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<nettime> U / Radio & Aural Destabilization |
[extracted/converted/etc. by moderators for <nettime>; this is the first of four short texts] U / Radio & Aural Destabilization liner notes for CD compiled by Laurent Diouf for Noise Museum "A broad drape of sound that seems to hypertrophy the slowness of the tempo into an almost immobile song." --Philipe Carles "varieties of sounds and silences, terrifying, mysterious, whirling must somehow be felt in the pulse, ebb, and flow of the music ..." --Hildegaard von Bingen by bart plantenga 3. Wreck This Mess: Remissions 1: Compilation I saw Dub Syndicate in NY where the speakers emitted deep, swelling subterranean tremors--dilated, diffuse, insistent like a heavy train rumbling through a dense fog, into the cauldron of the solar plexus until finally--vertigo, awe, breathlessness--somewhere between hangover and rite of passage; my partner was mugged by the music; it pressed consciousness from her body. There she lay, puddle of pretty unconsciousness at my feet. Further into the evening, mate in full upright revival, a young man dancing, suddenly withered and collapsed and then a taffy-legged woman wilted away, eyes lost in her forehead. Dub causes wax to dislodge from the innermost portions of our tympanic nerves--fomenting disorientation, derationalized music, blurring--sound begins residing both forward and back, as well as inside one's head (head as drum) where sound can wreak its havoc, invoke boundlessness, alter relationships to body, environment, desire, and linear time. Woofers begin to fibrilate, shred like paper flowers, let go of all moorings and we realize speakers (like our minds' ears) were not designed to accommodate such sonic tremors. The subworld is the aural nether where these sounds grumble along below sea level, snugly hugging the contours of territory with great spectral and counterfrictional lassitude, beyond "economies of desire," below fetishized thresholds of pain, near the edge of all audibility. Where its signature sound (pungent alloy of ephemeral noise, TV ghosts, found sound, archival musics, distended metarhythms, nomadic radio frequencies, hidden currents, mind-altering echo, natural ambience, auto-piloted composition, psychodynamic mood enhancement, and disembodied voices), rumbles along at the somnabulatory frequency of 30 hertz. Like a dense and spacious iceberg, scraping across a parking lot, immersive dub produces large vibrations in objects. This vast substratum's denizens, remain behind their turntables, in the dark; lit only by constellations of L.E.D. pinpoints strung across mixing boards. Here they evade the prefabricated pitfalls of fame, the knick of the knack of product endorsement, the standard "fandemonious"infantilization of stars, the vectors of conventional power, prefering to subsume ego in meaningful patterns found in noise. Mark Stewart and the Maffia's post-situationist deconstructions, feedback, cut-up polemical wall of throbbing noise is the essence of anxiety-as-terror on a discotheque floor. "As The Veneer Of Democracy Begins To Fade"--the world upside down 15 years years ahead of its time never sounded better. The history of Wreck This Mess begins here. In 1986, dark music became celebratory for me. Transcendental gloom (Doris Lessing calls it "divine discontent") is a noir fictional psychonavigation through tattered rhizomes and the dingy corridors of Burroughs' nervous system. Gebrauchsmuzik for internal organs that process the hypermediation malaise--information decomposing into data, meaning into false emotions. Unlike concerthalls, cinemas, video arcades, street theatre or sports, radio goes anywhere, everyday--flexible, nomadic, proletarian, wallpaper, subliminal. Radio precedes your arrival and prepares your environment as ubiquitous, prescient and subconscious soundtrack of life. Radio is everywhere and yet, radio is nothing. Lucky then, for the pirates, independents, community radio stations where sound might flourish, become sacred, beautiful and fun again. Amazing then how little effulgence fills the ether. As if creativity is the enemy of commerce--maybe it is, and maybe they are rightfully worried. I veered into radio in 1986, became a standard "alternative" dj at WFMU, foremost U.S. freeform radio station: whacky juxtapositions of good music with bad, corny with serious, post-punk noise with classical... In 1988 I migrated to Paris. In possession of a radio (or me possessed by it) in a foreign city, you begin to stray across wild frequencies of the universal medium called ether and when it begins to stir we call it the collective unconscious. I solicited the anarchist station in Paris, Radio Libertaire. Their response was immediate, enthusiastic. They're engage'/enrage' but also talky, talk all day long. Then I listened to my old show tapes--I never shut up either. "Wreck"means causing the ruin of any structure--iconoclasm. "This mess"means the marketplace-reshaped inner ear. Consumption aesthetics, aesthetic consumption. WTM became an abstract explosion inside utilitarian radio. Wreck This Mess was a response to trop de blabla everywhere; an abstract explosiona strategy of contrary seamlessness--against time without pleasure, labor without meaning, menace without fun, no talk, no breaks, no announcements, weather, time, news, gossip, chat, no playlists--unclog the aural and imaginal pathways. Almost immediately I was contacted by Manu & Laurent, a team of sonic proselytizers from another station. We became comrades sonique. Over the weeks they began to infiltrate, pirate, morph and infect W.T.M. in an insidious but organic manner. October 1988: WTM emerges with its personal anonymity intact to diffuse itself facelessly across the ether. On-U Sound, rumbling bio-rhythms, destabilizations of expectation through impossible segues, threading as many as 10 sources of sound (CDs, cassettes, LPs, microphones), all audio gadgets open at once, threaded through one another until it sometimes felt I was composing music--live, on air. I discovered that synaptical exchange called the segue which sinuously burrows into expectation, smolders between surprise and pleasure, knowledge and satisfaction, easy listening and difficult musics. Sometimes the hum of a waiting soundmachine was the only music infecting a dozen or a thousand ears. Almost immediately I was contacted by PanouPanou, a team of sonic proselytizers from another station. Manu and Laurent visited, and through hodgepodge of franglais and spun discs, we became comrades sonique. Over the weeks they began to infiltrate, pirate, mutiny, morph and infect WTM in an insidious but organic manner. Other germs of extreme (mis)behavior--Black Sifichi and Brad Lay--entered, adding their strange intrusions and hoaxes to the mix. When I periodically withdrew from Paris, the WTM mutiny would take the controls in full accordance with its own bio-sonic laws of mutation. In 1991 I moved back to NYC, capital of talkaholism, leaving PanouPanou mid-spin. Like Libertaire, WFMU had trop de blabla. One talked about everything, the other nothing and always the twain shall meet. I applied an extrapolation of the Libertaire agenda: no talk, no clues when a piece of music began or ended--long uninterrupted 3-hour sonic voyages. Segue as total orgasmic focus. I didn't answer phones and barricaded myself inside the studio with hundreds of sound sources. Anonymity became a signature, absence an obverse presence--wallpaper became wall, wall became structure. Seamlessness meant prodigal strategies of uninterrupted sound-machine, backmasking consciousness toward reflection (the opposite reverse spin of commercial radio). An integration of one sound with another, a daisy chain of overlapping instants, conversing, collaging, mutating--sounds vs cut-ups vs musics vs texts. Live on air! . Seamlessness derationalizing song as passive product--music becomes more of what it is. During my exile, Manu migrated south, Brad Lay played the Irish pub circuit with his Jewish cowboy brogue, Black Sifichi became Sub Para Dub at Radio Nova. Laurent, 1/2 Panou, flourished, became the Parisian cornerstone of speculative musics and now he's enthroned at the control board, ready to pilot WTM into the 2nd decade of aural gratification. WTM became something different and greater. --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl