Quote of the Week: The Music of Jonathan Lethem’s Chronic City

The new novel by Jonathan Lethem takes place in a modern Manhattan slightly askew from our own. It’s the same Epcot for aesthetes that the borough has become in the years since Mayor Rudolph Giuliani bleached Times Square and tamed crime, but there are differences, like a giant, and likely mechanical, tiger raging through midtown, and the existence of pop-cultural artifacts with no equivalent in our world, such as films that don’t appear in the IMDB listings for Marlon Brando and Werner Herzog — at least not in our parallel universe. The novel is titled Chronic City, and true to its name, it’s a marijuana-infused story of cultural paranoia. Key among those paranoids is Perkus, a walking encyclopedia of film, pop music, and politics who spends his time weaving conspiracies from stray threads of coincidence. These insights also manifest themselves in the form of “cluster” headaches, which lead him, in the following scene, to visit an acupuncturist known as Strabo:

    Thin as threads, each with a tiny flag at their end, they entered his body at various points, neck and wrists and shoulders, painlessly. Only a hint of tightness, a feeling he shouldn’t move suddenly, confirmed Strabo had used them at all. Then Strabo lowered the lights and switched on some music, long atmospheric tones that might have been vaguely Eastern. “To someone like you this CD may sound a bit corny,” he said, surprising Perkus. “But it’s specially formulated, there are tones underneath the music that are engaging directly with your limbic system. It works even if you don’t like the music particularly. It’s inoffensive, but I personally wish it didn’t sound so much like Muzak.”

    “Okay,” said Perkus, just beginning to see that he was expected to reside with the needles a while.

    “I’ll be back for you in half an hour. Practice breathing.”

    “What if I fall asleep?”

    “It’s fine to sleep. You can’t do anything wrong.” With that, Strabo was gone. Perkus lay still, feeling himself pined like a knife-thrower’s assistant, listening as an odious pan flute commenced soloing over the synthesized tones, promising a long dreadful journey through cliché. Here Perkus was, supreme skeptic and secularist, caught naked and punctured, his whole tense armor of self perilously near to dissolved. How had it could to this?

The first chapter is available for download at amazon.com.

Past Week at Twitter.com/Disquiet

  • Back to the Futurism, tonight: Luigi Russolo / Metal Machine Manifesto — Music for 16 Intonarumori at Yerba Buena — http://is.gd/4n32Y #
  • So much fog out, it's imaginable that it squelches the fog horns. #
  • Sirens and helicopter noise seem more conspicuous in San Francisco, if not more prevalent, since Trauma debuted on TV. #
  • The Tuesday noon siren rings on a Thursday: 10:15 on 10/15. Weird to hear the sound out of temporal context. Hope it never means something. #
  • Saw the Pogues, who still rock. The penny whistle is the stiletto of rock, the way it pierces the raucous rollick. (No Longplayer, though.) #
  • Last evening before the new neighbors move in. Enjoying final hours of several months of footstep-less-ness and backyard-noise-less-ness. #
  • Support @hecanjog solo electronic-music November tour and get a 7", a 12", a good feeling, and much more: http://is.gd/4itYD #
  • What we learned on Fringe last week: Dr. Bishop likes Yes, Dr. Bell likes Jerry Garcia, & Chris Squire's bass doesn't sound great on my TV. #
  • Woke up to find new Jonathan Lethem novel on my iPod Touch. Kindle software's a nice way to shop, especially on rainiest day of the year. #
  • Eating some pizza, learning about Ableton. #
  • College student on bus, seat close to mine, had iPod stolen and was hit in face. On the scene, police said it's "the fourth one tonight." #
  • This week's Disquiet MP3 Discussion Group is yapping it up about the Italian duo Tu M's album Monochromes Vol. 1 (Line): http://is.gd/4fTCI #
  • Holland Cotter asks of the Obamas's art choices: "Couldn’t they have opted for … a Sound Art piece in the Rose Garden?" http://is.gd/4dO9L #
  • The "Music" section at http://www.instructables.com/music is like http://www.etsy.com with instructions. #

Electronic Minimalism, Pulses and All (MP3s)

Much ambient and otherwise minimal electronic music bears the hallmarks of what’s known in classical music as “minimalism,” but few musicians accomplish this cross-pollination with the melodic alacrity of Segue. That’s the name under which Vancouver, Canada-born, Washington, DC-based Jordan Sauer records his pulsing, flowing, time-slowing wonders, like the three tracks that comprise his recent album, In with the Out, Old with the New. Released last month on the IOD netlabel, the record is rich with pieces that mix clockwork patterning with sinuous intent. Only one of the tracks is available for streaming, the rapid “Adventure” (MP3), which balances its staccato vocabulary, all miniscule little rhythmic items that sound like a china shop during an earthquake, with a glacial melodic structure.

[audio:http://semlabel.com/IOD/IOD009/03%20Adventure.mp3|titles=”Adventure”|artists=Segue]

The full set, however, is available for download as a Zip archive at semlabel.com/IOD.

More on Segue/Sauer at duckbay.net.

Sonic Exploration by Marc McNulty (MP3)

Were the Barrons, of Forbidden Planet soundtrack fame, still alive and working today, they might very well sound like Marc McNulty, the musician and sound artist whose explorations of small sonic spaces result in squiggling effects that suggest an otherworldly aura. He recently contributed a half-hour performance to the Rare Frequency podcast series (rarefrequency.com), and it’s a characteristically internecine journey through microscopic dank pockets of slomo whirligigs, melting tonal affect, and tantalizing garbles (MP3). Which is to say, it sounds both like a modern use of digital audio tools to explore audio objects, and like the special effects from an ancient science fiction film. Tomorrow’s music is yesteryear’s foley sounds.

[audio:http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/rfPodcasts/~5/SHGmrhmylLE/Podcast_Spec_39_Marc_McNulty_Live_on_Rare_Frequency.mp3|titles=”Lamictal”|artists=Marc McNulty]

Much more on McNulty as his website, earphone.org, which is generous with MP3s. According to a post on his site, the piece performed on Rare Frequency is titled “Lamictal,” which appears to be the name of a prescription drug used to treat bipolar disorder and epilepsy.

Cole Pierce’s Piano Clockwork (MP3)

Recipes can be judged, at least in part, by their ingredients. The parts of Cole Pierce‘s 2008 sound installation Piano Clockwork read as follows: “improvised piano, a clock running on a low battery, faulty mics, and tape manipulation.” It was presented at the Old Gold gallery in Chicago from October 24 through November 16 of last year. He’s uploaded a nearly 20-minute segment of the installation’s audio, and as with any good cooking, it retains elements of the ingredients, but is somehow transformed through alchemy.

Yes, there is the piano, heard in lush, echoing waves. And yes, there is the clock, represented through an occasional metronomic pulse, like feet slowly beating a path across wet ground. But it is much more than that — heard here, those sounds are buried deep in a thick envelope of backward-masked wisps, and a verdant haze of rough noises.

To download the MP3, click on the little arrow in the interface above.

More on the exhibit space at oldgoldexhibitionsandevents.com. These are two images shot at the site, from Pierce’s blog, colepierce.com: