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May
I just realized in the last couple of days that I havent put anything
into the H.U.T. at all this month .. been preoccupied I guess. Different
types of writing require different kinds of mental spaces AND actual spaces...
which is necessarily to say that the temporal components also differ
A few weeks ago AO and myself had an email exchange about sound. This
is my response to Adam. Following this is the response of someone else,
ML, to the original binary set of Adam and myself and who seemingly had
taken umbrage to some of the points I had made (or obscured). Of course
I include neither provocation by either person:
Adam-
The advent of modernism and its evil hyper twin, postmodernism, is all
about the evacuation of interiors, the stopping-up of the ears and the
propping-open of the eyes with toothpicks like some scene from some cheap
horror movie. For the modern (or rather modernism--in a way, everyone
who is alive no matter when that is, is living in the modern, for them;
the ancient Greeks when they were alive were modern compared to, say,
dead Egyptians...modernism though is specific to a time and
place.) And modernity is all about surfaces and the eye .. even those
technologies that give reports of interiors (x-rays e.g.) or ultra-sound
all rely on visuality, on the eye or on ways to turn everything into something
accessible to the eye. Thats why transparency in some
important for modernism, no matter in what field in may be, whether architecture,
politics, art, or personal relationships. Everything is supposed to be
visible and open to everything/everyone else, no secrets, no whispering,
nothing unintelligible. Everything that can be HEARD must be converted
into something that can be SEEN (after all, we say accusingly, I
see you for what you are we dont say I hear you for
what you are). The prime experience of the interior, subjectivity,
the Adam-ness, is not a matter of seeing for the subject called Adam but
a hearing of voices inside that somehow confirm Adamness. Sound is a belwether
of interiority, hence, in much earlier times of spirituality (and yes,
contact with the dead). A secular, all-seeing, universe cant stand
an interiorized universe, a sonic universe, a spiritual universe
(some writers have claimed that those are all synonymous) a universe where
interiors can hold secrets. The so-called experts of secular
modernist society must turn all potential sonic, hence subterranean, hence
indicative of some sort of interior plenitude --which Adam does more than
hint at--, hence subversive of the Realm of the Eye, into various forms
of planar visualities, flowcharts, manuals of operation. The tender viscosities
of sound must be macerated in the giant machine of modernism --GOD
LIES AT THE HEART OF SOUND (AND HENCE SLIPS TO SILENCE) but THE MACHINE
LIES AT THE HEART OF THE EYE (AND HENCE TO NOISE) ... and who knows if
they are the same, merely different poles of the dialectic, antinomian
qualities which are each invested in each other. NEVERTHELESS, the plenitude
of the world of sound feels quite different from the cold clinical schizoid
world of the eye (check our Martin Jays DOWNCAST EYES for the history
of the parade of theory in front of the eye). There is an inevitable slippage
into separate and, seemingly at least, opposite directions. Yes, even
that final sonic perturbation looks to be colonized by the eye, i.e.,
the dead. Those processes of psychiatry want nothing more than to lay
to rest the forces of the undead, to keep them from whispering tenderly
all over the living protoplasm, to dampen the prolonged ringing of the
bell long after the bell has been removed, to medicate the forces of ontological
tinnitus (that bell-like ringing of the nervous system after a blow has
been applied to it--after all, wasnt it Freud who said that the
main function of consciousness was to filter, as Adam so rightly pointed
out, all those items that might send the whole system into shock, which
would allow those who say they hear gods, demons, angels to be treated
and brought back into the world of immediacy and the light and the visible
and away from those minglings and tinglings?) The message of Islam for
example was delivered verbally, sonically, its message is still
delivered sonically from atop towers, an interiority of defiance to the
world of the visible and the contingent. "God is the all-hearing"
(from 32 passages in the Quran). The prophet, whether in the Quran
or the Bible, is the one who hears also and the one who responds. Sound
is that interior pulling to places that often have no name because they
cant be seen, cant be parsed, can hardly even be heard sometimes,
it seems to well up from the dense turgid mass of matter that we are,
that surrounds us, but that somehow speaks to us, somehow, matter speaking
to matter, even matter that no longer seems to be mattering,
that seems to be dead and gone. (although it must be said that technology
here does act as an increasingly gigantic shovel constantly digging into
the strata of the eye, expertification, the very thing that helped it
come into existence and which hones into the beacon of the undead or the
dead, or, sometimes we dont even know which is which these days.
(eg,
see here)
At some point -- and who knows how close we are to that point? --
all sounds and light must converge into One Thing, must not because says
god wills it so but because Technology says it must be so
(but what is technology?). The Thickness and the density of the world,
the globalness of the world ear/eye will then be apparent (see, even now
I stick to visuals: apparent) ...we dont know what it
will be, we will have become diffused, suffused, through and through by
our machines (really, arent we already? and really, what IS a machine?
for that matter what is a human? Doesnt it have to be true that
at the heart of the human is the inhuman? vast systems of materiality
circulating in unknown ways through yet more masses of matter?) --or who
knows, maybe they, the machines, will have taught us to surpass them,
all times of dead/undead/living, seeing/heard will have collapsed into
each other, the Sound of Light and the Light of Sound, everything interpenetrating
everything else, a vast monoblock of sentience penetrating outward from
the earth at light speed, or perhaps at some speed even faster, where
points are immediately present, where everything is present all time,
(where we have always been without knowing it), sounding forth over a
vast, infinite but perhaps sad (because voiceless) void, waiting to be
given Voice to cry either its infinite sadness or inexplicable joy, hiding
from Itself, playing with itself, chanting angelic hosannas circling endlessly
infinite thrones of light, 3k background radiation everywhere all the
time.
RC
----
(from another email)
further consequences:
starting at no particular place.
1. albert einstein once made a comment to the effect that, strangely enough,
theoretical discourse can only 'see' what it is predisposed to see and
that it's conceit of searching our entirely new avenues of thought tends
to be jsut that: a conceit. It is perhaps true of 'hearing' also (can
pose that as a question if you like). John cage was always trying to really
'hear' what was going on around him (as long as it was appropriately filtered
of course: he hated Glenn Branca for example and called his music authoritarian
-- like most artists he was unwilling to see his OWN work as ideologically
informed [and by that I mean simply something akin to what einstein was
proposing, that there is no 'natural' or neutral corner to emerge from
and make 'clean' pronouncements; this is the take of most modern philosophical
positions -- not merely decon -- and for the most part i tend to agree
with it. There may be problems with such a position of suspicion but that's
for another day. It is well known that Einstein himself was unable to
fully make the move into quantum mechanics -- 'god doesn't play dice with
the universe' -- and made his stand on some idea of 'enfolded complicity'
like that of David Bohm --which of course others have likened to a theological
hypothesis.
2. The types of music that any culture has seem to be tied in with all
the general forms of that culture, or the epistemic table as Foucault
put it in the Order Of Things. The Classical configuration, still embodied
by the newton/einstein mode, had need of a certain way of maintaining
order, hierarchical if you will, and the classical mode represents that
all the way down or over to orchestras, ensemble/author (or composer)
situations and to the way the tonal musical resources were organized.
This seems to me an obvious point. To think otherwise is to think that
there is a God-given (literally) right for the West to organize its
materials (ALL of its materials, sonic, beaurocratic, visual, cultural)
in this certain way and that other materials may have SOME merit, it doesnt
constitute enough merit to be considered as serious art, music, societal
patterns, family structures, religious ideas.
3. Modernism generally (and by that I include the culture of the last
150 years...some would take it back to 300 years and others would say
that its merely the contemporary point of an ensemble of relations
that began around 2000 years ago with the instauration of the Greek/Jew
Parnassus.) At any rate, the point I would make here is that in some ways
Schubert (or Beethoven or pick any other Western composer) is just as
modern as Stockhausen, but that there is the POSSIBILITY that we are seeing
an exit strategy for modernism (as an ideological ensemble
that is) we look at what we think of as the Avant Guard Modernists. An
end game in this way: that the aforementioned organization of materials
reaches a stage of hyper inflation with Schoenberg. Boulez, Webern and
their theory pimp Adorno. Even so the attempt to complete organize (or
in a way, de-organize) the tone row, to make it a completely amorphous
mass still doesnt do away with an even larger overriding principle,
that of style, since Webern and Schoenberg are readily distinguishable.
My point being that there is not an undifferentiated chaos (as you well
know) ... the difference between a completely organized mass of information
and a completely noisy one at times becomes a moot point.
4. But of course there is the question of satisfaction, as in, cant
get none from modern stuff some folks say. And there is where many folks
would start making a connection (as someone did to me once) that western
tonal organization was a god given one and that all others
must fall by the way side, and in support of this would give psycho-acousto-physiological
studies in support of such a position. I would say that hearing
(like seeing) is a complex phenomena and is not just ONE thing called
hearing but involves a WHOLE lot of other cultural components
that allow hearing to make sense.
5. Modernisms big thrust is to have everyone be in the same way....
all the methodologies that it has developed, all its theories, its technologies,
point in the same direction, toward a monoculture. (the current war
on terrorism gains much impetus from being a part of this immunological
complex). Since modernism has such an allergic reaction to all others
not of its own making, the only way it can move forward is
by continually toying with its own organizational structures, by continually
shuffling the deck, which, as we know, has become a literal artistic practice.
The only way for modernism to move forward is then to -- paradoxically
enough -- move backward, with the strategies of so-called post-modernism
(really, just the attenuated leading ledge of modernism) involving historical
reference, collaging/pastiche of elements, quotation, (which falls out
as the whole sample/re-mix culture of hip hop, dj shadow, etc.) and the
movement of formerly elitist artistic/musical strategies into
the masses.
6. In a way, modernism seems to have covered all the bases. That is, it
is arranging and rearranging everything with everything else. The whole
globalism thing is what thats about; modernism has found all these
neat new resources which it plans to put into the meat grinder and, under
the auspices of respecting the differences, is in fact molding
the whole world now (or attempting to and doing a pretty good job) into
this monoculture. And even the RESISTANCES help it in this tact, since
any resistance (or critique) brings out the loopholes in the system,
aids in eliminating such problems and enables it to work more efficiently
after increasingly brief, but chaotic, states of recalibration and turmoil.
7. Artists can get caught in these various stages of modernism: I
only listen to Beethoven or I only listen to jazz or
I cant stand modern art or whatever ---these are all
very helpful positions, structurally, for modernism because they help
to further delineate the facets of the same diamond, and the more facets,
the more round and smooth everything becomes, the more containable oddly
enough (it becomes increasingly apparent that modernism loves these reversing
contraries or chiasmatic relations. Hegel and Hegelians, Marx included,
have made much of these dialectical positions and their exhaustion as
an end-of-the-line maneuver).
8. The reasonable question of well, Im tired of all this and
I would like to opt out please seems to be simultaneously a moot
one and one that modernism (in the form of marketeers and capitalists)
love to hear because it means the opening up of another market (i.e.,
another recombinant strategy, as is, e.g., authenticity, I
just wanna be me, I just wanna do my own music) -- theres
always someone around to sell you to yourself or explain who you are or
why you did what you did or why, if you live here, you will be comfortable
with more of your kind...
9. The very strongest metaphysics of the subject (which from
modernisms perspective also makes it the weakest) has traditionally
been guaranteed by the divine, by God. Anything LESS than that and the
subject becomes a mutable thing, up for grabs, much like the body now
with genomic research, phil k. dicks We Can Build You
short novel.
10. For that matter the subject has always been subject (heh)
to underminings of various sorts. Certainly from a theological point of
view, the self is a curious entity, one that has definite
INHUMAN elements to it, those elements underwritten by the divine, nevertheless
INHUMAN. And from modernisms p.o.v. -- Well, the self seems to be
stroked and assuaged as never before, the whole culture of modernism seems
to be dedicated to extolling the virtues of subjectivity and refoliation
of the self...so much so that I am reminded of certain archaic sacrificial
practices (Aztecs for example) wherein the one to be sacrificed is taken
into the kings household and wined and dined and sexed beyond belief,
a year long party, before the ax falls. And at any rate, the ax that falls
for modernism is NIHILISM, which some would say is the extrapolation of
the self to the furthest reaches, such that everything else falls away
(there is a great book on that very subject by Gillespie called NIHILISM
AFTER NIETZSCHE).
11. But of course for modernism the MACHINE is the great inculcation of
the INHUMAN and the possibilities that it brings, a Great Reshuffling
that organic life and subjectivity on their own seem to find it difficult
to obtain, to the extent that folks now say evolution has stopped
--so, that Opening, that Something Other, formerly inhabited by God, now
takes on the guise of machines and the possibilities they will bring to
us, all the way from life everlasting to a True Friend, (and of course
I mean by machines something very broad indeed, as that which
has now come to occupy the space of the inhuman and a certain fidelity
to it and hope for it.)
12. The end.
(from a reply to that above)
A. "What would have been different about some piece of music if
Mozart had eaten strudel instead of drank a beer?"
Somewhat hard to say but I CAN say with some confidence that he would
not have written Pierre Lunaire, or Pli Selon Pli, or Threnody For the
Victims of Hiroshima, or even Music for Eighteen Musicians, or... or ...
or pick one out. What he would have written under the influence of strudel
might have been different but it wouldnt have been COMPLETELY different
I dare say. Anything Sui Generis is mostly discounted from the get go
it seems to me...for one thing its simply not recognizable (Im
thinking immediately, and somewhat banally, of the scene in the movie
Back to the Future where Michael J. Fox goes back to the fifties, attends
his fathers prom, manages to wind up on stage with a guitar, starts out
playing a fifties type song, he gets carried away and it escalates into
a Jimi Hendrix type rave-up, feedback etc and the whole auditorium stops
and just stares at him, as if he had gone stark raving bonkers. sui generis.
From the pov of that culture, it WAS mad and at the time many folks said
that about the blues when it was making its way into white culture.
B. I would say that the ACCIDENTAL is not the same as the SINGULAR ....
It can be or can lead to such but most often it seems like the case of
biology when mutation leads most often to non-viability and NOT to monstrosity
(or at any rate, its a dead monster. Any society that has the power
to suppress or destroy the monstrous which DOES survive will tend to do
so for the simple reason that it is in its best interest to do so.
If the monstrous survives (and mates, culturally speaking, and reproduces)
it will spell the end of the culture into which it is born -- or at least
marks the start of great conflict, until some hybrid form comes along.
Its not often that those deep internal dynamics of culture become
visible though. And to me its still an open question as to whether
a culture as technologically and communicationally as intense as ours
exacerbates that tendency of culture or combats it. Some would say that
the net encourages that sort of monstrous, singular diversity and rapid
assimilation/creation of hybrids. I would say that the jury is still way
out on that matter. Im always reminded of the story (think it came
from Foucault originally in fact) of the Victorians and their mania for
plant collecting, especially orchids. They would send out ships to far
corners of the world and brought back tons upon tons of orchids of every
conceivable kind. The plant collectors back in England built these elaborate
nurseries, or hothouses they called them, for the simple reason that they
stoked them into tropical temperatures, thinking that all orchids needed
that sort of heated environment. In point of fact, orchids need at least
3 separate temperature ranges. Well, of course the orchids started blooming
like crazy with the heat -- not because they were happy with
the environment but because they were trying to reproduce; they were in
fact in their death throes and would only last a season or so. If one
wishes to be poetic and humanizing about it, they were testifying
to the interrogation of their existence by trying to make
more of themselves. (Much has been made by the way about the co-evolutionary
strategy of orchids and humans in regard to the beauty [i.e.,
sexuality] of orchids; after a bit of a false start, it has certainly
served them well since whole industries now exist simply to propagate
orchids -- or at least the prettiest ones.) I sometimes think of technology
or the net anyway, in such terms.
C. Definitions. That's a bigger gulp than I'm willing to take at the moment.
But very briefly: the most salient features of modernism feature
changing spatial/temporal relations (to some degree, the temporal -- history--
begins to be folded into the spatial; postmodernism really
makes that process visible, for example in architectural reference, which
makes sense if you believe that postmodernism is simply the end zone of
modernism); the falling away form externality/objectivity into greater
reliance and belief in subjectivity as the be all and end all (Darwin
being an example there) of existence, although science presents this solipsism
as objectivity, which in turn is part of the self-reflexivity characteristic
of modernism (irony etc) and which often times seems the sole content
of postmodernism. I think one really has to include the forces of so-called
post modernism in with the mod. Because then you begin to see what appears
to be contrary movements (the problem with definitions is that they make
everything seem tied into neat packages -- in reality it seems to me that
there is a great porousness to everything --but maybe thats just
because Im a denizen of modernism!). That is to say that modernism
seems to be about a pulling away from the natural world into
the increasingly artificial and then virtual (I saw contradictory, because
that very pulling away from traditional concepts often leads to their
re-emergence later on -- for example the wholesale re-emergence of allegory
as a viable form in special effects intensive movies); a great reliance
on experimentalism as a governing protocol for almost everything.
