1. In Pine Effect μ-Ziq (Astralwerks) The least renowned of the major new British electronicists makes an incredibly fun and thoughtful album, packed with humorous and organic-sounding digital gurgles. It’s so at play with rhythmic possibilities that you’ll find yourself tapping your foot on a different down beat with each successive listen.
2. Litany Arvo Pärt (ECM) One of the most beautiful recordings yet from this Estonian classical composer. Not electronic in any sense, but very much evocative of the ethos of the ECM record label (and its founder, Manfred Eicher), which espouses space, ambience and tonal patience. Fans of Pärt are endlessly fascinated by his ability to sound ancient and modern simultaneously, and this album exemplifies that unique quality. The title piece is for soloists, chorus and chamber orchestra. The rest of the album is heavy on strings — there’s a piece for string orchestra, and a piece for string orchestra joined by a string quartet.
3. 68 Million Shades … Spring Heel Jack (Trade 2/Island U.K.) With its occasional tropical aura and the string-laden evocations of uptown frivolity, this album begs to be dismissed as party music when in fact it is an expertly produced, highly thoughtful, jazz-informed series of tunes by one of the most respected British electronic duos.
4. Heat (soundtrack) Various artists (Warner Bros.) The music for a film directed by Michael Mann (Manhunter, Thief, TV’s Miami Vice) is as carefully selected as his casts (this little production featured Robert De Niro and Al Pacino facing off in a coffee shop) and as hyper-designed as his sets (he favors the romantic neon blue of modern film noirs). The score proper is by Elliot Goldenthal (Drugstore Cowboy, Interview with the Vampire, Alien3) and the compositions and licensed tracks include ambient contributions from Kronos Quartet, Moby, Michael Brook, Brian Eno, Lisa Gerrard, Einstürzende Neubauten, and others.
5. Endtroducing DJ Shadow (Mo Wax/FFRR) The title is meant ironically, since Shadow has been producing moody instrumental music since the early ’90s, but this album brought him a newfound audience for his blunted beats, with their echoes of surveillance technology, AM radio, and old-school hip-hop.
6. Offbeat: A Red Hot Soundtrip Various artists (WaxTrax!/TVT, 1996) Skylab, DJ Krush, Meat Beat Manifesto, and others unite for AIDS-charity collection. Focus is on remarkable team-ups: vocalists Mark Eitzel, David Byrne, and (poet) Amiri Baraka meet, respectively, My Bloody Valentine, Tomandandy, and DJ Spooky. Also, jazz traditionalists Christian McBride (bass) and Joey DeFrancesco (organ) meet DJ Krazy.
7. Feed Me Weird Things Squarepusher (Warp) The British electronicist makes his full-length debut after a period of 12″ releases. A dozen tracks of errant drum’n’bass for folks who find Aphex Twin too airy and Photek too arid.
8. USSR Repertoire (The Theory of Verticality) DJ Vadim (Ninja Tune) An album that might give trip-hop a good name, with its porous layers of noise and rhythms, its loving echoes of hip-hop and an extended play time (over two-dozen tracks in all) that invites use as mood-inducing background.
9. The Magnificent Void Steve Roach (Hearts of Space) One of the prolific American ambient master’s most elusive recordings — still, subdued, haunting.
10. Source Lab 2 Various artists (Source/Gyroscope, 1996) Little is readily available stateside from the French label Source, so this compilation is a rare taste of the trip-hop descendants of composer Erik Satie and chanteur Serge Gainsbourg, most notably Dimitri From Paris and Extra Lucid.
Note: Disquiet.com was launched in the fall of 1996, but updates to the site were only indexed as of May 30, 1999; thus, some of these earlier publication dates are approximations. Also, prior to 1996, versions of what eventually became Disquiet.com were housed on websites at Netcom.com and, before that, Calweb.com.
Techno, jungle, trip-hop, illbient — talkin' 'bout electronic pop music
/ By Marc Weidenbaum
It’s a tough call, suggesting a short list of essential introductory electronica albums, electronica being this hopelessly utopian umbrella terminology for a very wide variety of machine-made pop music: ambient, techno, jungle, trip-hop, “abstract” hip-hop, drum’n’bass, industrial, trance, illbient. Those are all names being used to track the various subgenres of today’s electronic pop music: songs and soundscapes that are produced, primarily, on computers and other automated devices (turntables, tape machines, sine-wave generators) rather than on traditional musical instruments (guitar, bass, drums).
To list, say, five key full-length albums exemplifying the new electronic music would be mistaken. Today’s electronic music is continuously in flux, continuously changing. Whereas a typical rock band or rapper might release a single album each year, electronic musicians tend to release upwards of a dozen hours of music in the same amount of time: in the form of full-length albums, EPs, singles and remixes of other musicians’ songs.
Instead, here is a list of starting places: five compilations that will suggest various directions, five EPs which should allow you to inexpensively test the waters, five web sites packed with information (and music), and five text-based Internet resources. Happy hunting.
COMPILATIONS: Various-artists collections generally offer more filler than substance and rarely provide any sense of context. Following are rare recent exceptions, all domestic releases:
1. Macro Dub Infection, Volume One (Caroline, 1995): This watershed, two-CD collection features an international cast of electronic-music avatars, including Spring Heel Jack, Omni Trio, Tortoise, 4-Hero and Tricky. Emphasis is on dub, the highly reverberant offshoot of reggae. Volume Two is due soon, perhaps before the end of 1996.
2. Earthrise.Ninja.2 (Shadow/Ninja Tune USA, 1996): Maddening two-CD assortment from the U.K.-based Ninja Tune label, including cuts by DJ Food, Funki Porcini, Kruder & Dorfmeister, and 9 Lazy 9 and remixes by Wagon Christ, Autechre and others; an endlessly rewarding slew of low-down grooves and dank funk.
3. Offbeat: A Red Hot Soundtrip (WaxTrax!/TVT, 1996): Skylab, DJ Krush, Meat Beat Manifesto, and others unite for AIDS-charity collection. Focus is on remarkable team-ups: Vocalists Mark Eitzel, David Byrne and (poet) Amiri Baraka meet, respectively, My Bloody Valentine, Tomandandy and DJ Spooky. Also, jazz traditionalists Christian McBride (bass) and Joey DeFrancesco (organ) meet DJ Krazy.
4. Synthetic Pleasures, Volume One (Moonshine, 1996): Recent documentary film about information-age innovators, mystics, and extremists draws its soundtrack from work of Terre Theaemlitz, Single Cell Orchestra, Hardfloor, and others.
5. Source Lab 2 (Source/Gyroscope, 1996): Little is readily available stateside from the French label Source; so this compilation is a rare taste of the trip-hop descendants of composer Eric Satie and chanteur Serge Gainsbourg, most notably Dimitri From Paris and Extra Lucid.
12-INCHES: Despite vinyl’s precipitous disappearance from the mass market, it remains a fundamental part of all dance music, electronic or otherwise. Among the 12-inch’s assets are limited press runs, haphazard distribution and cryptic-to-nonexistent album-sleeve graphics: the perfect combination for pop-music fetish objects. All five of these are relatively recent U.S. releases, so they shouldn’t be too difficult to track down. And all, aside from the first, have related full-length albums.
1. Photek: The Hidden Camera (Astralwerks, 1996): Photek is Rupert Parkes, a mid-20s British DJ whose technical prowess has developed logarithmically over an ongoing series of singles. Hidden Camera’s juicy range of percussive sounds lends Parker’s sterescopic rhythm-play an intoxicating effect.
2. Oval vs. Tortoise: “Bubble Economy” / “Learning Curve” (Thrill Jockey, 1996): Tortoise is a noodly Chicago-based band that records spare, transcendent instrumentals. Oval is a German electronic unit whose breathless music makes the static between radio stations sound lush by comparison (and that’s a compliment). Oval vs. Tortoise is Markus Popp, of the latter, carving up the former’s recent album, Millions Now Living Will Never Die. The 12-inch is one of four in a Tortoise remix series, which includes reworkings by Luke Vibert, Spring Heel Jack, and others.
3. Skylab: Oh! Skylab (Astralwerks, 1995): One of the more remarkable team-ups, Skylab is an international quartet (with two members each from the U.K. and Japan) that overcomes a major language barrier to create some of the most richly orchestrated electronic pop music going. Contains remixes and extensions of material from the band’s debut, #1 (Astralwerks).
4. Pentatonik: “Credo”/”Zeitgeist” (Island/Quango, 199?): Pentatonik is Britain’s Simeon Bowring and friends, creating a dense electronic dance music that owes much to Ennio Morricone. Also available as part of Quango’s Atomic Audio compilation.
5. Drain: Regional Action! (Trance, 1996): As if Butthole Surfer drummer King Coffey didn’t have enough work running his indie Trance label, he locked himself away with a bank of samplers and came up with this EP (followed by a full-length called Offspeed and in There). If you dig the tweaked hip-hop groove of Cibo Matto, the kitchen-sink palette of Beck/Beastie Boys producers the Dust Brothers, or the innocent Orientalism of Mouse on Mars, take Action!
WORLDWIDE WEB SITES: The Internet, in particular the World Wide Web, is to electronic music what Kansas City was to jazz, what Vienna was to classical music: scene, magnet, muse.
1. hyperreal.org: Hyperreal is a byzantine collective served from San Francisco; a data universe worth getting lost in, especially the area called Epsilon; the source of two of the best electronic-music mailing lists (see below); a major nexus of ambient links should you ever feel the need to venture beyond.
2. breaks.com: Jungle is the kinetic extreme of electronic music, and the Breaks site, based in London, has much in the way of profiles, discographies and related links.
3. needle-drop.com: Needles, you may recall, are what one once, before the age of the Internet, lowered onto circular vinyl platters in order to access sonic material. Click on www.needle-drop.com to access (via RealAudio) full-length DJ webcasts. At presstime, a full hour of France’s Laurent Garnier, was up and running.
4. web.canlink.com/nation: Otherwise known as Squelch, a bright webzine, albeit with an awkward interface, featuring downloadable sound clips from interviews and recordings. Located in Kingston, Ontario.
5. nirvanet.fr: Nirvanet is a Paris-based, trilingual (Francais, English, Espanol) cyberculture website which heavily emphasizes electronic music. Multiple plug-in requirements make the site kinda gimmicky, but the Techno Ballroom is well worth a twirl.
ONLINE (LO REZ): You don’t need to feed a superpowered ISDN connection into your computer in order to partake of the Internet’s electronic-music culture. There is much text-based activity
1. Intelligent Dance Music mailing list: Initiated in August of 1993 as an Aphex Twin discussion, this list quickly expanded to all manner of so-called intelligent dance. As a private, mediated list, it’s free of the “spams” (unwanted, generally commercial, posts) and “flames” (feud-inviting vitriol) that clog many Usenet newsgroups. Visit hyperreal.org/music/lists/idm to learn how to subscribe.
2. Ambient Music mailing list: The Hyperreal ambient email list is flush with advance-release news, philosophical debate and creative tangents (ambient movies, ambient novels); like IDM, it’s a mediated list. Visit hyperreal.org/music/lists/ambient to learn how to subscribe.
3. rec.music.ambient: Usenet newsgroups are the best places to post questions and thoughts and to receive feedback. There are newsgroups devoted to hundreds of types of music, and electronic music is no exception. The ambient group tends to feature album reviews, next-day concert reports and demo-tape swaps. Also check out alt.music.techno.
4. alt.music.makers.electronic: Usenet is also popular with professional and amateur musicians. The conversation can prove impenetrable to outsiders, but there’s a lot of information here. Also check out alt.music.makers.DJ.
5. Internet Relay Chat: IRC is not the hotbed of ambient talk one might expect. However, if you set up a channel called #ambient, someone is likely to stop by.
Originally published, in slightly different form, in Tower Records’ Pulse! magazine, November 1996.
There are comics all over my apartment but only one hangs on the wall. Surveying those walls, white like eggshells and for the most part just as bare, I suppose that I am particular about what I’ll display. Or in less effete terms, what I’m willing to look at day in, day out.
A five-foot-tall Stranger Than Paradise poster from France commands what my landlord and I call the kitchen and everyone else refers to as a closet. One summer evening after work I carried the dry-mounted monstrosity (“Un Film de Jim Jarmusch”) home on the subway from Manhattan to Brooklyn. My fellow subway riders, vagrant and salaried alike, couldn’t have looked at me stranger if the stiff board had read “The End Is Nigh” and been sandwiched around my naked body. When I switched coasts the following autumn, I packed the poster with my mattress.
The living room features two more dry-mounts: a Raw magazine promotional, illustrated by Dutch comics master Joost Swarte, and a black-on-tan human body marksmanship target produced by the Alco Target Company of Duarte, California. The target is visible through my window, which I suppose should be of some concern to me in this time of personal-armament deregulation. What I find far more worrisome, however — alarming, even — is that the same target is visible through the window of an apartment three blocks up my street, where I spied it a few weeks ago while driving home from the supermarket. My target may be retired shortly.
The dining room, which extends from the kitchen much as a dog extends from its tail, is graced by a black-and-white photograph of a bombed-out library. I first saw the image in the Sunday book review supplement of a London newspaper in 1993, and it took a year to track down a copy to the Royal Historical Archives. The photograph is of Holland House Library in October of 1940, no doubt after a German air raid. The floor is carpeted with charred books — an allusion to municipal book burnings, Nazi, PTA or otherwise — and the ceiling has collapsed into an X of charred beams, but the walls remain erect, extending into the distance, as do whole shelves of singed volumes along them. Three men stand among the ruins, unfazed by the disaster around them or, apparently, the terror of the night before; each is in a different stage of perusing the library, almost Muybridge time-release style. One, hands buried deep in his overcoat, scans the titles; the second selects a single volume with an index finger; and the third, younger than the other two and the only one minus an overcoat, is already reading deeply. A chair sits empty just off center.
In the past year, friends, relatives and I have stumbled upon the photo in no fewer than four places: the cover of a recent history of World War II; the cover of volume 7 of a lefty political journal titled Americas Review; the street window display of a large Manhattan bookstore, blown up three times the size of my Stranger Than Paradise poster; and buried deep in, oddly, volume 7 of Building America, an early-’40s scholastic encyclopedia published by the Department of Supervision and Curriculum Development, National Education Association.
What appealed to me about the Holland House photo when I first saw it reproduced on cheap newsprint was not so much the compositional spark, as it were, that raised the image from photojournalism to art. Instead, I was deeply touched by this romantic image of knowledge’s triumph over violence. So I suppose that I should be pleased to find it widely circulated. Sure I am.
Oh, and then, without pausing at the cork board suspended above my desk or the flea market oddity haloing the toilet, there’s this piece of comic art I mentioned.
I suppose it was a long time coming. I have been reading comic books since I was at an age when knowledge’s triumph over violence meant preferring to read books in my bedroom over chancing an encounter with the bullies, and other human beings who populated my suburban cul-de-sac. Along with fear, my parents can be credited with inspiring my bookish retreat from the world. Family legend tells that they chose the site of our house’s construction because it was within walking distance — .6 miles — of the local public library: a left off Beech Place onto Briarwood Drive, a hike right down Woodbury Road, and a right again onto Main Street. Place, Drive, Road, Street: Long Island offered such diversity of experience.
Woodbury Road was a thoroughfare, and though I was allowed — encouraged, in fact — to walk along its east side to the library, my parents forbade crossing it. A rebel, I was not. I remember when the town built a new road intersecting Woodbury from the east: Washington Carver — can you guess? — Avenue. My civic pride at my hometown’s racial pluralism [edit: see corrective note below] was cut brief, for it quickly occurred to me that Mom and Dad might now consider the east side of Woodbury too heavily trafficked. They did not.
Then, one day, someone rented some office space next to an accountant on the west side of Woodbury and built a museum of cartoon art. I kid you not. Across just two lanes of blacktop stood a small red-brick building housing original drawings from comic books and daily newspapers. My parents took me to the museum on occasion, but for the most part I had to imagine its contents from the other side of the street, forced to satiate my image-lust at the library with New Yorker compendiums and historian Maurice Horn’s The World Encyclopedia of Comics (which, I recently discovered, neglects Joost Swarte). As if to taunt me, the cartoon museum eventually replaced its generic bronze street number with word-balloon-style signage: a bright white Dairy Queen swirl tilted on its side and outlined in black. Eventually, after a few years of beckoning me into a speed zone, the gallery closed.
The trip from Woodbury Road to my second story apartment in Sacramento is fairly brief, as far as comics are concerned. College. English degree. Shit work. Job offer. Move to California. For the past six and a half years, I have been employed with a music-magazine publisher where, among other things, I edit the comics. We have space for about four or five comics a month, which averages the arrival of one per week. Nothing beats the thrill of opening a package containing comic art, not even interviewing a favorite musician or acquiring the freelance services of a favorite novelist. The ritual surrounding the arrival of comic art is all mine: the NASA-quality Federal Express adhesive; the layers of protective cardboard; the arcane language of the artist’s instructions to the printer — the rare experience of comic-as-art, several times its eventual printed size, before it’s been scanned, filtered through computers and reproduced into 350,000 identical copies. (I instigated comics at the magazines in the first place, so the sense of having built something from scratch only adds to my excitement each time a page arrives.)
