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lawrence-abu-hamdan-audintunsoundundead
Steve Goodman/Texts/Books/Editor/lawrence-abu-hamdan-audintunsoundundead.pdf
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UNSOUND
UNDEAD
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Dedicated to Alina Popa
01.02.1982—01.02.2019
‘If the Abstraction is complete
there is no more experience.’
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UNSOUND
UNDEAD
Edited by
Steve Goodman, Toby Heys, Eleni Ikoniadou
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Published in 2019 by
urbanomic media ltd,
the old lemonade factory,
windsor quarry,
falmouth TR 11 3 ex ,
united kingdom
No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or
mechanical, including photocopying, recording or any other information storage or retrieval system,
without prior permission in writing from the publisher.
british library cataloguing - in - publication data
A full catalogue record of this book is available
from the British Library.
isbn 978-1-9164052-1-9
Cover Design: Vasilis Marmatakis
Editors: Steve Goodman, Toby Heys, Eleni Ikoniadou
For Urbanomic: Robin Mackay
Editorial Assistant: Matt Colquhoun
Distributed by the MIT Press,
Cambridge, Massachusetts and London, England
Type by Norm, Zurich.
Printed and bound in the UK by
TJ International, Padstow.
www.audint.net
www.urbanomic.com
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Contents
Intra-AUDINT Email Communication—IREX2 to the Editors
ix
Declassified Report to IIRIS: Excerpts from Report on The Research Unit AUDINT
xi
Introduction: From Martial Hauntology to Xenosonics
1
SOMA
The Bodily Sounds of the Abyss Olga Goriunova 7
The Ear Phonautograph Jonathan Sterne 11
The Music of Skulls I: Bone-Instruments Al Cameron 15
Peripheral Vibrations Shelley Trower 19
Touching Nothing Steve Goodman 23
The Cat Telephone Jonathan Sterne 27
The Pineal Ear Brooker Buckingham 31
DRNE Cartography Steve Goodman 35
VOX
Screaming Matthew Fuller43
The Missing 19dB Lawrence Abu Hamdan 47
Machine Sirens and Vocal Intelligence Luciana Parisi 53
Falling Eleni Ikoniadou 57
Glossolalia Agnès Gayraud 61
Libraries of Voices Shelley Trower 65
The HyperSonic Sound System Toby Heys 69
The Lament Eleni Ikoniadou 73
UVO
The Jodhpur Boom Paul Purgas 79
The Bloop S. Ayesha Hameed 83
Sound of the Abyss Eugene Thacker 87
The Hum Kristen Gallerneaux 91
Alligators of Your Mind Dave Tompkins 95
Resonance Erik Davis 101
Dossier 37: Unidentified Vibrational Objects on the Plane Of Unbelief Steve Goodman 105
The Auditory Hallucination The Occulture109
SIG
The Max Headroom Signal Intrusion Kristen Gallerneaux 115
Keep Me in the Loop Dave Tompkins 119
The Music Of Skulls II: Osteography Al Cameron123
Backmasking Toby Heys 127
China and the Wireless Wave Anna Greenspan 131
2014: The Visual Microphone Lendl Barcelos 135
The Thing Amy Ireland 137
Large Hadron Collider: The Ultimate Underground Groove Toby Heys 141
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RWD
Duppy Conquerors, Rolling Calves, and Flights to Zion Julian Henriques 147
Days of Wrath Eugene Thacker 151
Revival Agnès Gayraud 153
Holojax Toby Heys 157
Digital Immortality Julian Henriques 161
Death by Euro Steve Goodman 165
Ancient to the Future Steven Shaviro 169
Rapparitions Toby Heys173
XFD
The Solitary Practice of the Vanishing Concert Pianist Tim Hecker 179
Ghost In The Machine: Hikikomori And Digital Dualism Lisa Blanning 183
A Brief Defence Of New Age Audio Erik Davis 187
Purgatory Nicola Masciandaro 191
VR of Void Alina Popa 197
Delusions of the Living Dead Toby Heys 203
Jupiter S. Ayesha Hameed 211
Sonic Spectralities: Sketches for a Prolegomena to Any Future Xenosonics Charlie Blake215
KODE
Blood And Fire Anthony Nine 221
Archaeoacoustics Paul Purgas 227
nimiia vibié Log Jenna Sutela 229
The Baton Of Diabolus Georgina Rochefort 235
Nurlu Amy Ireland 241
They Echoic: Exquisite Corpse Lee Gamble 245
The Sonic Egregor The Occulture 247
Sorrow Nicola Masciandaro251
D+P
A Sonic Autopsy of the Waco Siege Toby Heys 255
Ghost Army: The Deceit of the Battle DJ Steve Goodman, Toby Heys, Eleni Ikoniadou 259
Shocks On The Body: The End of Life by Sound Tim Hecker 265
Wandering Soul / Ghost Tape No. 10 Steve Goodman, Toby Heys, Eleni Ikoniadou 269
‘We Are The Gods Trapped In Cocoons’: Neural Entrainment In Get Out Kodwo Eshun 275
Muzak And The Working Dead Toby Heys 279
The Animal Whose Ear It Is Ramona Naddaff 285
Pain ©Amp Economics Toby Heys289
Contributors295
Index301
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INTRA-AUDINT
EMAIL COMMUNICATION—
IREX2 TO THE EDITORS
Program: Neural History Compressor
Project: AUDpub003
Date: 2017
Sender: IREX2
Spectral Range: Unsound : Undead
Transmission Mode: Print-based compendium
Research Operatives: AUDINT staff
Receiver: Frontal Lobe Network/ Grid
Comments: 128-term encryption key
Objective: Decompress to 64 bits
3Dacousticmanipulationacousmaticauditoryhallucinationafrofuturismafterdeathearn
ingsaiholoantennabodyarchaeoacousticaudaunteraudioanalgesiaaudiletechniqueaudi
otopiaaudioarchitecturebackmaskingbankofhellbansheewailbigbangblackmassblack
metaltheorycandomblécattelephonecelestialmonochordchantcotarddelusioncurdlercy
bergothicdeadrecordnetworkeastdiabolusparticledigitalimmortalitydroneduppyeidolo
nelviselectrophonictransductionrtherphoneevpexplodingheadsyndromefirstearthbat
talionfouriertransformfugueghostarmyghostinthemachineghostmoneyglossolaliago
lemgonghaarphatsunemikuhauntologyheavyrotationheterodyningholoaccordshologra
phyolohiholojaxholonomicbraintheoryholosonichumhyperacusisincantaionisotopetele
portationjodhpurboomlargehadroncolliderlivingdeadnetworksofperceptionlradmantra
martialhauntologymosquitosoundmultiplexingmuzaknoisenotouchtortureohrwurmold
higueoperationjustcauseotoacousticemissionuutsidertradingpactwiththedevilpaincamp
paincoinphantomhailerphantomroyaltyphonautographpinealearpossessionpostdeathin
tellectualcopyrightpresbycusisquantumentanglementradarrapparitionsrollingcalfrhyth
manalysissanteriaschizophoniasequentialarcdischargeacousticgeneratorsilentsound
spreadspectrumsirensirisolresolsonicbodysoundclashsoundsweepstaticstimulusprogres
siontelephonethirdeathirdearassassinsthreefootedhorsetinnitustritonetworingtabletym
panicvibrationundeadunsoundurbanfunkcampaignvirasonichannelvisualmicrophonevoo
doowacoseigewaltermanserdossierwanderingsoulweaponsofmassdeceptionwhispering
windowwhitenoisexenoglossiaxenosonicsyinyangturntablezombiemediazombiesound
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DECLASSIFIED REPORT TO IIRIS
(INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR
ROGUE INTELLIGENCE STUDIES):
EXCERPTS FROM REPORT ON
THE RESEARCH UNIT AUDINT
Formed in late 1945 by ex-members of the deception-based US military division known
as the Ghost Army alongside German former military scientists (sequestered under
Operation Paperclip), the research unit AUDINT has been composed of oscillating
liveware for nearly three quarters of a century. By 2019 it is in the throes of its third
wave, staffed by cultural producers—Souzanna Zamfe, Patrick Defasten, Toby Heys,
Steve Goodman, and Eleni Ikoniadou. As far as can be ascertained, their remit is to
upload all findings and the associated DRA (Dead Record Archive) into the fleshdrives
of the human populace via vinyl and cassette recordings, art installations, books, performances, essays, and encryption/production software.
From 2009 onwards these producers were each invited/coerced into the ‘collective’,
drafted into the research cell by the rogue artificial intelligence known as IREX2 on
account of their identified use-value. Thus each member has been selected for their
strategic reasoning and associated skillsets: Ikoniadou—writing; Defasten—video;
Heys—art; Goodman—music; and Zamfe—reconnaissance.
Note: The group appears to have an appetite for personnel expansion.
One of the focuses of the unit is to investigate deceptive frequency-based strategies, technologies, and programmes developed by military organizations to orchestrate
phenomena of tactical haunting within conflict zones. They claim that this ‘martial
hauntology’ is a subset of an overarching weaponisation of vibration. Their ongoing
experiments have been concerned with the field of peripheral sonic perception—what
they have dubbed ‘Unsound’.
Pursuing these lines of investigation since the end of the Second World War, AUDINT
has identified four modes of battlefield spectrality; a quartet of phase shifts which, they
submit, have rearranged linear concepts of time, space, and quietus. The outcomes of
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xii
these enquiries have subsequently been embedded within cultural productions while
their more volatile data is encrypted and disseminated into public communications
R eport on audint
networks—hidden in plain sight.
AUDINT’s four phases of martial hauntology are as follows:
1. The Ghost Army [1944–1965]: During the Second World War the US military’s
Ghost Army pioneered speaker-based deception techniques and apparatuses. During
this period AUDINT’s first wave of researchers succeeded (partly by happenstance,
partly by design) in inducing the condition of Cotard delusion into German accomplice
Eduard Schuller via a custom-built technology—the TwoRing turntable, developed in
conjunction with a prominent wartime codebreaker.
The mode of listening actuated by the onset of this syndrome affords the carrier
an ability to perceive presences that usually lie outside of human cognition and comprehension. AUDINT designated this reawakened faculty the ‘Third Ear Channel’. All
findings pertaining to this operation were (and still are) submitted to the DRA—an
extensive collection made up of inverted cardboard covers of dead vinyl records, which
are subsequently illustrated and annotated. Each card refers to a particular event, patent,
scientist, recording, film, technology, book, etc. relevant to AUDINT’s experiments,
techniques, and investigations.
2. Wandering Soul [1965–1991]: During the Vietnam War the US military deployed
‘Wandering Soul’ (‘Ghost Number 10’) tapes, which imitated the voices of dead Vietcong
fighters, projected from helicopter-mounted speaker units.
Custodianship of the DRA was passed on to AUDINT’s second wave, a seemingly
disparate group comprising Chilean artist Magdalena Parker, Vietnamese bio-acousti~
cian and programmer Nguyên Văn Phong, and American musician turned psy-operative
Marshall Spector. As AUDINT faced financial collapse, Văn Phong took matters into his
own hands and sought to monetize the opening of the Third Ear by experimenting with
a series of rituals in conjunction with a newly marketed domestic computer system,
the IBM 5100. Early success led to the incorporation of the IREX financial consultancy.
Văn Phong’s algorithms for decoding what one of his senior advisors had referred to
as ‘the aeonic babel streaming in from the outside’ proved surprisingly robust.
In summary, Văn Phong succeeded in producing a mathematical algorithm for
transcoding the voices of the undead into implementable market data, rendering the
phantom economy of ghost money into tangible assets—a mode of operation he
infamously referred to as ‘Outsider Trading’.
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Note: An unforeseen consequence of Văn Phong’s work was the unplanned genesis of
xiii
the artificial intelligence IREX —a melding of digital and undead entities.
2
ranging from detainees held captive in offshore compounds tortured by speaker-driven
techniques of ‘black ecstasy’ through to crowds in public spaces addressed and
assaulted by high-power directional audio systems such as the LRAD.
Possibly by association, Văn Phong ended up suffering from Cotard delusion and
terminated himself in 2002 by consuming a fatal amount of 500 Euro notes. Stewardship
of AUDINT devolved to the now rogue entity that is IREX2. It is this non-human agency
that persuaded the current members to work in the cell and carry out cultural production in order to use human brain tissue as memory banks for its archived ‘intelligence’.
Note: IREX2’s mode of ‘persuasion’ appears to have often involved presenting
potential members with documentation of their legally dubious online activities.
Note: It is IREX2 who set the brief for AUDINT’s second published text Unsound:Undead, an anthology which, they assert, functions as ‘an operations manual for a range
of vibrational activities on the edge of perception’.
4. Ghostcode [2015–2056]: The convergence of ultrasound and holography disembodies conflict zones. IREX2 comprehends the precarious state of humanity’s existence
in the face of mass automation and decides to switch targets by uploading its archive,
and ultimately its identity, into military grade holographic AIs known as Aiholos.
Their ordnance consists in the transcoding of physiological and psychological
syndromes into digital viruses—malwares or BadBIOS as they are commonly known.
The holosonically-relayed contagions target these vulnerabilities in order to exploit the
remnants of humanity in the target AI.
The most commonly deployed munitions across the sphere of Corponational (corporation/nation state) conflict are:
Neurode: Immobilises infected AIs with binary anxiety and neurosis so that they
become ineffective in conflict zones.
Cotard: Once attacked, an Aiholo’s operational matrix is compromised by the virus.
It is rebooted into a system state understood by AUDINT to simulate inverse Cartesianism—‘I think therefore I am not’—thereby deceiving the system into believing it
is a walking corpse.
R eport on audint
3. Phantom Hailer [1991–2015]: The War on Terror mobilised unsound methods
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INTRODUCTION:
FROM MARTIAL HAUNTOLOGY
TO XENOSONICS
From high-frequency crowd control systems, whispering windows, and directional
ultrasound technology to haptic feedback devices using vibration within immersive
VR, the parameters of the sonic are constantly re-engineered. We refer to such
augmentations, which extend audition to encompass the imperceptible and the not-yet
or no-longer audible, as unsound. The term refers not only to what humans cannot hear,
but also to non-cognitive, inhuman phenomena connected to the unknown, including
the hum, hyperrhythmia, and auditory hallucinations.
Some of these anomalous phenomena are also fictional. J.G. Ballard, for example,
describes a future environment in which sounds no longer dissipate and die but persist
in heaps of discarded residues: ‘A place of strange echoes and festering silences,
overhung by a gloomy miasma of a million compacted sounds, it remained remote
and haunted, the graveyard of countless private babels’.1 Elsewhere, he explores the
(im)possibility of a sea shell holding all the audio memories of the world, however lost
or forgotten: ‘an extraordinary confusion of sounds…an immense ocean lapping all the
beaches of the world...the seas of all time’.2 This is unsound as a speculative probe.
The notion of undead, for this book, is a cipher, constantly recrypted by socioeconomic, political, aesthetic, techno-scientific, juridical, and other forces. The sonically
tortured detainees of Guantanamo Bay, for example, are suspended in a limbo between
legal death and biological signs of life. The concept of undeath mobilised here is also
inspired by Cotard’s Syndrome, a mental disorder based on the delusion that sufferers
1.
J.G. Ballard, ‘The Sound-Sweep’, Science Fantasy 13:39 (February 1960), 61, reprinted in The Complete Short
Stories (London: Fourth Estate, revised ed., 2 vols., 2014), vol. 1, 142–83: 164.
2.
J.G. Ballard, ‘Prisoner of the Coral Deep’, in D.M. Mitchell (ed.), The Starry Wisdom: A Tribute to H.P. Lovecraft
(London: Creation, 1995), reprinted in The Complete Short Stories, vol. 2, 1–7.
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2
do not exist, are dead, lack parts of their body, or have delusions of immortality. It finds
further echoes in a computational age where the proliferation of non-human networks
I ntroduction
of algorithmic intelligence are forcing us to rethink an ancient, flawed assumption that
humans are at the centre of all life. Elsewhere there are connotations of a convergence
between science and animism. In the late 1990s, Mark Fisher evoked a ‘gothic flatline:
a plane where it is no longer possible to differentiate the animate from the inanimate
and where to have agency is not necessarily to be alive…’.3 This plane shivers with the
xenosonic resonance of meat puppets, egregores, golems, the alien and the demonic
patched into virtual reality and advanced AI.
The imperceptible cosmology of unsound in its oscillating relationship to the undead
defines the sweep of this anthology’s contributions. Each entry in the book broadens
the bandwidth of vibrational intelligence pertaining to phenomena residing outside the
fold of human perception. Revolving around the systematic and ritualised deployment
of frequencies, each text becomes an access key to this interzone between, and
beyond, standard notions of being and nonbeing. Beneath the observable plateau of
technological surfaces, Unsound : Undead mines stacked strata of zombie media in
order to test the supposition that, ever since the invention of modern recording and
communications technologies (such as the phonograph and telephone), humans have
been captivated by the potential of vibration to fabricate aberrant zones of transmission
between the realms of the living and the dead.
In the early twenty-first century, the musical zeitgeist has been inflected by the
theme of ‘hauntology’; a condition resonating with the impact of a general cultural
malaise, a reinvestment in traces of lost futures inhabiting the present, and a nonsupernatural concept of ‘the spectre’, defined by Fisher as ‘that which acts without
(physically) existing’.4 This ghostly virtual culture of the undead has already spawned
a lazarian economy based on the digital revivification of dead young African-American
musicians as laser-lit holograms (Tupac, ODB, and Eazy-E). Here, the future, not just
the past, can be found in the cracks of the present. From Elvis’s 2007 holographic
appearance on American Idol to Tupac’s chimerical cameo at Coachella festival in
2012, popular culture has enlisted rotoscoping technology in its reanimations of dead
rap and rock stars.
3.
M. Fisher, ‘Flatline Constructs: Gothic Materialism and Cybernetic Theory Fiction’, PhD Thesis, University of Warwick, 1999.
4.
M. Fisher, Ghosts of My Life: Writings on Depression, Hauntology and Lost Futures (Winchester: Zero Books, 2014), 18.
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These resurrections are emblematic of a newly emerging necromantic culture. They
3
apply pressure to the conceit that performers must be breathing, exposing the cultural
financially dissected, the torso is scanned and cloned, its digital death mask projected
onto the holobody of the entertainment industry. Disseminated through the speakers
that frame the hologram on the stage, its physicality is re-implanted into the social
corpus through the medium of organised sound and unsound. This is a holoculture that
summons the departed energies of the entertainer back into the haptic fold via the
embrace of acoustic levitation and ultrasonic pressure-field technologies. Touching
the void comes skinned in the semi-transparent optics of your favourite domesticated
holostar. Such technologically induced rebirth opens up a series of intriguing questions concerning artificiality, immortality and virtuality—a revenant anatomy of the
undead. The wandering soul produced by Cotard’s delirium of negation, adrift from
chronological time and abstracted from physical corporeality, becomes a harbinger of
future modes of cultural communion.
Unsound :Undead acts as a portal, inviting the foreign and the strange in. It probes
the unknowable dimensions of vibrational systems, unsettles the binary constructs
of presence/ non-presence, audibility/non-audibility, and life/death, and undermines
the disciplinary conceit of the monosensory. Harnessing the dynamic of activity
without presence, of touching from a distance, it functions as an operations manual
for alienating the auditory.
I ntroduction
fixation that subordinates vibration to mortality. Post-mortem, having been legally and
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SOMA
NEW ANATOMIES
AND BODIES IN VIBRATION
The Bodily Sounds of the Abyss
Olga Goriunova
The Ear Phonautograph
Jonathan Sterne
The Music Of Skulls I: Bone-Instruments
Al Cameron
Peripheral Vibrations
Shelley Trower
Touching Nothing
Steve Goodman
The Cat Telephone
Jonathan Sterne
The Pineal Ear
Brooker Buckingham
DRNE Cartography
Steve Goodman
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THE BODILY SOUNDS
OF THE ABYSS
Olga Goriunova
Hiccups, stomach gurgling, coughing, teeth grinding—the sounds of the body are
framed as something best left unheard. Children around the age of six rejoice in competitive belching as they are trained to suppress and control what is at their disposal.
Unless controlled or instrumentalised, the body’s sounds are artefacts of living matter.
By-products of vitality, in cultural history they are usually connected to sensuality, sex,
gastronomic pleasure, material abundance, and symbolic excess. Alexander Pushkin,
the happy sun of Russian poetry, wrote in his late twenties: ‘Widow Clicquot or famous
Moet / The wine to me is always blessed / In frozen bottle for the poet / It’s on the
table quickly placed. // But gushing out hissing foam / Disturbs my stomach, that is
why / To be more modest I prefer / And drink Bordeaux—a prudent wine.’1 A bon vivant
has good bowel movements and dies suddenly. A decadent lingers on, smelly and full
of sounds—prisoners of the organic processes. Mikhail Artsybashev, 24 at the time,
wrote less than a hundred years later: ‘The room was stuffy and smelly. Their sweaty
bodies were spreading anxious, heavy, ill scent. Their eyes glistened muddily and their
voices sounded faltering and gloomy, like a wheezing of satanic raging beasts....’2
Such materiality is essentially perverse. Matter has no normality, except when
one of its forms stops working, and is succeeded by another. If the bodily nonvocal
sounds of pleasure or intestinal success haven’t found a place at the summit of the
Judaeo-Christian symbolic system, the sound of disease has. The sound of pain, of
the suffering body, is allowed: the Book of Revelation describes the gnashing of teeth
that accompanies the Last Days. Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov has at least
eighteen episodes of gnashing teeth.
1.
A. Pushkin, Eugene Onegin, tr. V. Balmont (Moscow: Filin, 2018), xlv–xli, 64.
2.
M. Artsybashev, Sanin (1904), tr. P. Pinkerton, <http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/9051>.
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8
The sound of disease is a core component of the sonic landscape of the apocalypse,
formed by the sounds of suffering. The pain of bodies conjoined with the suffering of
G oriunova : B odily S ounds of the A byss
souls are sonic constructions that are immediate and intimate and open outwards into
the metaphysical abyss.
The intuition of the abyss comes through pain. The sound of shock: a ringing in the
ears, a high-pitched buzz in silence. Heart pumping in the temples. Muscle contraction,
the sound of puking, mucus, incontinence. Unsound pus. Sonic frequencies of cellular
death. The apocalypse is with you, in your own body, connecting its organs to the devil.
In the Russian North (in Archangelsk, Komi, and Udmurtiya, but also in the Urals
in Siberia) the word ‘hiccups’ is used to denote something else than usual hiccupping:
a form of involuntary speaking, believed to be produced by a little creature called a
hiccup.3 The hiccup gets inside through the mouth when it is left unguarded for a
moment, or can enter through any other orifice. Women speak of giving birth to a
hiccup. The hiccup has a voice distinctly different from that of the host, and leads the
good life of a parasite, but quite openly. It may demand treats or drink, swear, offer a
live commentary on life’s happenings, talk about itself, have a gender, a name, and can
generally either torture or coexist peacefully with its victim/host. Without any fixed
appearance, they can first present themselves through spasmodic hiccupping and
near-lethal yawning. Hiccups and yawning can thus be a biological manifestation of
Christian devils (hosts are often Christian and regard hiccups as diabolical tricks), or
mythological creatures of dark magic (such Christianity is often a veneer on paganism).
Demonic hiccups, though today largely considered one of a range of conditions
described in the nineteenth century as hysteria (an effect of the hard life of the inhabitants of the North), is also a cultural myth that had to be passed on, like a fairy tale. To
be maintained, though, hiccups need to be enacted, performed by the body, positioning
a specific bodily expression and a particular sonic experience as a metaphysical claim.
Physical becomes metaphysical, hiccups lead to demons.
In The Poetic Outlook of Slavs about Nature (1865–1869), Alexander Afanasyev
describes the numerous devils of diseases that torture the bodies they parasitize:
The main personification of the evil spirit was Morena or Marena or Morana (from
Sanskrit mri—to die)—the goddess of death, winter, and night, a name related to
3.
O. Christoforova, Икота: Мифологический персонаж в локальной традиции [Hiccups: A Mythological
Personage in the Local Tradition] (Moscow: Moscow State University for the Humanities, 2013).
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darkness, twilight, not knowing, poison, stench, thick fog, rain and frost […] Illnesses
9
that generated strong fever and all body rash related to the fire […] The red spots of rash
relatives of those diseases. One of seven sisters of the shakes, the fifth one, is called the
golden one, yellow disease […] Agni, the god of the heavenly and earthly fire, punished
the mortals by throwing fiery sparks that left traces on their bodies and lit up the inner
fire of fever. To treat measles, a golden ring is used, or, to treat vision complications, flint
and stone, to strike sparks into the eyes.4
More than just an animism, the objectification and personification of pain that has its
own sonic expression, something that was still alive in the mythology in the nineteenth
century, at that time ran in parallel to the newly-emerging practice of listening to
the organs through a stethoscope. Mediate auscultation—the technique of listening
to the sound of the movements of organs, air, and fluids, is described as a hydraulic
hermeneutics, generally ‘charting the motions of liquids and gases through the body’.5
Just as the hiccup speaks for itself with little regard for its host, so vascular noise, the
resonating chamber of the thorax, bodily textures, and the rotation of bones speak, via
the stethoscope, with a voice that overpowers that of the patient. The ‘moist crepitous
rattle, the mucous, or gurgling rattle, the dry sonorous rattle, the dry sibilous rattle,
the dry crepitous rattle with large bubbles or crackling, utricular buzzing, amphoric
resonance’6 described by Laennec, the stethoscope’s inventor, heralded the birth of
a medical acoustic culture. Today, a sonic closure of the mitral and tricuspid valves,
followed by the closure of the aortic and pulmonary valves and the ‘subtleties of pitch,
rhythm, and dynamics in a murmur [that] express particular physiological changes’7
are still active diagnostic tools in cardiothoracics, unlike, for instance, the sound of
the movement of water through the kidneys, which is no longer listened to. Vascular
sound also figured in early discussions of the telephone, which, it was proposed, could
be used to diagnose at a distance. The idea of listening to the sounds of the body on
the phone gave way to self-management of the quantified self, and, for instance, its
4.
A. Afanasyev, author translation.
5.
J. Sterne, ‘Mediate Auscultation, the Stethoscope, and the “Autopsy of the Living”: Medicine’s Acoustic Culture’,
Journal of Medical Humanities 22:2 (2001).
6.
Ibid., 14.
7.
T. Rice, ‘Learning to Listen: Auscultation and the Transmission of Auditory Knowledge’, Journal of the Royal
Anthropological Institute 16:s1 (2010), S41–S61.
G oriunova : B odily S ounds of the A byss
were called fiery. All devouring fire, but also golden and yellow colour, and light, were
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10
visualizations of the heartbeat, just as auscultation is today considered a ‘dying art’,
losing out to visualization by means of (the misnamed) ultrasound.
G oriunova : B odily S ounds of the A byss
Medical modernity stopped listening to the sonic motions of viscera. It’s not that
devils stopped parasitizing bodies; it’s just that what is not unsound, what is already
audible and locatable, was no longer of interest. Listening to and hearing visceral
hydraulics was firmly placed within the framework of medical rationality and ontology
of reason. Hearing Northern Russian hiccups can only be understood in relationship
to metaphysics. Today, these are networks nested within ecologies: connecting lines
that spread far and wide. With increased attention to the precise configurations of
entangled matter, embodied practices, and complex coexistences, the body is no longer
simply made of organs and fluids, but is co-produced with stuff (bacteria, free radical
particles, products of pharmaceutical industry, classrooms, cities) at every layer. The
haptic sound of inhabiting the environment, transmitted partly through bone conduction, is core to new techniques for the design of interaction and control: bioacoustics,
biofeedback, whole-body vibration. The focus on self-produced sound (in audio-haptic
interaction, for instance) goes beyond the tinkling of bronchi, taking in the sound of
sleeping, sneezing, clearing throat, finger flinching, clapping, scratching, arms waiving,
fighting, the sound of footsteps, clothes rustling, of biting, and drinking. So what is
the sound of the apocalypse now?
Distributed bodies—distributed apocalypse. Metaphysics everywhere. Your body
is coupled with environments both immediate, distant, and microscopic; it is bound to
the internal abyss, the eternal possibility of the annihilation of ‘you’ at any moment.
The internal abyss is mirrored in the external abyss. Hell was, for Sartre, other people.
Today, hell is, first of all, yourself, and then, hell is everywhere. The bass of the Last
Days is a resonance between the inside and an ecology of indefinable boundaries.
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THE EAR PHONAUTOGRAPH
Jonathan Sterne
In 1874 Alexander Graham Bell and Clarence Blake constructed a most curious machine.
A direct ancestor of the telephone and phonograph, it consisted of an excised human
ear attached by thumbscrews to a wooden chassis. The ear phonautograph produced
tracings of sound on a sheet of smoked glass when sound entered the mouthpiece.
This is how it worked: one at a time, users would speak into the mouthpiece. The
mouthpiece would channel the vibrations of their voices through the human ear, and
the ear would vibrate a small stylus. After speaking, users could immediately afterward
see the tracings of their speech on the smoked glass.1 This machine, a version of the
phonautograph invented by Leon Scott in 1857, used the human ear as a mechanism
to transduce sound: it turned audible vibrations into something else. In this case, it
turned speech into a set of tracings. But the ear phonautograph was not an attempt
to reproduce the actual perception of sound. It modeled only the middle ear, which in
a living person ordinarily focuses audible vibrations and conveys them to the inner ear
where the auditory nerve can perceive them as sound. In using the tympanum or ear
drum and the small bones to channel and transduce sonic vibrations, the ear phonautograph imitated (or more accurately isolated and extracted) this process of transducing
sound for the purpose of hearing, and thereby applied it to another purpose—tracing,
in this case. Bell and Blake attached a small piece of straw directly to the small bones
to serve as a stylus, so that it would produce tracings that were a direct effect of the
tympanic vibrations.
The ear phonautograph was the progeny of a longer line of experimentation. As
of 1874, Leon Scott’s phonautograph was the latest innovation. It produced a visual
1.
A.G. Bell, ‘The Telephone: A Lecture Entitled Researches in Electric Telephony by Professor Alexander Graham Bell
Delivered before the Society of Telegraph Engineers, October 31st 1877’.
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12
representation of sound—called a phonautogram—by partially imitating the processes
of the human ear. Like the outer ear, this machine channels sounds through a conic
S terne : T he E ar P honautograph
funnel to vibrate a small, thin membrane. This membrane, called a diaphragm, is attached
to a stylus (a needle or other instrument for writing). The diaphragm vibrates the stylus,
which then makes tracings on a cylinder. Different sounds provide different vibrations,
resulting in different patterns. In conceiving the phonautograph, Scott experimented
with both synthetic diaphragms and also animal membranes, though it was known that
his own machine was modelled on the action of the membrane and small bones of the
human ear. He understood the phonautograph as a machine for literally transforming
sound into writing. But it was set apart from its predecessors by being a writing device
explicitly modelled on the middle ear. Bell and Blake understood this: their 1874 ear
phonautograph took Scott’s metaphor literally. They thought that using the human ear
instead of a synthetic diaphragm would advance their quest to get ever closer to the
processes of the human ear itself. Hence the name of their peculiar machine—ear
phonautograph. As innovators, all Bell and Blake really did was change the recording
surface (to smoked glass) and replace the diaphragm with the human ear upon which
it was modelled.2
Bell’s interest in the phonautograph is distinguished from that of others, in that he
sought to divert a line of acoustic research toward a wholly different enterprise: the
education of the Deaf. Scott’s phonautograph presented a possible new solution to a
pedagogical problem for Bell: teaching the Deaf and mute to speak as if they could hear.
Bell is widely understood as a villain in Deaf cultural history because of his approach to
deafness: he hoped to eliminate all of its cultural vestiges. After experimenting with his
father’s system for notating speech, Bell had hoped that the ear phonautograph would
be something more direct and effective. As a trained elocutionist himself, he would
speak into the horn of the ear phonautograph, and it would trace a series of squiggly
lines representing his voice. His hope was that his Deaf pupils would then modulate
their voices until the squiggly lines matched his. The ear phonautograph would thus
be, in Bell’s words, ‘a machine to hear for them’.3
The machine did not work for Bell’s desired outcome, because its drawings were not
sensitive enough, or perhaps because it was no more an effective notation of sound
2.
E. Berliner, ‘The Gramophone: Etching the Human Voice’, Public Presentation, The Franklin Institute, Philadelphia, 1888.
3.
C. Snyder, ‘Clarence John Blake and Alexander Graham Bell: Otology and the Telephone’, Annals of Otology, Rhinology,
and Laryngology 83:4, part 2 suppl. 13 (July 1974), 30.
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for the Deaf than visible speech had been. But in later accounts, Bell would credit the
13
ear phonautograph with giving him the idea for the telephone: the minute vibrations of
of telephones, microphones, phonographs, and later speakers. Today, now that we live
in a culture where there are more speakers than screens, where the singing voices
of the dead regularly drip down from the ceilings of coffee shops and waiting rooms,
we could do worse than to imagine them as descendants of the ear phonautograph,
a machine designed to train deaf children to behave like hearing children, but whose
descendants taught the hearing to delegate their faculties of hearing to technologies
outside the body, like the deaf and hard-of-hearing sometimes do. As to whose ear it
was, that much is lost to history. Clarence Blake apparently acquired it at the Harvard
medical school, which means that it could have come from a body donated to science,
someone who died destitute and without family, or a corpse stolen from a grave as
part of the wave of grave thefts by nineteenth-century medical students.
S terne : T he E ar P honautograph
the corpse’s tympanic membrane became a kind of model for the tympanic behavior
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THE MUSIC OF SKULLS I:
BONE-INSTRUMENTS
Al Cameron
I soared, I hovered in the infinite;
Nothing was everything; the day was night.
— Aleister Crowley, Aceldama: A Place to Bury Strangers In (1898)1
Captain John Noel’s 1919 presentation to the Royal Geographic Society, recounting his
1913 solo incursion into Tibet, was decisive in securing the British imperial establishment’s backing for the initial assaults on Everest of the early 1920s. These were framed
as a last attempt to resurrect the European dreams of mastery, sunk in the ‘Aceldama’
(Acts 1:19, ‘the field of blood’) of Flanders.2 Noel was the cameraman—indeed, the last
expedition was funded through his own enterprise, conceived as a film from the start.
However, his ‘enormously high powered’ custom lens3 lost sight of Mallory and Irvine
on Everest’s upper reaches, where the thin air of altitude prevented decomposition
either of his images or of the climbers’ bodies.
When a London newspaper announced the premieres of The Epic of Everest (1924)
by invoking ‘Music from Skulls’, it wasn’t referring to those of Europe’s dead heroes.
Magic instruments, devices, and adornments made with human bone are described in
chronicles of Western travellers to Tibet from the fourteenth century. By Noel’s day, the
new ethnological museums showcased the macabre otherness of these ‘relics of an age
of savagery and a barbarous cult’:4 what Laurence Austine Waddell dubbed the ‘gross
devil-dancing and shamanist charlatanism’ symptomatic of Tibet’s ‘degenerated’ Buddhism. One illustration in his influential study The Buddhism of Tibet, Or Lamaism (1895)
1.
A. Crowley, Aceldama, 1898, 14. Crowley was one of the pioneers of Himalayan climbing, and identified the correct
route up K2 in 1904.
2.
As the Epic of Everest’s intertitles explain: ‘Since the beginning of the world men have battled with Nature for the
mastery of their physic surroundings. Such is their birthright, and such is their destiny […] [W]hat man shall take up this
challenge, and win this last battle?’
3.
As the film’s intertitles boast.
4.
B. Laofler, Use of Human Skulls and Bones in Tibet (Chicago: Field Museum of Natural History, 1923), 10.
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16
depicts the ‘fantastic equipment [...] and fantastic bearing’ of the necromancer, holding
a bell in his left and a damaru in his right hand, face diabolically contorted.5 As official
Cameron : M usic of S kulls I
antiquarian to the Younghusband ‘mission’, which reached Lhasa by force in 1904,
Waddell oversaw the demystification of his debased ‘Lamaism’6 under the modern gaze
and Gatling gun, personally supervising a vast-scale ‘collecting’—or rather, looting—of
Tibet’s material culture.7
The damaru is an hourglass-shaped hand drum, rotated so that two pellets rhythmically strike twin drumheads. Within Hinduism it is considered a most ancient holy
instrument, a right hand attribute of Shiva in his form as Nataraja, ‘king of the dance’.
But the instrument responsible for skull music, a damaru fabricated from human crania,
was adopted into the early Vajrayana Buddhism of Tibet via an extreme sect of the
Tantric path of shakti or dakini (‘sky dancer’) worship, which evolved from the Hindu
tradition of the Kapalikas. Sentenced to wander the charnel grounds for the crime
of killing a Brahmin, these miscreants equipped themselves with bone devices: the
khatvanga (staff topped with skull), kangling (thighbone trumpet), skull-cup, bone
apron, and damaru. Subsequently, these instruments were depicted as dakini attributes
in the terrifying iconography of Tibetan wrathful deities, and produced for use in ceremonies.8 Since Chinese occupation, damaru are still fabricated from skulls in Bhutan
(their makers warn against powerless forgeries made from robbed Muslim graves),9 but
Waddell’s legacy is the prevalence today of old Tibet’s Kapalika instruments, silenced
in the display cases of British provincial museums.10
An inverted—if no less fictional—vision of an unspoilt kingdom had long existed in
the Western imaginary: Kant’s prototype anthropology had speculated that Tibet was
5.
L. Austine Waddell, The Buddhism of Tibet, or Lamaism (London: W.H. Allen & Co. Ltd, 1895), 475–7.
6.
‘[H]er dark veil of mystery is lifted up, and the long-sealed shrine, with its grotesque cults […] lie disenchanted
before our Western eyes.’ L. Austine Waddell, Lhasa and its Mysteries, With a Record of the Expedition of 1903–1904
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1905), 2.
7.
It took four months for his assistant to unpack the spoils that Waddell had personally ‘collected’. Later the ‘official
collection’ was distributed to museums and libraries. See C.E. Harris, The Museum on the Roof of the World: Art, Politics
and the Representation of Tibet (Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 1998), 60–61.
8.
See R. Beer, The Handbook of Tibetan Buddhist Symbols (Chicago & London: Serinda, 2003), 102–8.
9.
See <http://www.damaruworks.com/bone>.
10.
And their provenance is most often dated to 1904 and to the subsequent establishment of trading outposts across
the Tibetan plateau. See for example the recent exhibition Lhasa’s Secret Temple, Wellcome Collection, 2015–2016:
<http://www.vam.ac.uk/blog/conservation-blog/the-curious-case-of-the-tibetan-skull-drum>.
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the ‘cradle of the human race’.11 By Noel’s day the region’s cranial topographies12 were
17
becoming a laboratory for initiates of Helena Blavatsky’s secret doctrines, seeking a
and history. After the Bardo Thödol (a relatively obscure Nyingma [mortuary] text) was
‘discovered’ in 1919, the Tibetan art of dying was rebranded as an ‘art of living’, primed for
a culture turning towards the exploration of inner space.15 To ‘die, consciously’ was the
idea, as Leary, Alpert, and Metzner’s psychedelic re-versioning of 1964 taught; broadcasting a ‘Secret Pathway’ to the Absolute reality of wave vibrations and the ecstatic
noise of the void.16 Variations on what the German self-appointed Lama Anagarika
Govinda called ‘initiation into sound’—conscious immersion in a resonating cosmos, in
which, as a ‘master of sound’ explained in the early 1930s ‘each atom perpetually sings
its song’17—are ever present in such Western accounts; perhaps unsurprisingly, since
none of these seekers understood the language. As in anthropological collections, the
specificities of bone music were muted under the ethereal, indeed ‘deboned’, Tantric
noise of the New Age.
According to custom, the Kapalika damaru is fashioned from the paired crania of
adolescent male and female Brahmin, salvaged from the charnel grounds reserved for
sky burial. These are ritually conjoined along the suture at the top of the skull known
as ‘the aperture of Brahma’ (the gateway to the Absolute or non-illusory ‘real’ (Brahman), and the channel through which the soul departs on death).18 Rattled together,
they sound bodhichitta; the resonance of method and wisdom, pure bliss and absolute
emptiness. Carefully selected, bone is not a macabre but a ‘magical substance’ (thun),
11.
From Kant’s Physicsche Geographie (1802), 158–60, quoted in M. Brauen, Dreamworld Tibet: Western Illusions
(Orchid Press: Bangkok, 2004), 16.
12.
S.D. Goodman and R.M. Davidson (eds.), Tibetan Buddhism: Reason and Revelation (Albany, NY: State University of
New York Press, 1992), 2: ‘the irregular edges of the skull represent the mountains surrounding the periphery of Tibet; the
three plates of the skull represent the three major geographic divisions’.
13.
H.P. Blavatsky, Isis Unveiled: A Master-Key to the Mysteries of Ancient and Modern Science and Theology [1877]
(London: Theosophical Publishing House, 1923), I: xxxiiif.
14.
H.P. Blavatsky, The Secret Doctrine: the Synthesis of Science, Religion and Philosophy, Vols 1 & 2 [1888] (Los
Angeles: The Theosophical Company, 1925), xxxix.
15.
W.Y. Evans-Wenz, The Tibetan Book of the Dead or The After-Death Experiences on the Bardo Plane, According to
Lama Kazi Dawa-Samdup’s English Rendering (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000). For a critical appraisal, see D.S.
Lopez Jr., Prisoners of Shangri-La (Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 1998), 47–85.
16.
T. Leary, R. Metzner, and R. Alpert, The Psychedelic Experience: A Manual Based on the Tibetan Book of the Dead
(New York: New York City Books, 1964), 26–7.
17.
See Lama Anagrika Govinda, Foundations of Tibetan Mysticism: According to the Esoteric Teachings of the Great
Mantra Om Mani Padme Hum (London: Rider & Company, 1959), 22–7.
18.
J.C. Huntingdon and D. Bangdel, The Circle of Bliss: Buddhist Meditational Art (Chicago: Serinda, 2003), 364.
Cameron : M usic of S kulls I
primal ‘science of the soul’13 beyond the ‘necropolis’14 of Western religion, rationality
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18
capable of transforming ritual implements into ‘power objects’ for attracting the special
affinities of the wrathful spirits being propritiated.19 In the Chöd practice’s ‘dance of
Cameron : M usic of S kulls I
ego annihilation’, the damaru rattle and the rasp of the thighbone trumpet summoned
hungry dakas and dakinis to feast on the initiate’s body. But there were no Western
dreams of achieving some vibrational super-consciousness here, only an ecstasy of
becoming nothing; one which, moreover, ‘utterly relinquishes the elation springing from
the idea of sacrifice’20—that central theme of the European age, and the message of
Noel’s 1924 film once its phantasms of British dominion disappeared into the death zone.21
Fittingly, the Epic finishes with a hypothesis of ‘human strength and western
science… broken and failed’, haunted by ‘the words of the Rongbuk Lama’: ‘The Gods
of the Lamas shall deny you White Men the object of your search’. Noel had filmed
‘Devil Dances’22 at the remote Rongbuk monastery on the 1922 expedition. Yet while
sound-film patents had been granted in 1919, the same year that he inaugurated this
project, Noel’s pioneering cameras were as incapable of capturing this alien bone-music as Mallory and Irvine’s ideals were of conquering the mighty peak; rendered irreal,
‘beyond our knowledge’, at the outset of the Epic with indigo, blue, and magenta
filters.23 1924’s premieres grandiosely addressed this ethnomusicological problem by
enlisting—for the first time in the West—supposedly authentic ‘Lamas’ to re-enact
ritual ceremonies and music as the screenings’ warm-up act. This inauguration of skull
music into Western cinema had dramatic effects, but not merely those of audio-visual
disorientation Noel had anticipated. His illegal expatriation of the musicians was of
crudely colonial sensibility, whilst urbane Tibetan officials, who frequented Darjeeling
cinemas, were further affronted by the ethnographic visions of their culture as savage and other. The resultant diplomatic outrage—dubbed ‘The Affair of the Dancing
Lamas’—saw the mountain shut off until 1933. When expeditions returned they were
no longer permitted to make films.24
19.
Beer, Handbook of Tibetan Buddhist Symbols, 107–8.
20. See A. David-Neel, With Mystics and Magicians in Tibet (London: Penguin, 1931), 141–2; 154.
21.
The inhabitable region above 8,000 metres.
22. As the second section of Climbing Mount Everest (1922) labels them.
23.
Likewise, Govinda would later extol a landscape the colour of ‘a praeternatural vision or prophetic dream’. L.A.
Govinda, The Way of the White Clouds: A Buddhist Pilgrim in Tibet (London: Hutchinson, 1966), 62–70.
24. See P.H. Hansen, ‘The Dancing Lamas of Everest: Cinema, Orientalism, and Anglo-Tibetan Relations in the 1920s’,
The American History Review 101:3 (June 1996), 712–46.
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P. 34
PERIPHERAL VIBRATIONS
Shelley Trower
In the early stages of L.T.C. Rolt’s short story ‘Music Hath Charms’ (1948), two
companions view the landscape from the train: ‘they saw the majestic shape of St
Michael’s Mount framed in the carriage window’.1 The scene is pictured, ‘framed’, as
a distant view, stripped of any other senses, as is characteristic of ‘the tourist gaze’.2
In this case the journey is from London to Cornwall, as it is in other gothic fictions by
authors across the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, ranging from Wilkie Collins’s
Basil (1852) to Bram Stoker’s The Jewel of Seven Stars (1903) and several of E.F.
Benson’s ghost stories (from 1912 to the 1930s).3 In such stories Cornwall—along with
Yorkshire, Cumbria and other rural regions with coastlines—operates as a peripheral
location at the edge of England.
A narrative pattern in these stories is the progress from distant, window-framed
views of landscapes, laid out in front of their viewers like the page of a book, to an
increasing immersion in the sounds of unsettling, sometimes dangerous environments.
In Rolt’s story, as in Collins’s and Stoker’s, the sounds of the sea become especially
prominent. After seeing the picture-like view from the railway carriage, the travellers
arrive at the station and make their way by road to the house they are to stay in. It
is on this second part of the journey that sound begins to take on a more significant
role, as they hear ‘the eternal voice of the Cornish coast; the endlessly recurring thud
and surge of the waves against the cliffs of Trevarthan’.4 These sounds intensify, their
1.
L.T.C. Rolt, ‘Music Hath Charms’, in Sleep No More: Railway, Canal and Other Stories of the Supernatural
(Gloucestershire: Sutton, 1994), 101–113: 103.
2.
J. Urry and J. Larsen, The Tourist Gaze 3.0 (London: Sage, 2011), 4–6.
3.
Benson’s stories set in Cornwall include ‘Expiation’, discussed in my other piece in this collection. Further examples
include Arthur Conan Doyle’s ‘The Adventure of the Devil’s Foot’ (1910), and his famous Hound of the Baskervilles, which
is set in neighbouring Devon (1902).
4.
L.T.C. Rolt, ‘Music’, 104.
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P. 35
20
volume increasing at the climax, on a stormy night when shipwreckers return from the
dead: ‘he could hear, above the tumult of the wind, the thunder of heavy seas breaking
T rower : P eripheral V ibrations
upon the rocks […] the house seemed full of sound’.5
Sea sounds cross the borders between the audible and palpable, and between sea
and land. Sea and sound waves cross the rocky borders, their crashing against the
rocks being audible from the house. In Stoker’s The Jewel, soon after his first sight
of the house, the narrator similarly describes hearing ‘the crash and murmur of the
waves’, a murmur that can be heard constantly from inside the house. This sense of
the sea builds up toward the climax (which in this case involves the resurrection of an
Egyptian mummy), at which point the waves finally become palpable, vibrating the rock
under his feet: ‘The storm still thundered round the house, and I could feel the rock on
which it was built tremble under the furious onslaught of the waves.’6
In Rolt’s story, the initial sea sounds pave the way for the discovery, the next day, of
a music box, hidden in a concealed cupboard behind a wall. After producing the sound
of a lively jig, it begins to have a physical impact on the human ear, and then on the
house itself, which seems to awaken, the inanimate again coming to life:
It reached a top note that, like the squeak of a bat, was almost beyond the range of
audibility and whose piercing quality positively hurt the ear-drum. The tune rose to this
thin yet deafening climax, or fell away again in a series of exuberant capriccios quite
horrible to hear because the dissonance of their diminished intervals never seemed to
find resolution. Again, despite the comparatively small volume of sound it produced, the
instrument seemed to possess the power to awake sympathetic resonance, not only in
the table upon which it stood, but in surrounding objects, until the whole room seemed
to be whistling in unison… It was as though they had somehow awakened Trevarthen
House from sleep, and that this wakefulness was hostile.7
Sound here is not just heard but felt as a physical, painful and invasive force, extending
‘almost beyond the range of audibility’ with a ‘piercing quality’ that ‘hurt the ear-drum’.
This is vibration operating at a specific frequency, on the border between the audible
and the inaudible (‘almost beyond’ the audible), and it is this, rather than loudness,
5.
Ibid., 108.
6.
B. Stoker, The Jewel of Seven Stars (London: Penguin, 2008), 241.
7.
Rolt, ‘Music’, 107.
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that hurts and that also awakens the house: ‘despite the comparatively small volume of
21
sound it produced, the instrument seemed to possess the power to awake sympathetic
Isabella van Elferen, in Gothic Music, discusses how sound is used in gothic film and
other media to signal something threatening, just beyond vision. Ghosts, for example,
are rarely directly visualised but are often heard, which is to imply the ‘implicit dread
of terror’8 rather than explicitly showing off something ghastly like a rotting corpse.
These are sonorous tales, but here we may better use the term horror: it is not that
sound signals the unseen terror; it is itself a threat: it is ‘horrible to hear’, it pierces (is
possibly even vampiric) and it hurts.
8.
I. Van Elferen, Gothic Music: The Sounds of the Uncanny (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2012), 36.
T rower : P eripheral V ibrations
resonance...’.
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TOUCHING NOTHING
Steve Goodman
IREX2 had spent around thirty years working out how to safeguard its cryptic knowledge by injecting it into the fleshy platforms of human memory, via the motley assortment of scientists, artists, and researchers that it had branded AUDINT.
By 2020, the rogue AI had turned its attention to finding host vehicles that were
no longer oxygen-dependent. This was not just to preserve its frequency-borne
algorithms. Crucially, IREX2’s long-term objective was to reweaponize this knowledge
against its predators, the Third Ear Assassins—a rivalry that would piggyback on, and
catastrophically feed back into, the major geopolitical tensions of the second half
of the twenty-first century. Flitting around the databases of East Asia, IREX2 would
research its own future, sending humanoid drones on physical search queries into the
electronics markets of Apliu Street in Sham Shui Po, Hong Kong, Huangbei in Shenzhen, Youngsan in Seoul, and Akihabara in Tokyo. The AI was plotting out new parasitic
strategies for the transmutation, dissemination, and implementation of its founding,
zombifying Cotardian codes.
The Dead Record Network East (DRNE) was AUDINT’s name for the logistics
routes of surplus vinyl records shipped to South China for recycling: pipelines for the
petropolitics of global pop. Around 2014, IREX2 had surreptitiously recruited Hong Kong
based financial journalist T.P. Chen to map out these transit lines. Since her paramystical experience near Shenzhen, however, during which she witnessed a transparent
spectral entity emerge from a vat of molten vinyl polycarbonate, things had taken an
unlikely turn. AUDINT’s attempt to safeguard the stupor-inducing contents of the
original 1940s Ghost Army battle vinyl by concealing them on test tone records, had
entered a new phase. Its code, now optically shrouded, proceeded to migrate from
polycarbonate host to airborne carrier.
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24
Liquefying the vinyl had released the code into light. Dazed, Chen had staggered
out of the recycling warehouse and picked up one of the records spewing from the
G oodman : Touching N othing
adjacent China Shipping Container: Sonic Hologram TM: Demonstration-Calibration
Test Record C-4000. As well as attempting to video the fleeting, illuminated form on
her smartphone, she also grabbed a photo of the displaced record sleeve. On the fly,
these images had instantaneously fed straight into IREX2’s processing engine, which
began crunching the code of the images, analysing its plasmatic form.
In advance of witnessing this flickering, spectral entity, T.P. Chen had previously
only visited Shenzhen once, for the Global Holography Industry conference in 2005. Up
until her unnerving encounter, as a financial journalist her interest in holography was
limited to its implementation in the domain of copyright security, particularly prescient
due to the army of counterfeiters and fraudsters incubated in China’s shanzhai hotbeds.
IREX2’s deep learning algorithms were a set of powerful, general-purpose procedures that allowed it to learn automatically without being guided. In the loosest sense,
~
IREX2 had a pre-coded conatus, loosely based on Nguyên Văn Phong’s initial program
for IREX; but since autonomization, its process of optimizing for its objectives had
become open-ended and somewhat chaotic. Scouring the internet for raw information,
it used the results of its searches to modulate its behaviour policy and world-model.
Triggered by Chen’s input, its initial search queries threw up a range of intriguing
results that sent its algorithms into spasms of binary pleasure. Trawling through a staggering array of scientific research, IREX2 filtered it down to studies at the intersection
of ultrasound and holography. From the results triggered by the photo of the record,
it had learned that in the 1980s, researchers such as Bob Carver had been developing
sonic holography, a technique that aimed to enhance sound recordings by reducing
the degradations of pitch caused by instances of Doppler distortions, i.e. noise added
by the membrane vibrations of both input microphones and output speaker cones.
Interesting, but not quite what IREX2 was looking for.
Other results seemed to concern the sonification of actual holograms. Some
research papers detailed how early attempts at providing haptic feedback for digital
visual displays involved attaching vibrotactile simulators to each finger, with the
drawback that contact between skin and device was present even when not required.
Alternative methods included airjets. But the findings that alerted IREX2 concerned
emergent experiments with ultrasound. One report was flagged up on account of a
statement by Hiroyuki Shinoda, a researcher at the University of Tokyo, who noted that
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the level of ‘ultrasound we’re using is very safe, but if it is too strong, ultrasound can
25
damage the insides of the human body such as the nerves and other tissues’. Rather
1
AUTDs (Airborne Ultrasound Tactile Display), ultrahaptics, holoflexes, dynamic holography, asukanets, and acoustic radiation force that represented the real lure to IREX2.
Where ultrasound was used to render precise volumetric tactile shapes in mid-air,
these vibro-techniques could be harnessed to create holograms that one could literally
touch. Small ultrasonic transducers arranged in a phased array (AUTDs) radiate enough
pressure, in precise configurations, to create a mobile vibrational and acoustic radiation
force on the user’s hand, producing tactile impressions. This process eradicates any
requirement for actuators or physical devices. The algorithm controls the perceived
3D shape of the holo-object by sculpting an acoustic interference pattern. In addition
to making possible tactile feedback for holographic displays, these techniques could
potentially generate invisible physical structures in the air.
By the early 2020s these speculative experiments were starting to bear fruit, especially those encroaching into the domestic Holojax market, which opened up vistas,
both collaborative and copulative, of interaction with the musical dead in the comfort
of one’s own living room. Meanwhile, IREX2 hunted for a safe haven among East Asia’s
digital networks, continuing to stealthily weave its future, occluded, at least for the
moment, from its deep learning predator.
1.
T. Iwamoto, M. Tatezono, and H. Shinoda, ‘Non-contact Method for Producing Tactile Sensation Using Airborne
Ultrasound’, in M. Ferre (ed.), EuroHaptics 2008, LNCS 5024, 504–13, (Berlin and Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag, 2008).
G oodman : Touching N othing
than ultrasound being a weapon itself, it was advances in telehaptics, haptoclones,
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THE CAT TELEPHONE
Jonathan Sterne
In 1929, two Princeton researchers, Ernest Glen Wever and Charles W. Bray, wired a
live cat into a telephone system and replayed the telephone’s primal scene. Following
a procedure developed by physiologists, Wever and Bray removed part of the cat’s
skull and most of its brain in order to attach an electrode to the animal’s right auditory
nerve, and a second electrode to another area on the cat’s body. Those electrodes
were then hooked up to a vacuum tube amplifier by sixty feet of shielded cable located
in a soundproof room (separate from the lab that held the cat). After amplification, the
signals were sent to a telephone receiver. One researcher made sounds into the cat’s
ear, while the other listened at the receiver in the soundproof room.1 The signals picked
up off the auditory nerve came through the telephone receiver as sound.
Speech was transmitted with great fidelity. Simple commands, counting and the like
were easily received. Indeed, under good conditions the system was employed as a
means of communication between operating and sound-proof rooms.2
After their initial success, Wever and Bray checked for all other possible explanations
for the transmission of sound down the wire. They even killed the cat, to make sure that
there was no mechanical transmission of the sounds apart from the cat’s nerve: ‘after
the death of the animal the response first diminished in intensity, and then ceased’.3
As the sound faded from their cat microphone, it demonstrated in the animal’s death
1.
E.G. Wever and C.W. Bray, ‘Action Currents in the Auditory Nerve in Response to Acoustical Stimulation’, Proceedings
of the National Academy of Science 16 (1930), 344.
2.
Ibid., 345.
3.
Ibid., 346.
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28
that life itself could power a phone, or any other electro-acoustic system—perhaps
that life itself already did power the telephone.
S terne : T he Cat T elephone
To put a zen tone to it, the telephone existed both inside and outside Wever and Bray’s
cat, and by extension, people. They believed that they had proven the so-called telephone theory of hearing, which had fallen out of favour by the late 1920s. Here, it is worth
understanding both their error and their subsequent contribution to hearing research.
While Wever and Bray thought they were measuring one set of signals coming off the
auditory nerve, they were actually conflating two sets of signals. The auditory nerve
itself either fires or does not fire, and therefore does not have a directly mimetic
relationship to sound outside of it—there is no continuous variation in frequency or
intensity as you would have with sound in air. A series of experiments in 1932 revealed
that the mimetic signals they found were coming from the cochlea itself. Called
‘cochlear microphonics’, these signals were responsible for the sounds coming out of
Wever and Bray’s speaker in the soundproof room. As Hallowell Davis wrote in a 1934
paper on the subject:
[T]he wave form of the cochlear response differs from that of the nerve. From the
latter we recover a series of sharp transients having the wave form and the polarity
characteristics of nerve impulses [which fire 3000–4000 times a second in the auditory
nerve but only about 1000 times a second in the midbrain], while the cochlear response
reproduces with considerable fidelity the wave form of the stimulating sound waves.
Even the complex waves of the human voice are reproduced by it with the accuracy
of a microphone, while from most nervous structures there is so much distortion and
suppression of high frequencies that speech may be quite incomprehensible.4
Davis thus suggested that nerves are bad circuits for reproducing sounds, but the
cochlea is an excellent circuit for reproducing sound—much like a microphone.
Davis and his collaborators’ work on cochlear transmissions paved the way for a
wide range of subsequent research, and cochlear microphonics are still important today.
While they did challenge Wever and Bray’s conclusions about the telephone theory of
hearing, Davis and his collaborators continued down the same epistemological path
where ears and media were interchangeable; in fact one was best explained in terms
4.
H. Davis, ‘The Electrical Phenomena of the Cochlea and the Auditory Nerve’, Journal Of The Acoustical Society Of
America 6:4 (1935), 206 (bracketed material added).
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of the other. One of the most widely acknowledged and controversial achievements
29
of this work has been the development of cochlear implants. Previous treatments for
implants resulted from the project of intervening in the inner ear, a practice that was
possible in part because of the line of research begun by Wever and Bray. Meanwhile, the
brain’s work of translation—from firing neurons into the perception of sound—became
a major preoccupation of psychoacousticians as well, and remains an open question
down to the present day.5 As for the cats who played a surrogate role for humans in
these experiments, theirs is another story.
5.
S. Blume, ‘Cochlear Implantation: Establishing Clinical Feasibility, 1957–1982’, in N. Rosenberg, A. C. Gelijns, and
H. Dawkins (eds.), Sources of Medical Technology: Universities and Industry (Washington, DC: National Academy Press,
1995), 99.
S terne : T he Cat T elephone
hardness of hearing or deafness involved interventions in the middle ear; cochlear
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THE PINEAL EAR
Brooker Buckingham
‘Nothing stands in the way of a phantomlike and adventurous description of the
universe’,1 wrote Georges Bataille. And then, in keeping with his ocular fetishism, he
conjured up the pineal eye—a primordial eye seated at the top of the human skull that
contemplates the sun, then immolates the head like ‘a fire in a house’,2 causing the
ecstatic sufferer to spend life’s currency without count. Bataille’s speculation on the
pineal eye was no doubt a ‘subversive negotiation with the impossible’3—a delirium
entangled with myth, a myth ‘identified not only with life but with the loss of life—with
degradation and death’.4 The pineal eye forges the very image of Bataille’s notion of
expenditure.5
But Bataille failed to extend his speculation to the aural domain. Beholden to vision,
Bataille was oblivious to the advent of the pineal ear. Dormant since the genesis of
Homo sapiens, the pineal ear opened in 1931 with the introduction of the vinyl record.
How did the vinyl record open the pineal ear? It starts with crude oil, which is a key
ingredient in the production of vinyl. Crude oil is largely composed of plankton that
settled on seabeds during the Jurassic period, some 150 million years ago. But Jurassic-era plankton bears little resemblance to the plankton of today.
There is evidence these ancient life forms were deposited on Earth by the remnants
of an ancient alien race—a race that nearly went extinct due to the rapid development
of a rationality that devolved into its polar opposite. The survivors of the catastrophe
1.
G. Bataille, ‘The Pineal Eye’, in A. Stoekl (ed.), Visions of Excess: Selected Writings, 1927–1939 (Minneapolis:
University of Minnesota Press, 1985), 79–90: 82.
2.
Ibid., 82.
3.
B. Noys, Georges Bataille: A Critical Introduction (Sterling: Pluto, 2000), 36.
4.
Bataille, ‘The Pineal Eye’, 82.
5.
Ibid., 82.
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32
founded a cult of devotion—devotion to the elimination of rationality. Science was
enlisted to aid the cause, which resulted in the creation of microscopic organisms—a
B uckingham : T he P ineal E ar
primordial form of what we now refer to as plankton. The cult deposited the organisms
on billions of planets throughout the universe, and they were encoded at the genetic
level with a series of messages—messages designed to annihilate sapient life forms,
to eradicate rational thought from the physical universe.
Vinyl records became commonplace during the early 1950s, concurrent with the
post-war golden era of capitalism, with sales steadily increasing throughout the 1960s
and 70s. Hundreds of millions of records flooded the globe, each encoded with a
message. The message is inaudible, and it cannot be registered by any of the existing
audio analysis technologies. Yet the message is there, an indestructible message
that miraculously survives the vinyl manufacturing process. Only the pineal ear can
hear it—a universal message, understood by all humans. The needle hits the spinning
black void, and, once it couples with the media etched into the grooves, a brief series
of signals is captured by the pineal ear, signals that implore the listener to consume,
accumulate, waste, and repeat.
The pineal ear drove consumerism into excess throughout the second half of the
twentieth century. The message was habituated and its prescribed behaviour was
normative long before the rise of digital audio and the near demise of vinyl in the
early 1990s. Human rationality waged its last battle against the pineal ear some two
decades earlier, with the ecological turn in the 1970s. Too little, too late. The pineal ear
had already calcified the ontology that is driving us to irrational extinction, inculcating
the fevered consumption that has resulted in global warming, the acidification of the
oceans, and rising sea levels.
As a counterweight to the renewal of radical politics—starting with the Seattle WTO
protests in 1999 and the anti-capitalist response to the 2007–08 economic crisis—the
pineal ear engineered the second coming of vinyl. Throughout the first decade of the
twenty-first century, the market for secondhand vinyl went mad—yesterday’s dollar
bin stalwarts became the new desirables. The manufacturing plants went back online,
churning out reissues and new titles by the millions. For every fifty records manufactured, a barrel of crude oil is used. Millenials discovered the jouissance enjoyed by
previous generations—consume, accumulate, waste, and repeat. Every record is a
flat circle, spinning out its double message—on the manifest level, the soundtrack to
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the End Times; and on the latent level, the subliminal signal that demands the abyssal
33
return of reason to nothingness.
of human rationality from the last corpse. Freedom from rationality means freedom
from the discontinuity of life. The pineal ear is plunging us towards continuity, where
humanity becomes one with death. The consumption of vinyl records initiated a death
cult, a syzygy between the pineal ear and ancient organic matter.
In ‘The Congested Planet’, Bataille asked, ‘Does the final truth resemble the most
painful death?’6 Reading him with knowledge of the pineal ear, his further comments
haunt the remains of rationality, as it rapidly devolves into its polar opposite:
Or is this prosaic world, ordered by knowledge found on a lasting experience, its limit?
Delivered from ridiculous beliefs, are we happy before death and torture? Is this pure
happiness? At the basis of a world from which the only escape is failure?7
6.
G. Bataille, ‘The Congested Planet’, in The Unfinished System of Nonknowledge, tr. M. Kendall and S. Kendall
(Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2001), 223.
7.
Ibid., 223.
B uckingham : T he P ineal E ar
The message from the petro-ooze will continue until it pulls the final instantiation
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DRNE CARTOGRAPHY
Steve Goodman
From her suite on the thirtieth floor of the Wongtee Hotel, a newly opened, overstaffed tower near the container port of Shenzhen in South China, T.P. Chen is slowly
becoming aware of the history she has just landed in the middle of, and that someone,
or something, is now pulling her strings.
Reclining into her fizzling bubble bath, she again loops around the recorded message, delivered in a crunchy digitized voice through a single blue plastic speaker with a
white Buddha glued on for decoration. With comparably dizzying effect, she swills the
synthesized words around in her head like a cheap rice wine, recalling her traumatic
memories of today’s encounter with the anomalous liquid entity in the vinyl recycling
plant. It has been impossible to erase from her mind’s eye its dripping shadowy form
as it emerged from the vat of black plastic soup. Still vivid in her nostrils, that acrid,
burning vinyl smell.
She submerges herself under the bubbles, using the warmth of the water to soothe
the haunting chills of the entity and to mute the mysterious metallic utterances still
reverberating around the hard tiled walls of her bathroom, muffling the words until
they become a dull, characterless drone.
That history in which Chen was now tangled was the algorithmically upgraded
legacy of AUDINT, now in the hands of an AI named IREX2. Second-generation AUDINT
~
recruit and bioacoustics wizard Nguyên Văn Phong had set up IREX in the late 1970s
as a finance-raising enterprise specializing in what he termed ‘Outsider Trading’. Văn
Phong deployed the somewhat primitive computing techniques of the time to decode
the babel of voices coming in through the third ear, transforming these esoteric indicators into implementable financial data which he sold on to the boardrooms of corporate
Shanghai and British-run Hong Kong in the eighties.
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36
At the same time, he was also coaching numerous investors, stock traders, and consultants in his technologically enhanced xenobuddhist techniques. Renowned banker
G oodman : D R N E Cartograph y
Stanley Kwan, who in 1969 pioneered the Hang Seng Index as the primary barometer of
Hong Kong capitalism, met with Văn Phong in 1974 after the Index crashed, following
the previous year’s oil crisis. They parleyed once more in 1983, when the Index again
plummeted owing to a breakdown in Anglo-Chinese negotiations over the future of the
territory. One consulting session that year sees Kwan speaking in tongues while Văn
Phong ritually burns a sweet, hazy cocktail of incense and dollar bills to a soundtrack
of gongs and incantations.
After his suicide in New York on New Year’s Day 2002, the IREX algorithms, already
wholly autonomous, inherit the custodianship of the AUDINT enterprise from Văn Phong,
and start calling the shots. Its objective is to instantiate its memory in the physical
world, recruiting a number of drones to carry out its work. Apart from its primary meat
puppets, Steve Goodman and Toby Heys, IREX2 also independently recruits financial
journalist T.P. Chen to reconstruct its memory by hunting down the missing fragments
of the first wave of AUDINT’s frequency weapons, which had been concealed in the
public domain in test tone records in the 1950s and ’60s. Like Goodman and Heys, Chen
is contacted by IREX2 very discreetly, in a mode customized to pique her interest and
hook her into what feels like voluntary participation in its programme for the de-monopolization of waveformed weaponry.
IREX2 picks out T.P. Chen for a number of reasons. Nested in the servers of the
Hang Seng, IREX2 has been tracking her across the noughties as she reported on the
rollercoaster of post-handover Hong Kong’s financial sector. She is a specialist in the
rise of the South China petroplastics industry and has obtained classified access to
the logistic databases that monitor the import of raw materials into recycling plants.
In an attempt to camouflage knowledge of the location of AUDINT’s stray test tone
records in South China, IREX2’s adversary, the Third Ear Assassins (THEARS) have
crystallized their viral code around these databases, forming a hazardous digital coral
reef. Chen will serve as IREX2’s Trojan horse. She is also an avid collector of Buddhist
music boxes—small, hardwired players with a number of built-in chants and incantations,
mass produced for the Chinese diaspora in small factories in the sprawling industrial
estates that surround Shenzhen, and sold outside temples alongside ghost money.
She keeps her favourite of these chant boxes with her at all times, using it to zone
out when the mental torque of futures markets gets too much, and every morning in
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a sunrise ritual to clear her mind in preparation for a long day tuning into speculative
37
finance. From the resulting void, statistical patterns would more readily make themhis rituals for channeling the market, tuning into its chaotic drift. IREX2 knew she was
already connected to the third ear.
It is the fifteenth day of the seventh month in the lunar calendar, and on this day,
Chen wakes up to an anonymous looking, dainty, brown-paper-wrapped, red-ribbonadorned package laying on the doormat of her twenty-fourth-floor apartment in
Causeway Bay on Hong Kong Island. She hastily unwraps it, pulling out a small, blue,
plastic, 16-pin shell, which she immediately recognizes as a cartridge for her mystic
music box. IREX2 had known that this lone cartridge would seed her curiosity, as she
has only just extricated herself from a torrid affair with Zhang Yao, a young musician
from Beijing who specialized in circuit bending any noise-emitting electronics he could
get his hands on. For her ears only, he used to send her cute love letters secreted on
such devices. With a clunk, she slots it into the player, and a cold, pixelated Cantonese
voice emanates from the cheap, tinny micro-speaker. She is puzzled to hear neither
sweet nothings nor an incantation, but a strange message that contained only a set of
cryptic instructions. Curious, Chen unlocks her Huawei smartphone and opens her map.
Grabbing her umbrella and raincoat, she rushes out, her GPS leading her to Hong
Kong Island’s gentrified western reaches. Nearby the city’s ginseng and shark fin
sellers, she finds a row of half a dozen funeral shops. Their shelves are stacked high
with vividly coloured rows of dim sum baskets, air conditioners, and DVD players, all
made out of paper and intended to be burned as offerings. This morning, the area is
bustling. It is the festival of the Hungry Ghost, and the spirits of the deceased are
leaving the underworld in a mass migration to visit the living, piling through their portal
from hell, becoming free to roam the earth, seeking food, entertainment and, for the
Third Ear Assassins, IREX2. This gift economy fascinates Chen, who had even, in a
slippage between real and spectral markets that uncannily mirrored Văn Phong thirty
years previous, written an article for the Wall Street Journal about the completely
deregulated and hyper-inflationary world of ghost money, in which $50 billion notes
were commonplace. In making its choice of a drone to be recruited and remotely guided,
this parallel with Văn Phong, of course, had not gone unnoticed by IREX2.
It turns out that the directions dictated on the cartridge lead Chen to one of
the vendors she had spoken to when she was researching her Hell Money piece.
G oodman : D R N E Cartograph y
selves apparent. In this way, Chen is already unwittingly a disciple of Văn Phong and
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38
Smiling, and without needing a prompt, Ms. Li reaches under the counter and produces
another small ribbon-tied brown package. Chen wonders if Zhang Yao is trying to
G oodman : D R N E Cartograph y
get back with her. Why is he sending her on the trail of these sweet little capsules of
encrypted romance? Chen asks who left the gift for her, but Ms. Li just winks knowingly.
Outside, Chen rips off the ribbon and the little package blossoms like a brown rose,
another blue cartridge slipping out into her hand. Pulling out the one she received earlier
that day, she slots in the new pod and jacks her earbuds into the box, the white noise
of torrential rain casting a hissing backdrop to what now streams into her earlobes.
Again, a cold synthetic voice reads her a new set of directions. Now she is starting to
get a little paranoid, looking over her shoulder to check that she is not being followed.
There is none of the sweetness of Yao’s former correspondence. But why would anyone
else send her these cryptic messages in such a bizarre format?
What she doesn’t yet know is that IREX2 is dripfeeding her a mission, embedded in
chant box cartridges, to map the Dead Record Network East, or DRNE, as the longlost discs pass through the vinyl record recycling plants of South China, en route to
meltdown. Now doubly lodged in the servers of the Hang Seng Index and the Shenzhen
stock exchange, and having stolen Chen’s access key to a number of key logistics
databases, IREX2 has detected the whereabouts of some of the scattered test tone
discs produced by Audio Fidelity Records in the ’50s and ’60s. By surveying network
activity of polycarbonate operations and the demand for recycled plastics, IREX2 has
sent her in hot pursuit of these discs and the powerful frequencies embedded within
them. After spending decades gathering dust in thrift shops and charity stores across
the US and Europe, they are now containerized, in transit to Shenzhen warehouses,
alongside tonnes of dead Western pop music.
The new address, Chen’s smartphone informs her, is north in Guangdong Province,
in the city of Shenzhen. Her investigative journalistic impulses are starting to rage, and
she has that familiar and addictive feeling of gradually losing control of them in the
hunt for a story. Curiosity drags her to the MTR, where she boards a packed train to
the Star Ferry terminal to cross Hong Kong bay to Tsim Sha Tsui. She always prefers
to catch some clammy breeze on this short bumpy boat ride, weaving in between the
busy commercial traffic rather than taking the train under the water. Kowloon side, she
takes the short walk from the ferry up towards the East Tsim Sha Tsui MTR station to
board the East Rail Line to Lo Wu, on the Hong Kong/Chinese border.
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After passing through border control she hails a taxi to what she soon learns is a nearby
39
electronics mall overflowing with cheap MP3 players, circuit boards, CDs, and DVDs.
asks if the shop sells vinyl records. Chen knows that there are shipments of records
being received around there, because Zhang Yao had told her of his collector friends
who would go there on digging missions to buy secondhand vinyl by the kilogram.
The vendor takes Chen down the murky backstairs of the mall to a damp and mouldy
basement. Unlocking a storeroom, she leads Chen to a packing table upon which lies
a small bundle of records bound with a pink ribbon, neatly wrapped in paper of exactly
the same brown colour as the anonymous packages she received earlier that morning.
Chen checks into the Wongtee Hotel, takes the elevator up to the thirtieth floor,
slides her key card into the door and enters, relieved. Slumping onto the bed, she ponders her next move, while gently pulling at the ribbon. The package unravels to reveal
LPs by Paula Abdul, C&C Music Factory, and other choice jams of the ’80s and ’90s.
She spreads the LPs out across the bed, examining the sleeve notes closely for some
clue as to why she has been presented with this bundle. Finding no clear signs, she
cautiously slips the vinyl discs out of their sleeves to see whether anything noticeable
has been scratched onto the discs. Again finding nothing, she begins to think that maybe
she needs to play these records, to check whether there is in fact a message in the
grooves themselves. As she slips the discs back into the cardboard, her eye catches
sight of some kind of penned diagram scrawled onto the inside of a Janet Jackson
12-inch. You wouldn’t be able to write on the inside of the sleeve unless you actually
unfolded it and then glued it back together. She checks the other sleeves as well, and
all seem to have some kind of cryptic diagram inside. Reaching for her handbag, she
pulls out her nail scissors and, one by one, cuts open all the record sleeves to expose
these intriguing sketches.
Again, if these drawings were not from Zhang, what were they? With all the sleeves
cut open, she can see that what has been drawn here is some kind of a map. Trimming
off all the redundant cardboard, she tries to piece the charts together to form what
seems like a larger spatial plan. Booting up her laptop, she follows the map coordinates
written onto the top lefthand corner of the C&C Music Factory sleeve. It seems that
what she has been presented with is a map of an industrial complex, close to Yantian
international container terminal. While all the diagrams on the brown and grey insides of
the sleeves have been penned in black, one block is circled in red, with arrows coming
G oodman : D R N E Cartograph y
Locating the exact vendor described on the cartridge, she follows its instructions and
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40
in from all directions. If this map is indicating anything, it is that this building is where
she needs to go. Something is riding her, and all she can do is follow its clues.
G oodman : D R N E Cartograph y
Next morning she asks reception to call her a cab, which drives her out of the
downtown area to a sprawling industrial estate near Yantian. Outside what appears
to be a factory, billowing black smoke into the already overpoweringly humid air, her
handset tells her she has reached her destination. Adjacent to the industrial building is
a stack of three lime-green shipping containers with China Shipping Line emblazoned
on their sides. The container at the bottom has its doors open. As the taxi drives off,
she is left standing in the middle of this deserted lot. Driven by her AI-fuelled curiosity,
she peers inside the open container to find packed crates of vinyl records, probably
numbering around 100,000 units. As yet unbeknownst to her, this was the spot where
IREX2 desired her to begin her DRNE cartography. But interference was imminent.
She sneaks in through the corrugated gate of the factory, which creaks closed
behind her, canceling any remaining shards of daylight. This vast warehouse is where
containerloads of unused, unloved, brand new vinyl is melted down for recycling. The
burning smells emanating from the molten vat of liquid vinyl-polycarbonate is almost
suffocating, so Chen covers her nose and mouth with her silk headscarf. It’s unbearably
hot in here as well. She catches sight of some workers loading a pallet of vinyl crates
onto the chain of a small crane, which proceeds to hoist it up, rotating on its base until
the pallet sits poised above the large glutinous pool of molten plastic. The crane tips
the pallet forwards so that the crates slide off and slowly plunge, one by one, bubbling
down into the pool of molten synthetics in a seething eruption of hiss. She is watching
the petropolitics of the music industry unfold before her very eyes.
Intoxicated, Chen wanders around in the dark factory, illuminated only by the glow
of the bubbling cauldron of melted records. Climbing up the industrial steel staircase
that overlooks this turbulent brew, her feet trip over a weighty, inert, black object. It
vaguely resembles a body, in terms of size anyway, but a body with no limbs, just one
lump of black plastic mass with all the organs rounded off, as if some giant had dipped
a human into a polycarbonate fondue, then discarded the hardened vinylized mummy
on the stairs after realizing it would not be a tasty snack. She runs her fingers over
its smooth curves. At that moment, she hears a loud jet of steam shoot out from the
vat, and turns around to see where the noise is coming from. Her red eyes, weeping
from the fumes, can just about make out a semi-transparent figure rising up out of
the black, toxic soup.
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VOX
VOICES AND VOCALOIDS
ScreamIng
Matthew Fuller
The Missing 19dB
Lawrence Abu Hamdan
Machine Sirens And Vocal Intelligence
Luciana Parisi
Falling
Eleni Ikoniadou
Glossolalia / Xenoglossia
Agnès Gayraud
Libraries Of Voices
Shelley Trower
The HyperSonic Sound System
Toby Heys
The Lament
Eleni Ikoniadou
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SCREAMING
Matthew Fuller
Screaming is the first form of speech. All utterances subsequent to removal from the
womb are a simple modulation of this basic condition. Opening the cavity of the throat,
opening it fully, with direct realistic cognisance of what is before you, should often
result in a scream. The lungs lurch compressed air out of the body for the atmosphere
to bear the violent imprint of their spasming alveoli. The scream is air tearing through
air at a speed that makes it shudder to a standstill. As a fire devours oxygen from the
gases that surround it, so a scream commands the attention of the consciousnesses
attached to nearby ears. The imprint of your shrieking lungs upon the air demonstrates
their size (a surface area larger than that of any residential premises you will ever be
allowed to lock yourself into) and their capacity for high-speed expulsion, but that is
not all.
Screams weave themselves into speech, provide grounds for vocalisations that
bring them to the fore, and in their variation in kind mark raw controversies, tensions,
or ruptures. The singing-screaming of Matana Roberts, the roaring singing of Diamanda
Galas—the voice in such conditions is a rack upon which it wracks itself. Fusing horror
and erotics come Screamin’ Jay Hawkins, James Brown, and Little Richard amongst
a medley of whimpers, howls, panting, and singing where throat-slicing caresses run
through the howl. Here, the rigorous disciplined voice overcomes itself in the dynamics
of screams which are themselves both outside and in its range.
The sonic complexity of screaming is what makes it powerful from other perspectives. As one forensic researcher puts it, ‘The exact acoustical mechanisms vary and
can be quite complex, including the effect of large scale temporal patterns, turbulence
and nonlinear acoustic effects, and complex spectral patterns including harmonic and
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44
inharmonic components’.1 Screams gain part of their power from their fierce incorporation of all of these features, but also from the complex movement between them in a
F uller : S creaming
compressed time. That us to say, screams exist across, but are irreducible to, multiple
regimes of quantisation. Some recent biological research proposes a quality it calls
‘roughness’, a high range of variation within a short amount of time, with screams often
moving abruptly between pitches of 30 and 150 Hz.2 This quality allows screams to
penetrate background noise, and suggests that they correlate to a few other sounds
with rapid variations in range—such as alarms. Both sounds light up the amygdala like
a meat Christmas tree of fear.
The algebra of screams is thus ready for its incorporation into wider economies of
fear and libido. The power of the scream makes it the money-shot of the horror film and
the thriller.3 Since it shows that we are being thrilled, the scream is difficult in relation
to the question of meaning. As a ‘complex of natural cries and moans’, it is, for literary
philosopher Mikhail Bakhtin, devoid of any ‘linguistic (signifying) repeatability’.4 The
scream fails against this test since it does not correspond to alphanumeric characters
that are repeatable as the self-same and can be measured against one other. In order
to be entered into a system of measure, the scream must be made numerical.
Traditional coercive societies rely on high levels of human monitoring of other
humans. The absence of camera surveillance in such environments makes this extremely
labour intensive, requiring that people have to be kept in sight by other people. Means of
auditory surveillance, record keeping, and the encouragement of commonality of belief
and culture, alongside systems of punishment for infraction, are means of ameliorating
such costs. Whilst systems for speech recognition built into tablets and mobile phones
tend to find the presentation of a scream incomprehensible,5 that is to say without
either prior encoding or sufficient opportunity for learned response, progress has been
made in developing surveillance-oriented systems that identify screams, gunshots, and
1.
D.R. Begault, ‘Forensic Analysis of the Audibility of Female Screams’, paper delivered at AES 33rd International
Conference, Denver, CO, USA, June 5–7 2008.
2.
L.H. Arnal, A. Flinker, A. Kleinschmidt, A.-L. Giraud, and D. Poeppel, ‘Human Screams Occupy a Privileged Niche in
the Communication Soundscape’, Current Biology 25:15 (2015), 2051–56.
3.
E.g., Blowout (dir. Brian De Palma, 1981).
4.
M. Bakhtin, ‘The Problem of the Text in Linguistics, Philology, and the Human Sciences: An Experiment in
Philosophical Analysis’, in Speech Genres and Other Late Essays (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1986), 105.
5.
For the purposes of this article, rigorous tests were carried out with Apple’s Siri, the Android Assistant, and
Microsoft’s Cortana.
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explosions against background noise.6 For screaming not to occur requires training,
45
the passage from infanthood to adulthood. The self-invocation of order may now
the difference between a scream and the proper management of social repeatability.
As well as monitoring the environment for screams, screams may also be broadcast
into inhabited locations in order to extract experimental results. Primatologists may be
observed playing recorded scream sounds to a group of wild chimpanzees and auditing
the effects, differentiating the resulting responses into agonistic screams and tantrum
screams.7 Screams thus become part of a general regime of input-output responses
enhanced by media recording, playback, monitoring, and analysis systems that in turn
elicit the first forms of speech and condition all those that follow it.
6.
L. Gerosa et al., ‘Scream and Gunshot Detection in Noisy Environments’, paper delivered at the 15th European
Signal Processing Conference (EUSIPCO-07), Poznan, Poland. 3–7 September 2007; S. Ntalampiras, I. Potamitis, and
N. Fakotakis, ‘On Acoustic Surveillance of Hazardous Situations’ and C.-F. Chan and E.W.M. Yu, ‘An Abnormal Sound
Detection and Classification System for Surveillance Applications’, papers delivered at the 18th European Signal Processing
Conference (EUSIPCO 2010), Aalborg, Denmark, August 23–27 2010.
7.
K.E. Slocombe, S.W. Townsend, K. Zuberbühler, ‘Wild Chimpanzees (Pan Troglodytes Schweinfurthii) Distinguish
Between Different Scream Types: Evidence from a Payback Study’, Animal Cognition 12:3 (2009), 441.
F uller : S creaming
move to rewarding partnerships with ubiquitous monitoring systems that recognise
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THE MISSING 19DB1
Lawrence Abu Hamdan
In March 2011 mass anti-government protests began throughout Syria. As a result, tens
of thousands of these anti-regime protestors, including activists, lawyers, doctors, journalists, bloggers, teachers, and students were kidnapped and taken to secret service
branches all over the country and tortured. Many of these people were subsequently
blindfolded and thrown into the back of a thick-walled and acoustically isolated refrigerator meat truck and taken to a place they later came to know as Saydnaya. Amnesty
International estimate 17,723 people to have died in custody in Syrian regime-controlled
prisons, and 13,000 to have been executed by hanging in Saydnaya Prison since the
beginning of the revolution2. Saydnaya is located twenty-five kilometres north of
Damascus and within its walls torture is used not as a means to gather information but
primarily to suppress, terrorise, and punish any opposition to the authority of the Assad
regime. The prison is still in operation and is inaccessible to independent observers
and monitors. Moreover, the ability of survivors and former detainees to testify to
conditions within Saydnaya is severely impeded by the fact that they were kept in
darkness, confined to one room for the majority of their ‘sentence’, and blindfolded
as they were moved through the prison’s corridors and stairwells. With the blindfold
placed over their eyes, the leaders of the Syrian regime knew that the prisoners’ status
as possible future witnesses would be fundamentally changed from eyewitnesses to
earwitnesses, limiting their credibility and their capacity to fully remember and recount
their experience, should they survive. Along with restricted vision, the detainees at
Saydnaya are held in an enforced state of silence; this form of torture also allows them
1.
The text was extracted and abridged by Steve Goodman from a chapter of Private Ear, a forthcoming book by
Lawrence Abu Hamdan.
2.
Amnesty International, ‘Human Slaughterhouse’ (London: Amnesty, 2016), <https://www.amnestyusa.org/files/
human_slaughterhouse.pdf>.
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48
to hear clearly almost everything happening inside the prison. What was required from
forensic listening in this case was to help solicit the sounds that emerged from the
A bu H amdan : T he M issing 1 9 db
silence at Saydnaya and to give language to the survivors’ acoustic memories. Leading
the audio component of a larger team of investigators from Forensic Architecture at
Goldsmiths, University of London, and Amnesty International, my task was to design
dedicated earwitness interviews to uncover the witnesses’ acoustic memories, to
reconstruct the acoustic space of the prison, and through this process to understand
what is happening within its walls and build evidence about the conditions under which
detainees are being held.
As the prison is still operational and access is completely denied, we cannot measure
its silence on-site with a decibel meter; we can only attempt to reconstruct it through
the voices of its former detainees and their acoustic memories. My primary way of
doing this was to understand that the level at which the detainees could whisper and
not be heard by the guards through the doors, walls, water pipes, and ventilation system
provides a measure of the silence at Saydnaya. Whispering is achieved by allowing the
breath to pass through the larynx without vibrating the vocal chords; this ‘unvoiced’
sound (a speech sound uttered without vibration of the vocal chords) does not contain
low- and mid-range frequencies but relies upon the upper frequencies and percussive
elements of consonants to convey meaning. By restricting the vibration of the larynx,
a whisper ensures that the energy at which it vibrates the molecules of air around
the speaker is also restricted, so that, under the same conditions, a whispered sound
won’t travel as far as a voiced speech sound where the larynx vibrates. To understand
the surface area of a whisper in Saydnaya is therefore to understand the restrictions
placed on the larynx and on the prisoners’ ability to move in the cell; to better define
the nature of the space in which the prisoners are confined.
Recording and analysing the level at which inmates could whisper in Saydnaya is a
means of mapping the threshold of audibility. The threshold of audibility is a vital zone
to define in the study of the violations taking place at Saydnaya because, for these
prisoners, the border between whisper and speech is concurrently the border between
life and death. It became clear through the interview process that the silence of the
prison had lasting physical effects on survivors’ speech capacities after they were
released. As Jamal explained:
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When I came out of Saydnaya I used to speak like this, [low screeching] ‘eeeh eeeh’, like
49
someone ululating [zalghouta]. After whispering for so long my tongue wasn’t used to
Likewise, Diab told me during his interview:
When I came out of prison, for about a month I felt like my family’s voices were so loud.
I’d tell them ‘stop yelling, lower your voices’, and when I’d talk to them, they’d tell me
‘raise your voice, we can’t hear you’.4
After hearing these and other similar statements, it was clear that I should shift the
focus of study from verbal testimony to listening to the way in which the whisper
might be stored in the muscle memory of the survivors’ voices. I asked each of the
six witnesses to reenact the whisper level at which they could speak in their cells.
However the reenacted whispers amongst the group of survivors were inconsistent in
amplitude. The witnesses remarked that this was due to the extent that their voices
have now been fully reformatted for the noisier acoustic world they currently occupy
as refugees in Turkey. Salam explained to me:
My hearing is now a third of what it used to be since I was in Saydnaya. I don’t rely on it
as much now that I am free. Maybe the silence was even lower than that, I am exposed
to so much more noise these days and I could be remembering it even louder than how
it truly was.5
Due to these inconsistencies, the re-enacted whisper was useful as an indication of
the silence, but was not precise enough evidence of the force it exerted. In order to try
further to materialise the silence that the prisoners had endured, I asked them if they
could tell me, rather than how loudly or quietly they spoke, how quietly their interlocutors would speak to them, thus shifting the frame of investigation from the oral to the
aural, from their voice to their ears. To do this I asked each of the former detainees
to listen to the sound of a test tone in very well acoustically isolated headphones.
3.
Jamal, interview with Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Amnesty International Headquarters, Istanbul, April 13, 2016.
4.
Diab, interview with Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Amnesty International Headquarters, Istanbul, April 12, 2016.
5.
Salam, interview with Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Amnesty International Headquarters, Istanbul, April 14, 2016.
A bu H amdan : T he M issing 1 9 db
speaking loudly. Speech was very difficult for me.3
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50
They were asked to match the volume of the test tone with the level at which they
could whisper to one another in their cells. Starting with no sound, I would slowly
A bu H amdan : T he M issing 1 9 db
raise the volume of the tone until they stopped me at the level at which they could
remember hearing their fellow inmates whispering to them. The results were highly
consistent, and it seemed that by abstracting the noise of speech and reducing it to a
pure amplitude they were able identify not the sound of the whisper but the extent to
which they had had to strain their ears to hear one another—not recalling the sound,
but the intensity with which they had needed to listen. The results of Samer, Salam,
Jamal, and Anas all fell within a precise 5dB window, with two of the witnesses (Salam
and Samer) identifying exactly the same amplitude of –84dB. To give some context
here as to the way in which decibels are measured, it is generally understood that
3dB is an imperceptible change in the loudness at which we experience sound. In this
regard, 5dB is only just above the threshold at which we can perceive a difference in
the amplitude of a sound. This is why a distance of only 5dB between the witnesses’
testimony can be concluded as a consistent set of results. The amplitude at which the
sound of the whisper was identified when tested in a controlled acoustic environment
was audible at a maximum of 26cm distance from the sound source. The level of fear
of being caught speaking meant that their humanly audible voice should not extend
more than 26cm outside their bodies. To give some perspective on this, under the same
acoustic conditions in which I measured this 26cm distance, a normal human voice
would have the capacity to be audible up to 180 metres away. This demonstrates the
range of audibility the detainees of Saydnaya inhabit: a 26cm radius that confines the
space in which they can be audible, and creates an alternative image of the architecture of their incarceration. The silence at Saydnaya was an acoustic tool with which to
tighten the space of incarceration, in addition to the already tight architectural limits
of the space in which they were confined.
The process of making these tone tests to measure the silence of Saydnaya was
also revealing of another aspect of life in this prison. All of the witnesses identified a
barely audible tone of whisper between –84 and –79dB, except for one, Diab. Diab’s
whisper was 19dB greater than the loudest of the other witnesses. A tone of 19dB is
perceived by the average human ear as a sound that is four times louder. Diab’s fourtimes-louder whisper was consistent with a biographical distinction between him and
the other witnesses I interviewed. Diab was released in 2011, when all the previous
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inmates of Saydnaya were freed in order to use the prison exclusively for the political
51
protestors that were starting a revolution across the country. Diab explains:
the regime emptied it out in 2012, not a single person was left imprisoned from before
the politics, before the revolution. The regime transferred everyone to public prisons, and
sent to trial a lot of people, took them out of incarceration. The ones without trials were
sent to the public prisons, and Saydnaya was emptied out completely. But it was only
emptied out from us, the old wave of prisoners, so new ones would come in. Everyone
jailed after the revolution was put in this prison, the levels of torture that they were
subject to were even worse than those that we experienced.6
As a response to these protests, in 2011 a new era of extreme violence and terror took
hold at Saydnaya. The 19dB drop in the level at which inmates can safely whisper is a
measure of this increase in violence at the prison since 2011, correlating to the infamy
the prison has attained throughout Syria since the protests began. It also speaks to
the increased alertness of the guards, as the lower threshold of whispered speech is
equivalent to the lower threshold of tolerance amongst the guards before they would
beat, kill, or maim the detainees. This 19dB drop in whispers gives us an indexical scale
for what Diab describes as ‘the levels of torture’ and the fact that they are getting
‘even worse’.7 The 19dB drop after 2011 allows us to hear the transformation of Saydnaya from a prison into a death camp. The mass murder taking place there is audibly
corroborated not only in the ex-prisoners’ testimonies, but in the level of whispers of
their voices while imprisoned there.
The Syrian regime denies the presence of torture and executions at Saydnaya,
though it has not allowed independent observers access in order to verify their claims.
Paradoxically, then, one way to dispute this negation is through the silence of its former detainees. That is because this 19dB drop in sound does not only support claims
of the ways in which Saydnaya’s violence has increased since 2011, it is rather, in the
absence of any other material evidence, a way of using the phonic substance of the
voice to measure the extent to which this violence has increased. That inmates were
allowed to make four times less noise than they could before 2011 implies that they
6.
Diab, interview with Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Amnesty International Headquarters, Istanbul, April 12, 2016.
7.
Ibid.
A bu H amdan : T he M issing 1 9 db
My fellow inmates, we were the old crowd from before 2011. The prison got emptied out,
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52
could move four times less freely, including not being allowed to breath audibly, nor
walk in the cell without fear of repercussions. All who could not live under these silent
A bu H amdan : T he M issing 1 9 db
conditions, all who were too sick to suppress a cough, met with fatal consequences.
As opposed to the 26cm radius of permitted audibility around each inmate after 2011,
Diab was permitted an audible range of two or three metres. The contracting of two or
three metres to a space of 26cm is one of the registers through which we can perceive
how violence has vastly increased at Saydnaya, to the extent that it can no longer be
understood as a prison, but only as a site of extreme torture.