Theres a nice book by Fredrick Karl called MODERN AND MODERNISM,
which I just went over to the bookshelf and picked up. The first chapter
is called Getting To Be Modern: An Overview and is pretty
good but it doesnt have any pithy two line generalizations about
modernity. Here is a quote though:
Not unexpectedly, Modernism expresses both hope and threat to the
same people: in its technological phases spreading cheer, but in its political
and social consequences --not to speak of its artistic potentialities--creating
anxiety. This intense fear of Modern enters into every aspect of life,
becomes itself a form of belief. Many, perhaps most, cults from Nazism
to Jim Jones Jonestown, are associated with revulsion toward Modern,
even while modern advances are integral to their development. Whether
as art or politics, Modern has became a revolutionary word, a rallying
cry for or against, an association of conflicting, competing ideas. People
will kill for modern, or kill to oppose it.
"Long before technology and progress, Plato feared the modern spirit
and associated it with are, which undermines authority. His Socrates speaks
of poetrys power to seduce or feminize the soul, to magnify the
irrational. Poetry or art, therefor, encourages the lower element in man
that which is adversary to reason and authority. Plato was, of course,
correct, and every society that seeks authority as its connecting force
will also see art and, by extension, modern art, as a dangerous foe. For
Plato, art was so threatening because it was so attractive.
"Art, the artist, poetry, by association Modernism, are concerned
not with essences but with the changing physical world of senses and sensations.
[What others have called in different ways nihilistic. rc.]
Art rearranges our perception of things rather than stressing inherent
qualities. The danger of art and, by implication, "modern art,
is that it seduces, enervates, subverts. To broaden its appeal, Modernism
is often connected to progress, and in this sphere it is given a label.
In our own era, when Modernism and progress are yoked for political purposes,
we have a New Deal, a new Frontier, a New Left. The new is
a positive response to modernism, but it also suggests that old
Modernism is bereft of ideas, impotent, a shallow stream ready to
run dry."
[....]
"Although we routinely associate Modern with the advent of modern
life about one hundred years ago, the word was in the process of developing
for centuries. Attitudes toward Modern ideas long preceded
our era of Modernism...What this signifies is that the word was bandied
about in several societies --in the eighteenth century, for example, as
part of the battle between ancient books and modern
ideas --without becoming connected to any sense of a connected movement.
Modernism is not what older societies meant when they discussed
or rejected modern thought; they did not perceive an entire culture in
which Modern would be apotheosized. Whatever was modern in their terms
was isolated, connected to something in the arts, dependably assimilable
into larger units of traditional thought. How modern were Da Vincis
ideas and drawings, and yet they could be and were absorbed."
(from the first chapter)
and bla bla bla...getting tired must lay down must become unmodern.
rob
May 23
From an online pdf by Costa Deuzinas called The Legality of the Image,
found it when I was doing research on The Kings Two Bodies
by Kantorowitz:
"These obscure and paradoxical formulations are the most complete
defense of the claim that visuality is anchored on the desire to perceive
the invisible and ineffable, insight on blindness and light on darkness.
If only we lacked sight, Dionysius sighs, the knowledge of unknowing would
be so much easier. But our fallen nature is endowed or damned with the
senses of which vision is the foremost. In the Judaic tradition the desire
to see leads to the pleasures of the flesh; in the Christian imagery becomes
productive. By adopting a principle of aggressive visuality, the iconophiles
promoted the imperial aspirations of Christianity. Christian iconology
23 Pseudo-Dionysius, 'The Celestial Hierarchy' in Complete Works, 2, 3;
col.141A-C, p. 149. puts the icon, this most powerful mediating entity,
at the service of political and administrative tasks. Nicephoros presented
this idea starkly: 'not only Christ, but the whole Universe will disappear
if there is no circumscription or icon.' 25 The Byzantium was the first
empire to use aesthetics to create and propagate an all-inclusive conception
of the world. There are two aspects to this early society of the spectacle.
At the collective level, the elaborate iconography created a sense of
identity by providing a set of symbols for the community to aspire, an
ideal with its iconic representation. But its greater innovation lies
at the level of the individual psyche."
The holy and imperial images offer a complete speculum mundi, a total
visual organization of the world which furnishes the faithful with models
of what he should see, think and dream."
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