Recently in Seattle on vacation, I visited the offices of Fantagraphics Books, where I was faced with the reality of big-league comics publishing. Color separations beamed from a half dozen computer screens. Galley copies sat stacked below chairs. Entire issues-worth of comic art lay about the room. “Oh, here’s the new Jim Woodring,” someone said, motioning toward the top of a sticker-covered file cabinet.
Well, the experience of original comic art — “original comic art,” those three words cemented together in vernacular like “recommended daily allowance” and “sexually transmitted disease” — can be nowhere so distant from the Fantagraphics experience as in my apartment. I have always wanted to possess such a thing, probably since I lost the raffle for a Spider-Man page at the cartoon art museum back on Woodbury Road. It has always been a question of what more than when. Several hundred pieces of art pass across my desk each year, editorial illustrations (often assigned to comics artists, rather than to traditional commercial illustrators) and comics proper. But I only bought my first piece less than a year ago, the piece I have since framed and hung in my apartment.
In San Diego for the annual comics convention, I don’t often find much of interest. Sure, I swoon over episodes of Walt Kelly’s Pogo, of significantly greater dollar value than my car. But financial matters eventually took a back seat in the comic-art search. Originally, I was set on a piece by British artist Dave McKean, the rich photographic collages and the stark pen-and-inks. But the latter, I came to realize, lost something when a single page was orphaned from the context of a lengthy story. And as for the collages — I should have learned from my work experience. For what looks tremendous on the magazine and comic-book page is a figment of printer’s magic. Though fully painted comics, complete with hand lettering, are not unheard of, a single color page may be constructed from as many as a dozen separations. McKean’s work was tremendous in person, some four times its printed size, but it was also an awkward origami of vellum, onion skin, instructive overlays and color separations, more puzzle than painting, and certainly not suitable for framing.
As I write this, I am expecting at work a comic by an artist I greatly admire. He will be providing the piece in two parts: one watercolor, one black line. I am flirting with the idea of purchasing both and framing them separately, but I have not seen the draft yet, so I have no idea whether the piece itself will be of interest to me personally. In any case, computers have rendered such a suggestion meaningless in most of comicdom these days. An overwhelming percentage of comics are colored digitally, as on the tubes in the Fantagraphics office, so there is no actual color work to be displayed in the cartoon museums of the future. At best I could beg a copy of a computer file from a color technician and turn it into a memory-intensive screensaver on my computer. (Hmm?)
Eventually I came to focus my comic-art search on black and whites — true black and whites, comics meant to be printed in black and white, not a black-and-white piece of art destined for a professional colorist. Ironically, the piece I chose to purchase, the piece that now hangs in my dining room on the wall adjacent to war-torn London, was selected before I ever saw the completed art. A series of faxes arrived one day from a cartoonist named Matt Madden who lives in Austin, Texas, and whose self-published Terrifying Steamboat Stories comic I have long enjoyed. Among the faxes was a draft for “House Music,” which contained six simple panels. The final art is reproduced here, and it doesn’t differ much from the draft, aside from the quality of the line work: A needle retreats from a vinyl LP, instigating a musing about the kind of life-music of which John Cage and Erik Satie wrote, a chamber music that meshes household appliances, street distractions and other ambient noise, orchestrated by the nature of the built environment (“Filtered through drywall,” writes Madden). The remainder of the comic art focuses on elements in that environment: a desk, a fan, the book-lined corner of the room, a tea kettle. The peace inherent in Madden’s comic is lovely; reading the fax that day reminded me of a “story” he had once drawn in Steamboat Stories about slicing a zucchini.
I OK’d the draft and negotiated with Madden for the purchase assuming the final art met my expectations. Then I sat and waited for the arrival of the comic, feeling like an Alaskan fisherman must in advance of his bride’s appearance.
A month or so later Federal Express delivered it. The wording had been slightly altered. The draft’s opening (“When a record side comes to an end, a new song begins”) had flowered (“When the needle reaches the end of its ever-narrowing vinyl spiral, a new music begins”) and other descriptions had been trimmed (“household appliances” became “appliances”). Several objects had shifted further out of the panels. I have to say that I feel odd complimenting Madden’s comic from this vantage, as if I have some vested interest in increasing the work’s value. Let it simply be stated that I loved “House Music” upon its arrival. So did much of the staff, and it ran in the next issue of one of our magazines.
