Paul D. Miller on Sun, 22 Jul 2001 19:34:27 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] The Raw Uncut: Beastie Boys Liner notes... |
hey folks, this is an essay I did for the Beastie Boys new photo book "Pass the Mic." I discuss stuff like multi-cultural movements in contemporary culture, trying to break down barriers between various factions and what it means to make music in the late 20th century - through the lens, of course, of the current 21C moment. The reason I'm posting it here is that it's about the gaze - how people really look at one another - Black, White, Asian, Hispanic etc etc not to mention a perverse sense of "hey... why not..." It's not just about technology... Paul The Raw Uncut by Paul D. Miller a.k.a. Dj Spooky that Subliminal Kid Ari Marcopolous and the Beastie Boys or how friends can catch some of the weirdest stuff you never really thought anybody would remember, and then show it to you 10 years laterŠ "I hold the mic like a grudgeŠ" Rakim Š.It was another one of those days in the early 21st Century - I was on another continent, dj'ing another event in another country. Flip coordinates, repeat circumstances, reconnect the line of thought with the sounds of the scenario. Transition and exit, convergence and departure. Flip the moment, fold it in on itself. Cut. Repeat. Another tour, another situation. Look at the people and hear the sounds. RepeatŠCut. Š.But anyway, this time, after a long set, I got back to the hotel and couldn't sleep. I sat trying to figure out some different angles for this essay: Ari Marcopoulos and the Beastie Boys are all pretty distinct figures and basically, they're ciphers - real personalities with real viewpoints - something that's all too rare these days. You have to think of these two variables and how they interact: one, the band, the other the photographer. You've got to look at the images in this book as the kind of photographs a friend would take. Rare moments of sentiment, flashes of lucidity in front of thousands of people, reflective fragments of thought splayed out on a mixing board after hours and hours of getting the track just rightŠ the studio, the audience, the action; it's all what you wouldn't really think about, and Ari's a master of getting those kinds of portraits out of his subjects. In the pages of this book, you'll see how friends interact and create portraits of one another. I guess that's what visual music is about. Mirror and reflection, sound and selectionŠTo make a long story short, it's not easy to encapsulate the photographer or the band. As with any medium, there's a literal chorus of precedents: James van Der Zee's documentation of the Harlem jazz scene of the 1920's, Gordon Parks real time liquid flow capturing the mood and intensity of the civil rights movement, Walker Evans invocations of the radical pluralism of America in the midst of intense industrial change, Ernie Paniccioli's flash of the spirit prints of the electricity that animates so much of hip-hop in the pages of magazines like "Word Up!", and the athletic prowess that seems to be the ouevre's raison d'etre in magazines like "The Source." But there's also that weird sense of timelessness too: I think of Edward S. Curtis's monumental prints of the Native People's of North America one hundred years ago, or Barron Claiborne's black and white photos - fashionably cosmopolitan pan-African portraits of contemporary r &b stars and hip-hop mogulsŠ But of course, this is the Beastie Boys, and yeah, class, social hierarchy, and of course, there's that basic sense of 'yo! this is the crew just hanging out' type vibe pervading the imagesŠ but maybe that's the point. The reality of how bands become dj's and m.c.'s - and migrate back and back again - is something that has yet to really be documented, although, I think that with this book, we're off to a good start. Think of "Pass the Mic" as a kind of action portrait of a crew that was caught at the crossroads of America in the late 20th century - a radically changing landscape made of just about everything we can think about at the moment, and you'll get an idea of the lives lived in these images. It's a movie that's yet to be released, although I'm sure someone somewhere is working on it as I writeŠ Whiteboys, brothers with what in hip-hop some like to call the 'ice grill' melts, becomes what others call the 'gas face' and then just morphs and becomesŠ. Real. From one state of existence to another, the face and the eyes and the movements that hold it all together are what makes these portraits so poignant. The Beastie Boys album titles say it all: "License to Ill," "Pass the Mic" "Check your Head," "Scientists of Sound," "Ill Communication" - these are titles of philosophers and psycho-analysts of America's patchwork mind at work, and the photos of these gents as they do their thing brings to mind some of the strangest ways that America has changed in the last two decades - it's the ease of flow, the utterly natural mayhem that young folks in the U.S. of A just take for granted. That's the 'modern primitive' sound-image, just go to any major concert these days, and your eyes will tell you the same thingŠ. Back at the hotel the t.v.'s glow told the usual story: There's the usual debates over whether or not genetically modified foods would affect consumers, riots at a G-8 meeting in Genoa, Italy, the attempted impeachment of the Indonesian President, financial shennanigans amongst the wealthiest countries about the Kyoto Accord's attempts (at least on paper) to reduce various emissions that are destroying the atmosphere, shark attacks off the coast of Florida etc etc The usual litanyŠ Anyway, I channel surfed for a little bit (it was after all, something like 5 a.m. I had just walked into the hotel roomŠ) and, of course, it's mostly American titles - funny how stuff like "Bugs Bunny" over dubbed into Spanish always makes you feel so utterly surreal etc etc Anyway, feel a million flurries of now, a million intangibles of the present moment, an infinite permutation of what could beŠ the thought gets caughtŠ You get the picture. In the data cloud of collective consciousness, it's one of those issues that just seems to keep popping up. Where did I start? Where did I end? First and foremost, it's that flash of insight, a way of looking at the fragments of time. Check it: visual mode - open source, a kinematoscope of the unconscious: a bullet that cuts through everything like a Doc Edgerton, E.J. Maret or Muybridge flash frozen frame. You look for the elements of the experience, and if you think about it, even the word "analysis" means to break down something into its component parts. Stop motion: weapons drawn, flip the situation into a new kind of dawnŠ. What else is there to do but just check the pictures and see what people do in the process of making culture. Behind the scenes it's all about friends and time spent with people that are part of your tribe, your situation, your scenario. Think of Jack Kerouac behind some turntables cuttin' up a storm, think of James Van Der Zee skiing with Lauryn Hill, think of King Tubby just chilling out after a session with Gordon Parks - see? The mixes get more and more diverse, and time seems to just become more and more fragments to mix. If there's anything the 20th century taught us, it's that there are so many cultures out there that are mixed beyond anything we can possibly really contain in one image, one thought, one word. Acceptance of the pluralism and being open to diversity all starts with your crew. And I think that that's what you'll find in these images: an America that exists just at the edge of convention, photographed by someone who was and is part of the dynamic backdrop of a pop culture made all the more resilient and powerful because it can absorb. If you can deal with that, then these photos are something that can highlight just how much the world has changed in such a short amount of time. When this crew started out, hip-hop was the image of uncertainty after reconstruction - a faint echo of the South Bronx demolitions drawn across a map of New York City that urban planner and architect, Robert Moses simply imposed, like the European powers did to Africa in the 19th and 20th centuries. The Cross Bronx Expressway created a sound track to dispersion. It was a highway of imminent domain - but whose culture was erased, and whose culture thrived and survived? That's the question of the early 21st century. Can America really deal with all the accumulated fragments of dispossessed culture? Can the music of America (it's all fragments at this point anywayŠ) honestly be open to just about anything under the sun? One culture's Diaspora becomes another culture's soundtrack. In the here and now that Ari's photos capture, the Diaspora just acts as a reflection site, a way to reach across bridges made by class, social hierarchy and all the bullshit that normally accompanies that stuff - and make music. That's what "Pass the Mic" is about. If you can't deal with that, well, like the Beasties said so long ago you might just have to check your head. But anyway, it was another one of those days in the early 21st Century - I was on another continent, dj'ing another event in another country. Flip coordinates, repeat circumstances, reconnect the line of thought with the sounds of the scenario. Transition and exit, convergence and departure. Flip the moment, fold it in on itself. Cut. Repeat. Another tour, another situation. Look at the people and hear the sounds. RepeatŠUn-Cut. In one of my favorite recent essays to accompany a museum show of contemporary photography, The Brooklyn Museum's 2001 controversial survey of contemporary African American photographers "Commited To the Image," Clyde Taylor wrote: "one of the exclusive entitlements of the propertied class was the gaze. The disenfranchised were fixed at the receiving end of the right to scrutinize. Come the mid-twentieth century, a shift takes place. A recurrent academic joke tells of a European anthropologist looking through his telescope to research "primitive" customs when he discovers an African anthropologist peering through his own telescope and taking notes on him. "Today," wrote Jean-Paul Sartre, introducing a volume of poems from the Negritude movement of the 1930's and 1940's, "these black men have fixed their gaze upon us and our gaze is thrown back in our eyesŠ" What you're seeing here is what folks like Levi Strauss might have written about is the "Raw and The Cooked" had been written in an uptown situation - the modern visual jazz of a crew that came to catch wreck. White on white, and with a whole lot of Others thrown in to the mix, it all just changes and becomes something else. Maybe that's what dj culture and it's spin-off the M.C. are all about. Involution and cultural evolution sometimes go hand and hand, and make for a deeper vision of the way things work. And from b-boys to Buddhists, dusty 45's to MP3 files, the sounds of science are what make this collection of images so compelling a document to show how behind the stages and scenes, the people that make the sounds are just exactly that: people. The music and the images are reflections of one another, and at the end of the day, it's friends and people that make it all go that way. Anyway, feel a million flurries of now, a million intangibles of the present moment, an infinite permutation of what could beŠ the thought gets caughtŠ You get the picture. In the data cloud of collective consciousness, it's one of those issues that just seems to keep popping up. Where did I start? Where did I end? That's the message that I think these images send. Paul D. Miller a.k.a. Dj Spooky that Subliminal Kid July 21, Santiago, Chile 2001 ====================================================================== ========== Port:status>OPEN wildstyle access: www.djspooky.com Paul D. Miller a.k.a. Dj Spooky that Subliminal Kid Music and Art 245 w14th st #2RC NY NY 10011 _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold