintain the conventional idea that what develops might hold a piece together . . .
you just find ways to survive in this big piece.180
Pisaro tends to obscure memories in two apparently opposite ways. His use of
extended intervals of silence plays with the listener’s experience of time passing. These
intervals have the effect of putting the listener more deeply into the time and space of
the performance. In the context of a live performance of a piece such as the seventy-
five-minute mind is moving (1) (1996), the listener is hopefully in an attentive state, but
during the long silences finds herself lacking sufficient musical material to draw that
attention. By emptying a time interval of explicit markers, Pisaro illumines the listener’s
consciousness of time passing and, in turn, the fickle nature of that perception.
In his more recent work, another kind of forgetting has been achieved through
saturation.
In terms of the “inattentive gaps,” I think there’s something in the high density of
pieces like A Wave and Waves [2007], July Mountain [2009], Ricefall (2), Hearing
Perception 145
Metal (2) [2010–11] and Fields Have Ears (6) that actively encourages a state
where one is constantly “forgetting” what one just heard. I’ve come to enjoy the
experience of hearing a piece for a third or fourth (or fiftieth) time and hearing
new things in it. This still happens to me with these pieces.182
The altered sense of time he brought about in other pieces by shining a mirror of sorts
on the complexity of the listener’s own thought process occurs in these works through
a massive and incomprehensible accumulation of data.
Harrison writes of a similar effect within one of his pieces, Repetitions in Extended
Time (2008). “At first the repetitions appear indistinct, fleeting and constantly
changing, but, as time progresses, figurations become more prominent and obvious
and the details themselves begin to take on their own identity.”183 If the material has
not been absorbed in the first place, it is not available in the listener’s consciousness to
be either remembered or forgotten. It may, however, be perceived in the second, third,
or later instance. Repetition within a piece, or repeated hearings of the same piece,
may reveal more or different details of the sonic surface. As these details are detected,
the music is renewing itself—appearing as if it is fresh material. The tension between
the surface sameness and the flickering recognition of details further complicates the
listener’s experience of the passage of time.
Feldman writes, “Music can imply the infinite if enough things depart from the
norm far enough. Strange ‘abnormal’ events can lead to the feeling that anything can
happen, and you have a music with no boundaries.”184 Delving into a world of artistic
influence, he speaks of the play with perception as a means of activating self-reflection
and a sense of wonder.
The pianist Louis Goldstein confirms the effectiveness of Feldman’s work in this line
when he writes of his experience of performing Triadic Memories.
My own sense of time is stretched and tugged in ways I never before experienced.
There come moments when the unit of time I am measuring in my mind suddenly
doubles and simultaneously begins to move at half the previous tempo. Sometimes
I experience beats of time slower than I have ever been able to imagine. For me,
the sublimity of the ending, 100 minutes into the piece, results from two possible
conclusions playing off each other. Sometimes the effect is one of utter tragedy, when
in spite of great effort, time finally does break down and an awareness of terrifying
emptiness is discovered. Other times I remember the words of the artist-protagonist
in Kurt Vonnegut’s novel, Bluebeard. . . . “It was pure essence of human wonder.”186
Pisaro speaks of a similar expansion of perception and overall awareness that has been
sought after and encountered within the community of the Wandelweiser collective.
The immense richness of the network by which we feel time is a crucial part of the
way we experience life. To be in touch with this network is to be content. As Agnes
Martin says: “Joy is perception.”
In our music, the listener’s time and musical time meet halfway. The music,
by taking its course, by being always on its way but never in a hurry, redirects the
feeling of time. We may follow its progress easily, and therefore need not devote
much effort to staying on the path. In this situation our eyes stray to the path
running alongside us, on which someone just like us is walking. In this way the
music is a mirror in which we see ourself, reflected through a gauze made of time
that is stretched across the mirror. The gauze is held in place by sound.
Perception 147
While Harrison, Clementi, and Lang will tend to saturate a duration with sound in
their efforts to alter temporal perception, much (though certainly not all) of the work
of the Wandelweiser collective is concerned with transparency. To delve more fully
into Pisaro’s metaphor, the gauze, time, takes the place of the canvas material that
stretches through the boundaries of the piece. Some sounds are usually needed to
make sure it is understood as music. They must be placed carefully, so as to hold
it in place, or else the duration will be lost: attention will wander away from the
performative situation. The changes in Pisaro’s work—from sound to silence or from
one type of sound to another—tend to occur at regular time intervals. The listener can
wander or be recalled to the situation from one sound or silence to another. Pisaro
continues,
Sound moves the air, and is thus always an indicator of space and location. But,
more importantly, sound needs time to reveal itself. Sound and time are thus
interwoven: sound rides on time and acquires its identity; time is marked by
sound, and becomes perceptible.187
Time is one of the fundamental concerns of the musician. Listeners have been
transported for centuries into new modes of perceiving time, from the visceral pulses
of dance music to the suspension of time in an operatic aria. In more recent times,
the influence of innovation in visual art has given composers a whole new set of tools,
enabling them to explore new avenues of temporal perception in their work. In so
doing, they set meaningful and transformative experiences in motion.
Notes
1 “Mission Statement,” http://deeplistening.org/site/content/about.
2 “SA Issue 7: Pauline Oliveros on Deep Listening,” http://soundamerican.org/pauline-
oliveros-on-deep-listening.
3 Pauline Oliveros, Deep Listening: A Composer’s Sound Practice (Lincoln, NE:
iUniverse, 2005), 57.
4 Jürg Frey, “Life is Present,” 1996. http://www.wandelweiser.de/_juerg-frey/texts-e.
html#LIFE.
5 Frey, “Streichquartett II,” String Quartets, Bozzini Quartet, Edition Wandelweiser
Records, EWR 0410, 2006, compact disc.
6 Frey, “Life is Present.”
7 Frey, “Weite der Landschaft—Tiefe der Zeit,” 2008. http://www.wandelweiser.de/_
juerg-frey/texts.html#WEITE.
8 Frey, Six Instruments, Series (Haan: Edition Wandelweiser, 2002).
9 Frey, “Wo ist das Stuck?” 1999. http://www.wandelweiser.de/_juerg-frey/texts.
html#WO.
10 Frey, “Weite.”
11 Ibid.
12 Frey, “And on it went,” http://www.wandelweiser.de/_juerg-frey/texts-e.html#AND.
148 Experimental Music Since 1970
45 Laetitia Sonami, “Seizing a Sound and Smelling Its Belly to Fit in a Folder,” in Arcana
III: Musicians on Music, ed. John Zorn (New York: Hips Road, 2008), 220–22.
46 Laetitia Sonami, “lady’s glove,” http://sonami.net/ladys-glove.
47 See also “Laetitia Sonami at the Second L.A.S.T. Festival,” YouTube video, 28:17, from
an October 14, 2014 performance at the L.A.S.T. Festival, posted by “Piero Scaruffi,”
October 25, 2014, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y-1W4YVXZis and The Ear Goes
to the Sound: The Work of Laetitia Sonami (Oakland, CA: Kicked Your Height, 2014).
48 Pascal Battus, “Pascal Battus: Sound Massages,” Leonardo Music Journal 16 (2006):
76. Also see track 15 on accompanying CD.
49 Steven Kazuo Takasugi, “Vers une myopie musicale,” in Polyphony & Complexity,
ed. Claus-Steffen Mahnkopf, Frank Cox, and Wolfram Schurig (Hofheim: Wolke,
2002), 293.
50 Ming Tsao, “Between the Lines of Steven Kazuo Takasugi’s Recent Work ‘The
Jargon of Nothingness,’” Musik & Ästhetik 31 (2004): 4. https://www.academia.
edu/4516225/Between_the_Lines_of_Steven_Kazuo_Takasugi_s_recent_work_The_
Jargon_of_Nothingness_.
51 Tsao, “Between the Lines,” 6.
52 Ibid., 11.
53 Dmitri Kourliandski, falsa lectio, Bandcamp release, August 26, 2013, https://
fancymusic.bandcamp.com/album/falsa-lectio.
54 James Saunders, “Interview with Claudia Molitor,” September 23, 2012, http://www.
james-saunders.com/interview-with-claudia-molitor.
55 Richard Chartier, Series, Bandcamp release, September 2000, https://richardchartier.
bandcamp.com/album/series.
56 Brian Marley, Mark Wastell, and Damien Beaton, eds., Blocks of Consciousness and
the Unbroken Continuum (London: Sound 323, 2005), 269–70.
57 James Tenney, In a Large, Open Space (Lebanon, NH: Frog Peak Music, 1994).
58 Alvin Lucier, Reflections (Köln: MusikTexte, 1995), 164.
59 Lucier, Reflections, 158.
60 Ibid., 344.
61 Lucier, Crossings (Kiel: Material Press, 1984), 37.
62 Mary Jane Leach, Note Passing Note (Valley Falls, NY: Ariadne Press, 1981), http://
www.mjleach.com/scores/NotePassingNote.pdf.
63 Frank J. Oteri, “Mary Jane Leach: Sonic Confessions,” http://www.newmusicbox.org/
articles/mary-jane-leach-sonic-confessions. Leach, Trio for Duo (Valley Falls, NY:
Ariadne Press, 1985).
64 Leach, “Program Note,” http://www.mjleach.com/program%20notes/
TrioforDuoProgramNotes.pdf.
65 Words and Spaces, 212.
66 Ibid., 213.
67 Ibid., 214. See also Ron Kuivila, “Untitled: An Interactive Installation,” ICMC ’85
Proceedings. http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/p/pod/dod-idx/untitled-an-interactive-
installation.pdf?c=icmc;idno=bbp2372.1985.054.
68 Michael Brewster, “Where, There or Here?” 1998. http://acousticsculpture.com/
essay2.html.
69 “See Hear Now: A Sonic Drawing and Five Acoustic Sculptures,” 2002, http://www.
michaelbrewsterart.com/albums/see-hear-now/See-Hear-Now-catalog.pdf.
150 Experimental Music Since 1970
Noise
Noise is often understood to be either uninteresting or disturbing sound. The Austrian
composer Peter Ablinger is fascinated by noise, and draws a distinction between noises
in their specificity and noise in its totality. He writes:
Noise and noises are not the same. In fact, they can be almost opposites. What the
singular form refers to is the totality of white noise. What the plural refers to is the
many individual objects, the event-related noises of everyday life.2
156 Experimental Music Since 1970
The corn stood high and it was just before harvest. The hot summer east wind
swept through the fields and suddenly I heard das Rauschen (noise/the sound).
Although it was often explained to me, I can still never say how wheat and rye are
different. But I heard the difference. I believe it was the first time I really heard
outside an aesthetic circumstance (say, a concert). Something had happened . . .
one way or the other, it seems to me, all the pieces I’ve made since have to do with
this experience.7
Taken on its own terms, noise can have all sorts of shadings and qualities. What seems
to be a generality becomes a specificity.
James Saunders’ components derive their value solely through their assigned context
(2009) calls for “2 radios, barely audible and tuned to different static sounds.” The
sounds are produced on four different wood surfaces played with a violin bow. The
piece is designed to explore the similarities and differences in these sounds, as the two
musicians each play through the fourteen pages in a different order. The bowed wood
sounds are unstable because of the limited physical control that can be exerted at the low
dynamic level that the piece calls for: “o-pppp (----) on the edge of silence; sound will
stop and start uncontrollably.” The other dynamic indication has a similar instability:
“ppp (<>) very quiet, with naturally occurring, unforced variations.” The resultant
flickering in and out of presence or resonance is a potential match to the quality of the
radio static. At times these sounds will be difficult to differentiate. The piece poses the
question: Will the radio or the block of wood yield the more interesting information?
It becomes difficult to maintain an assumption that a piece of wood is more real than a
radio, or that a radio is more complex than a piece of wood. These considerations lead
squarely back to the quote from Jack Burnham’s System Esthetics (1968) that is used as
the title of the piece.
Michael Pisaro’s White Metal (Grey Series No. 2) (2012–13) is also concerned with
the differentiation of noises. Rather than presenting them side by side, he leaves the
choice of specific noises up to the performers, and maps them to the exact timings of a
Harnoncourt recording of Mozart’s 40th Symphony.8 “The starting image of the piece,”
writes Pisaro, “was layers of white(-ish) noise, intense or dense enough so that at first
differentiation between noises or layers might be nearly impossible.”9 The “at first” is
the key phrase in the description, since the sounds are gradually pulled apart and their
differences are revealed. Joe Panzner and Greg Stuart are staunch advocates of this
work, having developed hundreds of new sounds for each realization. By continually
seeking out new audio materials, each of which is subject to transformations within
158 Experimental Music Since 1970
the performance, they amplify the paradox of formal cohesion and an overwhelming
multiplicity of difference.10
Ablinger is similarly interested in presenting degrees of difference and density (of
sound/noise/noises) that are to be navigated by the listener. Der Regen, das Glas, das
Lachen (1994) is described as “the juncture of a one tone piece and white noise.” The
one tone is a single glissando over an octave that encompasses all the possible tones
within its range. Meanwhile:
The total sound passes in stages through 6 further layers of simultaneous sound
until it arrives at a single level of white noise. . . . What is played is extremely dense
and a large part of the orientation is left to the listener. Over long periods she is
left alone to listen in to the various levels of the piece, to find her way IN THE
SOUND.
This process of listening in is an essential part of the piece itself, the actual
event, the reason it came into being.11
To find this path for oneself in some of the “noisier” of Ablinger’s works is exhilarating,
because it is so clearly one’s own. What initially feels like an oppressive situation
becomes empowering.
In the Instrumente und Rauschen series, acoustic instruments are given a notated
pathway through the recorded noise. As Ablinger explains,
A very elementary music of scale fragments and sustained tones, almost completely
hidden behind a surface of coloured static noise.—Or, the other way round—
A series of drawings in time where the background, the paper is the main element,
while the disappearing figures on this paper are taken back to the state of illusion.13
Information, Language, and Interaction 159
Background and foreground coalesce into one ambiguous canvas, presenting both
detail and totality, and one is discernible from the other only with the greatest con-
centration. In Violine und Rauschen (“Veronica”) (1995/96), the violin sustains a single
note which can barely (and only at times) be discerned from the background sound.
In part 5, the violin adds to the texture and noise, rather than blending. The sonic
surface and the violin part mask each other, making it an exercise in close listening
to discover when the violin is playing. A piece outside of the series, 1–127 (2002) also
touches on this kind of construction. In all but one of the 127 instances, the guitar
plays a clear, methodical scale, which is interrupted by a recording of street noise.
What becomes clear only after listening to multiple segments of the audio recording
is that the guitar is playing along with the noise so precisely that one cannot be dif-
ferentiated from the other.14
Verticalization
Another technique for accumulating sounds is to layer multiple streams of sound
on top of each other. These layers often have some attribute or source in common,
but otherwise there is no internal coordination. In an early example, Charles Ives,
influenced by the childhood experience of seeing and hearing two marching bands
cross in a parade, overlaid different keys in the early Fugue in Four Keys on “The
Shining Shore” (1897), tunings in Three Quarter-Tone Pieces (1923–24), and styles
and melodies as well as keys in Central Park in the Dark (1906) and The Unanswered
Question (1906).15 John Cage used multiple radio frequencies in Imaginary Landscape
4 (1951) and Radio Music (1956), and forty-two different recordings in Imaginary
Landscape 5 (1952).
Ablinger has established a process of “verticalization” that would not have been
technologically possible in those earlier examples. Rather than dealing with noise itself,
as in the previous examples of his work, in Weiss/Weisslich 22 (1986, 96) he begins with
well-known musical masterworks. Using specially designed software, he “verticalizes”
the complete symphonies of Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Bruckner, and
Mahler into blocks of sound lasting forty seconds per composer. Christian Scheib
writes:
What looks on the surface like a drastic reduction is also a clarification of the specific
sonic qualities of each composer’s work. Floods of sonic information submerge a pitch
space, making it difficult to clearly discern the change from one moment to the next,
or to differentiate low from high except in a vibrant continuum. A layering of high
and low, melody and accompaniment, is no longer in effect. What you hear, then, is
saturation. And yet Mozart’s saturation sounds entirely distinct from Beethoven’s,
160 Experimental Music Since 1970
For quite some time I have had a fascination with the changes in perception
that occur when familiar materials are condensed and concentrated, and in
observing how well known material gradually becomes alienated and eventually
unrecognizable as it is superimposed in an increasing number of layers.18
This piece would have a very different effect if the entrances were timed so that all the
songs ended, rather than began, at the same time. The listener could then observe the
reverse transformation from clarity to noise. As it is now, the process takes place twenty-
six times over, so the listener can become more familiar with the layering and unlayering
and observe the change in character of the noise from one band and album to another.
In the Ciciliani example, the spectral freeze is a monolithic verticalization of the
entire album. What occurred over time (width, in this analogy) becomes simultaneous
(height). In Ablinger’s Nerz und Campari (1998), the freeze is clearly longer than the
material it has frozen. Over five minutes, the instrumentalist plays a very finely divided
scale (60 tones per octave) from the low to high range. Following that, for forty minutes,
the entire freeze is broadcast, along with any other incidental sounds that were recorded
in that live five-minute interval. The material does not change at all for those forty
minutes, but is described as “a ‘large,’ ‘wide’ surface-noise, a static sound-wall of inner
complexity, as it cannot be captured at once, but can only be experienced by spending
some time with it.”19 The entire traversal of the instrument’s range becomes one giant,
detailed, sustained chord. This basic premise holds throughout the IEAOV series, in
which “sounds as an input (the ‘palette’) turns into a color of sound as an output.”20
There are other ways to manipulate the duration and content of an existing
musical recording. In the first track of the French composer and turntablist eRikm’s
Variations Opportunistes, short samples of one very short clip of a Jean-Philippe
Rameau harpsichord piece are looped to saturate a much longer duration. This activity
is carried out through microscopic decisions, choosing the exact sample according to
its properties, the rate of looping, and the precise moment to move on and make the
next set of decisions within that five-second segment. The track seems to be defying
gravity, gradually moving forward in a clear and open sky. When eRikm focuses on a
Information, Language, and Interaction 161
dissonance about halfway through the piece, it becomes clear that this is an entirely
different territory, and then the glitch, which is characteristic of his work more broadly,
becomes suddenly apparent. The pitch bends in ways that enter another sonic territory
altogether. After this crazy ride we are dropped into the original source material, which
sounds surprisingly simple after so many manipulations. In five seconds, the flight
ends, and there is a rapid fade-out.21
A less hands-on approach is Leif Inge’s 9 Beet Stretch (2005), which begins with
a recording of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony and stretches its duration, without
pitch distortion, to last exactly twenty-four hours. This piece exists as a continuous
webstream, repeating every twenty-four hours.22 Though everything is slowed down to
less than 1/22nd of the original speed, the result feels strangely hurried, as the listener
is teased with the prospect of tracing every contour. There is so much musical activity,
however, that such tracking is basically impossible, and is doubtless impossible to
retain over the flow of twenty-four hours. 9 Beet Stretch invites the listener back to the
symphony at its original speed, to find it both more familiar and more strange after
delving into this transformative fantasy.
Pixelation
Pixelation (the division of images into discrete blocks of color) is key to the digital
reproduction of images. An analogous process is used in the digitization of sound.
The conceptual artist James Whitehead (known as JLIAT) has developed an unusual
thought experiment based on the premise of the digital reproduction of sound in “All
Possible CDs.”23
An audio CD stores music by patterns of bits. Each audio sample is 16 Bits, and
each second of sound has 44100 samples. So a second of sound is 16 multiplied
by 44100 bits, or zeros and ones in the binary number system. Multiply this by
two for stereo, and then by 60. And this gives the number of bits that make up
one minute of sound. The original Audio CD standard allowed for a maximum
recording time of 74 minutes, so multiply this number again by 74, And this will
give us the maximum number of bits on a CD.
Multiply 16 by 44100, by 2 by 60 by 74 and we get 6265728000. That is the total
number of bits that can be stored on a normal CD or CDR. . . .
The actual physical CDs in the world are actualizations of these virtualities.
Actual objects, physical CDs, being intensities on this virtual plane.
JLIAT has calculated the number (in the billions) that would cover every possible
combination of recorded sound on an audio CD. Although it is a very large number, this
thought exercise leads to questions about artistic endeavor. This theory is a somewhat
more plausible version of the notion of a monkey eventually typing the complete
works of Shakespeare using random keystrokes. If artistic work can be reduced to bits
(or pixels, or letters, or numbers, or any other discrete and quantifiable unit), how can
artists differentiate themselves? The implication is that the artist is as replaceable as,
162 Experimental Music Since 1970
and ultimately replaceable by, the recorded artifact. Walter Benjamin anticipated these
concerns in his 1936 essay, “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction.”
By working with the pixelation of sound, Ablinger has directly engaged with this
set of concerns. For the World Venice Forum 2009, he recorded a boy’s reading of the
Proclamation of the European Environmental Criminal Court. The frequencies of that
vocal performance were analyzed, and the data were used to depress the keys of the
piano according to the analysis. Deus Cantando (God, speaking) (2009) is the result
and is probably Ablinger’s most widely viewed work.24 He describes the methodology
as follows:
(2) Time and frequency of the chosen “phonograph” are dissolved into a grid of
small “squares” whose format may, for example, be 1 second (time) to 1 second
(interval).
(3) The resulting grid is the score, which is then to be reproduced in different
media: on traditional instruments, computer-controlled piano, or in white noise.25
This procedure has been carried out in the Quadraturen series, and is echoed in
various ways in Ablinger’s other work. By using a grain, or resolution, of about 16 units
per second, he approaches a level of detail at which the articulation of the piano can
be recognized as spoken word. His interest, he explains, is not in reproduction itself,
but in “the sudden shift into recognition . . . the observation of ‘reality’ via ‘music.’”26
Quadraturen IV (“Selbstportrait mit Berlin”) (1995–98) also calls for a perceptual shift
between realism and approximation. The use of a CD in performance underlines the
point that a recording is in itself a digitization or pixelation of whatever it documents.
The time and frequency grids shift between (and sometimes within) the sections. At
times in the recorded version, a regular pulse in the orchestra is more prominent than
the recordings of ambient city sounds. In the fifth section, one first hears a fairly regular
pulse in the orchestra with pitches that are not at all static, but jump around widely.
After an acceleration, the sounds of a restaurant are suddenly audible as the CD fades
in. The orchestra emulates these sounds in parallel, delivering an increasingly complex
rhythm to match the sounds of many people speaking at once. The acceleration
continues, and the orchestra and the recording command equal attention. Gradually
the illusion develops that the orchestra is doing the speaking. The recording becomes
inaudible, and after another moment the track is over. Ablinger writes:
The sound of the ensemble can in principle be compared with that of the recordings.
The music becomes an observer of reality. Compared with “reality,” “music” is
defined in terms of a scanner (with horizontal rhythm and vertical pitch). To be
precise, in terms of a very rough scanner which hobbles far behind the complexity
of reality. But at the same time, such hobbling reflects the truth of the observation
process as well as being an aesthetic phenomenon in itself.27
divisions. There are a limited number of possibilities in any given parameter. If the
grid is examined closely enough, we see that the 0s and 1s of digital data are highly
redundant, and yet through their use we have access to a wider scope of information
than ever before in history. Ablinger considers this contradiction very closely in his
work. As he explains,
All pieces within the series “Augmented Studies” may be seen as a continuation
of my exploration into redundancy. Most of the series (though not all) takes, as
its starting point, the redundancy of maximally simple material, or, carry on the
redundancy/rigour of method/algorithm as a structural vehicle to finally arrive
at its opposite—density and complexity. True to all pieces in the series, however,
seems to be the intent of focus—the tension between redundancy of material and
complexity of experience.28
Augmented Study (2012) is a “Proportion canon from a slow glissando over one octave.”29
Any canon is by definition full of redundancy. The same material is traversed by each
of these seven parts (though at different speeds). Each part in itself is redundant as it
travels by glissando up a scale at a steady rate, and the range of an octave that it travels
is very familiar. The sounding result, however, is like an intricate story unfolding in the
colorations of the parts and how they relate to one another.
In Hypothesen über das Mondlicht (2012), Ablinger increases the resolution of both
pitch and rhythm to “generate an algorithm capable of understanding and reproducing
the rhythmic complexity created by reflections of the moonlight on the surface of the
sea.” This attempt to translate activity from nature to music is one that he believes to
be a failure. The piece is a “micro-rhythmic/micro-tonal proportional canon created
out of one single, ascending, regular, 25-cent scale over the range of a flute,” and evokes
a radiantly complex, shimmering quality with its sixteen parts, but in the end it is
“something else.” A high resolution is a prerequisite to success in such an attempt at
reproduction, but not a guarantee of it. Part of the difficulty lies in the fact that it
is not a translation from sound to sound, but a two-part translation from a natural
process to a mathematical form (an algorithm) and then to sound. The resolution
makes no difference if the relevant information is not captured in the first place. As a
reproduction, this piece may be a failure. But as a speculation, as a means of expanding
a tool set and making something fresh, it is a compelling success.30
Joanna Bailie works with both recordings and acoustic instruments, often using
some type of transcription process. To Be Beside the Seaside (2015) is a series of
transcriptions—three different speculations based on sound recordings. The first
movement is a hybrid processing of two recordings that are linked only conceptually
to the sea. The first of these is a recording of the second movement of Debussy’s La
Mer (1905), “Jeux des vagues” (“play of the waves”) and the second is a field recording
of the waves breaking on Brighton Beach. Bailie made freezes from the recording
and out of those created twenty-five chords. The chords are approximations of those
freezes, transcribed as exactly as possible but presented in conformity with the twelve-
note-per-octave grid of equal temperament. The rhythm is based entirely on the field
164 Experimental Music Since 1970
recording. The performance note for the movement is, “Like waves breaking on a
beach (literally).” Like the chords, the rhythm is presented within a type of grid, in that
the smallest rhythmic subdivision is the sixteenth-note. There is no need for a higher
resolution for this hybrid reproduction, either harmonically or rhythmically. The
interest of the movement lies in the thorough amalgamation of these two recordings.
Both the pitch and rhythm of the second movement are taken from a single
source: a Herbert von Karajan recording of the third movement of Beethoven’s Fourth
Symphony. The rhythm of Bailie’s movement, which she calls “Slow sliding reveal,”
sounds familiar, but the pitch material is band filtered so that only the “very high
spectral content” of the recording is used. The performance note for this section is,
“Like the ghost of a symphony.” The “reveal” can be likened to the gradual exposure
of an analogue photograph in solution. As the deeper hues fill in, the image starts to
become clear. As soon as it is fully exposed and the Beethoven is recognized, Bailie’s
movement abruptly ends mid-phrase.
“Double flicker waltz” carries the ironic instruction, “Robotically precise, but romantic!”
It is not in itself danceable as a waltz, but is rather an interpolation of two Johann Strauss
waltzes, Wiener Blut (1873) and G’schichten aus dem Wienerwald (1868). The samples
alternate rapidly at the opening, but the rhythms gradually expand. Bailie explains:
As it slows down, and I make the rhythmic durations kind of more and more
equal, they start relating to each other. The samples from one start relating to the
other, and they build a kind of new story from it. And that’s something that comes
from slowing something down, that you have time to actually start constructing
these things as a listener.
In discussing this piece, Bailie named Douglas Gordon’s 24 Hour Psycho (1993) as
a major influence. A well-known film (Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho [1960]) became
something completely different through the method Gordon used to sample it, slowing
down the rate of the film to three frames per second. Bailie distorts the reproduction
in each of these movements and in the process creates a unique relationship with the
orchestral setting and repertoire.31
The advent of recording and subsequent manipulative technologies, far from
replacing human creativity, has facilitated the exploration of music, noise(s), and the
totality of sonic information.
The German composer Gerhard Stäbler’s JC/NY (1992) uses sounds made by
humans in their everyday activities, “ranging from reading and writing to eating
and sleeping.” Special attention is paid, through amplification, to the sounds of the
body—coughing, breathing, digestion. These particular sounds in the recording are
not unusual, but the deliberate foregrounding of them is. These are sounds that may
unintentionally come up in a concert situation, but this time they are the focus of
attention. The audience is also part of the performance:
The listener is challenged to play an active part in the creation of his own or his
neighbours’ experience of the work: by tapping the ear, by covering or uncovering
it, or by using the hand to enlarge the outer ear. . . . Index finger held lightly over
the cartilage flap of the ear and ooopen-close-oopen-close!32
This component of the piece underlines the point that humans can not only make
sound, but also obstruct it. The involuntary aspects of hearing are emphasized—not
only the sounds of the human body, but also the use of one audience member to
influence the listening experience of another. This instruction also invites an invasion
of personal space, in that not every audience member necessarily knows his or her
neighbor or is willing to come into physical contact. In Rachengold (1992), Stäbler
employs another largely involuntary human mechanism—the gargle. He sings in
falsetto while gargling over the course of over five minutes, discovering how much he
can control or manipulate the vocal mechanism in this state.