Three hundred and fifty thousand copies later, I still loved “House Music” and once the art returned from the printer I installed it on my wall. From where I am sitting, my own bookcases are reflected in the corner of its Plexiglas frame. I hadn’t looked at the draft in close to a year before I decided to write this essay. I pulled it out of my files at work. Ever the editor, I remembered the text changes. And I was pleased to be reminded that the tea kettle, which faces inward in the final art, once pointed off the page; I believe that Madden’s alteration aided the piece’s sense of privacy and enclosure.
But the biggest change of all I had never even noticed before. In the original draft, a man sits in front of the computer, typing. His presence thoroughly changes the strip. In the early version we’re led to believe that the comic’s narration is what the man is typing. In the final version, the narration is freed from such a physical mooring, much as the sounds are freed from their reference points and allowed to mingle into an imaginary musical composition. I haven’t discussed this with Madden, but I imagine that he felt that the presence of a body violated the quietude of his piece. One of the ironies of his title is that house music refers to the loud, bass-heavy soundtrack of club life, in contrast to the contemplative peace of home, the peace of being alone. “House Music” rests on my wall now, and it can rest on yours as well, or your fridge for that matter, if you choose to cut it out of this magazine . But don’t begrudge my cherishing the original. Part of the marvel of the art is that the ink still reflects, as if it were freshly drawn. White-out is apparent in places, lending texture to the LP. And a light trace of blue-lined drafting remains. The phonograph needle in panel two, for example, was first rendered half an inch above where it now rests. But even in the blue line sketch, there’s no trace of the man at the computer, which leaves the house empty for me to enjoy the work.
_________________
Three supplements to the above article:
1. Here is the final version of “House Music” by Matt Madden:
2. Here is the draft:
3. This is an amendment, which I wrote in 2001 when the article was reprinted at TheComicStore.com:
Memory plays tricks. Washington Carver Avenue does not exist. The street I reference, the one that I crossed on my regular walk to and from the public library in my home town, is named W Carver Street.
According to the town historian, the street was initially laid out in 1875, barely a decade after George Washington Carver was born. There is, apparently, no identification for whom the street was named. The primary public document, the “Road Record” (“Highway Book D pg. 162”), sheds no light in this area. “It’s possible,” I was informed, “that Carver was a real-estate broker at the time, since we have seen other roads named after people in the real-estate industry.”
I was approached by TheComicStore.com in early 2001, because the editor, an old friend, wanted to reprint this article I’d written about memory and comics and decorating and editing and so forth. I already knew at that time that I had gotten this street-name information wrong when the piece was first published, in Destroy All Comics magazine in 1996. I wrote not only to the town historian, but to my dad, to see what he knew about W Carver, and he emailed back:
“It was built some time in your youth. I don’t remember when but certainly before your adolescence. One of the selling points when we bought our house was that you would only have one street to cross going to the library, but they did us in by putting in W Carver and making you cross two streets.”
If you follow W Carver and cross New York Avenue, W Carver turns into E Carver. So W means West, not Washington. As a kid, I never wandered along Carver that far; I didn’t know about E Carver, just W Carver. I didn’t really look at street signs much at all, anyhow. I just knew when to turn left, when to turn right and when to walk straight ahead.
I did walk near E Carver later on, because it was near the Radio Shack, where I first got hooked on computers, and near several used book stores, where I accumulated copies of Mad Magazine paperbacks — dusty, fragile collections of “Spy vs. Spy,” Don Martin, “The Lighter Side,” and parodies of old movies I’d never heard of.
Originally published in ever so slightly different form in Destroy All Comics #5, May 1996. The parenthetical amendment about Carver Street was published on TheComicStore.com in May 2001.
Philip Glass’ most recent recording is not listed in the Schwann Opus catalog, the bible of classical new releases. The composition is called “Icct Hedral” and he cowrote it with Richard D. James, a young English synthesizer whiz who records under several pseudonyms, most prominently as Aphex Twin.
The pulsing, atmospheric “Icct Hedral” exemplifies what is called, in pop parlance, ambient techno music. It originally appeared on Aphex Twin’s album … I Care Because You Do (Warp/Sire/Elektra) as executed by James’ battery of electronics atop a patented Glass string setting. Glass’ full orchestration of the collaboration surfaced late this past summer on a U.K. import titled Donkey Rhubarb (Warp). His pulsing, atmospheric arrangement exemplifies what is called, in classical parlance, minimalism.
“Icct Hedral” is not Glass and James’ first association. Last year, Aphex Twin produced for Glass’ Point Music label a remix of The Sinking of the Titanic, composed by his fellow English electronics maven Gavin Bryars. Bryars, of course, is one of the primary influences on the music of Brian Eno, whose Obscure label first released Titanic in the ’70s and whose work from that time with pop singer David Bowie bore classical fruit recently as Glass’ Low Symphony.
The circle, as they say, is unbroken, even if Opus proves somewhat spotty in its coverage of the promiscuous music-making. The Summer ’95 Opus lists Glass’ Low, but neglects his work with Aphex Twin. Now, it is neither Opus‘ duty nor its editorial practice to map the full range of classical creativity. Most of the catalog is culled from record company-supplied submissions, not from the magazine’s data sleuthing. Which ultimately means that Glass is responsible for what among his work he chooses to categorize as classical. “Icct Hedral” did not make the cut.
But as we emerge from civic-minded Classical Music Month, the gaps in Opus do draw attention to the wide variety of music played out in the public arena, an arena too dynamic these days for active classical listeners to depend entirely on traditional sources of classical news. For every Philip Glass side project that threatens to give crossover a good name, there are a dozen exciting CDs released well under the radar.
Two records released this past summer serve to focus discussion on the involvement of rock labels — particularly independently distributed rock labels — in the musical activity. The records are Berlin: Symphony of a Great City, a new score to the 1927 F.W. Murnau film by 32-year-old composer Timothy Brock, and Rachel’s Handwriting, a disc of original compositions by a loose-knit collective that goes by the awkward moniker Rachel’s.
The Murnau score appeared on K Records, which is based in Olympia, Wash., and is best known, aside for one previous Brock score (Murnau’s Sunrise), for an idiosyncratic brand of self-produced, low-budget pop, including that of the label’s founder, Calvin Johnson. Brock has known Johnson since he was 18. Johnson’s current band is called the Dub Narcotic Sound System. Brock leads the Olympia Chamber Orchestra, which he conducts on the K releases. Johnson has explained the Brock anomalies in K’s catalog by saying the OCO is simply one facet of Olympia’s music scene which K chronicles.
Brock, who has a severe reading disability, is self-taught and holds no university degree. He began composing at age 13, and at age 19 was composer-in-residence of the University Chamber Orchestra at the University of Washington. Today he is composer-in-residence for the L.A.-based Film Preservation Archives, the source of his score commissions. (This fall, Opus will begin to list film scores, which already run in Spectrum, its non-classical sibling publication.) K will release Brock’s new Faust this month, and 20th Century Fox’s forthcoming Sunrise laserdisc will feature his music.
Rachel’sHandwriting appeared on Quarterstick Records, a Chicago-based record label whose catalog is exemplified by such bands as Mule and the Mekons — inventive acts, but ones working purely within the pop/rock idiom. Like Brock’s chamber score, Handwriting fits comfortably within a common definition of classical music (certainly more easily than much of Philip Glass’ extracurricular activities). Brock’s work is rich with romantic melodic swaths, punctuated by expressionistic angles; the sympathetic playing is a tribute to Brock’s close working relationship with his fellow Olympia residents in the OCO. The Rachel’s record is a small chamber effort, sad-toned in the manner of Kurt Weill, Astor Piazzolla and the string writing of John Lurie. It is built around a trio comprised of the group’s composers — Christian Frederickson (viola), Rachel Grimes (piano) and Jason B. Noble (bass) — plus guests ranging from vibraphone to clarinet.
Frederickson and Grimes are academically trained (she received her BA in composition in Louisville; he is currently at Juilliard). Whereas none of Brock’s OCO members participate in the Olympia rock scene, many of the additional players on Handwriting are members of “alternative” rock acts.
A graduate of several rock bands, Noble is the secret ingredient of Rachel’s (he plays electric guitar and manipulates tapes on two of the record’s tracks). And his ambiguous role in its music — musical omnivore, self-consciously untrained — is an emblem for the position of rock labels as an emerging influence in the classical field.
Originally published, in slightly different form, in Classical Pulse! magazine, October 1995.
A musician repairs artifact instruments and attempts to reproduce long-forgotten performance practices, hoping to rediscover the original sound, setting and inspiration of the music to which he has dedicated his life.
A small ensemble is labeled “avant-garde” for its mixing of traditional instrumentation with prerecorded tape loops; deaf to the name-calling, the group faces the challenge of bringing its complicated studio concoctions to life on stage.
A radio station’s program director is excited by new performers and compositions and wants to bring them to the station’s audience, but the audience responds only to music it already knows.
Classical music fans will find these scenarios pretty familiar: the divisive period-instruments standoff, the glut of repertoire warhorses, those tradition-threatening “electro-acoustic” composers. Each subject has sparked a fierce debate, a volley of aesthetic rivalry among liner-note manifestos, the academy, and magazine and newspaper articles. And each debate has, in turn, faded to a subtle but enduring residue on the face of classical music life in the late 20th century. It is nagging stuff, the content of party small talk and cursory surveys of the classical-music industry’s never-ending woes: poor record sales, a static canon, a graying audience.
What may be surprising, however, are the identities of the artists mentioned above. The musician toiling in the authentic-instruments movement is a prolific British punk-rock holdout who calls himself Billy Childish, the “avant-garde” ensemble is a rap group known as the Beastie Boys, and the struggling musicians favored by our hypothetical struggling station director are countless.
The search for common ground between classical and pop music is nothing new, but the discussion invariably focuses on superficial overlaps: the Beatles enticing Alan Civil to cameo with his French horn, a Sir Michael Tippett orchestration that calls for an electric guitar, a Madonna hit single that closes with a snippet of chamber music. Some of today’s composers dig deeper, attempting to absorb pop much as Dvorak did his own national folk music; Scott Johnson, David Lang and David Soldier come to mind. But the general public is far more likely to be treated to the reverse on that formula: commercial attempts to fire the classical repertoire under a pop glaze. Listen, if you must, to Visions, Angel Records’ recent cynical contemporization of 12th-century composer Hildegard von Bingen — complete with electric keyboard drivel more suited to a nightclub than a house of worship.
The attempt to make peace between classical and pop music is poisoned by attempts to make a heavy profit off that peace. What is neglected wholesale are the things that classical and pop music and musicians have in common, regardless of their aesthetic sympathies, or even mutual awareness. These essential, and invisible, matters are perhaps best described as procedural. Music is many things, but high up on the list is the attempt to answer questions, deal with problems; these challenges are the things classical and pop musicians have in common, even if their answers — hell, their whole vocabularies — are different. The results of this line of inquiry will not create the next Officium, the ECM label’s failed attempt to fuse its jazz and classical sides; nor will it determine the song list for the next 3 Tenors concert. If anything, focusing on what pop and classical musicians have in common ultimately brings into focus that which they do not.
Shouldn’t fans of the authentic-instrument movement be intrigued, even heartened, to discover that a similar tenet has taken hold in pop music? Billy Childish, for example, likes things lo-fi. The term encapsulates a relatively new recording ideology, a return to simple recording situations: limited microphones, tube amplifiers, no overdubs. We aren’t talking about gut strings, equal temperament and glacially escalating concert pitch, but for once pop music appears to be following classical music’s lead. Childish, for one, hears romance in the brittle echo of wire recordings, just as Malcolm Bilson does in the short decay of the fortepiano. By betraying the failings of source tape, CDs are blessed with a more human feel, or so the theory goes. That the repertoire of the classical period-instrument movement dates almost exclusively to pre-recording history shouldn’t preclude the albums of Childish and, say, his countryman John Eliot Gardiner from being heard together. (Similarly, aficionados of studio-minded composers Gavin Bryars, Alvin Curran, Alvin Lucier and Morton Subotnick should appreciate the Beastie Boys’ techniques, if not their music, given the rap trio’s agility at blending prerecorded and live music like no one else around.)
Getting to hear new music is the biggest obstacle. NPR listeners accustomed to catching one of The Four Seasons every week can relate: What gets played on radio isn’t what’s going on in classical music, only what has made it through the layers of consultants, ad agencies and bottom-line-feeding music directors. Same goes for pop radio.
After hearing Abbess Hildegard recast as a synthesizer-twiddling new-age seer (and looker), you too may bristle at the artificial sheen endemic to today’s commercial music and instinctively scurry off to a remote hovel with poor electricity, OK acoustics and a good spirit about it. And you may just find Childish or someone of his ilk already there, having set up a two-track recorder and ripping through a series of pop tunes that sound like they date back to the era of Heifetz and Stravinsky.
Originally published, in slightly different form, in Classical Pulse! magazine, December 1994.