The exploration of vocal mechanisms can also take place through small sounds.
Ami Yoshida is a Japanese vocalist who describes her work as “a barely audible sound
that is perceived as sound itself rather than as vocalization.”33 She operates in a state of
extremity, completely withdrawn from normal modes of communication or singing.
The unusual qualities of this approach, combined with the use of this most viscerally
empathetic instrument, bring the listener to a very raw place as well. Tiger Thrush
(2003), a solo album of Yoshida’s, is unremitting in its exploration of the hidden
pockets of the vocal mechanism.34 It’s not about volume, but about strain and intent.
Aaron Cassidy writes that these sounds
disconnect the voice from the body. These sounds are made in a microscopically
small physical space in the throat. Like the squeal of air coming out of the pinched
opening of a balloon, or like the unpredictable squawk from a clarinet reed, they
are the noises not of their resonating chambers but instead of a tiny, compressed,
pressurized space.35
This work presents a sound image of profound solitude. More than the display of
screaming in Stäbler’s . . . drüber (1972/73), Yoshida’s introverted, internalized, barely
projected and yet piercing sounds activate the sense of having no other outlet but the
limited form of one’s own physiology.36
Joan La Barbara has been an important vocal collaborator with Cage, Ashley,
Lucier, and Feldman, among many other composers. In her own compositional work,
166 Experimental Music Since 1970
she shares an interest with Yoshida in exploring the possibilities of the voice within
tight boundaries. Voice Piece: One-Note Internal Resonance Investigation (1974) is an
incredibly diverse range of activity that makes the constraint of a single note feel like
a completely open field in itself. Overtones and undertones are almost constantly
appearing and flickering in various degrees of prominence. Timbre, roughness, and
the shaping of the vowels are in relaxed but apparently constant motion. Circular Song
(1975) is comprised of upward glissandos on an inhale and downward glissandos on
an exhale. Tom Johnson writes of this first of two CDs of the Voice Is the Original
Instrument release that it is not yet in a “product development stage,” but finds these
explorations more fascinating in their “raw experimental form” than he would expect
to in a more finished product.37 This raw data, so patiently and skillfully delivered, is an
invitation to each listener to explore his or her own voice in a parallel way.
She then learned to sing the melody and sped her voice up until it was the same
length and pitch as the original birdsong. The piece is made from multiple layers
of the various permutations of the birdsong and the human interpretation of it.39
The listening process is in equal parts revealing about the function of the technology,
the adaptability of the voice, and the nature of the original birdsong. The iterations are
audible, and the transformation is evident. While many people imagine what it would
be like to fly, Z found a way to make her own voice sing like a bird, in what George
Lewis calls a “dialogic imagination of subjectivity.”40
Chris Mercer is an American composer of primarily electroacoustic music whose
Birdsong Gloves create a feedback situation with cheap hearing aids to emulate both
birdsong and cricket stridulation. The fingertips of the gloves each have headphones
planted into them.41 In the video example, high tones are sent in upward and
downward glissandi as the hands quickly circle around the hearing aids in rapid shifts
of proximity.42
Information, Language, and Interaction 167
Dialogues
While imitation is one means of relating to animal sounds, they can also be provoked
as a response to stimulus. Emmanuel Holterbach summoned the musicianship of a
group of New Zealand parrots by playing gongs for about five minutes continuously.
Gradually, they approached and started trilling with the gong. As more birds engage,
the intensity and types of interaction constantly shift throughout the track. The gong
itself seems plain in comparison with the sounds the parrots use to respond to it. They
are interacting with the overtones and with one another. This improvisation explores
a focused moment of influence between a human-made sound and the musicality of
the birds.43
Mimus Polyglottos (1976) is a project designed by Ric Cupples and David Dunn
that culminated in an outdoor recording of a single bird responding to electronically
generated sounds. The first stimulus tape was of recorded birdsong, and was successful
in provoking a response. The second, distorted stimulus had quite the opposite
effect. “The bird exhibited extremely agitated physical behavior and stopped singing
for the stimulus duration.” The alterations to the mockingbird song caused alarm.
It is surprising, then, that a synthetic approximation of the rhythm and timbre of
mockingbird songs was not alarming to any of the birds who heard it, but triggered
a highly complex interaction. In the recording, the bird deftly interacts with various
aspects of the recording, including pitch, rhythm, and timbre, but never settles either
on a single aspect or on direct imitation. A great musical mind is at work, full of facility
and flexibility and creativity. The performance still feels spontaneous and fresh after
many listenings.44
Several sections of Dunn’s Oracles (1974–75) provide a communication stimulus to
be played outdoors—through loudspeakers to plants and canines, and underwater to
sea life. Practical considerations are necessary in the setup of the two sections. Section
four calls for high amplification and alternates one minute of playing the tape with
a minute in which the tape is silent, so that there is an open duration for the wolves,
coyotes, or other canines to respond. These alternations take place over an extended
period of time, and changes in the environment are recorded and documented. Like
Mimus Polyglottos, the composition consists of two things: a recording and a situation.
Oracles operates as a series of propositions, all of which will yield information that
could not have been known in advance with any degree of specificity. Each section
sends the performers out into the natural world to find answers that are specific to the
wildlife found in the chosen time and place.
In The Audible Phylogeny of Lemurs (2008–12), Chris Mercer has used recordings
and research gathered over years to present lemur sounds grouped by their function. He
studied the lemurs in depth, initially through playback studies on alarm responsiveness
and then through further observation, and finally drew them together so as to advance
a better understanding of their functions and contexts.
My goal is to preserve and augment the calls’ natural characteristics and to group
and combine them so as to explicate relationships between calls of different
168 Experimental Music Since 1970
species, making the phylogeny audible and the beauty and complexity of the calls
accessible. . . . The vocalizations are documented for context of emission, cross-
referenced with the scientific literature, and meticulously cleaned, enhanced, edited,
and spatialized to reveal their acoustic structures and phylogenetic relationships.
The various species of lemurs in these pieces present a diversity of activity through
the quantity of samples that is astonishing from the first moments and throughout the
seventeen-plus minutes of the piece. He also provides quite a lot of detail in describing
the activity taking place within each section.
The calls of Part I are related to social interaction, and in Section I, they are grouped
in order by degree of arousal. Section VI presents expulsive calls that have a series of
great names, including the “double-unit sneeze call,” the “growl-huff,” the “shee-fak,”
the “plosive bark,” and the “snort.” These brief sections are concentrated with activity.45
Animal spaces
Animal communication occurs not only within social contexts, but also within defined
physical spaces. A beehive or a tree is a vibrant acoustical space when it is filled with
insects, and can be studied as such.
Patrick Farmer is a British musician, sound artist, and writer who describes
himself as “often utilising more and more fantastical methods to create sounds that
are themselves, wonderfully ordinary.”46 This statement applies to gwenynen fel |
y drenewydd (2009), in which Farmer positions the microphone—and by extension
the listener—in particular locations within or adjacent to beehives in a single apiary.
Each of the eight tracks on this release has a unique profile.
What is heard from “Top ledge of hive no 3 above small entrance” is an unstable
churning or circulation. Pitch gradually becomes apparent around the five-minute
mark, but seems far less present than the noise texture. The sounds of individual bees
will not carry as powerfully through the top ledge of the hive as the collective sounds.
The quality of the noise in “On ceramic stopper of hive no 1” is vastly different from
what comes before it. The ceramic stopper acts as a filter, so that trends of pitch and
activity are heard, but there is little to no specificity apparent. This example seems the
most protected, the most removed from the activity of the bees. In immediate contrast,
the bees are individually audible in “Top entrances of hives nos 3 and 4.” As buzzes and
trajectories of flight are heard, the recording takes on some of the attributes of a small
ensemble work, highlighting interactions between several bees at a time.
All this is done without any direct interference on Farmer’s part. As he puts it,
“The placement of microphones in recording situations like this I have long felt to be
more important than the processing and assemblage that inevitably ensues. I often
spend much longer just sitting and thinking about where to attach them than I do
anything else.”47 This particular placement captures intense periods of activity and
motion. In “Top right of hive no 2” is heard a rich, deep resonance with no real sound
specificity. It sounds like it could be the sound of a highway heard from an inner room
of an apartment. At other moments it sounds like wind. At no point does it sound
Information, Language, and Interaction 169
like bees. A close listening to these recordings gives the impression that it would be
impossible to understand the sounds and activities of bees in any significant degree.
Miya Masaoka has also used bees in her sound works, but her work is live and
sonically interactive. In Bee Project #1 (1996), 3,000 bees are in a glass beehive on the
stage. The sounds of the hive are amplified, mixed, and manipulated according to a
score. The piece also calls for koto, violin, and percussion. In Bee Project #5 (2001),
for 3,000 bees, koto, computer, and video, the sounds of the hive are mapped and
spatialized in eight channels to sonically place the audience in the hive.48 She has
further explored insect immersion in Ritual (1997–99) by releasing giant Madagascar
hissing cockroaches onto her naked body and setting up sound samples that are
triggered by their movement.49
In the last track of Taiwan-based sound artist Yannick Dauby’s La rivière penchée
(2004), the featured insects are not bees but crickets. Their sounds first become
apparent around the 1:45 mark, delicately interspersed with wind chimes. Leading up
to the nine-minute mark, the cricket sounds re-emerge, far more present, both sharp
and delicate in a complex series of polyrhythms and flickering changes in intensity.50
With all the other sounds going on in the track, it might seem that this track is not as
much about crickets as Masaoka’s or Farmer’s works are about bees, but the structure
of the piece deals with different aspects of the insects’ sounds. Crickets tend to be heard
under the cover of darkness, and their sound rarely is heard suddenly, but noticed
after the ear has already processed it. The cover of the wind chimes is analogous to the
circumstances in which crickets are heard.
Another key example of entering into an insect environment is David Dunn’s
somewhat terrifying The Sound of Light in Trees (2005), which has already been
discussed in Chapter 2.
happening within each of those months. It is clear from the sounds themselves that
October is colder than September. The wind takes on greater dominance, and the
character of the animal vocalizations is markedly different. As the album notes state:
The weather has created and shaped all our habitats. Clearly it also has a profound
and dynamic effect upon our lives and that of other animals. The three locations
featured here all have moods and characters which are made tangible by the
elements, and these periodic events are represented within by a form of time
compression.52
November is even starker and sounds positively dangerous, dense with wind and chill,
with cows and birds cutting through the thick night air. December is far quieter, with
no plant life exposed to pick up the sound of the wind, but only some birds singing
quietly. “Midnight at the Oasis” on Cross-Pollination (2011) is also a time compression,
this time from sunrise to sunset in the Kalahari desert in South Africa, featuring
“the dense and harmonic mosaic of delicate animal rhythms recorded in this remote
habitat.”53
The American bioacoustician and sound recordist Bernie Krause has developed the
term “biophony” to mean “relationships of individual creatures to the total biological
soundscape as each establishes frequency and/or temporal bandwidth within a given
habitat.”54 He writes of the need to record not only single animals, but more complete
ecologies as well. His long-term engagement with recording habitats has yielded
alarming observations of how the sonic environment has changed over time.
When I began recording over four decades ago, I could record for 10 hours and
capture one hour of usable material, good enough for an album or a film soundtrack
or a museum installation. Now, because of global warming, resource extraction,
and human noise, among many other factors, it can take up to 1,000 hours or more
to capture the same thing. Fully 50 percent of my archive comes from habitats so
radically altered that they’re either altogether silent or can no longer be heard in
any of their original form.55
When he learned of a logging company’s claim that “selective logging” would have no
environmental impact, he captured a recording of a meadow in the area before it was
done and a year later, at the same time of year, and compared the two results. The birds
were no longer present. Returning to the same site fifteen times over twenty-five years,
he found:
The biophony, the density and diversity of that biophony, has not yet returned to
anything like it was before the operation. But here’s a picture of Lincoln Meadow
taken after, and you can see that from the perspective of the camera or the human
eye, hardly a stick or a tree appears to be out of place, which would confirm the
logging company’s contention that there’s nothing of environmental impact.
However, our ears tell us a very different story.56
Information, Language, and Interaction 171
Krause illustrates this example with sonograms in one of his books, The Great Animal
Orchestra. He also shares a pair of sonograms from living and dead areas of the same
coral reef in Fiji. Of the enormous variety of animals he lists from the first example,
only some snapping shrimp remain.57
Krause is committed to the project of telling the stories of whole environments,
rather than just single animals or species, in sound. In 2013 he related:
Hearing the sounds in context with each other tells the creature story in a very
different way. From my perspective, taking the voice of a single animal from a
habitat and trying to understand it out of context is a little like trying to comprehend
an elephant by examining only a single hair at the tip of its tail.58
In the biophony, different species find their own acoustical niches in which to
communicate, and “it is possible to define animals’ geographical territory through an
analysis of biophonic expression.”59 He has found through his repeated visits to the
same sites that as the habitat changes, the “acoustic fabric” also changes. Animals have
to adapt by altering their communication, and there is a measure of confusion as these
shifts take place over “weeks, months, or in some cases, even years.”60
Krause is concerned about context, not only in the ecological sense, but also in
terms of how the natural world is exhibited and comprehended. Creatures from similar
habitats are presented together, but “Sound in zoos and museums is still driven by
systems where the visitor pushes a button to hear a sound or see a video. Designers
still install sound systems that constantly repeat the same program over and over.”61 He
has made numerous installations that provide a far more realistic presentation of how
these sounds actually occur in nature.62
David Dunn echoes these concerns about context when he writes:
You cannot dismantle this whole with an expectation that its guests will reveal their
motivations in isolation from the party. The profuse interconnections between
these organisms betray the limitations of reductionist thought and I am left with
the realization that it is the evidence of this wholeness manifesting as sound which
I must learn to respect if not comprehend.
Dunn’s Chaos and the Emergent Mind of the Pond (1991) is a collage of underwater
recordings from North American freshwater ponds.63 Some of the recordings are
presented at actual speed, while others are at half speed. Besides that one time/pitch
shift and the layering of different recordings, there are no other alterations to the sound
files. It becomes clear that there is a complex interaction between the organisms and
their context. “Then there are these emergent rhythms, these elastic pulsations of life,
sounding as if the very morphology of these little beings and the pond’s macro body
were dependent.” The rhythmic structures are unimaginably complex, but the clicks,
though consistent, seem to Dunn to be “sensitive to the assertions of others.” For him,
listening to and working with these sounds is an act of speculation and wonder. “Since
most of the insects generating these sounds have not been studied for their sound
making capacities, the specific sources remain a mystery.”64
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I know that pistol shrimp make sounds when they snap their claws to paralyse
their prey, but do others in the same family do the same? No one seems to know.
Underwater there is very little known about the soundscapes created by living
creatures, and few understand the details of variations between the various grunts,
knocking sounds and rumbling sounds that cod, haddock, pollock, other fish
and crustaceas [sic] produce, and how they experience and orientate themselves
through the use of sound.65
Though Winderen has some educational background in fish ecology, she poses these
questions as an artist. Her aim is not to establish facts, but rather to provoke speculation,
and especially to ask the question, how little do we know? She writes:
In the depths of the oceans there are invisible but audible soundscapes, about
which we are largely ignorant, even if the oceans cover 70% of our planet. I am also
experimenting with different types of microphones to collect sounds which are not
obviously recognisable, but give room for broader, more imaginative readings.66
Watson, Dunn, Krause, and Winderen each have unique interests and techniques, but
they share a fascination with the capacity of sound to reveal the scope of the mystery
that still surrounds the natural world.
5.3 Language
Every time someone speaks—or even imagines speaking—language is structuring
sound. Some composers embrace linguistic structures as sonic structures, while others
play with the qualities of the human voice under the influence of these patterns and
meanings.
particularly interested in what scholars of phonetics call the ‘vowel pool’: the matrix
of all possible vowels. No single language uses all the vowels contained in the vowel
pool.” This pool is extended to include a number of European and Asian languages. The
landscapes pictured from South Dublin County are shown in relation to the vocal tract
to indicate tongue positions. “In this work, the macrological geographical structures
of South Dublin are replicated micrologically in the singer’s mouth, producing vowel
sounds from Vilnius, Tibet and Berlin.”67 These shapes are given voice, and their
linguistic content is mapped using the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). How
literal these correspondences are is open to question, given the fictional nature of the
Grupát project of which this piece is a part.68
Nate Wooley’s [8] Syllables (2011) and [9] Syllables (2012) use the IPA to “create
parameters for how the sound is made.” The aspects that are shaped include tongue,
teeth, throat, and oral cavity, all of which have a clear impact on the sounding result
of the trumpet. Wooley’s intention was to steer himself away from “proper trumpet
sound,” and the results are sometimes unstable, sometimes distorted, sometimes
simply inflected.69
Bonnie Jones, a Korean-American musician and writer, spells out a text with her
voice in by the time (2012) in a way that makes the words difficult to track. Using
a monotone voice, pausing only occasionally between words, she reads each letter
of the sentence, “By the time I reach the end of this sentence, our bodies will have
changed.” She writes that she is “interested in how people perceive, ‘read’ and interact
with these sounds and texts given our current technological moment.”70 we’ve (2010)
is a silent video screen capture that implicitly suggests a silent, temporally structured
performance by the viewer. The cursor blinks for some time, then the first letters and
words are spelled out slowly, with pauses long enough to invite impatient completions.
The text gradually disperses between the top and bottom of the screen. Words that
were written in sequence disappear and reappear, and are heard more as memories
than as new internal sound productions. The process leaves the observer with the
feeling of having been muted.71
The A. Typist project centers in Seoul, and involves both writers and musicians.
A piece of writing is the entire score of each piece, and a typewriter with a modified
mechanism and attached motors is the instrument. The typewriter is modified to
enhance and explore the sounds of writing. Language becomes clearly yet indirectly
audible through this mechanism. The initiators of the project ask the question, “Can
the act of writing be another way of producing music?” The attempts to answer that
question enhance and amplify the sounds of writing.
The formal markers of new lines, sentences, paragraphs, and pages are evident in
listening to “Been here before” on the profile (2011) release. The auxiliary, unpredictable
174 Experimental Music Since 1970
sounds of the typewriter rumble in the foreground in a way that continually disrupts
any momentary sense of regularity. In the typing of the single sentence of the second
track, “Who in the hallway can be driven out and run away at the same time,” the whole
machine seems to malfunction in an accumulation of insistent high metallic pulses.
In “This hallway is empty,” the sentences are quite short and the sound is much more
prone to interruption by the auxiliary motors. This project offers a way of performing
text that translates language directly into sound while paradoxically obliterating any
semantic structure. Words are not represented with any meaning, but the length of
the structural units (words, sentences, lines, paragraphs) is reflected. The behavior of
the motors operates in unpredictable relation with these other factors, and would vary
from one performance to another.73
Description for Other Things (2011) operates more as a text score than as an actual
text to type. The thirty-five close-typed pages could not be replicated through manual
typing in under seventeen minutes, and when keystrokes are heard, they are not
particularly fast. What is more audible is the action of the machine and its auxiliaries.
The descriptions of the actions to be performed on the typewriter are the substance of
the text, and are presented in a repetitive (though not directly copy-pasted) manner
in the liner notes. Any logical correspondence with the text is severely challenged by
the form of this presentation, both in text and in sound. Nothing is literal. Keystrokes
are not plausibly word for word, and even the prescribed actions are not carried out in
the manner described. The time stamps in the booklet fail to match the durations of
the tracks. The project almost completely contradicts its textual basis. Ryu Hankil and
his collaborators (including Kim Taeyong, Lee Youngji, lo wie, and Manfred Werder)
have continued to explore various forms for this project with vastly different results.74
and simple melodic lines present the set of words as an entity, rather than individual
words as carriers of meaning.78 In reviewing the piece’s premiere, Tim Rutherford-
Johnson pointed out that the alphabetical organization of the words shapes their
attacks into clear sections, not only the A’s and the B’s, but “all the words beginning ‘ab’,
‘ac’, ‘ad’, and so on. Again, each of these has a particular sonic character. So the list is not
an undifferentiated stream, but has a form and shape of its own.”79
Another approach to a wide selection of words is through an instrument designed
for improvisation by Alessandro Bosetti, who is an Italian composer, performer, and
sound artist. Mask Mirror is an instrument made of samples of his own speaking
voice, projected through a speaker and designed to blend with his live voice as much as
possible. The samples are language fragments organized into categories of various sizes,
from sound granules to phrases. A key on the keyboard triggers each category, and as
he starts a sentence he will press a key and see where the phrase directs his narration.
Bosetti built this instrument as a way to improvise with the kinds of materials that have
come to interest him most: “Voice recordings and montages, interviews, conversations,
misunderstandings, translations and—more broadly—sense.” These improvisations
take turns that are generally improbable, and often quite funny.80
The best condition for me to play with Mask Mirror is that of emptying my head
as much as I can before a show and then to start saying the first things that come
to my mind. . . . I then keep going from there trying to be open that whatever may
come or develop.
Bosetti’s view of the Mask Mirror has evolved over time, almost as if it is a living and
breathing alter ego that is an equal player with him in the performative situation.
I used to think about Mask Mirror as an instrument that I play along with my
voice but now I sometimes think that it is Mask Mirror that plays me or whatever
thing inside of me that could be roughly called language. By giving little kicks of
randomness it activates other ways to use, play, reconstruct or deconstruct my
linguistic abilities.81
In the event of a nuclear war, human life would be sacrificed. This sacrifice could
not occur unless human life was thought to be expendable. In this, your life is
included. How do you feel about being expendable?
176 Experimental Music Since 1970
Each person, from as diverse a set of backgrounds as possible, faces the camera and
answers the question over several minutes. In the installation setting, thirty of these
videos play simultaneously in what Gaburo calls a “grand noise”:
It’ll be just human noise—talking—and if you just want to listen to that and hear
how monitor fifteen is talking to monitor twenty-five across the way, these words
will sort of jut out. That’s one way to experience it, but it is also possible to get close,
like you would to a painting, and have this great viewing and listening to any one.
My idea is that it would be something like paintings.82
In addition to the clear ideological concerns of this question, which was asked during
the Cold War, is a clear focus on the sound qualities of “human noise.” People are
simply talking, but their response is treated as art, equivalent to a painting in a museum
setting.
The melody inherent in language is one of the most significant musics of everyday
experience. Because language is coded as meaning, its musical features are often
overlooked. These musical aspects can be investigated as specificities—the pitch
contours, rhythms, and articulations of a particular person’s speech—or from another
direction—the implied music of a text. Paul DeMarinis writes:
Hidden beneath speech’s words and music’s melodies I hear the singing of a voice
more ancient than language. No longer are we aware that as we speak our voices
rise and fall, following the deeper contours of speech melodies that prefigure our
sense and our meanings.83
Alien Voices (1988) is an installation in which the melodic contour of the listener’s
spoken text is analyzed and played back on a synthesizer. “By experimenting with
the different settings,” writes DeMarinis, “you can discover to what extent you rely
on melody to understand meaning and perhaps speculate on the linguistic content
of musical melody.”84 The listener becomes an active participant, and the installation
behaves as a mirror, or perhaps more accurately a document that is produced with
drastic filtering. By removing both meaning and timbre, other qualities of the
participant’s quality of speech are revealed. DeMarinis’s Music as a Second Language
release is filled with related investigations. In Leçon par l’aiguille (1988), the melodic
trajectories of an old French language instruction record are traced by glissandi. The
recording is further treated in Fonetica Francese to find its inherent harmonies “by a
process of melodic quantization.”
An Appeal (1990) is “a fit of legal dictation plagued by spurious vocal melodies.”
The recorded voice is given a melody, initially a downward scale. The wording and
the accent are from a familiar, legal context, but they are transformed into melodies
completely alien to that context. Odd Evening (1988) traces the rhythmic and melodic
attributes of a Chinese radio play with “musical doubles.” The pitches of these doubles
conform to a pentatonic scale, rather than being perfectly adherent to the found
pitches of the spoken words. This approach is a somewhat literal tracing of recorded
Information, Language, and Interaction 177
speech. As DeMarinis puts it, “The rhythms and melodies of speech are mirrored by
their musical doubles.”85 But the choice of instruments of course relates to the overall
intent of the piece.
Steve Reich places the recorded clips of people’s voices within the dense texture
of the string quartet in Different Trains (1988). These melodies were based on Reich’s
transcriptions of each vocal clip. The strings play the inflections of a retired Pullman
porter and of several Holocaust survivors as they recount their experiences on trains.86
Pamela Z also works with the melodic qualities that she finds in recorded speech.
Her work with sound loops led her into this line of work:
When spoken text is repeated by a machine, you can hear the fundamental tone
of something that you thought was unpitched. So I began composing based on the
melodies in natural speech, which I never would have done if I hadn’t discovered
the digital delay.87
Her interest in these melodies has drawn her to capture certain types of speaking.
Geekspeak (1995) is made up of recorded speech of researchers and programmers at
Xerox PARC. Small Talk (1998) presents three different speech types:
Voice Studies (2003) explores vocal production and evokes vocal profiling through the
presentation of various accents.89
Peter Ablinger’s Voices & Piano (1998–) is an ongoing series of pieces that have two
parts: the recorded voice of a public figure, and a concurrent response to that voice
played by the pianist. At the time of writing, there are fifty of these pieces, representing
a wide cross-section of ages, nationalities, etc. But it is the individual traits of each
voice and the specific attributes of the recording that are of interest to Ablinger.
He writes, “Reality/speech is continuous, perception/music is a grid which tries
to approach the first.”90 He combines formulaic aspects of analysis with conditional,
subjective decisions about how to underline each person’s statement. Neither the
analysis software nor his own musical instinct is adequate in itself to effectively create
this musical relationship. He offers one such example: “Sometimes I hear it having a
very specific rhythm in it and this may lead me to imitate its tempo. But then it never
fits!”91 The fluid realities of human communication cannot be reduced to mathematical
descriptions. But these analyses help in the process of making each piano part as
specific as possible.
Part of the charm of these works is the sense of relationship that each listener brings
to many of these figures. In some cases their voices may be a fresh discovery, though
their work or historical importance is well known. Then there are two comparisons
that become possible: the voice compared to that prior knowledge, and the recorded
178 Experimental Music Since 1970
voice compared to the piano accompaniment. In the case of the Morton Feldman
setting, the piano part mysteriously closes the gap between the subtlety of his music
and the lack of subtlety in his manner of speaking.92
The American composer Paul Lansky’s Six Fantasies on a Poem by Thomas Campion
(1978–79) uses a single reading by Hannah MacKay of “Rose-Cheekt Lawra” (published
1602) as musical material for six transformations. Each of these fantasies has a different
relation to the original. The first piece multiplies her voice, giving each track a different
melodic formation and developing a harmonic flow. The next versions seem to submerge
the voice to varying degrees, until in the fifth fantasy articulated speech is barely
audible. The last fantasy ornaments, rather than transforms, the original recording, and
its inherent melodies are apparent after having heard the other treatments.93
Charles Amirkhanian’s Heavy Aspirations (1973) also uses a single spoken voice
recording, but treats it in more identifiable ways through repetition—doubling it and
creating two-part counterpoints. The speaker (the conductor Nicolas Slonimsky)
has a very rhythmic, highly articulated, accented manner of speech that commands
attention immediately. Though there are clear pitch inflections, the ear is drawn to the
rhythm and the articulation of the delivery, particularly in the rapid-fire speech of the
two versions of the voice in the last minute.
Amirkhanian frequently writes his own texts, creating sound poems out of just a
few words that he performs over several tracks and drawing attention to the sounds
of each of the words. Church Car (1980–81)94 and Just (1972)95 are two such examples.
Church Car accelerates rapidly over its short duration, and both pieces share qualities of
insistence and rhythmic specificity with Heavy Aspirations. Gold and Spirit (1984) was
written for the Olympics in Los Angeles. A chorus of 64 identical voices is increasingly
processed along with sounds related to sports.96
I recorded sports sounds and collaged them into a piece, mixing them with the
sports cheers that I am so fond of like “rae man rae” and “go van go,” and these are
blended together into a kind of sports fantasy.97
a new, flashy outfit.) Gordon Mumma circles a football field on a bicycle while Ashley
whistles in a seat placed in the middle of it. As Mumma rides up, Ashley exclaims,
“Gee, Gordon!” as if it is a chance meeting. During his own interview, Alvin Lucier is in
the midst of a performance of Outlines of Persons and Things (1975) along with Ashley
and two other performers. They are all in front of loudspeakers that are playing clusters
of sine tones, “creating moving sound shadows.”98 All of these disparate scenes offer
memorable settings for conversations. Ashley was friends with each of the composers
he interviewed and references matters that have no apparent connection to their work.
The manner of the conversation is informal, but it is highlighted through the setting,
the surrounding activities, and the camera work. These conversations are not simply
(and not always) about music. For Ashley, they are music, and he calls the work a
music-theater piece.99
The Perfect Lives (1978–80) opera follows more directly in this line than is
immediately apparent. This piece is more thoroughly Ashley’s composition, rather
than being a collaborative effort with other composers, though there was certainly
a great deal of collaboration with his band of performers. What is parallel is the use
of fairly ordinary settings, juxtaposed with theatrical—or at the very least unusual—
actions. The composition is made of speech, performed in something of a chant but
with no sense of formality.
The scenes take place in a supermarket, a bank, a bar, a church, and a back yard. The
manner of text delivery shifts from one setting to another. “The Bank” is much faster
than “The Supermarket,” and “The Bar” enters into a more proclamatory mode than
anything preceding it. In “The Church,” Ashley stands at the front with a preaching
scarf, taking on a preacher’s manner of delivery. There is a musical accompaniment
under all of this, primarily by “Blue” Gene Tyranny, that was not composed by Ashley
but is an informal, sometimes lounge-like jazz piano style of accompaniment. It lends a
charm and atmosphere to the work, but is not to be mistaken as the substance of it. Like
the physical settings of Music with Roots in the Aether, it provides a context for speech.
Perfect Lives has both an instrumental and a theatrical floor of activity, but all of this
is background to the foreground: the musical qualities of the delivery of the text. The
focus on the musicality of the text is also enforced by the tenuous relation of the text to
a decipherable narrative. If a story is to be found, it could only happen through repeated
listening. The sentences are complete, but the sense of a narrative is something that
only feels trackable for isolated moments, rather than from one moment to another.
The listener does not get caught up in a story, but rather in the telling of it. This relation
to narrative focuses attention on the rhythms and contours of the speech.
Ashley was interested in the prosaic: what people experience every day and
know best. It might be said that television is to opera as singing is to speaking. Both
Music With Roots in the Aether and Perfect Lives are made for television, and Ashley
developed them to be broadcast on television networks. Television is everyday
entertainment, as speech is everyday communication. (Keith and Mendi Obadike’s
internet opera, The Sour Thunder (1996–2002) is a more contemporary extension of
this line of thinking, and also plays with both genre and the musical qualities of speech
patterns.100) Perfect Lives has a libretto, a makeup artist, a series of sets and scenes,
180 Experimental Music Since 1970
and an instrumental accompaniment. Everything other than the lack of song makes it
clear that this is an opera, and without the ongoing musical accompaniment it might
be considered theater. But Ashley’s performative speech, as well as that of his other
performers, is something between song and regular speech. It does not defy regular
accentuation and never fully launches into song, but it is projected as music.
These musical qualities can be broken down in a few basic ways. Pitch inflections
and rhythmic nuance are part of a native speaker’s basic knowledge base. If two or
more people read the same text, their actual pitches and speeds will vary, but the
relative pitch and internal rhythms will have some correlation. The third basic quality
goes beyond the instructions inherent in the words. It is the character, as embodied
and projected by a vocalist. Ashley’s descriptions of the vocal qualities of his characters
are diverse and specific. The Immortality Songs (1993) is a study in various types of
ranting.101 The opera Crash (2013–14) has three vocal types. One is “a person singing
as if speaking on the telephone; that is, with the particular, brief intimacy that comes
in phone conversations.” The second sings in “a detached, deliberate style, as if reading
a classic poem,” and the third recites, “very briefly, the important events and ideas the
man-subject has lived through” with an “almost unnoticeable vocal tic, a kind of rarely
heard stutter.”102 Six singers rotate among these three characters throughout the work.
Now Eleanor’s Idea is a series of four operas, each of which is based on a different
form of interrogation.103 In one of these operas, el/Aficionado (1987), the singer is given a
“character defining” pitch that “forces a certain ‘character’ to emerge.”104 Ashley clarifies
that beyond this pitch and the givens of the text, “the singer is entirely free to invent
the vocal character,” and underlines the importance of those specific decisions to the
performance. The performers of Ashley’s works are nothing like chanting automatons.
There is ample room for interpretation—perhaps more so than in most sung work.
Ashley’s operatic innovations are vast. He was prolific, and explored this approach
to composition over the course of decades. Another aspect of his composition is the
way the ensemble behaves. As mentioned earlier, voices will rotate among parts, so that
often there is no single singer-to-character mapping. There will often be a soloist and
a chorus, and the chorus relates to the soloist in complexly rotating configurations. In
Celestial Excursions (2003),
There is an abundance of spoken voice, sometimes decipherable, and often not. These
voices become accompaniment, even orchestration, as they combine past the point of
intelligibility. In Atalanta (1982–91), performers have to frequently start over, without
a reference point or agreement with other members of the ensemble.106 In this way
Ashley weaves indeterminacy in in terms of timing and ensemble work.
Ashley’s radical step was to elevate speech itself to the status of music by giving it
a context worthy of opera. His works are extended flights that illuminate the musical
qualities of the spoken word.
Information, Language, and Interaction 181
Blonk is constantly finding new ways of expressing or translating text into sound.
A contrasting example is the sound poem, Sound (1999). The text itself is about
sound, breathing, the voice, hearing, and listening, and he finds countless methods of
representing the text and inviting the listener to emulate this process.
The listener’s ears are in fact whirring because Blonk’s voice is blowing across the
microphone on the R’s of “whirring.” The closing lines are full of onomatopoetic words,
each articulated and illustrated with relish.
Bam! A delicious pang. And a jolly boom! Your innards are a-thundering. How
heavenly it shrieks and screams. Rages and roars. Hammers and thumps. Thwack!
Figure 5.3 Jaap Blonk: Plea for Proof, “Impediment,” first phase
© Jaap Blonk
Information, Language, and Interaction 183
Slap! What a delight. Bang! Wallop! A blaring hullabaloo. A heavenly hubbub that
shouts with laughter inside you. Rave! Ecstasy drones and beats. How it screeches
and yelps and echoes and hoots in the sonic paradise in which you’re listening. You
hear! You hear, you hear sound! Sound.115
Figure 5.4 Jaap Blonk: Plea for Proof, “Impediment,” intermediate phase
© Jaap Blonk
184 Experimental Music Since 1970
Translation
For Blonk, written language is a fundamental aspect of notation, and the process he went
through in creating his notation has been a significant influence on his development
as a composer. When he began writing sound poetry, he used regular written Dutch,
German, French, and English, but found that the IPA had greater possibilities, “making
it possible to use different pronunciations of the same letter in one text. So I could
create poems with more variety of sound color.” Having reaped the benefits of this
transition, he found himself ready for even wider horizons, and he began to extend the
IPA with his own signs. “This developed into the—ever unfinished—system I am using
now for functional sound poetry scores: BLIPAX (Blonk’s IPA Extended).”116 These
shapes became part of his creative process in translating the sounds he produced into
notation, and they took on further life as shapes and as objects to be translated back
into sound.
Traces of Speech (2012) is a project that began with the letters of BLIPAX, hand
drawn and then subjected to two different types of treatment, or translation. One of
these is an electronic version created by importing the raw data into audio software
and treating it digitally. The resultant sound output becomes part of the recording.
The second treatment of these images is by running the characters through optical
character recognition (OCR) software twice, once with an English setting and once
Figure 5.5 Jaap Blonk: Plea for Proof, “Impediment,” English OCR excerpt
© Jaap Blonk
Information, Language, and Interaction 185
with a German setting. Both resultant texts are unintelligible, but Blonk finds ways
to articulate them. His greatest challenge was “the interpretation of the multitude of
punctuation signs.”117 He tried to solve this problem in very different ways through the
different pieces. In “Plea for Proof,” he interprets these marks as “inward plosives.”118
In these types of translational processes, subjective interpretation tends to be
discouraged. Blonk writes that in Traces of Speech he “refrained from pursuing any
personal expression.”119 Craig Kendall, the digital editor and sound designer of Yasunao
Tone’s Musica Iconologos release, writes:
It should be noted that there was never any exclusion or repeated inclusion of
sounds based on their final result. To his credit, Tone always remained true to the
poem’s structure regardless of his personal impressions of the music, and in a sense
the sounds were a type of “chance operation” in form, as their final organization
was established long before the project began production.
Kendall’s task was to use sound to create an “encoded description” for each detailed
image of Chinese character chosen by Tone. Robert Ashley writes:
Tone has “translated” the Chinese character for us, not into words (which obviously
would be inappropriate), but into its signifier, both in its form (its visual template)
and in its literal trace as a word or combination of signs in the Chinese language.
The result is a music of startling accuracy and purity.120
The sound of these pieces certainly does have a startling quality to it, quite unlike
anything else because of the nature of the process and the total allegiance to its results.
Most of the shaping power, beyond the shapes of the characters themselves, is in the
hands of the sound designer. He made some select choices, such as mapping the length
of the sound to the meaning of the word it was derived from, and pitch-shifting the
sound to reflect “the phonetic implications of the spoken Chinese word.” These remain
translational, rather than interpretive processes. Molecular Music (1982–85) similarly
involves translation, though in that case it is a process involving a number of steps in
an analogue, rather than digital process.121
Total faithfulness to the translational process is also a hallmark of Clarence Barlow’s
Progéthal Percussion for Advanced Beginners (2003–). Barlow invented a language
based on percussion techniques, and then he translated English and German texts into
that language. “You could take a translating machine and translate them back into
English and German.”122 The translated texts included Hamlet’s soliloquy, as well as
two UN resolutions.
Translation is often quite challenging. Prosody, sentence structure, cultural associa-
tions, and hidden shades of meaning are all facets of the original that can be lost, even
with the most skillful attention. The only aspect that remains stable is its meaning, and
even that is uncertain. “Lost in translation” is a cliché for a reason. Then why do it? It
is a point of access to things that have been made in foreign territories. Great works
can travel across cultures, and while much is lost, some degree of understanding or
186 Experimental Music Since 1970
exposure is also gained. Translation is a recognition that while there are various ways
of constructing meaning, there is a common base of understanding across cultures.
But for some people, the artifacts of what is lost or vulnerable are of significant interest
in and of themselves.
Alessandro Bosetti took spoken voice radio messages that were only partially
decipherable, and went through a laborious transcription process. Then he used them
in a radio broadcast, inviting listeners to engage in a game of telephone with the
fragments, either transcribing or recording what they understood. These fragments
were relayed to Michael Meilinger, a professional radio broadcaster, over several hours.
He had to work hard drastically deviating from his daily practice. I tried to keep
some tension with him and avoid that some relaxation could lead him to adopt a
more playful or theatrical tone. It worked. Nevertheless by the end of the whole
process he came out of the speaker booth with a big smile on his face and I felt
relieved.
When Bosetti spent time with all the submissions, he experienced it as a hall of mirrors:
I would have expected the message to progressively deteriorate, rot, fall into pieces
of complete abstraction. I would have expected a triumph of entropy. But meaning
was naturally coming back in this collective process, far away people holding
hands, holding ears.123
The recordings are of real communications, but they are so garbled that any effort to
make sense of them is an act of speculation. The various misunderstandings, overlaps
between understandings, and fragmentary narratives piece together in fascinating
ways.124
Translation can occur not only across languages, but also across art forms.
Temporal art forms are often mapped to each other, and this is so common as to be
almost unremarkable. It is normal for a dance, film, or theater piece to use music as a
fundamental part of the work. Cartoons are often scored with particular precision. But
translations between temporal and nontemporal forms, or between linear and non-
linear, are less permissive of direct correlations.
The American composer Sam Sfirri’s Beckett Pieces (2009–10) are translations of
small fragments of text drawn from Beckett’s novels to a series of textual performance
instructions. The way in which sound is produced becomes a metaphor for the
suggested image or action of the fragment. The text, “Delicious instants” (2009) suggests
something that reveals itself for all too short a time. It advances too late and recedes
too soon. In Sfirri’s version, the conductor cues, and the musicians silently count a
pulse of their own choosing. At the second cue, they each “reveal their pulses” with
short sounds. On the third cue, they cease playing. Each player chooses a pulse, but
the beginning and ending of its sounding version is at the discretion of the conductor,
and the sounds are at the discretion of the players. The shared agency brings about
Information, Language, and Interaction 187
these sounds. No one fully controls the nature of the sounding material. It is only
through the coinciding of cue with pulse and tone that the sounds come to be, and that
coincidence is all too brief.
Other translations are more direct. In “for the choice of directions” (2010), each
player chooses two sounds and finds a path between them. Another direct example is
included in its entirety just below:
These pieces highlight the fact that translations carry the unique stamp of their
translator. Another composer would likely treat the same texts very differently.
(An interesting comparison in the nature of translation, though with different source
material, is Michael Pisaro’s use of text in harmony series (2004–06).125) For “the
undulating land” (2009) Sfirri uses the configuration of two instrumental groups to
suggest a horizon. Each player in each group chooses one quiet tone.
One player from each group plays, beginning together. When a tone ends within a
group, a different player plays.
As the land is full of variations, the shifts in one group will likely not occur
simultaneously with the shifts in the other. “Tones last the natural length of an exhale,
bow stroke, or decay.” The land undulates between the groups, flickering on one side
and then the other according to processes driven by the physiology of the musician
and the topography of the instrument.
Translation is emulated not only from one language to another and from language
to music, but can occur in any way that establishes a statement in a different context.
The “From Shape to Sound” section of Chapter 3 presents many examples of this type of
pathway. Other composers have engaged in different conceptions of translation as well.
The Berlin-based British interdisciplinary artist Chris Newman writes that for him, the
“act of translating later became seminal as in—from one medium to another—from life
into an artistic medium.”126 He works between text, music, video, and painting, among
other forms.127
188 Experimental Music Since 1970
Sarah Hughes is active as a visual artist as well as a composer, and also makes use of
text in her creative work. She has an ongoing interest in translational processes within
and between these activities. In making A reward is given for the best inframmary fold
(2015), she began with an existing work of her own music.
I decided to rewrite the score for this commission as I’m interested in how things
get translated from one medium to another, and a different set of instrumentation
is like working with a different set of materials. . . .
The translation/reworking is present in most of my work, and filtering through
an idea by reworking it a number of times is something I’ve been interested in
for a long time. This could be reworking sketchbooks as screenprints, using the
same sculptures in various installations or using the same sections to rework a
composition. These are becoming more and more interrelated.
One example she offers of this practice is a release that was conceived by Joseph Clayton
Mills, Sifr (2015) was initially created by Joseph Clayton Mills as an audio recording,
and then sent to seven composers (Ryoko Akama, Sylvain Chauveau, Jonathan Chen,
Patrick Farmer, Sarah Hughes, Michael Pisaro, and Adam Sonderberg) with the request
that they create a score to accompany it. Mills writes, “By reversing the trajectory of the
relationship between a score and its interpretation—by making the music, in essence, a
‘score’ for composition—Sifr plays with issues of authority, musical representation, and
what constitutes composition.” It is a reverse engineering of the sounding work, done
with varying degrees of specificity and in different forms by each of them.
Farmer’s instructions (along with graphics and definitions) are in tiny print on
business-sized cards and come with a magnifying glass. Sonderberg’s score is a single-
page graphic with a grid of numbers associated with each ten-minute interval. Pisaro’s
Drip Music No. 13 is a text score in the line of George Brecht, combining a fictional
scenario and specifics of the sounding work within 100 words. Hughes’ text plays
between association, quotation, and direct (though very general) instruction. Chaveau’s
is a photograph. Akama’s clear but open instructions are engulfed by a meditation on a
specific locality in Paris. Jonathan Chen’s stack of six cards presents the work in layers,
breaking it apart into specific attributes that are still quite variable to the decisions of
the performer.128 None of these scores resembles another, but each one draws from the
original sound file and bears the mark of the translator.
5.4 Interaction
Interaction, improvisation, indeterminacy
These three terms are not interchangeable, but they share a common center: the
unknown. Indeterminacy is the unknown itself, or that which is subject to conditions.
Improvisation implies a temporal unknown. The music is not known in advance, but
Information, Language, and Interaction 189
Anthony Braxton made a parallel statement with another layer of connotations: “Both
aleatory and indeterminism are words which have been coined . . . to bypass the word
improvisation and as such the influence of non-white sensibility.”132 George Lewis, who
has deep experience across these ostensibly separate categories, rejects the notion of a
partition between them:
It should be axiomatic that, both in our musical and in our human, everyday-
life improvisations, we interact with our environment, navigating through time,
place, and situation, both creating and discovering form. On the face of it, this
interactive, form-giving process appears to take root and flower freely, in many
kinds of music, both with and without preexisting rules and regulations.133
The placement of agency in a musical interaction reveals more about it than any
categorization. How are the musical decisions structured? If there are no structural
preconditions, what are the conditions that have an effect on the decisions of the
musicians?
These three kinds of situations are roughly analogous to the social situations of
strangers, acquaintances or friends, and families. An interaction of some sort is always
possible, but the starting point is different. Within any of these contexts, similarity and
difference, familiarity and strangeness are all part of the potential material. What are
the social preconditions, and what is in the nature of the interaction as it takes place?
How are the musicians listening to one another? To what degree are they responding,
contradicting, interacting, negating, ignoring, agitating, questioning, obscuring,
overriding, supporting, directing? All these things happen in improvisation, just as
they do in conversation.
Threads of commentary are traceable among numerous musicians involved in
long-term collaborations (and not only improvisations), and light some pathways
through types of musical interaction that often go unexplained. Recurrently, musical
relationships are explained in social and political terms.
Cornelius Cardew was a powerful musical influence in the UK, and founded the
Scratch Orchestra with Michael Parsons and Howard Skempton in 1969. He defines
a scratch orchestra as “a large number of enthusiasts pooling their resources (not
primarily material resources) and assembling for action (musicmaking, performance,
edification).” The five types of musical activity outlined in the draft constitution
of the Scratch Orchestra are: scratch music, popular classics, improvisation rites,
compositions, and research projects. The group was most active from 1969 to 1971, and
was basically inoperative by 1974; but it cast a very long shadow. As Parsons has said:
When one thinks of achievements one looks at monuments and finished works. In
a sense what the Scratch Orchestra achieved was not like this, it was more to do
with influences or currents which have been set in motion. It got people thinking
about music in a different sort of way. Then it went into the London Musicians’
Collective and other collectives around the country. It influenced the way people
thought about music as a social activity. It made me realize that music is always
something that involves people doing things together, and that’s just as important
an aspect of music as the structures and the abstract aspects which are embodied
in notation. So I think it was the awareness of the social dimension of music which
was most influential at the time, and has remained influential for a lot of us since
that time.134
re-creating the whole musical condition without reliance on the forms of its
history—of course an impossibility.136
Keith Rowe adds that they even made a formal agreement not to discuss performances
afterward.
We decided to formally have a music which was totally improvised, without any
restrictions to form. We would not play heads. We would not have structures.
There would be no pre-discussion for a performance or no after-discussion after
a performance about the performance. That was quite formally set down. . . .
And I think it is true to this day, now 36 whatever years later, that we have never
discussed a performance.137
The one form, then, is their agreement as to a lack of form and abstention from
discussion of their improvisations. One possible reason for this second rule is that in
having those conversations, they might arrive at an unwelcome consensus about what
constituted a “good” performance, and influence one another toward some sort of ideal
sound, rather than a spontaneous response to one another and all of the circumstances
of the situation. Cardew, at one time a member of the group, reflected:
We are searching for sounds and for the responses that attach to them rather than
thinking them up, preparing them and producing them. The search is conducted in
the medium of sound and the musician himself is at the heart of the experiment.138
Victor Schonfeld underlined the importance of having sufficient scope and dimensions
to engage in this experiment: long stretches of silence in which to find “a whole new
world of sounds which were previously hidden or overlooked,” as well as “all the
dimensions of musical space to create the feeling that sound is a solid object in solid
space.” Sounds are placed alongside each other in layers, and everyone (audience and
improvisers alike) has an individual experience of those layers according to their depth
of focus, their location, and any other factor that may be at play. “There is no whole or
centre, only parts.”139
John Tilbury has reflected that “the relation of the individual to the collective is
not antithetical, that individuality is achieved and refined not in spite of, but through
others.”140 AMM’s cultural and musical practices were aligned with individualism and a
nonhierarchical structure. Reflecting on this parallel between AMM and the Association
for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM), Hamza Walker writes:
The AACM was formed in Chicago in 1965 (the same year as AMM) in order to empower
its individual participants. As John Shenoy Jackson and Muhal Richard Abrams put
it, “The AACM intends to show how the disadvantaged and the disenfranchised can
come together and determine their own strategies for political and economic freedom,
thereby determining their own destinies.”142
Within the context of the AACM, particularly as its genesis took place alongside the
Civil Rights Movement, it was essential that every participant have a voice. Members
were not just encouraged, but required to bring their own work to the group. While
spontaneous dialogues are fostered in much of this work, and there are often calls
for improvisation, the underlying structures have been determined by the individual
musicians. George Lewis is a member of the AACM (as well as a trombonist, composer,
software designer, and musicologist) and wrote the most substantial book on their
history: A Power Stronger Than Itself: The AACM and American Experimental Music
(2008). He puts this sense of urgency around its structures in stark terms:
Indeed, it seems fitting that in the wake of the radical physical and even mental
silencing of slavery (as distinct from, say, an aestheticized silence of four minutes
or so), African Americans developed an array of musical practices that encouraged
all to speak. As a socially constituted scene, the AACM embodied the trope of
individuality within the aggregate, both at the level of music-making, at the level
of the political organization of the collective, thereby providing a potential symbol
for the new, utopian kind of sociopolitical system that Szwed describes.143
AACM member Wadada Leo Smith’s statement of his own musical philosophy
echoes and extends this clear focus on individualism throughout the social and sonic
relationships he establishes:
Human interactions tend to fall into familiar patterns, and musical interactions
are subject to similar conditions if there is no intervening structure. For AMM, the
intervening structure was their mode of working, which was formally stated and
agreed upon. For the AACM, it was essential to instead have new voices and input,
developing the strength of the collective by listening to each other’s ideas both in music
and in whatever other forms the musicians chose to communicate them. Lewis has
called the group an “unstable polyphony” of voices.145
Information, Language, and Interaction 193
The collective work assumed a set of commandments that were accepted by all
members: no priority of an individual player was to be allowed, no sound was to be
produced which was bound to the tonal system, no rhythmic periodicity should be
created, no easily remembered motives were to be introduced, no exact repetition
of a former occurrence was to be performed.
Much like AMM, Nuova Consonanza based its operation on rules that are negative,
rather than positive, though it is a different type of property that is being negated.
AMM’s most emphasized restrictions relate to communication. Nuova Consonanza’s
limitations articulate musical familiarities that are to be avoided. These last four
stipulations are designed to avoid a sense of musical familiarity in terms of harmony,
melody, or rhythm. The first of these rules echoes the concerns of individualism of the
other two groups, though again the specifics are different. In the AACM, individual
players alternately assume prominence through that “unstable polyphony.” As long as it
remains unstable and no one assumes an overall prominence, they are not at odds with
their intentions. Nuova Consonanza’s nonhierarchical structure is a blanket statement,
applied throughout each performance. As a group of active composers, they worked
to differentiate their individual practices from their collective practice. Alongside a
reduction of means, Franco Evangelisti’s statement captures another of the positive
musical values of the group: “The distribution of individual energy in the service of
the collective idea.”146
Musica Elettronica Viva (MEV) was also formed in Rome in the mid-1960s, and
like its peer groups developed a clear set of guidelines. As stated by member Alvin
Curran, MEV has functioned according to the following understanding:
The value of democracy and lack of hierarchy echo the other groups, and the emphasis
on the “unknowable” is resonant with AMM in particular. Curran’s fellow MEV
member Richard Teitelbaum reveals the multiplicity of their influences, ranging
from Cage to European expressionism but with a particular interest in the “African-
American experimental tradition,” including Ornette Coleman and John Coltrane.
“In part it was that influence that encouraged MEV’s music toward interaction,
stimulus, and response rather than the cooler, non-reactive independence espoused
by Cage.”147
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A significant level of trust among the members of the group is, for Curran, both
essential and variable. With reckless abandon he tells how this variability plays out.
In an ideal state, all performing musicians will listen with equal intensity and
understanding to every audible sound and musical gesture as if it were their own,
and respond only when they must. . . . An important corollary allows this agreement
of trust to be momentarily voided, in cases of inspired autism. Furthermore, this
premise, while centered on an instinctive understanding of creative risk and the
benefits of increasing it progressively, did not make us—the MEV group—immune
from getting screwed or from making lousy music, but it did help in getting us to
some unimaginable spaces.148
It’s not necessarily about making things work. If anything, it’s about finding a way
of being together and sharing ideas; that’s all it is, really. It’s not about making this
product, this perfect music and repeating it. It’s about sharing a space, sharing
ideas, and even disagreeing in the music. It’s finding alternative modes and other
ways of being together.149
It’s a concept that applies musically to quite differently working, and sounding,
groups who are maybe even already working in the threshold regions of other
musical fields, even though they still belong here regardless.150
Echtzeitmusik is a book that provides valuable insight into both this community and the
various types of improvisation and other experimental work in which its participants
are involved. Davies and Beins are both represented in this book, and are also part of
a trio with Mark Wastell called The Sealed Knot. The instrumentation of The Sealed
Knot has changed from acoustic to electroacoustic, and Wastell has played cello and
double bass at different times. Beins explains a sense of evolving continuity:
But despite all those transformations there remains a specific chemistry that is very
much The Sealed Knot. I think it’s especially due to those shared experiences we
make that the trio continues over such a long time. The fact is that this particular
constellation of three individuals allows us to enter new territory again and again.
They sometimes go for one or two years without playing, and Wastell finds that makes
for “a very raw and open experience.” At the point of this particular interview they were
discussing an upcoming performance with a new instrumentation. “We start afresh.”
Information, Language, and Interaction 195
We simply played one of those memorable shows where everything fell into place.
No plans, no blue print, no pre-conceptions. What is evident from the recording is
the closeness of our group language. Our timing, use of dynamics, density versus
space, push and pull. Where and how these elements manifest in a performance
is informed by prior engagement with one another musically, but also very much
part of the “then and there” aspect of a live show.151
Types of rejection
This need to reject, avoid, circumvent, or negate is frequently asserted among
improvising musicians. The French percussionist Lê Quan Ninh describes the
avoidance of familiarity using territory as a metaphor.
It’s up to the improvisers then, to search out other locations where the geography of
the playing space is not already so defined, a territory upon which we can explore
its hidden nooks and crannies without risking a repatriation by those default codes
and signs. . . . Territory. A fundamental element of play, can be made to resonate.
Will this vibration of space not let us glimpse a no-man’s land, a space without
geography, in no way carved-up according to criteria for membership: an atopy
capable of welcoming all languages?152
Another section of Ninh’s Abécédaire, called “Dance,” is about the types of interactions
that occur among musicians within such a territory once it has been found.
Everything one needs for movement and sonic intervention comes from this space
we’ve co-located. It demonstrates how different ways of being can work together.
This space enables us to unfold the atopy of our gathering. “Immediacy, absence of
deliberation, rejection of intervening propositions, no jumping to conclusions.”153
Like many of the long-running groups already discussed, Ninh has made certain
types of rejection explicit. Deliberation, propositions, and conclusions are all forms
of consensus-building that are well placed in political or business settings, but the
avoidance of them in a musical setting is, for Ninh, a more productive type of contract.
196 Experimental Music Since 1970
John Butcher, a British saxophonist, has articulated this need to go against the grain
and avoid consensus in specific terms.
If I can spot, if you like, the consensus in the group, there’s a temptation, a tendency
I have is to go against it. . . . whether that involves things like volume, if it involves
not playing melody, I return to the saxophone as a melody instrument, very often,
because I don’t by and large enjoy those situations where a lot of material has been
proscribed before you even start the improvisation.154
“between,” for me is about the tension and space between objects, and how we
might occupy this area, to reside if you like between the conventions, to locate the
flexibility that comes from de-theorizing the dogmas.
It seemed to me as if Toshi and I were navigating a route through a familiar
part of town, where each of the buildings stood for and represented expectations,
styles, outcomes and histories. We wanted to resist entering the buildings and to
stay between.
Rowe articulates a necessity to get away from tendencies and histories—not only
collective histories or knowledge, but personal habits and inclinations as well.
Speaking of her duo with Utah Kawasaki called Astro Twin, Ami Yoshida states an
avoidance, not only of familiar musical materials and of collaboration, but of music itself:
We don’t perform with the idea of creating something musical. How can I put it?
As materials, we take these garbagelike sounds that have hardly ever been used
before, and each of us tries to make them resonate more and more. I don’t just
use my voice—I also do things like scrape the floor with the mike. Our respective
sounds are totally unrelated to each other. Since Kawasaki’s sounds and actions
have no connection to mine, it ends up being this sort of garbagelike ensemble
with a completely non-functioning collaboration style. In a sense, it’s as if we’d
chosen the sounds and the performance style that were the least likely ever to
become music.155
I think that is fundamental if you play with people to think [of] the music as a
collective production, that means to relate. But the ways we relate should not be
the most obvious, It can be boring to play in a very responsive way. To oppose,
to disappear, to ignore, to cover the other one can be very interesting. The basic
situation, is to be aware of the others’ presence at any moment and to decide
actually, more than anything, how much we want to relate playing and listening.
To stop listening and to stop relating for a while, as a way to create tension and
go deeper into the interaction itself can help to produce dynamism and make the
music very alive.156
This point of view seems to be at odds with the aims of democracy and equality
advocated by so many of the musicians in this section; and yet it might simply be a
reflection of actual interactions, rather than a more remote idealism. It draws from the
real experience of how people relate to each other, which is often fraught with tension,
misunderstanding, and imbalance.
is that he embeds these concerns in the structures of his written scores. He develops
and notates methods to bring out nonhierarchical musical relationships, not only
between the musicians, but between composer and musicians. He writes:
Apart from giving individual players ranges of choices in what and how to play,
my main interest has been the mutual effects players have on each other in the real
time of performance.158
As rhythm and speed, articulation, amplitude, color, and modes of playing are all
flexible, any player may try to establish what the point of reference for unison is
at any point in the course of playing. If, however, a movement by a player, say, in
the direction of faster is not generally picked up by the rest, he must return to the
prevailing speed.167
This is another form of consensus-building. The players can devise different ways of
adhering to the given path—the melody. But within this process, anyone can act as a
catalyst. Stephen Drury reflects on this work from the standpoint of performance:
The beauty of the Exercises, though, comes from the unwritten necessity involved
in playing them. Beyond mere rule-following or open improvisation, these
works require the musicians to ask and answer questions of personal and group
performance practice. It is music made personal through consensus.
He adds: “In an ensemble performance, the directive ‘try to stay together’ encapsulates
this ambiguity; not ‘stay together,’ and not ‘go off on your own’; the deviations from the
norm becoming the substance of the piece.”168 Philip Thomas illustrates this point in
his account of a 2004 performance of Exercise 10:
The rehearsal in the afternoon was good and we felt comfortable with our
interpretation of the piece. In the concert everything changed. The speed at which
we played was more variable and, on the whole, faster. Our ability to keep together
was severely challenged and there was a tangible sense of panic and concentration
(amongst the performers, but possibly also for the audience). It was a thrilling
performance.
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It is my suspicion that the catalyst for the change that occurred between rehearsal
and performance was provided by Christian Wolff. Just as in his notation practice he
plays agent provocateur, so in performance he facilitated change and the capacity for
furthering the performers’ experience, thus considerably enlivening the situation.
After discussing this general approach with Wolff, Thomas concluded that “a crucial
aspect of his role as performer and composer seems to be to facilitate change.”169
One of those changes is in how decisions are made and what roles are played
by both the composer and the performer. Wolff is known not to give directives or
critiques in the rehearsal situation, but to adhere to the flexibility and ambiguity of
the score. The rehearsal situation is a social situation, and by exerting his authority as
composer he would prevent a more democratic process of conversation, disagreement,
and compromise. As Thomas writes, “In a very practical way, the notations often act
as a catalyst for discussion and implicitly challenge hierarchical structures that exist
within groups. Furthermore, many of the works through their actual procedures
facilitate a democratic approach to performance.” This conversation is both verbal and
musical. Participants must listen to each other as interpreters of the score, and within
the musical execution also “respond to, trigger, and attend to actions and sounds by
other performers within the group.”170 Wolff wants the musicians playing his work to
be active decision-makers, rather than to implement a scripted set of actions.
Music itself simply happens when people get together and make sounds. This is the
situation that interests me now. Furthermore, I am interested in having everyone
participate when that happens.171
a utopian model for an ideal democracy.”175 Individuals are free to move between these
cities and states, and “encouraged to develop internal surprises.”176 Jonathan Piper
writes, “I don’t know of anyone besides Braxton who essentially hands a six inch stack
of scores to the players and lets them choose what to play, when to play, and who to
play it with.”177 There is structure, musical material, and guidance, but there is still a
great deal of agency invested in each participant. The listener is also encouraged to
“walk inside the music,” finding an individual route through these networks of activity.
Ensemble work is a factor that multiplies the possible outcomes of indeterminate
situations exponentially. Every participant’s decisions depend not only on navigating
the written instructions, but also on what the other participants do. The British
composer James Saunders is interested in “group behaviours and decision making,”178
which he explores in his open-form works. The question of agency is central to the
things-to-do series. Each piece has a different configuration of who directs the sounds
and who is directed. In i decide what it is i am going to do (2014), each player (of any
number of players) calls out what they will do and then does that thing. The player
has made a list ahead of time of noises, pitches, devices, and processes. Instructions
could be “noise 1,” “pitch 3,” “process 2 off,” “device 4 on,” etc. The audience witnesses
a narrated version of independent, concurrent agency. Most of the pieces seem to have
a social analogy, and i tell you what to do (2014) might be likened to a dictatorship
(or perhaps an orchestra). One person directs at least four players. you say what to
do (2014) is like a series of committees, each with a figurehead who must obey the
instructions of each of three to six assistants. lots and lots for us to do (2014) might be
likened to an agreeable couple, each of whom does exactly as they are told. Perhaps
the most realistic configuration is choose who tells you what to do (2014). Every player
is both issuing instructions and choosing whose instructions to follow. As children
navigate between their parents’ instructions, their own desires, those of siblings, and
eventually teachers, friends, employers, etc., they learn in various ways that it is both
undesirable and impossible to follow every direction. A two-year-old’s delight in saying
“no” is one of the earliest assertions of personal agency. Similarly, players in choose who
tells you what to do “may change their allegiance at any time.”179
In Michael Pisaro’s anabasis (3) (2015), players are not directly responsive to (or
defiant of) one another, but operate collectively within a given framework. Each
of the fifteen or more performers has a part with a unique set of timings. Each of
these parts has twenty durational intervals, and each duration is to be filled with a
different sound. These sounds are richly described through pitch, quoted poetry, and
colors associated with transformation among five characters (sea, coast, city, country,
desert). There is, however, a great deal of agency granted to the musicians in terms of
internal durations, articulation, and instrumentation. “The goal is to have a number of
independent parts that somehow blend into a gradual sonic transformation between
five characters, moving from the sea to the desert (i.e., an anabasis).”180 Like Braxton,
Pisaro is modeling a successful collective.
Any hope for a collective (military, revolutionary, artistic, etc.) lies in coherence
outside law. In musical terms, this means a score that gives large-scale pattern and
202 Experimental Music Since 1970
guides to some degree, the smaller scale details. But the coherence lies not with the
score, but with the contingent situation: of playing and of listening. Each version of
the piece is an adventure in a wilderness where “any individual sound whatsoever”
can suddenly find itself in a sensible whole of no one person’s making.
The premiere performance lasts for an hour, and reveals these gradual and surprising
shifts in texture. Because of the number of independent parts and the overlaps
among them, it is to be expected that change will be gradual. What is unexpected
is that consensus will be audible—that real change will occur in the collective. And
yet, making their decisions within these guidelines, the musicians who performed the
piece achieved a lively, dynamic, and totally convincing coherence.181
anabasis (1) (2013/14) is Pisaro’s original formation of this conception of group
movement, and involves five musicians, four of whom each focus on a different type of
substance (sands, winds, tones, waves). Pisaro’s driving question behind this piece was
this: “Is there a way of tracing the ‘found’ discontinuities of an event like Kingsnake Grey
into a composed work?” (Kingsnake Grey is a field recording of sundown in Congaree
National Park that is part of the Continuum Unbound set along with Congaree Nomads
and anabasis (1).) He was looking for a situation that provided for a greater sense of
contingency than could be afforded by a single creator, and invited four other “distinct
musical personalities” into the process: Patrick Farmer, Joe Panzner, Greg Stuart, and
Toshiya Tsunoda.
I began to envision a structure that gave place to each musician, but in a way that
a) the story of the piece would be affected irrevocably by what they did, and b) that
their sounds would be constantly tugged at by those of the other musicians.182
Each musician created his part separately. The tracks were assembled and mixed
according to a predetermined structure, and then underwent a process called
“unbinding,” which is “any sort of change to continuity.” Pisaro lists some examples of
the elements of unbinding:
Silences or pauses.
Cadences.
Fades.
Interruptions.
Changes.
Cuts. (Hard cut, soft cut, cut and replace, and so on.)
Loops (real or apparent, made or found).
Time elongated or stretched.
Overlapping arcs.
Processes ending or beginning.
Events.
Time stopped. Time disappearing.183
Information, Language, and Interaction 203
Where anabasis (3) creates a structure in which to find continuity, anabasis (1) is
subject to a framework that seeks out “change to continuity.” And yet the overall
sense of directionality is the exact reverse of anabasis (1), from sand to waves
rather than from sea to desert. Both pieces focus on the movement of the group,
though one group is aware of its context and the other is not. anabasis (3) seeks
out discontinuity among the few, while anabasis (1) seeks out continuity among
the many. Both pieces rely on the agency of the individual within a governing
framework.
Cueing
When agency is situated within musical interactions, the manner in which cues are
given and received becomes a key factor of the performance. Where a look, a nod, or
a particular sound can function as a simple prompt, actions and reactions, causes and
effects, can be considerably less predictable.
superstition’s willing victim (2007) is a piece by the American composer Joseph
Kudirka that sets up a type of cueing almost destined for failure in every articulation.
The attempt to match another player is not on the basis of anything other than
duration. “Each player chooses one other player, attempting to anticipate both when
the other player will start their sound and end their sound, playing their own sound
at the same time.”184 What follows is a series of “if ” statements, or options for what
to do in case of failure—if the player starts or ends the sound too soon or too late.
In this somewhat brief text score, a complicated set of relationships is established,
where communication flows in a single direction between one player and another.
Interaction is only partial when only one player is attempting to listen and respond,
rather than both.
In either/or (2008/09), James Saunders sets up a series of logic gates that
determine whether a player is to make a sound or not. Each player selects two other
players as reference points, and follows a series of cues that determine whether or
not to play. These rules change throughout the piece. There is a list of sounds to
choose from, but when to play is determined in the moment by the actions of the
other players.185
Dominic Lash’s interest in cues relates to his experience as an improviser in several
different types of settings. In For Six (2013), there are three pairs of players, and each
player’s choice of actions between (1) silence, (2) continuous sound, and (3) irregular
sound depends on which of those sounds the partner is producing. The player has
the option to stay with the current sound or change sounds, but can only change
according to the given if/then condition. By making the changes for each player
mutually dependent, Lash sets up a chain reaction that no one can predict or control.
Each player has selected a different sheet of the score. Though every decision affects
the options of the partner, there is no direct knowledge of how a change will enable
any given option. The players in each pair are locked in an interaction, but only see its
outcomes in retrospect.
204 Experimental Music Since 1970
if 1 then 1
2 if 2 then 3
if 3 then 1
Figure 5.7 Dominic Lash: For Six (graphic from final page of score)
© Dominic Lash
The assigned responses to all but the first of these questions is to be delivered with a
very slow rate of change:
Each variable should undergo change at a glacial pace. More specifically, any
change within a given sound’s variable from one extreme to another should occur
over the equivalent of two breath lengths or two bow lengths.191
This piece is the first in the process series. Subsequent pieces in the series integrate
these kinds of questions into a spatial notation with cueing arrows. What the various
performances of the pieces in this series share, besides a tenuous sound quality that
seems always to be traveling slowly along a continuum, is a sense of focused collective
attention, “an environment where active, close, subtle and sensitive listening is
prioritised.”192
Christian Wolff ’s Lines (1972) defines lines to be passed between the members of a
string quartet, but leaves the durations open. “Thus,” he writes, the “viola lets her sound
go when she wishes, at which point the violin must pick it up immediately, holds it as
Information, Language, and Interaction 205
(audience)
1a 2a 3a 4a
(audience)
1 2 3 4
(audience)
Figure 5.8 Nomi Epstein: communications for a.pe.ri.od.ic, Stage Set-Up diagram
© Nomi Epstein
desired, lets it go for the cello to pick up, and so forth.”193 It is equivalent in some ways to
a ball that is in one player’s possession and must be passed to the next. Both the throw
and the catch have to be executed carefully if the sound is not to fall (or fall silent).
In directing the a.pe.ri.od.ic ensemble in Chicago, Nomi Epstein has cultivated an
interest in how musicians listen to each other and interact. communications for a.pe.ri.od.ic
(2015) establishes two musically interlocking groups of four musicians. Each player
listens to one musician but plays for another. There are nine different types of activity
that they each play, some of which involve contingent responses to this paired musician.
Each of the eight parts has a unique timeline of which activity to perform when.
The configuration is simply presented, and the activities themselves are often less of
a performative challenge than a listening challenge:
Between you and your listening partner, play 14 sounds, separated by silence (if
possible). One of you will begin, then you will alternate, each playing 7 sounds, until
all 14 sounds have been played. Because your listening partner is different from
your playing partner, you often times will need to listen and play simultaneously.194
All of the musicians play the shared fourteen sounds at the same time, and there are
three such episodes interspersed through the piece. Apart from this synchronicity, the
temporal containers are different for each player, and that adds to the challenge of
responding to someone who is transitioning between different types of activity, and, in
fact, is responding to a different musician.
In two groups (2015), Epstein extends this idea of asymmetric listening and
responding in the relationships between each group of ten vocalists. Every member of
group two chooses a member of group one and responds in this way:
After every 2nd long-tone s/he sings, you will sing a very, very slow descending
glissando beginning on the pitch you heard. . . . When you complete your glissando,
listen again, and choose either the same or a different performer of Group 1 for
their 2nd long-tone as a cue for your next glissando.
Each member of group two chooses a moment to whistle for the duration of one long
breath, and each member of group one choose two of those ten moments to stop
singing and simply listen to the whistle.195
206 Experimental Music Since 1970
At any time any player can call any divisi system, which in turn can be broken at
any time by any player (in a number of ways, the simplest of which is by taking a
“solo”—only one “soloist” at a time is permitted).
Part of Zorn’s motivation is to present the whole work as a form of energy, rather than
as a flow of time. In his words, he wants to develop a vertical conception of time, “as
an energy that appears immediately everywhere, and can be collected, balanced and
regenerated in ‘pockets’ of information/material.”198
Another intention and outcome in these works is a type of rigor, a focusing of
attention. When there are specific rules and vocabularies, musicians are brought to a
state of specific, heightened attention that is at least equivalent to challenging notated
music, and perhaps more challenging in the demand for spontaneous reaction.
Bruce Ackley recalls that in Lacrosse (1977), “The rigor required kept our attention
riveted and the improvising tightly focused. Yet each player was able to bring their
personal approach to this music that operated on a multiplicity of levels.”199 The choice
of musicians for these game pieces is crucial for Zorn, and is a major reason for the
obscurity of the actual rules of play. He prefers to be the one to explain them directly,
“in rehearsal as part of an oral tradition.” Cobra (1984) is the culmination of Zorn’s
experiences with these other game pieces, and his best-known work.200
The composer, improviser, and multi-instrumentalist Roscoe Mitchell is a key
member of the AACM and also used to play in the associated Art Ensemble of Chicago.
He developed a tool to facilitate improvisation as a specific response to a recurrent
problem. In conducting improvisation workshops, he found that imitation tended to
betray a state of being perpetually behind:
You’re doing the phrase and then someone else is coming up and doing it. That
means that they’re not really there in the moment. They’re waiting around to listen
to see what you’re doing. I would describe it like being behind on a written piece
of music—you really know your part, and I don’t really know mine, so I’m kind of
following and listening to see what you’re doing and because of that I can’t really
be with you. That was one of the problems I wanted to correct, getting people
to function as individuals inside of the improvisation so that counterpoint is
maintained, which is a very important element in music.201
Information, Language, and Interaction 207
Theses [sic] scored improvisations were build [sic] to do this—fix players so that
they don’t follow. . . . What it does is it gives players a longer time to function in
an improvisation that’s really working. That helps because I found that it builds
concentration.202
Improvisation is primarily learned in the doing, and Mitchell and others have
developed ways of suggesting new behaviors to displace the habits that tend to develop.
John Stevens’ book, Search & Reflect: A Music Workshop Handbook (1985) is a series
of improvisational exercises. Maggie Nicols developed her improvisational practice as
a singer through such workshops with Stevens and others in the Spontaneous Music
Ensemble, and is committed to the activity of inviting other people into her own
improvisational workshops at the Oval House Theatre in London.
I’ve always been very rooted in diversity of community, and the gathering is open
to anybody. Not just any musician, but people who are not musicians. And I don’t
mean just other artists, but people just in off the street. . . . More and more people
are sort of recognizing that skilled improvisers can use our skills to include rather
than exclude, which doesn’t mean that we don’t want to work with other skilled
improvisers. However, that diversity creates a different kind of virtuosity . . . social
virtuosity.203
Social space is key to collaboration for me, whether this be in the context of a live
improvisation or working together in the studio with someone. Just as acoustical
space provides the resonance for the sound of our instruments, so too does social
space provide a place for our thoughts to reflect, deflect, sound in other ways than
acoustical resonance can. And for this to occur I need to be in the same room with
my collaborator.204
208 Experimental Music Since 1970
The actual experience of being with people is tangibly different than any technological
solution. Just as a person-to-person conversation is markedly different from a phone
call for more than acoustical reasons, entire dimensions are lost through online
collaboration, and there is no commonality of context or acoustic. For Kahn, the
liveness of the experience is not only temporal, but spatial and personal. It extends to
the presence of an audience as well:
When I perform before an audience I sense their energy, their presence. I feel
my own thoughts resonating in the space of the audience’s presence and I sense
their energy on a physical plane, as well. The presence of an audience puts me in a
totally different place. I could play in the same room without the audience and the
experience would be totally different, and not only because the acoustical properties
of the space would have changed without people in it. Generally speaking, the further
removed I feel from the audience—because of stage size, room configuration, etc—
the less I enjoy the playing experience. The audience is essential.205
The text accompanying a release called Tables and Stairs (2011) by Robin Hayward
(tuba), Ferran Fages (sinewaves), and Nikos Veliotis (cello) was written by one of
the hosts of their meeting in Athens. The musical interaction was grounded in the
hospitality of the gathering and shaped by the receptivity of the listeners.
As the evening got closer, less thought was given to the expected outcome and
more to the feel-good spirit of the evening. . . . And then it happened; after a few
exploratory minutes, the three musicians became one and the warmest possible
tones filled the cool summer night. Remarkably structured in its spontaneity,
the music was split in separate parts or steps of roughly eight minutes each,
meanwhile—within these parts—the exchanges between the musicians evolved
with striking beauty. The fourth part brought us back to near silence, closely
anticipating every next move.206
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.207
and Otomo Yoshihide. The sounds (sinewaves, handmade electronics, and acoustic
turntable) are barely graspable, and are best listened to when there is nothing and
no one stirring. There is a palpable intensity about the way the two musicians are
interacting. “Here, the meaning of ‘listening to sound’ is more important than that of
‘producing sound.’”208 The act of listening truly is more palpable in this recording than
the sense of any performance, and the listener—even at a greatly removed place or
time—is woven into this act of intensive listening.
Other important musical choices are generated internally via random numbers.
These processes provide much of the “personality” of the system, and include
melody and harmony, orchestration, ornamentation, pacing, transposition,
rhythm, pacing, and internal behavior options, such as whether and how to react
to input, or how quickly to change parameter and which should be changed.211
In two available recordings,212 the Voyager software seems to have quite a vibrant
personality of its own, and yet it is capable of assimilating any information that is
thrown at it.
Lewis’s image of a performance with Voyager as a conversation avoids two
extremes, and gets at something more radical in the process. The first of these extremes
is implausibility. While the interaction is unpredictable in any number of ways, it is
important to him that a “believable context” be established.
I’m looking for something that seems plausible, but is also somehow not as
expected, that I could then trace back, as I would do in improvisation and say, well
210 Experimental Music Since 1970
yeah, that seems like an answer. It’s not what I was expecting to hear, but I could
see that. I don’t agree, but I could see that.213
The second extreme, then, is simple agreement, echoing or direct input-output. The
Voyager system has its own way of processing things that is not controllable by the
musician who is playing with it, and is endowed with a degree of artificial intelligence
capable of even defying Lewis’s intentions.214 (Paradoxically, that is a mark of its success.)
“If you want to hear the program play in a certain way,” suggests Lewis, “you figure out
how what you want to hear is organized, and you start playing that way yourself.” The
interaction is a “subject-subject model of discourse, rather than stimulus/response.”215
Chadabe conceived of Many Times . . . (2001) as an environment—an instrument
that “takes the sound produced by a performer and from it produces many different
transformed instances of it throughout the performance space, multiplying the
performer’s actions so that it comes from loudspeakers on the left, on the right,
above, behind, from here, there, everywhere.”216 The sound production of the
musician proliferates throughout the space, becoming an entire environment. The
acoustic instrument is transformed by Chadabe’s electronic instrument into an entire
weather system that the performer must navigate. The environments created by the
five musicians recorded for the EMF release are so distinct that they seem not to
be operating according to the same rules. The system is consistent, though. It is the
substance—the sound materials and their behaviors under these conditions—that
makes the great difference, as well as the moment-to-moment choices of each musician
within that environment.
David Tudor’s Rainforest IV (1973), like the previous versions of Rainforest, is
an “electroacoustic environment” that encourages interaction from musicians and
audience alike. Interactions are happening on many planes, in that the musicians
are exploring the environment individually and the audience moves freely among
the sounding objects.217 Various objects are used as acoustic filters. In the summer
1973 workshop, these included “old bedsprings, barrels, cookie sheets, wood planks.
Someone blew out two transducers by trying to resonate the bathroom plumbing
under the toilet.”218 Through the introduction and integration of these large objects it
became a sound sculpture to be navigated by the performers. Tom Johnson wrote this
of the performance in The Village Voice:
It kept Tudor and his assistants interested for five and a half hours. . . . They just
seemed to enjoy keeping the sounds going for those who wanted to stay, and
for those who would come back later on. I suppose they were also having an
enjoyable time feeding various sounds into various objects, testing how the objects
responded to different things, trying to find resonant frequencies, and listening to
subtle variations.219
The two recorded versions in the box set called The Art of David Tudor have entirely
different sonic qualities, apart from the sense of accumulated chaos, exploration, and
enjoyment of the sound worlds being discovered. A group of proponents of this work
Information, Language, and Interaction 211
called Composers Inside Electronics formed out of the 1973 workshop, and they have
continued to present the work dozens of times over the following decades.220
Tudor’s Neural Synthesis (1992–94) is not a piece in any usual sense, but was the
outcome of a proposal by Forrest Warthman that together they develop “a computer
system capable of enveloping and integrating the sounds of his performances.” As
Warthman describes it:
It generates sound and routes signals but the role of learner, pattern-recognizer
and responder is played by David, himself a vastly more complex neural network
than the chip. During performances David chooses from up to 14 channels of
synthesizer output, modifying each of them with his other electronic devices to
create the final signals.
There’s the model especially in the European tradition of the Creative Superperson
(the Composer), and the lesser worker musician (the performer) which I’ve wanted
to get away from. I like the idea of sharing in the creation of something and don’t
mind getting less than 100% of the credit for it. I like designing software which can
be lifted off the ground, so to speak, by a wonderfully imaginative musician who
does something with it that I never would have dreamed of.
She performs the flute (which one normally thinks of as a gentle instrument) in a
very strong and sometimes harsh way, making the electronics (which one might
normally think of as mechanical and a bit macho) seem sinuous and yielding and
gentle. I never in a million years could have imagined this relationship; I felt really
happy that the situation was left open enough so that such a thing could occur.223
212 Experimental Music Since 1970
Behrman’s methodology enables such things to occur. “The performers have options
rather than instructions, and the exploration of each situation as it unfolds is up to
them.”224 This openness is enforced by the responsiveness of the computer to the musi-
cian. In On the Other Ocean (1977), the two musicians’ harmonies affect the elec-
tronically produced harmonies,225 putting “the human being back in the forefront,”226
as Thom Holmes writes. Unforeseen Events (1991) similarly uses circuits that sense
the pitches of the musicians, as well as other aspects of their performances. Lucier’s
description of the piece suggests an enjoyable game with intermittently changing rules:
Unforeseen Events is in four parts. In all of them the computer responds to trumpet
calls, long tones, and single notes, creating harmonies, chords, and arpeggiated
figures that sustain or change pitch and timbre in subtle ways. In Part Two, Fishing
for Complements, the composer listens to what’s going on and enters changes into
the computer. In Part Three, Witch Grass, only when the performer pauses do the
harmonies move away from their origins and don’t stop until the performer plays
again.227
Lucier clarifies that the charm of the piece, for him, is in the indirectness of cause-
and-effect relationships: “Most of the time the relationships are interrupted and
distant and therefore engage the listener in tantalizing ways.”228 These are only two
examples of many pieces in which Behrman has explored the possible relationships
between musicians and electronics. He reflects that these systems suggest the forms
of performance or interaction, but welcomes departures from those practices as
well. “I think that the vocabulary develops as you work on the piece. But sometimes,
a performer can break out of the vocabulary, and do something that seems strange, and
sometimes that’s very nice.”229
Behrman is not focused solely on electronics and the choices of the musicians who
work with it. His conception of interactivity is large enough to include the audience
member, or in particular the visitor to an installation. He and George Lewis set up an
installation called In Thin Air (1997) that enabled visitors to manipulate a three-part
canon while viewing a live visualization of the sounding result. He writes:
The idea of “In Thin Air” and similar installations was that no matter what you do
the music should always remain lively, and that you don’t have to know anything
about music in order to engage the system and find it rewarding.230
Like his rejection of the “Creative Superperson” earlier, Behrman, as well as Lewis, is
interested in situations that offer agency to the other participants in a musical work
and to at least partially flatten the hierarchies and structures that art music seems to
carry as baggage. They see their work as being that of creating an interesting situation,
and then stepping back to let others reckon with it. Behrman sums it up:
An analogy that I like for interactive music is that it’s like a piece of sports
equipment—a bicycle, say, or a sailboat. The design is very important, but all the
Information, Language, and Interaction 213
Richard Teitelbaum underlines the value of a “highly complex set of stimuli and
responses to the improvised input” in his own practice:
Some years ago, in attempting to define his idea of indeterminacy, John Cage said
that he likes to be in a situation in which he literally doesn’t know what he is doing
(Cage 1962). Similarly, my notion here is that by creating an interactive situation
in which the performer cannot consciously comprehend or predict the outcome
of his actions, his/her mind will bypass more superficial levels of thinking and
rational control to reach something deeper.232
These interactive systems are artificial musical intelligences that, as Teitelbaum puts it,
“mimic in some ways the mysterious interactions between freely improvising human
performers, responding to their own and each other’s spontaneous musical gestures.”233
The logic, actions, and reactions between human performers further enhance the
mysteries of the interactive or improvisational encounter.
What I realized was that she was picking me for me . . . skills that were inhabited
by me. . . . it really made me understand that she wants the essence of the person to
come out. And when for instance I can’t do a show because I have some conflict, it’s
difficult. It’s much more difficult than if it were some other performance, because
214 Experimental Music Since 1970
she needs that time to get that essence of that person, and you really feel like part
of you is in it. And so you feel much more invested in it.234
The personal working relationship is as crucial to the work as any sounds that are
developed, and the individuality of the musicians involved is a part of the work that
cannot be excised from it.
Éliane Radigue exclaims:
I’m so fortunate to have these wonderful people lend me their talent, it’s a gift for
me, all these extraordinary musicians! Real happiness is working together. We have
known such pleasure, sharing these intense exchanges, that’s what’s important.235
Radigue has been known for her work with the ARP 2500 since the 1960s. Four
decades later, she and her key collaborators (especially Charles Curtis) discovered,
through a great focus of concentration and dedication of time, a working method that
situates the sound in the collaboration, and not in a written score. In its current, more
established form, the process often begins with an image brought by the musician and
continues with an extended process of exploring the sonic possibilities that they arrive
at together. As the working process itself has been refined over time, so too have the
techniques been sculpted into their clearest and purest forms of exploration.
Over twenty musicians have worked with Radigue at the time of this writing,
some alone, some more than once, and some in ensembles. Every piece that has
been performed has been developed and rehearsed in that formation in residence
with Radigue, and occupies at least three durations and spaces—the number of days
developing the work in Radigue’s apartment, the performer’s individual preparation,
and a substantial amount of time, usually fifteen minutes or more, in the space of the
performance.236
What is the nature of the sounds that are explored in these collaborations? Charles
Curtis writes:
The diffusion of sound is to my mind one of éliane radigue’s great subjects. a sound’s
primary source is only a very small part of its phenomenal reality. overtones,
combination tones, resonance, sympathetic resonance, all make up the infinite
array of resultant, or secondary, phenomena, which ultimately define sound as we
experience it. radigue’s music achieves an extraordinary degree of clarity in this
range of sound experience.237
Naldjorlak (2004–09) is a large piece in three parts, each created through an intense
collaborative process. The first of these was made with Curtis. She made selections
from the techniques and sounds he shared with her. This process was her “shopping.”
They worked in great detail with each other and with the instrument.
We discussed at length the ordering of the techniques and sound-states, and the
ways in which the characteristic instabilities of a sound-state would shape its
Information, Language, and Interaction 215
One of the key decisions was to tune the cello in a way that “seeks to consolidate, as
nearly as possible, all of the resonating parts of the instrument.” Curtis’s description of
their work with the wolf tone clarifies the kind of work that is accomplished in these
sessions.
The search for self-sameness reveals a unit of distance we would not have
discovered without having attempted to bridge it. we cannot bridge it, because it is
inside. the object sought is contained in the subject; tuning to it is the painstaking
calibration of the difference that is the self.
working with éliane is learning to hear as she hears.238
This was not to be Curtis’s and Radigue’s only collaboration. After Naldjorlak, she
embarked on a new project, even more ambitious in scale, called OCCAM OCEAN
(2011–). One of the main common points between these pieces and Naldjorlak is, as
Radigue says:
These pieces are for the instrumentalists, they were not composed for an
instrument, but for the instrumentalists. . . . It’s personal, this music belongs to
them.
She goes on to explain, “It’s an oral transmission, an extremely delicate material. You
can’t write it down, it’s impossible to write such music.” The relation to the instrument
is best captured through the most direct means. As she describes the collaboration
process with Curtis, “The score became the whole body of the instrument.”239
Much of this work has to do with secondary results. Radigue describes her “sound
quest” as centering on “the soul, or the spirit of sound,” which she relates to richness
and resonance and more specifically to “partials, sub-harmonics, the harmonics, etc.”240
Curtis says, “You don’t know, where are these sounds coming from? You play one thing
and something else results. And the great art of this music is to organize it in such a way
that what is produced as a secondary resonance is stronger than the primary act that
is being played.”241 In Radigue’s words, “I’ve learned the subtle pleasure which comes
from trying to discipline a sound. To hold a feedback at exactly the right distance,
you better watch out!”242 Emmanuel Holterbach’s description of her earlier work with
feedback shows its connection to this recent work:
We are inside the timbres, riding on dense, complex frequencies. There is not just
one oscillator making a continuous sound slightly modulated, there are many
of them functioning together. Eliane was working this way using several filtered
oscillators, modifying the sound, coating it, revealing, generating, elaborating all
216 Experimental Music Since 1970
the aspects of the harmonics, resulting in this mass of sound. Then when she puts
all this together in a montage, the results are magic.243
Radigue’s reflections on the feedback works parallel the experiences that performers
and listeners have had of the Naldjorlak and OCCAM OCEAN series. “I grew to like
this slow, precise way of working,” she says. “The result was a music that takes its time,
is demanding on the listener, and will not forgive only one thing: that you do not
listen to it!” Her collaborative projects, like this earlier work, are processes of listening.
Rhodri Davies, one of the first collaborators on OCCAM OCEAN reflects,
I just love the whole process of how the piece took shape, really. And it kind of
appeared from nowhere, in a way. It was partly a form of osmosis, or as if Eliane
was transmitting this piece to me.244
The relationship between composer and performer becomes central to the work. It
happens directly, face to face, and more importantly, “heart to heart.”245 The immediacy
of that relationship transmits powerfully in live performance. The video and audio
reproductions of these works lose more than the acoustic subtleties of transmission.
There is a sense of presence that is brought to the work that is mostly lost in any
recording. The musicians were fully engaged in the process that brought their portion
of the piece into being, and the listeners are making this work with them, watching it
take shape in a shared space and experience.
Luke Nickel is a Canadian interdisciplinary artist who also segments the
communication of a score into separate communications. He writes of Made of My
Mother’s Cravings (2014): “I created the piece by telling each member of the quartet
instructions: some secrets, some to share. The group then assembled the piece in
rehearsal, largely without my input. This is the result.”246 In both recorded performances,
there is an unusual quality of rawness. The players are participating in an oral, folkloric
tradition without any sense of irony or flippancy. Each player is working hard to project
something that is already internalized. The interaction among the players is not simply
about execution, but about content, and about differences in perception between each
of them. The June and November 2014 performances are in a displaced interaction
with one another too, as memories of the score have been eroded or replaced.247
Factory (2014) is a set of verbal scores that were given to the violinist Mira Benjamin
and then, by agreement between her and Nickel, permanently deleted in that physical
form. These scores are now accessed, not even through the composer, but through
conversation with Benjamin as their living archive. She is aware of her unique and
somewhat strange function in the development of the work, not only in dialogue with
Nickel, but especially in her interactions with the musicians who access it.
for anyone if I was really trying to adhere to some kind of rote system. . . . For
me, the score kind of keeps building, because as other people access it, it includes
those conversations too. . . . one of the fundamental sort of things that Luke gave
me license to do at the beginning . . . is to forget. I think the process is infinitely
interesting because I just keep forgetting things.
But it is Nickel who best articulates the relation of the work and the process to Benjamin
herself. He writes:
I think creating it was specifically about Mira and her particular skills of
conceptualization, realization, ultimate generosity, pragmatism. . . . These
characteristics if divorced from the piece would not allow it to exist.248
The fruitful irony here is that Benjamin’s fluid sense of the nature of the piece is her
most essential attribute as the access point for it. She explains further:
I think for somebody to really be able to get to the heart of this type of way of
working, one can’t be all that concerned with ownership. It would just stop
anything from happening. This work is all about contamination.249
In all of these projects, the point of access to the work becomes the primary site of
interaction, and it infuses the performance with those unique dynamics.
Notes
1 Peter Ablinger, “Rauschen,” http://ablinger.mur.at/rauschen.html.
2 Cassidy and Einbond, Noise in and as Music (Huddersfield, UK: University of
Huddersfield Press, 2013), 5.
3 Ablinger, “Rauschen.”
4 Ablinger, “Weiss/Weisslich 7: Rauschen,” http://ablinger.mur.at/ww7_wasserfall.html.
5 Ablinger, “Weiss/Weisslich 33, ‘Die Farbe der Nähe,’” http://ablinger.mur.at/
ww33.html.
6 Ablinger, “Weiss/Weisslich 18,” on Weiss/Weisslich, World Edition 0008, 2002,
compact disc.
7 Ablinger, “Weiss/Weisslich 18,” http://ablinger.mur.at/docs/ww18engl.pdf.
8 Jennie Gottschalk, “wandelweiser und so weiter NYC III,” May 29, 2013, http://www.
soundexpanse.com/wwusw-nyc-3.
9 Michael Pisaro, White Metal (Grey Series No. 2) (unpublished score, 2012–13).
10 See http://dromosrecords.com/catalogue_makam.php?id=1 and http://www.
senufoeditions.com/wordpress/?page_id=720.
11 Peter Ablinger, “Der Regen, das Glas, das Lachen,” http://ablinger.mur.at/
werk89drdgdl.html.
12 Cassidy and Einbond, Noise in and as Music, 8.
13 Peter Ablinger, “Instrumente und Rauschen,” http://ablinger.mur.at/i+r2_i+r.html.
218 Experimental Music Since 1970
14 Seth Josel has recorded 95 of these segments in the CD 33-127, mode 206, 2009.
Evan Johnson’s liner notes may be the single-best introduction to Ablinger’s work
available, and are also at http://ablinger.mur.at/werk2000_1-127text.html.
15 Apparently his father was a direct influence on this set of habits, in having his
children sing in one key while he accompanied them in another. See http://www.
charlesives.org/02bio.htm.
16 Peter Ablinger, “Weiss/Weisslich 22,” and Notes by Christian Scheib, Vienna/Austria,
http://ablinger.mur.at/ww22.html.
17 One segment of this piece can be heard at https://soundcloud.com/ciciliani/pop-
wall-alphabet-m.
18 Cassidy and Einbond, Noise in and as Music, 191.
19 Peter Ablinger, “IEAOV,” http://ablinger.mur.at/docu07.html.
20 Ablinger, “IEAOV,” http://ablinger.mur.at/ieaov.html.
21 See Erik M., “Frame,” http://www.erikm.com/music/?var_ajax_redir=1 and the
recording at https://erikm.bandcamp.com/album/variations-opportunistes-2007.
22 The ongoing stream can be found at http://www.park.nl/park_cms/public/index.
php?thisarticle=118, and more information on the project is available at http://www.
harsmedia.com/SoundBlog/Archief/00550.php.
23 JLIAT, “All Possible CDs,” http://www.jliat.com/APCDS/index.html.
24 Peter Ablinger and Deus Cantando (God, singing). http://ablinger.mur.at/txt_
qu3god.html. See also a video documenting this project at https://www.youtube.
com/watch?v=muCPjK4nGY4.
25 Ablinger, “Phonorealism: The Reproduction of ‘Phonographs’ by Instruments,”
http://ablinger.mur.at/phonorealism.html.
26 Ablinger, “Quadraturen,” http://ablinger.mur.at/docu11.html.
27 Ibid.
28 Ablinger, “Augmented Studies: about the series,” http://ablinger.mur.at/txt_augst.
html.
29 Ablinger, “Augmented Study für 7 Violinen,” http://ablinger.mur.at/txt_augst_
augmented.html. Listen at https://soundcloud.com/midnightsledding/peter-
ablinger-augmented-study.
30 Ablinger, “Hypothesen Über das Mondlicht,” http://ablinger.mur.at/txt_augst_
hypothesen.html.
31 Joanna Bailie, To Be Beside the Seaside (unpublished score, 2015). “Tectonics Festival
Glasgow 2015.” BBC Hear and Now. BBC 3. London, UK, May 16, 2015.
32 Gerhard Stäbler, . . . Im aufhörlichen Wirbel . . ., col legno WWE 20021, 1998,
compact disc. Liner notes, 12.
33 “Profile,” last modified January 12, 2001, http://www.japanimprov.com/ayoshida.
34 Ami Yoshida, Tiger Thrush, Improvised Music from Japan, IMJ-504, 2003,
compact disc.
35 Cassidy and Einbond, Noise in and as Music, 51.
36 For other examples of vocal extremity, see Chapter 3, The Physicality of Performance.
37 Tom Johnson, The Voice of New Music (Eindhoven: Apollohuis, 1989), 3, http://www.
editions75.com/Books/TheVoiceOfNewMusic.PDF.
38 Joan La Barbara, Voice is the Original Instrument, Lovely Music, CD 3003, 2 compact
discs, CD 1, track 5.
39 Pamela Z., “Syrinx,” SoundCloud track, 6:11, https://soundcloud.com/pamela-z/syrinx.
Information, Language, and Interaction 219
40 George Lewis, “The Virtual Discourses of Pamela Z,” Journal of the Society for
American Music 1, no. 1 (2007): 73–74.
41 Chris Mercer, “The Birdsong Emulation Gloves,” http://musictechnology.music.
northwestern.edu/Mercer/Research.html.
42 Mercer, “Birdsong Gloves,” YouTube video, 0:58, posted by “camercer72,” January 13,
2009, https://youtu.be/Aag-t5pMhpQ.
43 Emmanuel Holterbach, “Sérénade pour Nestor Kéa,” Bandcamp release, 5:32, August
8, 2013, https://emmanuelholterbach.bandcamp.com/track/s-r-nade-pour-nestor-k-a.
44 David Dunn and Ric Cupples, “Mimus Polyglottus,” on Music, Language and
Environment, Innova Recordings, innova 508, 1996, 2 compact discs. Ric Cupples
and David Dunn, Mimus Polyglottus (unpublished score, 1976).
45 Mercer, “Research,” http://musictechnology.northwestern.edu/Mercer/
Research.html. Mercer, “The Audible Phylogeny of Lemurs,” YouTube video,
17:33, posted by “camercer72,” December 15, 2013, https://www.youtube.com/
watch?v=PQe7SACPQy4.
46 “About,” http://patrickfarmer.org/about.
47 Ibid.
48 Miya Masaoka, “Skin & Insects,” http://www.miyamasaoka.com/interdisciplinary/
skin_insects/index.html.
49 Masaoka, “Compositions,” http://www.miyamasaoka.com/music/compositions/
index.html.
50 Yannick Dauby, La rivière penchée, Bandcamp release, October 7, 2013, https://
kalerne.bandcamp.com/album/la-rivi-re-pench-e.
51 Chris Watson, Outside the Circle of Fire, Touch, TO:37, 1998, compact disc.
http://touchshop.org/product_info.php?cPath=9&products_id=14 and Weather
Report, Touch, TO:47, 2003, compact disc, http://touchshop.org/product_info.
php?cPath=9&products_id=15.
52 Watson, Weather Report, http://www.touchmusic.org.uk/catalogue/to47_chris_
watson_weather_repo.html.
53 Chris Watson and Marcus Davidson, Cross-Pollination, Touch, Tone 43, 2011,
compact disc, http://touchshop.org/product_info.php?cPath=9&products_id=464.
54 “Bernie Krause Biography,” http://www.wildsanctuary.com.
55 Bernie Krause, “The voice of the natural world,” https://www.ted.com/talks/bernie_
krause_the_voice_of_the_natural_world/transcript?language=en.
56 Krause, “The voice of the natural world,” TED talk, 14:48, June 2013, http://www.ted.
com/talks/bernie_krause_the_voice_of_the_natural_world?language=en.
57 Krause, The Great Animal Orchestra (New York: Little, Brown, 2012), 68–73.
58 Krause, Into a Wild Sanctuary (Berkeley, CA: Heyday Books, 1998), 78.
59 Krause, The Great Animal Orchestra, 100.
60 Krause, Into a Wild Sanctuary, 80.
61 Ibid., 100.
62 Krause’s website, which includes numerous audio examples, is http://www.
wildsanctuary.com. Other related (but not affiliated) projects include the Wildlife
Sound Recording Society (http://www.wildlife-sound.org), WildSounds (http://
www.wildsounds.com), and Martyn Stewart’s site (http://naturesound.org).
63 This piece is available on the CD Angels and Insects, and an excerpt is available here:
http://www.davidddunn.com/~david/sounds/Chaos.mp3.
220 Experimental Music Since 1970
64 David Dunn, Chaos and the Emergent Mind of the Pond (unpublished essay,
1991), 2–4.
65 Jana Winderen, The Noisiest Guys on Planet, Bandcamp release, June 16, 2009,
https://janawinderen.bandcamp.com/album/the-noisiest-guys-on-the-planet.
66 Winderen, “Artist Statement,” http://www.janawinderen.com/information.
67 Jennifer Walshe, “‘Three Songs’ by Ukeoirn O’Connor,” Soundcloud track, 8:43,
posted by “Grupat,” 2013, https://soundcloud.com/grupat/three-songs-by-ukeoirn-
oconnor.
68 See Chapter 6, Histories.
69 Nate Wooley, (9) Syllables, Bandcamp release, 48:09, April 10, 2013, https://mnoad.
bandcamp.com/album/9-syllables.
70 Bonnie Jones, “by the time,” Soundcloud track, 16:14, posted by “ICA London,”
2012, https://soundcloud.com/icalondon/bonnie-jones-by-the-time.
71 Jones, “we’ve. 2010, screen capture, 17:15,” YouTube video, 17:14, posted by “Bonnie
Jones, November 28, 2011,” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dUyTG1M36KA.
72 “The Typist,” http://www.echoraum.at/typist.htm.
73 Kim Taeyong, Lee Youngji, and Ryu Hankil, Profile, Manual, manualcd05, 2011,
book and compact disc. “A. Typist,” http://lo-wie.blogspot.com/p/a-typist.html.
74 Ryu Hankil, Descriptions for Other Things, Mediabus, 2011, book and compact disc.
75 “‘On Words: J’ by Luiz Henrique Yudo (en),” YouTube video, 18:59, posted by
“sergeizagny,” May 28, 2011, https://youtu.be/30-cQPqr0vU.
76 See for example “ON WORDS: O,” https://soundcloud.com/luiz-henri/on-wordso.
77 Luiz Henrique Yudo, “On Phobia,” Soundcloud track, 1:57:01, https://soundcloud.
com/luiz-henri/on-phobia. See www.phobialist.com.
78 Michael Oesterle, “all words,” Soundcloud track, 10:43, https://soundcloud.com/
michaeloesterle/all-words-2014.
79 Tim Rutherford-Johnson, “Michael Oesterle: all words,” https://johnsonsrambler.
wordpress.com/2015/10/20/michael-oesterle-all-words.
80 Alessandro Bosetti, “I could see the clouds over Neukölln,” YouTube video, 9:56,
posted by “alessandrobosetti,” September 24, 2012, https://www.youtube.com/
watch?v=zPYcp5t3k30.
81 Bosetti, “Mask Mirror,” http://www.melgun.net/live-projects/mask-mirror.
82 “Composer Kenneth Gaburo: A Conversation with Bruce Duffie,” April 9, 1987,
http://www.bruceduffie.com/gaburo.html.
83 Paul DeMarinis, Paul DeMarinis: Buried in Noise (Heidelberg: Kehrer, 2010), 208.
84 Ibid., 208.
85 DeMarinis, Music as a Second Language, Lovely Music, CD 3011, 1991, compact
disc. Liner notes.
86 Alvin Lucier, Music 109: Notes on Experimental Music (Middletown, CT: Wesleyan
University Press, 2014), 175.
87 Tom Sellar, “Parts of Speech: Interview with Pamela Z,” Theater Magazine 30, no. 2
(2000), http://www.pamelaz.com/theater.html.
88 Lewis, George E., “The Virtual Discourses of Pamela Z,” Journal of the Society for
American Music 1, no. 1 (2007): 57–77. Pamela Z., A Delay is Better Than a Disaster,
Starkland st213, 2004, compact disc.
89 Lewis, “Virtual Discourses,” 74.
90 Peter Ablinger, “Voices and Piano,” http://ablinger.mur.at/voices_and_piano.html.
Information, Language, and Interaction 221
222 See disc 7 of The Art of David Tudor—Neural Network Plus (1992).
223 “David Behrman, Interview by Jason Gross,” August 1997, http://www.furious.com/
perfect/behrman.html.
224 David Behrman, “Leapday Night,” http://www.lovely.com/albumnotes/
notes1042.html.
225 Behrman, On the Other Ocean, Lovely Music, LCD 1041, 1996, compact disc. Liner
notes, http://www.lovely.com/albumnotes/notes1041.html.
226 Thom Holmes, Electronic and Experimental Music (New York: Scribner’s, 1985), 103.
227 Lucier, Music 109, 83.
228 Ibid., 83.
229 Kalvos and Damian, “David Behrman: Kitchen Sink Electronics; No Compromises,”
http://econtact.ca/10_2/BehrmanDa_KD.html.
230 “David Behrman, Interview by Jason Gross.”
231 Ibid.
232 Richard Teitelbaum, “Improvisation, Computers and the Unconscious Mind,”
Contemporary Music Review 25, nos. 5/6 (2006): 504.
233 Ibid., 507.
234 Babeth Vanloo and Meredith Monk, Meredith Monk: Inner Voice (New York: First
Run Features, 2010).
235 Virtuoso Listening, (2011, La Huit), DVD.
236 See Luke Nickel, “Occam Notions: Collaboration and the Performer’s Perspective
in Éliane Radigue’s Occam Ocean,” Tempo 70, no. 275 (January 2016): 22–35 for an
overview of Radigue’s collaborative practice.
237 “Éliane Radigue Naldjorlak,” http://www.shiiin.com/shiiin3.php.
238 Ibid.
239 Éliane Radigue, “Naldjorlak I,” in Agape: Miguel Abreu Gallery, June 3–July 28, 2007,
ed. Alex Waterman (New York: Miguel Abreu Gallery, 2007), 18.
240 Virtuoso Listening.
241 Ibid.
242 Ibid.
243 Ibid.
244 Ibid.
245 Éliane Radigue, Pour répondre à le demande de Julien, trans. Luke Nickel, Portraits
Polychromes no. 17.
246 Luke Nickel, “Made of My Mother’s Cravings: June 2014,” Soundcloud track,
9:12, 2015, https://soundcloud.com/lukejnickel/made-of-my-mothers-cravings-
june-2014.
247 See Ibid and “Made of My Mother’s Cravings: Nov 2014,” https://soundcloud.com/
lukejnickel/made-of-my-mothers-cravings-nov-2014.
248 Luke Nickel in discussion with the author, October 28, 2015.
249 Mira Benjamin in discussion with the author, April 30, 2015.
6
What are the sounds of a place? How does it change from moment to moment, from
morning to afternoon to evening to night, over seasons, years, decades, centuries? How
near or far are the sounds? Are the sound sources in motion? Are you in motion? How
can a place or a duration be better understood through sound?
While some of these questions are easily asked and answered, others are impossibly
speculative. No one can possibly know every sound of every place, or even the sound of
a single place over a long period of time. But there are people who are deeply engaged
in these questions, and pursue them in a number of ways.
The projects discussed in the “Mappings” section tend to be inherently active and
restless, involving various forms of transport, tracing boundaries, asking impossibly
wide-ranging questions, questioning the ways things have traditionally been done, and
testing perceptual as well as geographic boundaries. In the second section, site-specific
works are not only (and not necessarily) about a specific place, but are in some way
dependent upon its configuration or features, using one or more aspects of the site itself
as an instrument. Finally, the last section looks at new ways of approaching history
through objects, technologies, historical sites, musical pasts, and ultimately imagination.
6.1 Mappings
conversations can be overheard, as well as the conductor calling out stops and taking
fares, the opening and closing of the door, the revving of the motor, and other traffic
passing by.
Chris Watson’s El Tren Fantasma (2010) is a field recording from the final months
of operation of the trains of the Ferrocarriles Nacionales de México. Watson rode
the train for a month as part of the crew for a BBC TV series called Great Railway
Journeys, and incorporated his recordings into this sound piece.4 Watson’s notes on the
piece read as a text score, but they can never be executed again.
Take the ghost train from Los Mochis to Veracruz and travel cross country, coast
to coast Pacific to Atlantic. Ride the rhythm of the rails on board the Ferrocarriles
Nacionales de México and the music of a journey that has now passed into history.
In fact, the last words of the note, “passed into history” make that impossibility plain,
revealing that is not a prompt to action, but an invitation to a specific listening and
imaginative experience. The listener takes the journey with Watson across Mexico,
from the west coast, east and south across the country to Veracruz. Watson writes that
the piece was “inspired by Pierre Schaeffer,” whose Étude aux chemins de fer (1948) was
also based on the sounds of trains and is understood to be the first piece of musique
concrète. Watson’s piece differs from Schaeffer’s in its relative length and its linearity.
Only a portion of each leg of the journey is represented on each track, and some tracks
are quite short; but the environmental sounds seem to gradually change, while the
sounds of the train and that “rhythm of the rails” remain somewhat constant.
In addition to these examples that make use of (mostly field) recordings, lines
can be traced through space in a live performance situation. There are three different
types of sound production in David Dunn’s Skydrift (1976–78). Ten vocalists form a
broad circle in the center. The sixteen instrumentalists (four each of flute, clarinet,
trumpet, and trombone) and four speakers (broadcasting a four-channel tape) form an
evenly spaced enclosing circle around the vocalists. During the thirty minutes of the
performance, the instrumentalists move very slowly outward until they have expanded
the circle to about half a mile in diameter.5 The space is to be vast, open air, and remote,
with low amplitude ambient sound.6
The recording is of a performance that took place on December 11, 1977. It is not a
document of any participant’s experience, but a rough approximation, a compromise
between those various experiences. Dunn’s decision to subsequently interview each of
the participants foregrounded their individual perceptions. They literally each heard a
different piece, based on placement, orientation, and motion in space, along with more
subjective factors. Even the singers in the inner circle were oriented toward different
segments of the expanding circle.
Many people spoke about the strange or compelling aspects of the experience for
them. Alan Brewer commented that the acoustics seemed at different points like a
movie theater, a space ship, and a new world.7 Duane Lakin-Thomas was taken aback
by how loud his clarinet seemed as he went farther out, saying that it “rang in my
ears extremely loudly, as though it was . . . almost at the pain threshold. . . . All that
sound . . . instead of getting eaten up by the desert—apparently was turned back on
Place and Time 229
our own ears.”8 Meanwhile, Jack Logan found that the air was absorbing all the usual
loudness of his trumpet, making him feel “terribly small in that space.”9 One of the
singers offered an explanation for these behaviors from his central vantage point. The
sound, he said, “was carried literally by the wind so that different instruments . . . that
I wouldn’t normally hear would all of a sudden become very strongly accented.”10
The sense of absence and distance became stronger over the course of the piece
for the instrumentalists. They talked about how very alone they felt as they walked
away from the other participants, until they were “just beyond the perimeter of
audibility.”11 David Dickey commented that he felt a transition as he moved outward
from interacting with musicians to interacting with the environment.12
Stephen Chase is another composer who explores traveling sounds. As he puts it,
he is “drawn to such things as the relationship between physical action and sound
production.”13 His out-of-doors suite (2014–15) is a set of text scores that offers “many
examples of pitch deviation with distance.”14 One of these, ringing singing cycling
(2014), has a functional similarity to Skydrift, in that there is a central reference point
that operates independently of the other aspects of the performance and there is an
expanding circumference around it. A group of cyclists gather at a time and place
at which bell ringing will begin. When it starts, the cyclists ride around the source,
reproducing one or oscillating between two of the bell pitches and gradually moving
further outward. Unlike Skydrift, the musicians circle back periodically to retune to the
bells and to each other.15
lights out for the territory (2014) is a slower, more contemplative piece that can be
performed by almost anyone:
walk
in silence
feeling the ground
beneath your feet
and listening
to the variegated textures
of your boots/shoes/feet
against floor
—careful now16
The line here is a trail, created at the point of contact between foot (or whatever
footwear is encasing it) and terrain.
BEAMING (2015) uses “strongly directional beams of sound and/or light” to draw
lines and ellipses (by spinning) “On hilltops, across plains, through passageways and
forest clearings . . .” The space becomes known through the reflections, bends, and
diffusion of the beams or pulses.17 Several of the pieces challenge the musicians to
coordinate pitches over a significant distance.18 In points on the curve (2014), each
of them is stationed at a point along a river, “just out of earshot of the player at the
next point,” except for a player who rides downstream in a rowboat, repeating one
pitch over and over for the benefit of the stationary musicians. They imitate the pitch
Place and Time 231
that they hear for as long as they can hear it, even as it shifts with distance.19 Spring
Waves (2014) places the musicians at least 100 meters apart, and one of them directs
their sound to the other, making it easier to replicate as the pulses become louder and
slower. The second musician picks up the pitch and pulse, aiming the sound for the
midpoint between them. Much like in BEAMING, the task is to use the instrument to
draw a line through space, but in that case only the starting point of the line is defined.
Here, both ends of the line are clear—one per player—and it has an additional point
in the center, which is the point of intersection of the sound. Chase gives the options
that another duo can play across this sound line, or that duos can perform the score
in parallel lines.20
Michael Parsons’ Echo Piece at Muddusjarvi (1976) is written for two players with
woodblocks. Parsons and Howard Skempton played regular pulses as they walked in
straight lines on a frozen lake in Finland, determining their locations according to the
echoes off the face of the cliff. Parsons explains that the existing score is a description
of that performance, but it can be adapted in any number of ways.
The essential features of the piece are that the players explore changing
relationships between outgoing and reflected sounds as they move in relation to
the source of the echo, and that they observe the changing rhythmic relationships
between sounds played and heard at different distances as they move in relation
to each other.21
Borders
Borders are lines drawn in outdoor space. From an aerial point of view, they are lines
that mark geographic, political, and/or property boundaries.
232 Experimental Music Since 1970
In the piece Border Fences (1998), Richard Lerman combined audio samples from
fences between Mexico and Arizona with a series of actions to be performed on a metal
fence for the audience on the other side. These actions include:
These sounds are registered not only directly but also through piezo disc microphones
which are attached to the fence and various extensions of it. Stephen Cornford’s
Attempts to shatter steel with sound (2006–07) is a provocation parallel to Lerman’s,
and an action with no hope of success.
The unrealisable aim of the piece was to find a frequency which causes the fence
to either melt, buckle or ideally, shatter. The project is potentially endless and
proposes a means of engaging with the numerous barriers that marcate urban
territory, one that is not vandalism but nevertheless refuses to acknowledge the
intended purpose of the fence.23
Jon Rose has been heavily engaged in such a refusal, and he and Hollis Taylor have
used fences at borders throughout the world as instruments. “The main issue,” for Rose,
“is trying to get sound that moves through space. Mostly when we listen to music, it
comes from a fixed point, and this is the transmission of sound over huge areas.”24
Rose and Taylor have documented their expeditions in Post Impressions: a travel book
for tragic intellectuals (2007) in writing, photography, and with an accompanying CD.
Rose recounts his epiphany that “if the wind could play a fence as an aeolian harp,
then as a violinist armed with a bow I could also cause these gigantic structures to
sing.”25 Rose and Taylor have done many types of bowing on the fences, ranging from
sustained long tones to percussive treatments. Their choices seem to be determined
in the moment according to the properties of the materials—loose or tense, smooth,
wound, or barbed wire.26
As they try to play fences at political boundaries, Rose will typically do the talking
with officials and say that he is just a musician. If he is already at the site he will invite
officials or other locals to hear what he is hearing by listening through headphones
to the fence. But the inclusion in his bio of his apprehension by Israeli forces at
Ramallah creates some impression that boundaries are being tested in more ways than
one.27 Whether or not this project is motivated by political leanings, violin bows and
Place and Time 233
contact microphones are not effective means of destruction, but rather for conveying
information. People who live or work by the fences are fascinated by the sounds they
produce when they accept the invitation to listen to them closely.
Both Rose and Lerman have also constructed their own fences. For Rose, it provides
a new instrument to play. For Lerman, constructing his own wind harps has taught
him more about their nature and their acoustics. Like Rose, he compares fences to
string instruments. “Rough strings catch more wind, and if a string is very rough,
the timbre may change. Positioning a string to get the wind at a certain angle also
affects the sound, like up bow/down bow/bowing at angles, etc.”28 Through the use of
contact microphones, he has found wind harps in “leaves of palm trees, tops of pine
trees, cactus thorns, fields of grass, stems of desert bushes, rocks, salt flats, and [less
successfully] spider webs.”29
In outdoor spaces, boundary markers do not affect acoustics in the clear ways that
the materials and dimensions of walls affect indoor spaces; but these markers hold
sonic information about the activity of the space they traverse.
Schafer is interested in the history of sound in place, and in developing and pursuing
methods to enrich these histories, which are generally sparse. The challenge is greater
because there is no sonic equivalent to aerial photography. Large areas have not been,
and still cannot be, effectively surveyed for their sonic characteristics. Schafer suggests
that we need to turn to “earwitness accounts from literature and mythology, as well as
to anthropological and historical records” to build such histories.32 He argues in favor
of identifying the sounds to “preserve, encourage, multiply,” and establishing from that
vantage point what the “boring or destructive” sounds are and why they need to be
eliminated. Noise abatement, he writes, is a “negative approach,” a non-solution to
noise pollution, which is ultimately the result of a failure to listen. Only through careful
listening can the soundscape be improved.33
Among the many organizations associated with acoustic ecology, the first one to be
established was the World Soundscape Project. The efforts of this group spread in many
directions, including writing books, education of children, recording, mapping, and
soundwalking.34 Founded in 1993, the World Forum for Acoustic Ecology (WFAE) is
an umbrella organization that has affiliates on four continents and publishes an annual
journal.
Though there is an active network of people with a direct interest in this field, and a
greater number of field recordists, ecologists, and other interested citizens and experts,
the challenge of understanding and improving the soundscape is daunting to the point
of unattainability. Schafer writes:
Not everyone with these concerns is or ever was a member of the WFAE. For musicians,
or for anyone with sensitive hearing, it is common to have increasing concerns about
the sonic environment.
Some people, including the percussionist and sound artist Max Neuhaus, have
tried to do something about it. He developed a knowledge of how sound is cognitively
mapped to attempt to create a better environment in terms of both sound and safety,
turning his attention to what might be the most disruptive sound in city life: the siren.
He echoes Schafer when he writes, “Looking at the history of these devices, it becomes
clear that the sounds themselves have never actually been designed. They are, instead,
the product of whatever could be found to make a loud noise.”36 Old sounds, designed
with the technological limitations of the past, were simply copied electronically, rather
than being considered for their acoustic characteristics.
Neuhaus’s project was not driven by aesthetic concerns, but by very practical ones.
Sirens are, for one thing, “almost impossible to locate.”37 While he was working on
the project he read a news story about multiple fatalities as two police cars, both with
Place and Time 235
their sirens blaring, collided at a blind corner.38 He also learned about another frequent
source of difficulty from emergency vehicle drivers: it is difficult to hear instructions
over their radios while their sirens are on. The sirens also frequently cause tension for
them—at the source of the noise—as it does for people nearby.39
Neuhaus approached the New York City police with his idea of building a better
siren, and after having some difficulty getting any helpful attention finally gloated:
Although, while policing New York, they had encountered practically everything
else in life, I do not think they had ever come across artistic obsession before. After
three hours I walked away from it with two of their police cars.
By this time he had thought long and hard about what features were most needed in a
siren. “It is not necessary to frighten people in order to get their attention.”40 He came
up with the idea that the speed of the car could be mapped to the speed of the bursts, so
that “a faster-moving car would sound more urgent.”41 After some testing he found that
the speed indications were effective, but he could not tell whether the car was moving
toward him or away from him. His solution was to place a second horn on the rear
of the car with a different pattern of sounds. He developed this idea further to make
the car sound more urgent when it was approaching than when it was to the side or
receding. He created three different patterns to project three different levels of urgency.
When he tested the new sirens with emergency vehicle drivers, they were impressed
that they could hear each other’s sirens in addition to their own. Neuhaus applied
for and was issued a patent on forty-six ideas of how to move emergency vehicles
through traffic. The New York City police department asked to test the sirens in one of
their precincts. Every problem he encountered was solvable, except for one: No siren
manufacturer was willing to manufacture a set of prototypes. He finally concluded:
There is no pressure from government for a safer siren because the manufacturers
are on the government committees that are supposed to regulate them. There is
no civic pressure because the public doesn’t know that a better alternative exists.
Although you can lead a horse to water, you cannot make him drink.42
Soundwalks
Soundwalking is a practice that is strongly associated with acoustic ecology. Hildegard
Westerkamp, one of its strong proponents, describes it in this way: “A soundwalk is
any excursion whose main purpose is listening to the environment.” It is a practice
of “uncompromised listening,” giving “ears priority.” A Soundwalk in Queen Elizabeth
Park in Vancouver (1974) is a guided sonic tour, a specific text score that anyone in
that location can follow. The participant is asked, according to his or her position in
the park, to walk, listen, stop, find, explore, experiment, discover, play, or sit. Specific
questions are posed along the way. There is a clear narrative, though it is subject to the
perception and circumstance of the listener. Specific likely sounds are listed, including
footsteps, fountains, a waterwheel, and a creek.43
236 Experimental Music Since 1970
Choose a pitch-black night or thick fog and set yourself a goal you want to reach.
Your eyes are of little help. Your ears are your main tools for finding your way
around. With your voice or any other sound you produce you will be able to tell
where you stand in relation to your environment.
As an alternative within the same score, she suggests going for an orientation walk
in any city and navigating by asking people for directions. “Besides not getting lost
that way, you will also get to know a little of the character of a city by listening to
the way people answer. Listen to the sounds and melodies in their voices, listen for
accents.”44 In Westerkamp’s soundwalks, the performer and the listener are one. There
is no mediation of technology between the specific sounds of the place and the focused
attention of the walker/performer/listener. “In a soundwalk then, listeners and the
environment create a unique ‘piece’ together. It occurs only once, during the time of
the walk itself.”45 However thoroughly a place may have been researched for its sonic
properties, time and circumstance will tend to intervene. The outcome can be far more
captivating than whatever was planned in advance. Westerkamp writes:
In addition to these pieces designed for the direct experience of the walkers,
Westerkamp also produced and hosted a radio show called Soundwalking on
Vancouver Co-operative Radio. She used the radio as a medium to convey the sounds
of different locations in Vancouver. In her recorded works, the mediation is not limited
to the technology (microphone, recorder, radio, etc.). During A Walk Through the
City (1981), Norbert Ruebsaat reads his poem by the same name, and that reading
“interacts with, comments on, dramatizes, struggles with the sounds and other voices
it encounters in the piece,” all of which are recorded in Vancouver’s Skid Row area.
Westerkamp lists some of these sounds: “Traffic, carhorns, brakes, sirens, aircraft,
construction, pinball machines, the throb of trains, human voices.” In addition to the
poem, these recorded sounds operate as instruments, and are used as sound objects
that are digitally manipulated in the studio.47
Michael Parsons wrote Walk (1969) for the Scratch Orchestra “for any number of
people walking in a large open space.”48 Echo Piece (2009) is presented as a new version
Place and Time 237
of that piece. It is not a soundwalk in the sense of the previous examples, but it is
certainly a walking piece, in that both the audience and the musicians are moving
through a space. This piece is designed for Canary Wharf, which is ideal for its “series
of open spaces surrounded by sound-reflecting surfaces, and being relatively free of
traffic noise.” At 5-, 10-, 15-, or 20-minute intervals, the musicians and audience move
from one location to another within Canary Wharf.
Players with trumpets, horns and trombones will play short single notes,
interspersed with silences, evoking echoes from reflective surfaces, in a variable,
open-form, sparse and pointillistic texture of discrete sounds.
Echo Piece creates a spatial polyphony of multiple echoes, activating the sound-
reflecting surfaces of buildings at different distances, revealing the elasticity of the
surrounding medium.49
In the use of reflective surfaces to define a space, Parsons’ piece is related not only to
Westerkamp’s walk in pitch-black or heavy fog conditions, but also to Lucier’s Vespers
(1968), in which blindfolded participants use a type of echolocation to navigate from
one point to another in a room. In Parsons’ piece, the objective is not navigation, but
rather a better understanding of the sonic effect of architecture.
Elena Biserna’s Walking from Scores project is a collection of scores by many of the
previously mentioned composers and others, all of which were collectively performed.
She writes that the notation is “understood as a call to action . . . a privileged mode
of interacting with the environment and everyday life.”50 One of the many pieces
performed in this event was Francesco Gagliardi’s Alternative Piece (Belfast 2008).
The walker is to “identify the source of all the sounds you hear,” while also listing
the sounds that cannot be identified. In parallel, “potential sources of sounds you
would not expect to be able to hear” are identified and sought out, and the resulting
sounds that are heard are listed. By compounding walking not only with listening, but
also with identification and transcription, Gagliardi creates a basically impossible set
of tasks. In particular, the sourcing of sounds highlights the unknowable aspects of
pedestrian activity.51
For the New York-based composer and trombonist Craig Shepard, walking
provides an opportunity not only for hearing sounds, but also for imagining them—
for composing. In Switzerland, he did much of his composing as he walked from
one point to the next. His 2005 On Foot project was a month-long journey across
Switzerland. He brought his pocket trumpet, and wrote and performed a piece each
day. For the On Foot: Brooklyn project, he changed the timescale, writing a piece
each week, sometimes for an ensemble, and walking each weekend to a different
destination from his home in Greenpoint. In New York, he traveled everywhere
on foot for the three-month duration of the project and used that walking time as
composing time.
A lot of my best work actually happens while I’m walking. I might have a couple
ideas, a couple of notes, maybe a pattern that I’m interested in trying out. Then
238 Experimental Music Since 1970
I go walk, and I kind of forget a lot of stuff. And it opens up a space for me, for the
work to manifest itself, so the pieces happen a little bit on their own.52
For Shepard, walking is not only a way of relating to place, but of deepening his creative
process. Wherever these walks occur, the effort required and the removal of customized
distractions (his walks are typically cell phone free) are part of an opening up of a space
in which to think and work.
In The Garden, a piece from Kortrijk Tracks (2013), David Helbich credits
Guy Debord’s situationist technique of imposing a map of one place on a different
place. This section of the piece is called “dérive versus drive.”58 He uses Louis XIV’s
prescriptive maps of how to walk through the gardens of Versailles and projects them
onto something that is as little like them as could be imagined: a modern parking lot.
Through the use of an audio guide, the users are to navigate the parking lot according
to the directions for the garden. But “the situation there will not allow you to do
so, at least not exactly. The place is full of cars. So you are forced to make your own
decisions.”59
feet, and listen to what is going on around you. In its specificity, oto-date highlights
several variable aspects: the specific sounds at the exact time of each listening session,
and the orientation and hearing of the listener.61
Suzuki chooses these locations deliberately for their sonic attributes. This piece
refers indirectly to Max Neuhaus’s LISTEN. In the first version in 1966, the word
LISTEN was rubber stamped onto participants’ hands as they walked to specific
points in New York. A later version of the piece more closely anticipates oto-date in
stamping “LISTEN” in large letters on the underside of the Brooklyn Bridge. Neuhaus
explained:
It came from a long fascination of mine with sounds of traffic moving across that
bridge—the rich sound texture formed from hundreds of tires rolling over the
open grating of the roadbed, each with a different speed and tread.62
The final version of the piece is a do-it-yourself version, a postcard “to be placed in
locations selected by its recipients.”63 The process of selection is important in both
Suzuki’s and Neuhaus’s series. To find an interaction, a particular intersection of
sounds, or a diversity of impacts (as in the Brooklyn Bridge example) is to learn to
listen to the city.
David Helbich is committed to the idea of an “audience as active individuals.”64 Drag
& Drop involves multiple “guides” dropping off participants in set locations of Brussels
for an interval of time, then picking them up and dropping them off somewhere else.
The score “guides all attendees towards a structural experience of this very particular
environment: the typical Brussels topography with its very quick rhythm of social and
urban changes.”65
Kortrijk Tracks is part of the City Tracks series, which also has versions for
Brussels, Riga, Bergen, and Maastricht. All of these scores and sound files can be
downloaded and performed, and Helbich invites people to try them out in their own
cities as well, defining the spaces by generic characteristics such as “the biggest theatre
in town,” “a waiting situation,” and “a long wall.” Each location has been specifically
mapped and numbered for each city, and there is a series of tasks to be performed,
accompanied at times by the recorded tracks, and heard on open-ear headphones in
various configurations. The track will often overlay sounds from the same or similar
location at different times. An exception is Holodeck, Please, that uses recordings from
Cairo and Nablus to suggest that a very different city is to be found on the other side
of the wall.66
is the city that was so closely studied is no accident, since Simon Fraser University has
been a hub of activity for acoustic ecology.
More recent sound mapping projects have used smartphone apps to link sounds
with geotags or geocaches. James Saunders’ location composites (2011–) places
text scores in geocaches, among other means of distribution.68 A research group at
Concordia University’s Mobile Media Lab, led by Owen Chapman, has developed a
project with an integrated iOS app called AudioMobile that operates as both a tool and
a platform for both static and dynamic field recording with integrated photographs
and GPS coordinates. An early application of the app was a soundmapping of the
Falaise St. Jacques in Montreal.69 The field recordings became the basis for student
compositions, and were also integrated into a collective sound map. Other collective
urban projects active at various times include the London Sound Survey and the New
York Sound Map.70 Chris Watson received contributions from residents for his sound
map of Sheffield, Inside the Circle of Fire (2013), which was created as an installation for
the Millennium Gallery. These recordings ranged from historical documents to current
tram signals to a recording of Buddhist chant, all of which Watson incorporated, along
with his own recordings, into a spatialized sound map.71
Locations that are special for their sonic qualities can also be discovered through
conversation, tapping into people’s experiences and memories. Jason Kahn has
gathered such personal geographies in his Unheard Cities series for radio and
installation, and to date has made versions of this project in Zürich, Delhi, Tokyo, and
Kyoto. He interviews residents of each city, asking, “What is your favorite sound or
sound atmosphere in the city?” The recorded answers serve as the introduction to the
recording of the sound that has been described. “As an artist,” he writes, “these works
allow me to discover urban spaces through sound, discovering cities through the ears
of others.” Kyoto and Tokyo were explored in parallel, especially for the vast differences
between these two Japanese cities.
I was surprised to discover that the Kyoto residents often referred to the sound of
a human voice: a Buddhist priest chanting, a recording of a Buddhist priest giving
a lecture in a temple, the sound of one’s mother speaking (as an example of the
sound of a Kyoto dialect which is slowly vanishing), a young woman working at
the cash register in a convenience store shouting out “thank you!” In Tokyo many
of the sounds people chose came closer to sound environments, rather than single
sounds. This represented for me the density of Tokyo’s sonic topographies: the idea
of a single sound is almost absurd, it is very difficult to experience this, even late at
night or very early in the morning. Kyoto, with far fewer residents and nothing of
the density of Tokyo, makes it possible to hear singular sounds.72
No one person can carry with them the histories of these cities. By interviewing multiple
longtime residents, Kahn uncovered aspects of the places that would otherwise be
inaccessible to him.
242 Experimental Music Since 1970
Site specificity
The creation of a sound work for a specific place is likely to involve, first of all, a deep
consideration of the attributes of that place. Decisions may then follow about what
aspect or aspects of it to engage with and whether that engagement will reveal, obscure,
or contradict the apparent or hidden features of the space.
Some composers and sound artists have made or found instruments that have the
length to visibly stretch through the space. These sound works are not exploring a
room or a border, but a site. Alan Lamb has been creating long wire sound structures
since the 1970s.73 One of these, the Wogarno Wire Installation (1999–) is made of
two parallel steel wires stretched 300 meters from the bottom to the top of Wogarno
Hill in the midwest outback of Australia. This installation is not meant to be played,
but simply to be heard as it responds to the wind and other factors in its environs.
As Lamb describes it, “It is soft enough to be inaudible more than a few meters from
the boulders, and loud enough to hear every infinite detail when the ear is held to
crevices in the boulders. The ground can be felt to vibrate subtly underfoot.”74 The
SPring 8 Wind Organ (1997) was built in a hexagonal form north of Kobe, Japan. After
a security vehicle damaged the installation, Lamb constructed a Great Bow, as he called
it, out of bamboo and nylon to activate the sound.75 Lamb’s first installation of this
kind was a set of abandoned telephone wires he found in the Great Southern outback
of Australia that was dubbed The Faraway Wind Organ (1976–84). Recordings of these
instruments, both played and recorded without intervention, are available on several
CDs (Night Passage [1998], Primal Images [1995], and Journeys on the Winds of Time
[1990]), and reveal a staggering array of consonance and dissonance. Lamb explains:
The wire starts to vibrate under the influence of the wind. The physics is extremely
complex, but basically, it causes the wire to flip back and forth in the windstream,
which is the origin of the hum, and it can be up to very high frequency rates.
Now once that process is in train, all sorts of things can happen, all sorts of, in
mathematical terms, it would be called instabilities, get fed up in that vibration. . . .
one ends up with a complex of pitches which form harmonic complexes, some of
which are extraordinarily beautiful, others which are very cacophonic.76
Chris Kallmyer describes himself as “an artist that works with sound and spaces.”77 This
Distance Makes Us Feel Closer (2013) fills a vast space in a way rather different from
Lamb’s, as it “resounds over miles of land surrounding the Magdalena Ridge Observatory
at 10,600 ft” in New Mexico. The ensemble is comprised of augmented car horns that are
stationed about a mile apart on either side of the Magdalena Ridge, while the audience
is gathered for sixty minutes in the center of that space. The video of the event shows
the immensity of that desert space, and it seems almost unimaginable that such a large
portion of it could be traversed through sound. Kallmyer explains that he chose the site
because of its epic perch above the desert and the rigorous landscape that spreads
out above and below a variety of listening areas. This offered the listener nearly
Place and Time 243
endless ways to guide their own experience. Once the work was installed on the
site, one realizes how sound functions in such a broad vacuum of space—that
sound is vitally feeble without something to resonate with . . . there is no land to
hold the sound in.78
To balance out the decisions between the pusher and the players, Chen adds the
proviso that “if speed of cart makes reading infeasible, sitters may rest, or turn to face
the pusher and sing the pusher’s name in protest.”82
Traveling music for freezers resonates with other environmentally driven works in
asking the participants to tune to their surroundings. “As a group, tune to a freezer.
Sustaining the chord, walk away, meet another freezer. Interfere. Slowly, retune to the
new environment. Repeat.” Optional variations include “Many groups, many freezers”
and “Heads inside and out.” This piece is an examination of the characteristics of
micro-environments, and underlines the differences in sound between apparently
similar spaces.
The La Jolla documentation reveals that at times the performance was incompatible
with the normal behaviors and uses of a supermarket. Micki Davis and Ash Smith’s
Cereal Killer involves filling the aisle with cereal boxes in what appear to be a battle
formation. Some bewildered shoppers look on, and one ventures through with difficulty
to get an item on her list. This project is not simply a private listening experience, but
a public repurposing of the space. Chen recalls, “When prodded about the activity, a
clerk responded, ‘I don’t know, but as long as they’re shopping, we’re not going to do
anything.’”83 Maybe there is room for art in capitalism after all.
More so than a grocery store, a parking lot often seems soulless and functional, a
place to get in and out of as quickly as possible. It’s a transitional space, like an airport
or an escalator. It would be unusual to hear someone say they wish they had spent more
time in the parking lot. All of those generalities are subverted in Music for Parking
Garages (2011), a series of performances that took place in the parking garage of the
Walker Art Center in Minneapolis. The invitation read:
These pieces will create a warm ambient environment for visitors as they park their
cars, stop in to listen, or even nap to the music. Come pull up a bean bag chair or
backseat, and experience the acoustical charm of the parking structure.
A group of seven musicians played with the acoustics of the building. Members of the
vocal group Cantus found a particularly resonant spot to sing and tested out the effects
of overtone singing and Renaissance counterpoint. Improvisations involved using the
walls as percussive surfaces. Casey Anderson’s piece explored the acoustics of the space
with clapping.84 Chris Kallmyer, one of the organizers and participants in this project,
wrote an article called “Sonic Cartography and the Perception of Place,” in which he
said:
Perhaps this is our humble aspiration: to create platforms for potential warm
human encounters. When creating places and events for the presentation of sound
Place and Time 245
The acoustic is reverberant and responsive to exploration, and the low lighting and lack
of competing activity are conducive to both concentration and relaxation. The garage
is completely recontextualized as a venue, a desirable place to be in itself.
Christian Kesten has created vibrant contexts within subway stations, one of which
is called willkommen zu hause (1996). Two violinists were posted on either side of the
entrance to the Nordbahnhof in Berlin and played transcriptions of the sounds of the
swinging doors.86 This sound, which is utilitarian and familiar to anyone who travels
in this station, is given an attentive, artful, and human touch. Kesten writes that his
“interest lies in the ‘space in-between’: between music and theatre, music and language,
between music and the visual arts.”87 These pieces lie in between music and the transit
of everyday life. His nordbahnhof (1996), bahnhof zoo (1997), and hauptbahnhof
(2010) are installations that set up acoustic explorations of each of these stations. The
wind and brass players are spread throughout the station and sound out long tones,
establishing relationships with each other and with the space. Passengers in transit can
simply move through these sounds, or they can more consciously engage as listeners in
the networked relationships of place and the functional sounds of the station.88
Philip Corner has further subverted the relationship of organized sound-making to
place in Listening walk at the Lanificio Bonotto (1995). The site is a fabric factory, and
“The regular workers were the conductors of that music made by machines.” Guests
are invited to walk through the space and listen, but the workers themselves determine
the density of the rhythmic counterpoint through the operation of the machinery that
is integral to their daily work. The site is both the acoustic quality of the space and the
machinery that is planted in it, and the workers are sounding that site in “a guided tour
for ears” through the various locations in the mill.89
Hong-Kai Wang is a Taiwanese interdisciplinary artist whose Music While You Work
(2010) is a sound installation based on recordings at industrial sites in Luxembourg.
She spent six weeks actively listening at these eight factory sites and subsequently
invited visitors to the installation to “ponder how sounds make us live and work
together.”90 Her project echoes Corner’s in the type of site that sounds are drawn from,
but it is different in several ways. She is a relatively unobtrusive presence, not asking
for any alteration to the daily routine of the people working in the factory. They do not
perform, but simply go about their work. The project is also different, in that while the
factories go unchanged, it is a museum space that is transformed, through her twenty-
channel installation, into a work site.
reveals something about the acoustic. The “Neue Kirche” recording in Wismar seems
almost silent, but with acclimation a listener can start to learn something about the
space. In both the “Frauenkirche” and “Trierer Dom” recordings, the space itself has an
audible quality, the specific character of which becomes more apparent by comparing
the two recordings. Harbours (1999–2007) is a collection of recordings from harbors in
Germany and Finland, exploring the sounds of gangways, tunnels, and docks.91
Lawrence English, a media artist and composer based in Australia, recorded
Antarctica (2010) at the Marambio and Esperanza bases. Even listening to the
recording from a sheltered space in comfortable weather, the relentlessness of the
recorded condition becomes successively more terrifying over the course of the track.
There is no respite, and the listener is out there in the wind and snow and cold with
English, “A small speck of organic dust in a howling storm.” In this recording, there is
hardly any other context heard than the storm. Patagonia (2010), on the other hand,
was recorded in relation to man-made objects that are clearly discernible: “Abandoned
buildings . . . quivering road signs, wailing fences and other objects brought into relief
with the wind.” These objects are the instruments, and the wind is their tireless and
terrifying player—even adversary.92
The French-Italian composer Luc Ferrari’s Presque rien ou le lever du jour au bord de
la mer (1967–70) was a historic and hugely influential step away from musique concrète,
in that there is no disguising of the original source material. Instead, it is edited to
clearly present the sounds heard in one day in the summer of 1968 in the town of
Vela Luka, located in what is now Croatia.93 The recording is edited, but its strands
are intact, and it sounds like a single active morning. Ferrari’s notes on the piece call
it a “Most faithful possible realistic restitution of a village of fishermen awakening.”94
Ferrari explains the thought and the title of the series:
These things, which I call “The Presque Riens” because they are lacking development
and completely static, because really almost nothing happens musically, are more
reproductions than productions: electroacoustic nature photographs—a beach
landscape in the morning mists, a winter day in the mountaintops.95
The series continued to preoccupy Ferrari for the rest of his life, and he consciously
drew in variables of subjectivity and memory in the later pieces in the series. But these
pieces are fundamentally focused on constructing narratives of place.
Cévennes (2013) is a double CD of field recordings made in the Cévennes mountain
range and the Parc National des Cévennes in France. These sounds were collected
by Marc and Olivier Namblard, two brothers who are both sound recordists and call
themselves “audio-naturalists and listening wanderers.” The Cévennes is the area they
would visit every summer throughout their childhood, and the sense of intimacy with
this territory is palpable. The individual tracks are identified by place, time of year, time
of day, and any species of animal or plant life that is audible. The listener is immersed
in whatever event has been described, whether it be the feeding of vultures (a track
that will stop most listeners in their tracks), burning off the weeds, the resonance of
water dripping into a cave, beetles gnawing into a cabin, or the “caress of tiny notes” of
Place and Time 247
The tape part is comprised of field recordings made in Vermont, “edited to create a
structure appropriate to each season.” The durations are set up in proportions to match
the durations of those seasons in Vermont, with a 6:5:10:3 ratio between summer, fall,
winter, and spring. This ratio gets at the reality of what happens, and also of what
residents feel as they live through the seasons, year after year.
“Summer” consists of cycles of sound textures (of air, water metal and earth)
repeating in abundant variety. “Autumn” consists of sounds that are transformed
gradually and whose qualities are expressed as timbre modulations. “Winter”
focuses upon the experience of time/duration in long, sustained sounds and
silences. “Spring” is expressed as a release of energy, through interaction of
rhythmic patterns.98
These characterizations are brilliantly suited to both a New England weather cycle and
a musical treatment. The four seasons in the score are laid out distinctly, each using a
different interplay of text, graphics, and traditional notation, and they do not suggest
an imitation of the recorded material, but an abstraction of its activity. The cycles and
interplays of textures of Goldstein’s conception of summer are apparent in both the
tape and instrumental parts of the recording. It is full of life.
“Autumn” has a completely different character, with the many transformations
taking place in a single direction. Leaves change color, turn to brown, fall off the tree.
There is no reversal of this motion. So too, the loudness of a passage goes from forte to
piano, and there is no return to loudness. The vibrato also goes from wide to normal.
The musicians take precedence over the tape in this section, enacting this decline.
Place and Time 249
Before making the score, in speculating about this section Goldstein journaled, “This
is what can be given to the instrumentalists and vocalists: things of such presence
that cannot be recorded on tape and various silences and nuances, of beginnings and
yieldings in between.”99
The performance instructions for “Winter” include the line, “sustained as varieties
of sound masses and silences.” Again, there is very little audible contribution from
the recorded material, with the exception of some long passages of aggressive wind
and quick footsteps in the snow. Winter is a long duration, filled with other long
expanses: ponds covered with ice, white skies, walkways and roads filled with snow
and slush.
The image of the brooks, taken from a map of the brooks in and around Sheffield,
Vermont forms most of the score and seems at least abstractly parallel in its significance
with the harmonic lattice.101 The brooks themselves are recorded, “Each brook its own
singing with nuances of density, texture, pitch levels, dynamic, etc.”102
place
time
( sounds )108
Werder prefers variants of the term “actualize” to those of “perform” for his work.
“A word like ‘actualization’ would allude more to a practice of working on situations
Place and Time 251
that are occurring to some extent by themselves, and where the ‘performer’ finds
herself intrinsically as part of a situation (and not as its creator).”109 He actualized this
piece every day throughout the month of September, 2009, from 8:55 p.m. until about
9:25 p.m.110 In this way he could diminish some variables, such as light, amount of
activity, and traffic. But for Werder, an actualization is not ultimately about the specific
activity of the place itself. “I’m not so much interested in discovering certain identities
of a place, but more in sensing that I actually interact in its infinity.”
Kahn chose a very different site in Zürich: the train station. He made a recording at
10 a.m. on each day of March, 2010. These recordings all carry the consistent sound of
the space, a noisy hum that seems monolithic, at least to an unaided ear. It is made up
of numerous components, but these are out of focus from Kahn’s vantage point. This
hum has waves of greater presence and sometimes recedes. What we hear specifically
are the sounds that project more clearly and the sounds that are close. People walk by,
sometimes in high heels; traces of conversation are heard, teenage girls laugh, dogs
are walked, toddlers’ voices and babies’ cries cut across the distance. The same child
seems to make several appearances, which is likely with a daily routine. Routines are
patterns, and these patterns have an audible effect. The March 6, 2010 track seems
oddly quiet, which makes sense on learning that it is a Saturday. A conversation starts
nearby, and the activity level seems to pick up in general. That background hum is also
much lessened on the Sunday. More sound can be heard in the distance. How far one
hears is not simply linked to location, but also to the amount of sonic interference.
Werder writes this of the compositional questions that preoccupied him at the time
of writing 20051:
How could I work the performance space in the score—the performance space
which had become so important, so present by the mere fact of a certain absence
of produced sounds by the performers?
And, I was looking for something like a “structural matter of fact” rather than
a “prescription for action.” Something that could be just there and occurring
regardless of any performance approach.
to the world that has true immediacy. It is taken on its own terms, without the effort
to influence or shape it.
Each place is intrinsic multiplicity and doesn’t need any intervention of ours.
So, I try to approach a place regarding a performance almost unnoticeably,
unimposingly. I think when performing I’m looking for a situation where for
a certain time something like “the world” would appear. Not one to look at or
listen to. Not one to project concepts onto. One to be part of, where in a chaotic
and infinite becoming something like a real sense of meeting and sharing would
merge. I remember having been so overwhelmed and moved by the mere fact of
finding myself in this great abundance of life on the shores of the Limmat River.
A diverse series of actualizations of this 20051 score was made as a project for the
Another Timbre website. All of the recordings and accompanying statements are
available there, and come from many different places—in fact, all over the world. Goh
Lee Kwang’s brief realization is almost silent, except for a short interval of typing in the
middle. Taku Unami’s is a single click in the midst of four otherwise silent seconds.111
Stefan Thut writes,
The bracketed word in the score [Klänge] led me to question whether there is a
possibility of “bracketing out sounds” in a given situation. . . . I started by leaving
my hometown and going to a place one kilometre away in order to establish a
distance from the sounds of the afternoon’s parade. Then to further bracket out the
sounds of the day I applied equalizing around predominant frequencies to let them
intermingle with the surroundings.112
This fresh take on the score invites a broader question about bracketing and its functions
in daily life. What are the brackets or buffers we set up in our own experiences?
A night’s sleep and the quality of it can affect the following morning and the rest of
the day. Having a certain time set aside, like Werder’s daily actualizations in September
2009 or Kahn’s in March 2010, provides another type of bracket. The time spent in
transit, thinking about listening, or thinking about the place and its qualities, sets up
and protects that listening experience.
Max Neuhaus writes about his Place series as “removing sound from time and
setting it, instead, in place.”113 But his permanent installations set up complex dynamics
with time and memory, from a micro scale of perception during a single visit to the
macro scale of how the installation shifts based on changes in its setting over the
decades of its existence.
These pieces use sounds so subtle that they go unnoticed until they disappear.
Neuhaus compares this experience to that of people conversing in a noisy café when
the coffee grinder is shut off, and “the space is suddenly enveloped in an aural vacuum.
What seems like a moment of complete silence occupies the café.”114 It is important
that the sound be made “almost plausible within the space,” so that it only is noticed
with attention.115
Place and Time 253
The play of time, memory, and space is more complicated in Three to One (1992).
A different sound color is projected into each of the three stories of the installation.
Passing up the stairway for the first time, the differences between the floors are
subtle but distinct. Returning down the stairs, aural memories begin to fuse the
distinctions into one differentiated whole.
Neuhaus further explains that each of these sounds mixes with outside sound in a
different way. As the city of Kassel develops, these outside sounds will change. The
listener is set in a shifting relationship with these three sound colors, which are in turn
shifting in relation to the life of the city.116 They are designed to be experienced more
than once. Neuhaus writes:
These moment works depend on a long term relationship in order to function; they
need to be lived in—a small shift on a regular basis throughout the day, that you
forget about, and then encounter again. They cannot be visited like an exhibition.117
City pieces
A surprising number of sound artists have drawn new pathways or created discernible
zones within a city that are themselves made of sound. Llorenç Barber is a Spanish
composer and sound artist whose City Concerts (1988–) are eruptions of sound
that emanate from its most broadly audible fixed instruments: church bells. “All of
a sudden, the city sounds, the city itself,” Barber explains. “The center of the event is
transferred from an idol or a star, to a physical fact . . . a fact of the memory.”118 Videos
of these events show residents of the city suddenly looking up, stopped in their tracks
by this profusion of metallic harmony. These are composed pieces, with ebbs and flows,
climaxes and silences, usually lasting about an hour and involving over 100 musicians.
They have taken place in over seventy European and American cities.119
In berliner bahn bells (2011), Hans W. Koch broadcasts live environmental sounds
from the Berlin Hauptbahnhof (central railway station) at the base of a carillon tower
and generates a real-time carillon score based on their pitch content. As he sums it up,
“the carillon plays a ‘piano reduction’ of berlin central’s sonic reality.”120 The carillon tower
and the Hauptbahnhof are close to one another, and Koch has used technology to draw
a sonic line between them, so the sounds of one are concurrently played by the other.121
To create the Tate Harmonic Bridge (2006) installation, the American sound
sculptor Bill Fontana installed accelerometers (vibration sensors) on the Millennium
Foot Bridge in London and spatialized these sounds throughout Turbine Hall in the
Tate Modern, as well as the main concourse of the nearby Southwark Tube station.
Fontana explains:
This bridge is alive with vibrations caused by the bridge’s responses to the collective
energy of footsteps, load and wind. This sonic world is inaudible to the ear when
walking over this bridge.
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Fontana’s conception of this work was that it would form a link between the footbridge
(and therefore also the other side of the Thames), the Tate Modern, and Southwark
Station. These sounds are incredibly beautiful, all the more so because they are
inaudible without such an intervention and they are not altered or enhanced in any
way except to tune to these other spaces.122 Other pieces in this Acoustical Visions
series include soundings of a steel factory in Linz, a historic tunnel in Rome, sand
dunes near Abu Dhabi, and an unrealized project with the Eiffel Tower. Fontana is
equally at home with using sound materials from either urban or natural sounds. In
fact, Fontana’s body of work so far seems focused on building bridges of sound between
natural and man-made, indoor and outdoor, old and new, distant and near (“hearing
as far as you can see”), mundane and artful. SOUND SCULPTURES THROUGH THE
GOLDEN GATE (1987) is a duet between the Golden Gate Bridge and the Farallon
Islands National Wildlife Refuge, which are 32 miles apart. These types of projects are
prevalent throughout his career. He writes:
Organ (2011) in St. Paul, Minnesota. Blackburn, a British composer and environmental
sound artist now based in the Twin Cities, writes:
There is a parallel city beneath our feet, connected by pipes and caverns, carrying
rainwater, electricity, (un-)sanitary waste, and utilities. In St. Paul, It has been carved
into the limestone rock for over a hundred years and extends for many miles.
6.3 Histories
Experimentalism is normally associated with the present and the future. But in the
sense in which it is being used in this book, it is not necessarily about edginess or being
in the vanguard, but about a relation, however speculative, to reality. That reality can
just as easily be placed in the past, especially when there are documents, recordings,
information, or artifacts that serve as reference points from which to reconstruct such
a history. Histories can be drawn, implied, imagined, or reimagined through sound.
door bells, death bells, church bells, bicycle bells, sleigh bells, railway crossing signals,
mine bells, school bells, cow bells.”131
The use of outmoded sound technologies can be effective in creating an audible
bridge to a previous era. Aleksander Kolkowski is a British violinist and sound artist
who has found a powerful way of evoking the past by using wax cylinder recording
technology, which was popular in the early years of the twentieth century, to record
performances in the early twenty-first century. The Phonographies Archive includes
fifty-eight recordings of about two minutes each, many of which are made by musicians
featured in this book.132 The most ironic of these recordings is of Jonathan Sterne reading
an excerpt from his book, MP3: The Meaning of a Format (2012). The recorded voice is
heard as inhabiting the past, rather than the relatively recent time of the recording in
June of 2012.133 The effect of these recording technologies on the music is a strange one.
Even though it is clearly illusory, there is a certain kind of validation that stems from
the idea that these recordings have “stood the test of time.” Someone decided to record
and preserve this performance. It’s not a cheap, digital form of documentation, but an
antique technology. The technology is at least as present a factor as the acoustics, and
transforms the type of attention paid to the performance.
Paul DeMarinis picks up on both the use of the phonograph and the study of
old objects in his series called The Edison Effect (1989–93), using laser beams to
play “ancient phonograph records.”134 The most speculative of these phonographs is
Fragments of Jericho, an “authentic recreation of what is probably the world’s most
ancient audio recording.”135 This information is said to be held in the grooves on the
surface of the vessel. Most of the other installations involve classic and favorite tunes
on phonographs, and are mediated in some way. In Al and Mary do the Waltz, Johann
Strauss’s Blue Danube Waltz issues from a wax cylinder, played by a laser beam that
shines through a bowl of goldfish. The goldfish “occasionally interrupt the beam to
produce uncomposed musical pauses.”136 A laser that emanates from a hypodermic
syringe plays Rhapsody in Blue. The score of Hitchcock’s Vertigo is inscribed on
dinner plates. Like Kolkowski, it is not DeMarinis’s intention to give the best possible
rendition. He is far more interested in the aspects of distortion inherent both in the
original documents and in their means of reproduction.
Each Edison Effect player is a meditation on some aspect of the relations among
music, memory and the passage of time. Our sense of time, memory, and belonging
have all been changed by the exact repetition implicit in mechanical recording.
The needle in the groove, no less than the needle in the vein, is one symbolic
emblem on our quixotic quest for the perfect moment of fulfillment. . . . The raw
and raucous noises of the record surface commingle with the sounds inscribed in
the groove, creating a havoc of misinterpreted intentions and benign accidents.137
Noé Cuéllar and Joseph Clayton Mills (known as the duo Partial) were participants in a
set of installations at a second-hand store in Chicago. During their residency, they mined
the basement for sounding objects. The three tracks of LL (2010–11) are presented in
order from most to least interference with these sounds. The final track, “a Single screw
Place and Time 257
of Flesh is all that pins the Soul,” is simply a recording of a nineteenth-century music
box that they found, “here allowed to speak with its own voice.” In this recording, the
music box mechanism is as audible as the melody, and seems perhaps more beautiful.
The second track, “Paul,” is a series of explorations of the objects found in the space.
These recordings were made in situ during our initial investigations of the acoustics
of the space, chiefly performed using materials that we discovered there. We spent
several nights improvising, uncovering sounds, experimenting with different
combinations and juxtapositions of timbres.
They write about the objects as if they have human qualities. They tried to “create a
kind of conversation between the different timbres and textures of the objects and to
draw out their ‘voices.’”138 Though not all of these objects were designed to sound in the
first place, they are invested with voices through these investigations. Like the work of
Kolkowski, DeMarinis, and Kubisch, Cuéllar and Mills have found ways to give voice
to the objects of the past.
I realized that the piano has a great ability to maintain its sound for a long time,
even if the surrounding walls collapse, or if it is in a damp environment. . . . Most
of them were in a dilapidated condition, but some of them still played. When I saw
the large concert grand in an abandoned auditorium, I was sure that the ravages
of time, and 27 years’ worth of water dripping on [an] instrument with an open
keyboard and no upper plate, would have claimed the piano for their own. To
my amazement the piano still played. . . . I found it interesting to gradually work
around all the instruments that I found and record each piano in each place. . . .
none of the recorded sounds have been modified, as I wanted to preserve as much
as possible of their reality.139
Cílková’s pieces are responsive to the specific historical locations, and not just to their
general conditions. Echoes of nursery remain inside me takes place in an abandoned
nursery school, and she uses diatonic melodies and occasional clusters that toddlers
might have reached up to play on the keys. In Piano in Apartment I, played on the
best preserved of the pianos, the sound of abandonment carries, both in the tuning
and in the uneven textures of the chords. “The hammers were soaked with water and
catching between the strings, because someone had left the window open.”140 In House
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of Art she plays only the strings, since the hammers were all removed, and in Torsos of
non-playing pianos she searches for sounds from pianos that no longer function at all
as intended. As one of the longest tracks, this piece has a richness of texture despite the
handicaps of the instrument.
Jakob Kirkegaard has taken a different approach to the Chernobyl Zone of Exclusion
with his AION project. Referencing Alvin Lucier’s I am sitting in a room (1970), he
recorded the silence within each of four spaces, playing it back into the room and
letting the overtones build up. Where Lucier’s piece used the sound of his spoken voice
as material, Kirkegaard’s uses the silence (or at least lack of human sound) of each
space—a church, an auditorium, a pool, a gym. That silence is all the more significant
because these spaces were highly populated public places that were immediately
evacuated on April 26, 1986, when the nuclear accident occurred. “By listening to the
silence of four radiating spaces he aims to unlock a fragment of the time existing inside
the zone.”141 For those who were there, it may tap into a memory. For those who were
not, the video of this project creates a powerful document of a historical disaster and
its aftermath.
The construction of Kirkegaard’s piece refers to Alvin Lucier’s I am sitting in a room
(1969), but his attention is directed very differently. While Lucier’s piece deals with the
effect of acoustics on recorded speech, AION interrogates the effect of a historical event
and its aftermath on the sound of a space. Initially, there is the silence of abandonment.
These are no longer occupied spaces. At one time these spaces were built and then
used, and have particular properties and acoustics as a result. The swimming pool is
partially filled with water, and water is dripping into it at the time of the recording. This
activity grows with each iteration as the water keeps on dripping, and the accumulation
of drops reverberates, sounding out the space. The video image is treated similarly to
the sound, and the sunlight gradually whitens every part of the room it hits, until the
image is almost completely white. The mirroring of sonic and visual processes also
mirrors the gradual decay of these spaces.
Chris Watson’s historical approach is more overtly speculative, drawing on
multidisciplinary scholarship but ultimately imagining and realizing entire scenes for
each of the seasons. The place is Holy Island, in Northumberland in the United Kingdom,
and these scenes are imagined, as the album title states, as taking place In St. Cuthbert’s
Time: A 7th Century Soundscape of Lindisfarne (2013). More particularly, the focus is on
the setting in which Eadfrith created his masterpiece, the Lindisfarne Gospels.
This production aims to reflect upon the daily and seasonal aspects of the evolving
variety of ambient sounds that accompanied life and work during that period of
exceptional thought and creativity.142
The research for this sound work was done in collaboration with archaeologists,
medieval scholars, and anthropologists who were in residence with Watson at Durham
University’s Institute of Advanced Study. The information they relayed to Watson
factors into his reconstruction of the sonic life of the island around 700 A.D., season
by season. The concentration of natural sounds is reflective of a time in which natural
Place and Time 259
sound and activity were unimpeded by human technology. There are no planes
overhead, sirens, or traffic. Though the recording only engages the sense of hearing, it
excites the imagination of all the senses. The listener is placed in that island landscape,
tasting the salt air and feeling the cool wind off the water in the company of cows,
birds, insects, seals, and the occasional human bell-ringer.143
While the previous examples are efforts to capture aspects of the past, Mazen
Kerbaj recorded Starry Night in Beirut during an actual wartime situation, improvising
on his trumpet as Israeli bombs were exploding nearby. From the difficult technical
conditions of the wartime situation, he enlisted help from the readers of his blog to
make an excerpt of the sound recording available.144 Kerbaj is a cartoonist as well as
an improviser, and around this time was actively posting drawings and cartoons in
response to the wartime situation. He replied in this way to some of the feedback he got:
I was asked twice so far: “don’t you think that your piece of music and bombs is of
a bad taste?
i answered twice: “do you think that it is of a good taste to throw a bomb on a
bus with civilians escaping their village?”
it is incredible that some people, listening to this piece in their living room in
london or in paris, ask themselves if they like it or not.145
Kerbaj engaged with the sounds of the bombs as harsh and familiar realities of life. The
night of July 16–17, 2006 was one of many consecutive virtually sleepless nights. On
that night he chose to face the present reality of his experience as a musician.146
I have found from past experience that my music is the strongest when I perform
in a space which has its own memories—at a historic building, abandoned factory,
old theater, even a street corner. It’s a strange ritual. I am trying to both extract and
abstract the essence of memory by playing my own field recordings, so to speak
my personal memories, at a location that is saturated with its own memories. The
result is invisible but one can feel live memories awaking sleeping memories.147
The energy of a place with a rich history offers a new perspective on the resonance of
his own history, as documented in the sounds of places he has been. He talks about his
search for performance locations as “an archaeological dig for the memory spots of a
city,”148 and finds these scouted locations far more interesting than any traditional venue.
260 Experimental Music Since 1970
what remains is the performed material that fits over this original notated scaffold of
the Guami clip. Each instrumental category (strings, winds, vibraphone, voice) is given
unique instructions on how to interact with the score. The sustained tones and the
smoothing of the glitches and loops of the CD part bring a return to lyricism, opening
up the harmonies of the original clip.154
In Broken Light (1991–92), the recorded material (string music of Corelli, Locatelli,
and Torelli) is treated in two ways. Collins manipulates the CD player, “isolating and
freezing short loops of recorded music. As it slowly steps from one ‘skipping groove’ to
the next, the lush contrapuntal texture of the concerto grosso is suspended in harmonic
blocks.” The second overlay is a guided improvisation of the string quartet. Much
of this guidance is a description of what is occurring in the recorded part. Beyond that,
the musicians are given suggestions of variations, avoiding any literal attempt to match
the recording. The string parts are separate, painted on the surface of the material
emitted by the malfunctioning CD.155
Paul Whitty has an interest in “re-organisation and re-categorisation of found
materials.”156 stop me if you think that you’ve heard this one before (2015) relates
repertoire to the particular history of each of the keyboard instruments that are
gathered for its performance.
Each performance task is related to a single page of one of these scores. One such event
is to “Perform every event on the page using one of the following methods”:
Begin with the highest pitch and end with the lowest pitch.
Begin with the lowest pitch and end with the highest pitch.
Begin with the pitch with the highest number of incidences on the page and
end with the pitch—or pitches with the lowest number of incidences on the page.
Begin with the pitch—or pitches—with the longest duration and end with the
pitch—or pitches—with the shortest duration.157
Winterreise (2013), Schubert’s entire Winterreise cycle is alphabetized, word by word and
chord by chord, with the repetitions of each word filling a measure. Aacccino (2012) is
“an ordered arrangement of the sonorities of Bach’s Ciaccona.” Two symphonic surveys
are done, one being A Chronological Survey of Haydn’s Symphonic Opening Sonorities
(2013). The timpani parts of all of the movements of all of Bruckner’s symphonies are
played simultaneously by thirty-five players in Bruckner’s Symphonic Timpani (2013).
Other pieces include certain elements based on identifiable properties. At C (2015) is
“Every Middle C from Tristan und Isolde.” The second example is the All Tetrads in The
Art of the Fugue (2013). Then there is an apparently simple (yet consequential) act of
erasure in Beethoven op. 131 mvt 1 Without Rests (2014). The instruments quickly go
out of their intended alignment. These works are treated methodically, but their results
are completely unintended by their original composers.158
The Russian composer Sergei Zagny went through the entire score of Tchaikovsky’s
Swan Lake with the goal of maximally preserving it “while stripping out all the
excessive emotion and overblown sentimentality we now find so embarrassing.” Some
sections of Fragments from Swan Lake (2003) are intact, apart from the reduction
of the instrumental forces from orchestra to chamber ensemble. “The absence of
modifications renders particularly acute the problem of authorship and the associated
problem of novelty, both of which are of fundamental importance in relation to the
present work.”159 The removal of sentimentality seems ironic, especially on the reflection
that the desire to preserve or “fix” the piece might be an act of sentimentality in itself.
This music is so familiar that an experienced listener can remember its excesses even as
they are omitted. The question of judgment lurks during the listening process. Did that
entire section need to come out? Isn’t this part I’m hearing a little syrupy too?
Where Zagny tries to erase such special moments, the Canadian composer
Cassandra Miller seeks them out and dives into them. “Her work,” writes James Weeks,
“is about the way we make these objects our own, about how we love things and thereby
change both ourselves and them.”160 Miller explains:
I suppose I’m curious about things that move me, and the process in my brain of
then identifying personally with these things, as if my very personhood is built out
of the things that have touched me in my life. . . . I’m moved by something I hear,
and then I think, hot damn, gotta make me a piece about that. And usually there’s
something about the fact of identification that I don’t understand, something in
there that doesn’t sit right, or that piques my curiosity.161
Her material is not written music, but recorded performances derived from a wide
range of sources, among which are 1990s American popular culture, traditional music
of Mozambique, bird song, and Italian bel canto opera. There is no traceable logic or
pattern among these sources other than the sheer range of diffusion. The understanding
of what moves any of us and why it moves us is elusive, and Miller’s project is an
ongoing investigation of that mystery.
Her solo violin work called For Mira (2012) is an exploration of the instabilities
of Kurt Cobain’s characteristic vocal delivery in the last track of Nirvana’s MTV
Place and Time 263
Unplugged performance of November 18, 1993 that has been called a “hot-tempered,
quick-burning little jewel of a composition”162 The violin takes on the twists and turns
of the voice, always falling back on itself as if every advance takes many attempts—
hitting the wall of a maze many times and in many different ways before finding a way
to the next corridor.
Miller was “drawn to and comforted by”163 a sound clip of an mbira player from
Mozambique that she had heard two decades earlier and rediscovered.164 In the
process of making Philip the wanderer (2012), she transcribed the clip and focused
in particular on the specific deviations of rhythm. One minute and eighteen seconds
of recorded material becomes an abundant three-movement work that lasts sixteen
minutes. Miller says of the piece, “I amplified some things, thinned other sections etc.,
and I found I was carving out the shape of some kind of imaginary story.” This story
is even narrated through comments in the score, and the musical figures themselves
become characters:
She presents the music in personified form because that is how she experienced it,
and her compositional process is an extrapolation of that experience. Her task, as she
discovered it, was “to root around until I found myself somewhere in the material that
already existed.”165
seconds of sound followed by six seconds of silence. Performances have taken place in
various parts of Europe, as well as the United States, Australia, Latin America, and Asia.
To date, Werder has listed performances up through page 800 of the score.168 When
I heard pages 647–52 in New York, I had the sense that I was embedded in something
with vast dimensions. There is no stated ideology, but there is a continuity. Michael
Pisaro, who has participated in dozens of performances over the years, reflects:
The piece gathers momentum and context when one hears performances by
different people in different locations at different times. It is modular, and ongoing
in structure and so (for the time being) any one performance is always somewhat
incomplete.169
The performer series (1999–) follows a similar model, but each version has a stated
number of performers, ranging from one to nine.171
Marcus Kaiser is a composer, cellist, and visual artist who is, like Werder, part of
the Wandelweiser collective. In his interdisciplinary Unterholtz (2006–) series (part of
the overarching opernfraktal project), each previous version of the piece is embedded
in the new version, both visually and aurally. In what Kaiser calls a “jungle thicket,” the
senses are flooded with accumulation on many planes. The audio and video recordings
of the previous versions of the work are processed into sequences that play concurrently
with each new performance.172 As he explains it:
Other factors are equally important in establishing the internal histories of Unterholtz. It
has been an ongoing project for nearly ten years so far. There are fourteen documented
Place and Time 265
instances of the work, each building on the last. The scores are “a growing part of the
whole,” to be played only in part, and they are supplemented by other scores that Kaiser
calls “ways through the whole thing.”174 In addition to these layers within the live
performance, there are correspondences at certain times with the previous versions
that are present in the space. These layers of activity at a given moment within the
work speak to each other. The score is played with a stopwatch, in part, so that these
moments can be overlaid.
Unterholtz is usually performed within the context of an installation. It is difficult
to tease this project apart from many of his other projects. Spinozawucherung (2015)
is a part of Unterholtz and vice versa. Kaiser lived in this installation for the month of
February 2015, and exhibited several other pieces too. In Opernfraktal 21 Tage (2003),
areas were set up for various purposes. Visitors were invited to make tea in the kitchen,
work at a table, or rest in one of the cubes. The musical performances occur on a
cyclical basis within these installations, incorporating material from previous concerts.
By living in the space, and by inviting others to inhabit it for periods of time beyond
that of a formal musical performance, Kaiser embeds a sense of real life into the
installation that sits differently in the memory. The sense of place established through
the architecture of the installation sets this experience apart from the everyday,
while presenting a viable alternative to the everyday through the provision of basic
comforts.175
As with the Werder projects, someone who experiences Kaiser’s work in person is
likely to feel like part of a larger project—all the more so since the sounds and images
of the time and place are being captured and will likely include their presence in the
next iteration.
Jakob Ullmann’s voice books and FIRE 3 (2004–05) is different from Kaiser’s and
Werder’s projects in that it does not require an accumulation of performances across
time. Instead, it constructs a history in a single performance that spans vast distances
266 Experimental Music Since 1970
of time, space, and experience. Multiple ancient religious texts are brought together in
a single performance and made to understand each other through sound.
Voice, books and FIRE is the result of my reflections about the relationships between
music and language: language as sound and language as text, the numerous
relationships between texts of different cultural and religious traditions, between
the work of the human spirit in the present and in the past and the questions
arising from the problem of understanding these different traditions, languages
and texts and representing them in a present, which has lost knowledge about
substantial parts, even of its own tradition and history. 176
The score is made up of fourteen separate pages that can be presented in any order. Each
page is a collage of manuscripts drawn from many religious traditions. The preparation
process for the singers is lengthy, in that it involves learning how to pronounce texts
from numerous alphabets and languages, including Aramaic, Armenian, Coptic,
Georgian, Greek, Latin, and Russian.177 Once this preparation is done, however, the
interpretation is fairly free.
The thrust behind the work is that these texts should speak to one another. As
they are overlaid on the page, each with its own distinct alphabet, text, and overall
appearance, the singers overlay their voices in what Ullmann calls “a situation of living
polyphony.” These texts are reproduced as faithfully as possible, both as image and as
sound, and they are enlivened and combined without violence or dissent.
Though much of the source material is ancient, the entire Voice, Books and FIRE
series is a utopian reimagining of the twentieth century on a foundation of mutual
respect—something that has historically been elusive among religious traditions from
ancient times through to the present. The piece itself is a history in which these things
coexist.
Place and Time 267
Figure 6.9 Jakob Ullmann: voice, books and FIRE 3, material for the voices, graphic
page 10-d3
© Jakob Ullmann
Figure 6.10 Jakob Ullmann: voice, books and FIRE 3, material for the voices, graphic
page 11-ot
© Jakob Ullmann
268 Experimental Music Since 1970
Last but not least, the piece is the result of the impression that I—as an East-German
artist—have a special obligation to remember not only my numerous colleagues
who are victims of the horrors of the last century, the “century of wolves,” but
also all the cultural, spiritual and religious traditions of Eastern and South-eastern
Europe which have been alienated and suppressed, persecuted and even destroyed
in the so-called “Christian occident,” not only for decades but for centuries.
So this piece is dedicated to the memory of all the victims who have been
upholders and witnesses of these forgotten and dismissed traditions and to these
traditions themselves.178
Ullmann’s project also draws from a different tradition, and one of which he is fully a
part: the experimental tradition, in particular “greater freedoms in the interpretation
of scores and liberated relationships between composers and musicians.”179
Ullmann’s focus is on the ancient, on respect among peoples, and on the allowance of
freedom to the thoughtful performer. His use of the freedoms of experimental practice in
this work is a suggested solution to an age-old problem. The discipline and focus required
in the preparation of the piece, in combination with the evocations of coexistence in each
page of the score, creates a situation that draws on the strengths of tradition without their
limitations, and suggests a path out of historical and ongoing conflicts.
Westerkamp who made “occasional diversions into the ether of the avant-garde for
unsuspecting, strange-starved Irish audiences.”182 Nick Roth writes a brief biography of
Ultan O’Farrell, a Uilleann piper who was a purported influence on Pauline Oliveros.
His drones were so long that the recordist ran out of wax cylinders in trying to
document a performance.183
Walshe is active not only as a composer but also as a vocalist, and this interest is
betrayed in the character of Róisín Madigan O’Reilly, who created an Irish translation of
Kurt Schwitters’ seminal sound poem, Ursonate (1922–32).184 Quite a patriot, O’Reilly
sustained two different projects that related Irish vowel sounds to the sounds of the
wind, the sea, and radio waves.185 Billie Hennessy’s “meandering tonal sing-voice” Scripts
are compared to the work of Satie for their “lack of standard compositional concerns.”186
Other composers in this collective (retroactively) anticipate further musical
developments of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, including binaural beats
and small intervals (Eyleif Mullen-White), free improvisation and automatic music-
making (Andrew Hunt), and experimental musical instrument building (the Ó Laoire
twins).187 Cage’s chance procedures, especially as manifested in the Freeman Etudes, are
anticipated by Caoimhín Breathnach’s scores that are made of tracings of constellations
and crystallographic forms.188
These pieces operate as a series of speculations. What would it be like to have
had such a tradition? What conditions would have been optimal for these sound
explorations? What might have occurred that has gone undocumented? Equally
importantly, how do these speculations play out as sound? The implementation of
scores and performances of these works has been rigorous, and is a central component
of Walshe’s creative work.
Anthropologies imaginaires (2014) is a mockumentary created primarily by composer
and vocalist Gabriel Dharmoo that alternately invents and reimagines vocal traditions.
Even the most Western of traditions, such as twelve-tone music and conducted choral
singing (“hypnotized choirs”), are presented by Dharmoo with primitivistic flair, and
discussed by fictional experts through a lens of otherness as strange cultural artifacts. It
is a lively performance that is fascinating and ridiculous, cringeworthy and compelling
all at once, taking up numerous issues, among which Dharmoo lists “post-colonialism,
post-exoticism, cultural extinction, globalization, normalized racism and cultural
appropriation in an ambiguous, humorous and disturbing way.”189
Sr Anselme O’Ceallaig is another exponent of Jennifer Walshe’s invented Irish
tradition, and her biography connects with Hildegard von Bingen, while her
musical preoccupations draw a connection of sorts between the sustained works
of Éliane Radigue and Eva-Maria Houben. She thought of her organ compositions
as contemplative prayers. These Virtues are comprised of drones, and “focus on
incremental changes in organ stops.”190
These small, gradual shifts are anticipated by another fictional composer: the
Wandelweiser antecedent Viola Torros. Created by Johnny Chang and Catherine
Lamb, she was surrounded by philosophers and poets, and traveled vast distances in
search of the “unknown.” This word “unknown” recurs throughout her biography, in
reference to her birth year, the meaning of syllables found in one of her fragments,191
and the makers of the bowed instruments for which she composed. An air of mystery
270 Experimental Music Since 1970
surrounds her life as well as her work. She “must have had a very exciting life, but she
never seemed to find interest in creating a narrative to describe any of the events she
experienced or witnessed.” The work itself has been discovered and reconstructed from
fragments and remnants.
One belief is that these “fragments” are actually purposeful and to be left as
they are. Other theories are that she intended . . . the fragments to be installed
(performed) across large distances. Still other theories are that the fragments
should be interpreted as audible shadings between parts.
The singers in Monk’s work draw from their own personalities and experiences
in shaping their characters. Each voice and each character is unique, and every
Place and Time 271
characterization is separately developed for the opera and changes through successive
performances. “The performers are the life of the script. They inhabit the work. Ideally,
the play is being written as though it were alive.”197 In her non-theatrical work, this
emphasis on the uniqueness of individual voices holds equally true. She says:
I think the voice is a wonderful instrument for dealing with emotion that we don’t
have words for. It can get between the emotions that we can catalogue. It has so
much nuance and yet a very direct connection to the center of each person.198
In relation to Dolmen Music (1980–81) she writes, “My main concerns in the group
music have been to work with the unique quality of each voice and to play with the
ensemble possibilities of unison, texture, counterpoint, weaving, etc.”199
The voice is the most human of instruments, and for Monk it is crucial that the
specific nature of each performer is manifested, so that very humanity is maximally
present. Even focusing on Dolmen Music album alone, the range of emotion and
technique in these vocal performances is staggering, from the ritualistic chanting of
“Overture and Men’s Conclave” to the reckless abandon and ululations of “Travelling,”
to the rich and dark tones of “Biography” that seem to evoke a greater depth of
experience with every repetition.
At the end of Atlas (1991), the main character, Alexandra Daniels, has traveled the
world and found that her entire expedition has been “the inner journey of a soul.”200 In
the penultimate scene, “Earth Seen From Above,” she experiences both timelessness
and placelessness. In “Madwoman’s Vision” in Book of Days (1988), Monk travels
through an astonishing range of vocal expression as the madwoman herself travels
from medieval to modern times and back and reels under the intensity of her visions.
“Book of Days,” writes Monk, “is very much about the transparency and relativity
of time—the sense that you can see one period through another and the sensation
that everything could be happening concurrently. That history is a thought, eternity
is now.”201
That sense of now-ness is related to presence, feeling, and emotion. Monk has listed
another of her goals, to create
An art that reaches toward emotion we have no words for, that we barely
remember—an art that affirms the world of feeling in a time and society where
feelings are in danger of being eliminated.202
It is not so much the particular vocal techniques as it is her approach to creating and
performing the work that keys into this level of emotional depth. Free of language but
full of multiple experiences and individualities—those of all of the artists involved—
she employs the voice as a means of expression that is both primordial and up to date
because of its essential timelessness. Monk writes of the voice as “a tool for discovering,
activating, remembering, uncovering, demonstrating primordial/prelogical conscious-
ness.”203 Why is it necessary to reimagine history, to evoke archetypes and universalities
in order to arrive at such a place? Monk says, “I think we’re living in a society that is not
272 Experimental Music Since 1970
really that interested in emotion. . . . So in a way you have to go outside it a bit to have
the human memory of feeling.”204
Another composer who is interested in the productive recovery of memory is Maria
de Alvear. Her long stays with aboriginal people on several continents have been part
of her attempt to grasp elusive histories, and she cites the area her family came from
near Frankfurt, Germany, as an important influence, in that many prehistoric fossils
have been found there. She creates her music through automatic writing processes,
having found a “non-thinking state” distant from constraint, society, and emotion that
enables her to write “for pure love.” Her first piece written in this way is for solo piano,
and is named accordingly: En amor duro (1991). As Raoul Mörchen writes:
Large, white sheets of paper in oblong format, staves that end nowhere and have
no dividing bar lines. On the sheets are dots and lines, a few notes, obviously
written down in a hurry. “They look so helpless you could almost think a five-
year-old had written them, someone who can’t write music,” Maria de Alvear says
of these scores. “But, of course, I did know how to write music. I just made a clean
sweep.”205
This clean sweep of formalities and presentation was made to enable something
else to come forth. She has continued in this line. World (1996) is a “ceremony for
two pianists and orchestra” based on open musical structures that de Alvear says is
about “the recovery of ancient knowledge.”206 Like most of her works, it has ritualistic
qualities, and provides a wide swath of time and musical space for contemplation of
these subjects. Reinier van Houdt writes, “To me, MARIA DE ALVEAR composes
like a natural phenomenon: guided not as much by the coming and going of ideas and
emotions, nor addressing them, but like a law of nature impassively displaying a sort
of automatic writing that moves the body and courses through the psyche, ultimately
damanding [sic] full awareness.”207 Her project has been a continual exploration of
approaches to sound that provide a venue for this awareness.
To these composers, the recovery of lost histories is not solely brought about through
knowledge; it is also an act of imagination. Whether or not the stories and images
made by these composers connect to objective historical truths, they are reflections on
what is felt to be missing, and to an appreciable degree they succeed in filling that void.
Notes
1 Emeka Ogboh, “Verbal Maps_Obalende,” SoundCloud track, 2:14, posted by
“Lagos Soundscape,” 2012, https://soundcloud.com/lagos-soundscape/verbal-
maps_obalende, and “Verbal Maps_Ojuelegba,” SoundCloud track, 2:21, posted by
“Lagos Soundscape,” 2012, https://soundcloud.com/lagos-soundscape/verbal-maps_
ojuelegba. Ogboh’s main site is http://www.14thmay.com.
2 Ogboh, “Lagos by Bus III,” SoundCloud track, 8:10, posted by “Lagos Soundscape,”
2014, https://soundcloud.com/lagos-soundscape/lagos-by-bus-iii.
Place and Time 273
33 Ibid., 4, 205.
34 David Dunn, “Acoustic Ecology and the Experimental Music Tradition,” http://
www.newmusicbox.org/articles/Acoustic-Ecology-and-the-Experimental-Music-
Tradition.
35 Schafer, Soundscape, 206.
36 Max Neuhaus, “Sirens,” 1993, http://www.max-neuhaus.info/soundworks/vectors/
invention/sirens/Sirens.pdf, 1.
37 Ibid., 1.
38 Ibid., 4.
39 Ibid., 8.
40 Ibid., 2.
41 Ibid., 6.
42 Ibid., 10.
43 Hildegard Westerkamp, “Soundwalking,” http://www.sfu.ca/~westerka/writings%20
page/articles%20pages/soundwalking.html.
44 Ibid.
45 Westerkamp, “Soundwalking as Ecological Practice,” http://www.sfu.ca/~westerka/
writings%20page/articles%20pages/soundasecology2.html.
46 Ibid.
47 Westerkamp, Transformations, Empreintes DIGITALes, IMED 1031, compact disc,
http://www.electrocd.com/en/cat/imed_1031.
48 Saunders and Lely, Word Events, 305.
49 “‘Echo Piece’ by Michael Parsons, Curated by Mathieu Copeland in Canary Wharf,”
June 21, 2009, http://centrefortheaestheticrevolution.blogspot.com/2009/06/echo-
piece-by-michael-parsons-curated.html. Images of the walk are shown at http://
meredithgunderson.com/michael-parsons-%E2%80%94%C2%A0echo-piece.
50 Elena Biserna, “Walking from Scores,” http://www.xing.it/opera/803/walking_from_
scores.
51 Francesco Gagliardi, Alternative Piece (Belfast 2008), http://www.gdouglasbarrett.
com/performing_the_city/Alternative_Piece_(Belfast_2008).pdf.
52 Jennie Gottschalk, “Craig Shepard interview—On Foot: Brooklyn,” http://www.
soundexpanse.com/craig-shepard-interview-on-foot-brooklyn.
53 Yolande Harris, “Displaced Sound Walks,” http://yolandeharris.net/?nk_
work=displaced-sound-walks.
54 “Displaced Sound Walks,” on project wiki, accessed January 19, 2015, http://wiki.
dxarts.washington.edu/groups/general/wiki/2a9c1/Displaced_Sound_Walks_.html,
site discontinued.
55 Harris, “Displaced Sound Walks.”
56 Viv Corringham, “Shadow-walks,” http://vivcorringham.org/shadow-walks.
57 Corringham, “audio,” http://vivcorringham.org/audio.
58 David Helbich, Scores Kortrijk Tracks: An Experimental Audio
Guide for the City of Kortrijk, 2013, https://docs.google.com/file/
d/0B9MqpNDDFli0R09PbjVCSmR5YTQ/edit.
59 “Playing with your ears,” May 11, 2013, https://resonancenetwork.wordpress.
com/2013/05/11/playing-with-your-ears.
60 Chris Kennedy, “Akio Suzuki: Stop and Listen to the World,” Musicworks 115, Spring
2013, https://www.musicworks.ca/featured-article/featured-article/akio-suzuki.
Place and Time 275
109 Werder, 20051, Winds Measure, wm28, 2012, 8 compact discs. Liner notes.
110 Werder, “2005/1,” http://placetime.blogspot.com.
111 “‘2005/1’ by Manfred Werder,” May 2013, http://www.anothertimbre.com/
werder2005(1).html.
112 “2005/1: Stefan Thut,” http://www.anothertimbre.com/thut2005.html.
113 Max Neuhaus, “Place,” http://www.max-neuhaus.info/soundworks/vectors/place.
114 Neuhaus, “Timepieces,” http://www.max-neuhaus.info/openforms/timepieces.
115 Neuhaus, “Notes on Place and Moment,” http://www.max-neuhaus.info/
soundworks/vectors/place/notes.
116 Neuhaus, “Three To One,” http://www.max-neuhaus.info/images/ThreeToOne.gif.
117 Neuhaus, “Notes on Place and Moment.”
118 “The Music of the Elements—Llorenç Barber,” YouTube video, 3:09, posted by
“sonoraestudios,” May 20, 2010, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N8J_iBA_YBA.
119 For more details about Llorenç’s projects, see http://www.furious.com/perfect/
llorencbarber.html. Some excerpts of the city concerts are at https://www.
youtube.com/watch?v=TgZF6KBiBcQ [Liverpool] and https://www.youtube.
com/watch?v=N8J_iBA_YBA (Strasbourg), and a full concert in Alba de Tormes
(near Salamanca, Spain) is currently available at https://www.youtube.com/
watch?v=fTrMRsdtuGo. Also see Constructing Urban Space with Sounds and Music
(Surrey: Ashgate, 2014).
120 hans w. koch, “Berlin Bahn Bells,” July 2011, http://www.hans-w-koch.net/
performances/bbb.html.
121 See “View (Carillon),” YouTube video, 7:10, posted by “Johnnyecho,” July 10,
2011, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wJYhpKht6N4 for an excerpt of this
performance.
122 See Bill Fontana, “Acoustical Visions,” http://www.resoundings.org/Pages/
Acoustical_Visions_Portfolio.html and http://resoundings.org/Pages/Harmonic_
Bridge1.htm.
123 See Fontana, “The Environment as a Musical Resource,” http://resoundings.org/
Pages/musical%20resource.html for much more detail on all a vast array of relevant
works.
124 “Max Neuhaus: Time Piece Graz,” http://www.museum-joanneum.at/en/kunsthaus-
graz/about-us/architecture/time-piece-graz.
125 “Sound Works,” http://www.max-neuhaus.info/soundworks/list and “Drawing:
Times Square, 1992,” http://www.max-neuhaus.info/images/TimesSquare.gif.
See also Max Neuhaus, Times Square, Time Piece Beacon (New York: Dia Art
Foundation, 2009).
126 “Philip Blackburn’s Sewer Pipe Organ,” YouTube video, 6:22, posted by “Philip
Blackburn, September 24, 2011, https://youtu.be/5o7WHeo9fVU. See also
“SewerOrgan Mvt1,” Soundcloud track, 17:43, posted by “Innova Recordings,” 2011,
https://soundcloud.com/innovadotmu/sewerorgan-mvt1/s-Uc5wI, to compare this
sound quality to the sound of the first movement before it is sent through the drain
network.
127 “Philip Blackburn’s Duluth Harbor Serenade,” YouTube video, 8:35, posted by “Philip
Blackburn,” September 6, 2011, https://youtu.be/gTBhM5bnIKU.
128 Christina Kubisch, KlangRaumLichtZeit: Arbeiten von 1980 bis 2000 (Heidelberg:
Kehrer, 2000), 26.
278 Experimental Music Since 1970
160 James Weeks, “Along the Grain: The Music of Cassandra Miller,” Tempo 68, no. 269
(2014): 53.
161 Ibid., 59–60.
162 Mira Benjamin, “Documentation//Cassandra Miller: For Mira,” October 18, 2013,
http://nunord.net/wp/cassandra-miller-for-mira.
163 Weeks, “Along the Grain,” 59.
164 “Mandowa II,” Southern Mozambique: Portuguese East Africa 1943, '49, '54, '55, '57,
'63, SWP Records, SWP021, 2003, compact disc.
165 Cassandra Miller, “Philip the Wanderer,” 2013, https://cassandramiller.wordpress.
com/2013/08/06/philip-the-wanderer. Miller, Philip the Wanderer (unpublished
score, 2012).
166 “Klangjahre,” http://www.aslsp.org/de/klangjahre.html.
167 ORGAN2ASLSP, http://www.aslsp.org/de. Also see Daniel J. Wakin, “John Cage’s
Long Music Composition in Germany Changes a Note,” New York Times, May 6,
2006, http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/06/arts/music/06chor.html?_r=0.
168 Stück 1998, http://stuck1998.blogspot.com.
169 Michael Pisaro, comment on “Manfred Werder—Stück 1998 Seiten 624–626 (Skiti),”
January 31, 2011, http://olewnick.blogspot.com/2011/01/manfred-werder-stuck-
1998-seiten-624.html.
170 Brian Olewnick, “Manfred Werder—Stück 1998,” http://olewnick.blogspot.
com/2011/01/manfred-werder-stuck-1998-seiten-624.html.
171 Performer Series (1999-), http://performerseries.blogspot.com.
172 Marcus Kaiser, “projektbeschreibung, ‘UNTERHOLZ’,” http://www.opernfraktal.
de/_unterholz/text.html. Also see http://www.opernfraktal.de/_unterholz/video.
html.
173 Kaiser, e-mail to author, October 2015.
174 Kaiser, e-mail to author, February 2015.
175 Burkhard Schlothauer, “MUSIK—ZEIT—LEBEN—RAUM,” http://www.
wandelweiser.de/_burkhard-schlothauer/texts.html#Burkh.
176 Ibid.
177 Jakob Ullmann, Voice, Books and Fire 3, Edition RZ Ed. RZ 2005, 2008, compact
disc. Liner notes.
178 Ibid.
179 Ibid.
180 Jennifer Walshe, ed., Historical Documents of the Irish Avant-Garde (Dublin:
Aisteach Foundation, 2015), 15, 121–22, 124–25. Also see https://soundcloud.
com/migro/08-historical-documents-of-the for four very different examples of the
Guinness Dadaists’ aural documentations.
181 Walshe, Historical Documents, xi.
182 Ibid., 3–5.
183 Ibid., 131.
184 Ibid. Translation is documented on p. 57.
185 Ibid., 44–45.
186 Ibid., 103.
187 Ibid., 102, 110–11, 134. See two versions of “The Death Of King Ri Ra,” at https://
soundcloud.com/migro/03-the-death-of-king-ri-ra-1 and https://soundcloud.com/
migro/03-the-death-of-king-ri-ra.
280 Experimental Music Since 1970
188 Walshe, Historical Documents, 105–09 and “Song Roll 5,” https://soundcloud.com/
migro/05-song-roll-5-1?in=migro/sets/historical-documents-of-the-irish-avant-
garde-album-sampler.
189 Gabriel Dharmoo, “Anthropologies Imaginary (Excerpts),” Vimeo video, 7:23,
https://vimeo.com/105009513.
190 Walshe, Historical Documents, 116.
191 See “Viola Torros: Vocal Fragments (1),” https://soundcloud.com/johnnychchang/
viola-torros-vocal-fragments1?in=johnnychchang/sets/viola-torros.
192 See “Viola Torros,” https://soundcloud.com/johnnychchang/sets/viola-torros and
“The Music of Torros,” http://www.wandelweiser.de/_viola-torros/index.html#THE_
MUSIC_OF_TORROS.
193 Ibid., 63.
194 Babeth Vanloo and Meredith Monk, Meredith Monk: Inner Voice (New York: First
Run Features, 2010).
195 Deborah Jowitt, ed., Meredith Monk (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press,
1997), 17.
196 Ibid., 39.
197 Ibid., 50.
198 Ibid., 145.
199 Meredith Monk, Dolmen Music, ECM 1197, 1994, compact disc. Liner notes.
200 Monk, Atlas, ECM New Series 1491/92, 1993, 2 compact discs. Liner notes.
201 Monk, Book of Days, ECM New Series 1399, 1990, compact disc. Liner notes.
202 Jowitt, Meredith Monk, 17.
203 Ibid., 56.
204 Ibid., 145.
205 Raoul Mörchen, “For Pure Love: About the German-Spanish Composer Maria de
Alvear, http://www.mariadealvear.com/pages/tx_about_en.html.
206 Maria de Alvear, World, World Edition #0002, 1999, compact disc. Liner notes.
207 “Llena,” http://www.world-edition.com/pages/english/archiv/cd/cd_0005.html.
See also Raoul Mörchen, “For Pure Love,” http://www.mariadealvear.com/pages/
tx_about_en.html.
7
Advocates
The “we” of music we’d like to hear is not just the curators or the performers, but
the audience that has developed and grown over its nine years. . . . The performers
are genuinely committed to the work. The audience is happy to be there, and is
wonderfully attentive.1
The series has become a central hub of a community that centers in London but
overlaps with other near and distant localities, both in programming and in the visitors
drawn to it.
In Miami, a series of initiatives has been masterminded by the Venezuelan composer
and sound artist Gustavo Matamoros. In addition to the biannual Subtropics festival,
a listening club frequently meets at the Audiotheque performance space. Listening
Gallery: Under the Awnings was a curated sound installation heard by passers-by
outside the ArtCenter/South Florida. At this intersection—the southwest corner of
Lincoln and Meridian—it literally had a place in the community.2
Other groups have had various functions (including publishing and presenting),
sizes, and degrees of longevity and formality. In addition to the groups discussed in
Chapter 5, a partial list could also include the Sonic Arts Union, Fluxus, Plainsound,
Tone Roads, Kalerne, Experimental Sound Studio, Nonsequitur, Frog Peak,
Zeitvertrieb, Echtzeitmusik, EarPort, Experimental Intermedia, Experimental Music
Catalogue, Al Maslakh, Roulette, Composers Inside Electronics, Sacred Realism,
Q-02, Material Press, 23five, Touch, Wandelweiser, and the wulf. Without the support
282 Experimental Music Since 1970
that has developed in the context of such groups, much of the work discussed in this
book would never have been made.
The same can be said of performing musicians, many of whom provide the direct
inspiration and opportunity, as well as the necessary dialogue and testing ground, to
bring a work into being. The works throughout this book and this constellation of
practices are riddled with questions, and the contributions of the musicians at every
stage of the creation and presentation of a work are invaluable.
The distribution of these activities across countries and continents makes it both
physically and financially impossible to experience all of the most promising music
first-hand. Fortunately there are record labels that have brought focus and initiative to
the dissemination of this work.
Since Mimi Johnson began it in 1978, Lovely Music has been the go-to source, not
only for the works of members of the Sonic Arts Union, but for dozens of other artists.
Jon Abbey began Erstwhile Records in 1999 with a focus on electroacoustic
improvisation. Abbey has an active interest both in ongoing collaborations and in
promising first meetings of improvisers. Live events produced by Erstwhile include the
AMPLIFY festival, a multiday event held every two or three years since 2002.
The youngest of this cross-section of labels is Simon Reynell’s Another Timbre,
founded in 2007 in Sheffield, UK. Reynell’s active interests span across composition
and improvisation, up-and-coming artists and established composers. The website is a
useful companion to the label, including in-depth interviews and richly documented
online projects involving multiple collaborators.
It is easy to become overwhelmed by the sheer number of active musicians and
organizations in this field. From my own experience, I would recommend finding the
work and the artists that you care about and moving outward from there. That is how
this book was written.
Notes
1 Jennie Gottschalk, “Music We’d Like to Hear 2013 (III)—Cello and Piano,” http://
www.soundexpanse.com/mwlth2013iii.
2 This installation space was closed in May 2015 when the building was handed over
to new owners.
Appendix
Selective bibliography
Topical books
Beins, Burkhard, Christian Kesten, Gisela Nauck, and Andrea Neumann, eds., Echtzeitmusik
Berlin: Selbstbestimmung einer Szene = self-defining a scene (Hofheim: Wolke, 2011).
Collins, Nicolas, Handmade Electronic Music: The Art of Hardware Hacking (New York:
Routledge, 2009).
Labelle, Brandon, Background Noise: Perspectives on Sound Art (New York: Continuum,
2006).
Labelle, Brandon, and Steve Roden, Site of Sound: Of Architecture and the Ear (Los
Angeles: Errant Bodies Press, 2009).
Lewis, George, A Power Stronger than Itself: The AACM and Experimental Music (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 2008).
Marley, Brian, Mark Wastell, and Damien Beaton, Blocks of Consciousness and the
Unbroken Continuum (London: Sound 323, 2005).
Prévost, Eddie, No Sound is Innocent (Matching Tye: Copula, 1995).
Cassidy, Aaron, and Aaron Einbond, Noise in and as Music (Huddersfield: University of
Huddersfield Press, 2013).
Dworkin, Craig, No Medium (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2015).
Houben, Eva-Maria, and Burkhard Schlothauer, MusikDenken: Texte der Waldelweiser
Komponisten (Zürich: Edition Howeg, 2008).
284 Appendix
Kelly, Caleb, Cracked Media: The Sound of Malfunction (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press,
2009).
Schafer, R. Murray, The Soundscape: Our Sonic Environment and the Tuning of the World
(Rochester, VT: Destiny Books, 1994).
Stevens, John, Search and Reflect: A Music Workshop Handbook (Twickenham:
Rockschool, 2007).
Individual composers
Ashley, Robert, and Ralf Dietrich, eds., Outside of Time: Ideas About Music (Köln:
MusikTexte, 2009).
Blomberg, Katja, Chico Mello, Christian Scheib, Trond Olav Reinholdtsen, and Peter
Ablinger, Peter Ablinger: Hören hören (Heidelberg: Kehrer, 2008).
Cage, John, Silence: Lectures and Writings (Middletown: Wesleyan University Press, 1961).
DeMarinis, Paul, Paul DeMarinis: Buried in Noise (Heidelberg: Kehrer, 2010).
Johnson, Tom, Self-Similar Melodies (Paris: Editions 75, 1995).
Johnston, Ben, and Bob Gilmore, eds., “Maximum Clarity” and Other Writings on Music
(Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2006).
Lucier, Alvin, Gisela Gronemeyer, and Reinhard Oehlschlägel, Reflections: Interviews,
Scores, Writings (Köln: MusikTexte, 1995).
Monahan, Gordon, Seeing Sound: Sound Art, Performance and Music, 1978–2011: Gordon
Monahan (Scarborough: Doris McCarthy Gallery, 2011).
Mumma, Gordon, and Michelle Fillion, Cybersonic Arts: Adventures in American New
Music (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2015).
Niblock, Phill, and Yvan Étienne, eds., Phill Niblock, Working Title (Dijon: les Presses du
Réel Editions, 2012).
Oliveros, Pauline, Deep Listening: A Composer’s Sound Practice (New York: iUniverse, 2005).
Panzner, Joe, The Process that is the World: Cage/Deleuze/Events/Performance (New York:
Bloomsbury Academic, 2015).
Pritchett, James, The Music of John Cage (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993).
Tenney, James, Larry Polansky, Lauren Pratt, Robert Wannamaker, and Michael Winter,
From Scratch: Writings in Music Theory (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2015).
Thomas, Philip, and Stephen Chase, Changing the System: The Music of Christian Wolff
(Farnham: Ashgate, 2010).
Wolff, Christian, Gisela Gronemeyer, and Reinhard Oehlschlägel, Cues: Writings &
Conversations (Köln: MusikTexte, 1998).