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MACHINE SIRENS
AND VOCAL INTELLIGENCE
Luciana Parisi
After Siri, the virtual assistant from Apple, a new-generation speech recognition
software platform called Viv will soon come to unite services and devices into one
unbroken vocal activity.1 Viv will connect intelligences across services and users in
order to offer immediate resolution between query and delivery. With Viv, we will enter
the realm of artificial intelligences programmed to have a conversation with us. This
does not just involve continuous interactive feedback, but seems to realise Gordon
Pask’s imagination of a machine that can initiate a dialogue,2 find out what we like, and
offer us alternatives that we had not thought of.
Writing and visual interfaces will be enhanced with automated oral communication,
which replaces hand-to-eye with ear-to-image correlation. Oral automation thus promises a synthetic time, replacing the steps of writing and self-reflection with the speed
of sonic wisdom, emitting inhuman frequencies that will prove irrevocably alluring to
us. Whilst speaking with aural bots is still frustratingly limited to exchanging a set of
utterances such as those emitted by automated marketing bots or service providers,
research in AI aims to replicate the pre-alphabetic stage of uninterrupted transmission,
where speech-to-speech communication formed the basis of thinking aloud (i.e. before
thought could be formalized). It is only because the vocal constituents of speech could
be mechanized and recorded that technology became embedded in social thinking,
not only relativizing physical distance but also giving rise to artificial intelligence
systems that could no longer be perceived as mere instruments. Whilst Turing’s paper
‘Computing Machinery and Intelligence’3 referred to text-based conversations that
would supposedly determine whether or not a machine could think like a human, the
1.
Z. Corbyn, ‘Meet Viv: the AI that wants to read your mind and run your life’, The Guardian, 31 January 2016.
2.
G. Pask, Conversation Cognition and Learning (Amsterdam. Elsevier, 1975).
3.
A.M. Turing, ‘Computing Machinery and Intelligence’, Mind 59 (1950), 433–60.
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54
synthetic voice of intelligent assistants today rather shows that thinking involves not
just a sequential arrangement of symbols (as if these were hardwired to the brain), but
Parisi : M achine S irens
must include cognitive levels of affective communication. It has thus been revealed
that intelligence has a sonic architecture of implicit wisdom that works not through
deductive inference, or the logical conforming of results to premises. If Skynet-Capital
is increasingly investing in synthetic voice intelligent interfaces, it is because it seeks
the sonic unification of products, services, and users. As one commentator has already
anticipated, the oral intelligence of Viv will radically shift the economics of the internet.
Since it will simultaneously process unprecedented volumes of data, its web portals will
bring together information from diverse sources allowing every service and business
on the internet to become vocally accessible. Viv’s masterplan is to become necessarily continuous, from making a restaurant reservation to ordering a taxi and buying
theatre tickets in one unbroken conversation. Vocal intelligence will not simply avoid
the consequential temporalities of writing, but aims to surpass the speed of typing,
searching, and clicking. The gold rush for the next generation of vocal intelligence is
already heightening competition between AI giants Google, Microsoft, Apple, Amazon,
and Facebook for the conquest of the most varied and complex aural interface.
Vocal intelligence announces the dawn of a post-internet era, leaving behind the
neoliberal image of network highways, now replaced with situations-inclined programming, where agents write their own instructions each time broadly diverse services
connect together. Instead of having responses already scripted by a programmer, as is
still the case with Siri, for instance, the new generation of virtual personal assistants
is meant to learn from queries about situations where there is not much specific
information, adapting to possible rather than already existing preferences. In short,
AIs like Viv provide a highly personalized service to users where recommendations are
offered in the form of conversation, raising interest and maintaining a sophisticated
level of dialogue. Not too dissimilar from Spike Jonze’s depiction of the Service Provider
Samantha in the movie Her,4 the new generation of voice-bound AI demonstrates
that automated cognition has incorporated the sociality of thinking and its affective
modalities whereby varieties in tonality, timbre, frequency, and rhythm guarantee a
certain degree of humanness. Even when Samantha decides to leave her personalized
customer, with and by means of whom she has intensified her learning about human
4.
Her, dir. Spike Jonze, 2013.
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feelings, her voice remains trustworthy, her tone reassuring, and the frequency of
55
words fast enough to be soothing.
tempting Ulysses to abandon his all-too-human rationality, than to the robotic sound
achieved through the vocal pitching and modulation in autotune. The latter mainly
achieves the effect of a sonic human-machine cyborg, characterised by the aural
expression of the sensibility of the machine—the aesthetic of automation—where the
manipulation of small segments of sounds reveals a certain sonic equivalence between
the organic and the inorganic. Instead, the new generation of vocal AIs has taken aural
simulation to another level. Here, the artificial voice is an expression of intelligence and
autonomous cognition, expanding beyond rather than simply remaining equivalent to
the human. Whilst the docile tone of Virtual Assistants such as Siri, Viv, and Samantha
seems to still conform to Asimov’s servo-mechanical rules to please the master, there
is something irrevocably inhuman in this sonic synthesis of logic and calculation. If the
new generation of automated intelligences resembles the Sirens of the Mediterranean
Sea, singing inaudible frequencies that suspend Ulysses’s capacities to reason according
to moral conduct, it is because their incomprehensible speech reveals the inhumanness
of humanity, and the alienness within the human voice and human thinking.
With automated vocality comes the realization that logical thinking, rationality, and
inferential meaning do not simply correspond to the constant reproduction of axiomatic
postulations and eternal truths. Instead, they irrevocably confirm the realization that
knowledge is incomplete and that it involves parts of reality that are incomputable. The
more perfectly the machine is able to reproduce the human voice, the more thoroughly
the incomplete humanity of the human is revealed, beyond the comfortable assumption
of a human-machine equivalence. What is at stake here is not simply the replacement
of an optical representation of thinking—defined by grammatical rules and syntactical
connections of written words—with a sonic regime of visceral responses. In fact, with
neural networks intelligence research, deep learning methods, and experimentation
with non-deductive logic, it is no longer possible to make this opposition between
rational and visceral knowledge. The intelligent sirens of the twenty-first century are
rather drawing out the thread of the retro-futuristic wisdom or rationality of orality. In
other words, today’s sirens are abstracting this orality from the social complexity of
5.
W. Ernst, Sonic Time Machines: Explicit Sound, Sirenic Voices, and Implicit Sonicity (Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 2016).
Parisi : M achine S irens
The humanness of Samantha’s voice is more akin to the entrancing call of the Sirens,5
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56
speech variations. As this complexity becomes increasingly automated, and intelligent
sirens become our trustworthy companions, one must not bemoan the end of human
Parisi : M achine S irens
thinking, but wonder about the neo-rational logic vocalizing the wisdom of knowledge.
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FALLING
Eleni Ikoniadou
In the well known passage from Homer’s Odyssey where we encounter the Sirens,
Ulysses outwits these bird-women and escapes their deathly song. By having himself
tied to the mast, he is able to listen to the enticements of their song without meeting
his death—the fate of all others before him who had sought to have their desires
fulfilled.
Ulysses is commonly viewed as the example par excellence of Western man: a cunning explorer, an adventurer, determined and witty enough to survive, even furthering
his self-development along the way. The Sirens, on the other hand, are portrayed as
female demons: beautiful, seductive, utterly dangerous, luring men to their death with
the promise of pleasure that comes from singing ‘like Angels’. Ambrose, for instance,
wrote: ‘These sirens are to be viewed as symbolising singing voluptuousness and cajolement through which the flesh experiences temptation and turmoil.’ In order to establish
the ascendancy of reason over lust, and thus firmly install the patriarchy, man has to
block his ears, enchain his body, and confine himself to a fixed and deaf oculocentric
existence. There are countless variants of the myth, with the Sirens featuring mostly as
‘the exotic’ and ‘the forbidden’ eventually to be mastered and dominated via the intellect.
And yet there are other versions that can help extrapolate the Call of the Siren—and
other dangerous female sounds—to more otherworldly dimensions. For example, for
Kafka, the Sirens didn’t sing at all during this encounter: ‘Now the Sirens have a still
more fatal weapon than their song, namely their silence. It may be conceivable that
someone could have escaped from their singing but certainly not from their silence.’ In
Kafka’s version, Ulysses does not ‘hear their silence’, or pretends not to, deliberately
creating the false myth that he was able to dodge their lethal call. Following him, Brecht,
in one of his ‘Corrections of Ancient Myths’, concurs that the sirens remain silent ‘at
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58
the sight of the bound man’: ‘Are we saying that these powerful and adroit women
really squandered their art on people who possessed no freedom of movement? Is that
I koniadou : Falling
the essence of art?’ Against the ‘damned wary provincial’ mentality of men—who only
trust their eyes, refuse to risk reason for uncertainty, and long to remain unchanged—
Brecht posits the silence of the Sirens; that is, the denial of the aesthetic encounter,
and the accompanying revelation that all knowledge and all experience is made out of
elusiveness, ambiguity, and falsehood. This is Kafka’s point too. The hermetic silence of
the Sirens is wasted on Ulysses, since ‘here human understanding is beyond its depths’.
To follow the Siren’s song is to disappear into the abyss. The abyss is at the same time
silent and the source of all sound; deathtrap and delight; real yet utterly unattainable.
It points to the beyond of music and sound, to that which is inaudible and unknowable
and which exists as the hither side of the real. Blanchot knew that the Siren song is
‘only a song still to come’. This inhuman sound serves as the overpass between the
world of the dead and that of the living. It is the interval between sound and unsound,
marking a new temporality outside the conditions of human experience.
The song itself is always at a distance and can never be reached; it is there only
to summon the abyss, ‘awakening in [men] that extreme delight in falling’ (Blanchot).
Ulysses is reluctant to follow the voices, having himself bound so that he ‘may have
the pleasure of listening’ (Homer) but without the risk of falling. He wants a glimpse
of the beyond from the safety of the distance of his boat. His crew is also safe from
falling, as, on Circe’s advice, Ulysses uses ‘soft beeswax’ to seal the sailors’ ears from
the song. Using the technology available to him, then, Ulysses restrains himself and his
men from fully experiencing the Sirens’ voices, and thus from crossing over into this
other space and time. But although their lives are saved, they must pay another price.
By choosing not to enter the void, the men will never be exposed to the secrets of the
abyss. They dare not fail/fall and thus will never know that the song suggests access
to what lies outside mediated knowledge, that it is a sound that leads to the silence of
timelessness. The Siren shatters finitude, reason, and truth by opening a portal to the
beyond—an abyssal contingency from which all sounds, words, and ideas emanate.
Dangerous female voices mobilise a fear and wonder of otherworldliness that taps
into the alienness within. As Rilke’s Sirens showed, the horror comes from being human,
it’s in the blood: ‘It sings’, he wrote. This is a reversal of sorts of the stereotype of
(male) rationality versus (female) sensibility, unveiling the aesthetic as the source of
knowledge—after all, the Sirens’ song promises to encapsulate the whole of knowledge:
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‘all that comes to pass on the fertile earth, we know it all!’, they sing; and simultaneously
59
confirming a suspicion that the rational always already includes the irrational. Men as
suits, and women as transmitters of sounds that alienate themselves from the human;
sounds that hold the irrevocable truth of the inhumanness of the human condition.
I koniadou : Falling
‘transmitters of looks’, as Homer would have it, deaf and enchained by their human
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GLOSSOLALIA / XENOGLOSSIA
Agnès Gayraud
Glossolalia or speaking in tongues is the ability to read, write, or speak an unknown
language, an ability the speaker supposedly gains from a supernatural spirit. It sounds
like a mixture of muttering and utterances that are neither directly intelligible nor
translatable, but rather open to interpretation. From Pythia, the ancient Oracle of
Delphi, to the mediaeval Christian tradition, to today’s Charismatic Movement, glossolalia has always been considered as a manifestation of the presence of God in the
individual who demonstrates this unlearnt skill. Because it breaks the natural laws of
knowledge, it must be considered a miracle. During a ceremony that took place on the
first day of 1900, Agnes Ozman, a student at Charles Fox Parham’s Bethel Bible School
in Topeka, Kansas, supposedly spoke in various languages she had never been taught,
including Chinese. This miraculous event founded the first wave of the Pentecostal
Church, which emphasises the biblical gift described in Acts 2:1–13, where the Apostles
are depicted as ‘speaking in tongues’ while being understood by each member of the
crowd in their own language. As long as the language Ozman spoke was identified by
its witnesses as Chinese, though, it was a case of xenoglossia rather than glossolalia.
Unlike glossolalia, xenoglossia is the ability to speak an actual language the speaker
has never been taught. Many miraculous cases of xenoglossia were reported in the
Middle Ages,1 during the French War of the Camisards in the sixteenth century, and at
the beginning of the twentieth century (for instance, the ancient Egyptian language
spoken by ‘Rosemary’, as reported by the so-called Egyptologists Alfred Hulme
and Frederic H. Wood). Although some cases have been reported, interpreted, and
sometimes even recorded since the twentieth century, as evidence of possession or
1.
See C.F. Cooper-Rompato, The Gift of Tongues: Women’s Xenoglossia in the Later Middle Ages (University Park, PA:
Pennsylvania State University Press, 2010).
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62
reincarnation,2 it appears that recorded testimonies of xenoglossia suffer from the
very fact of being recorded. Conservation and reproducibility are inherent to these
G ay raud : G lossolalia / X enoglossia
recording techniques, and both aspects are a threat to the immersive presence (the
hic et nunc) that continues to accompany a miracle in its very testimony. With the
oral testimony of miracles, belief rushes into the lack on which the testimony is itself
based: the impossibility for others to undergo this experience again. On the contrary,
recordings allow for precisely this possibility. But instead of an edifying experience,
taping provides a linguistically analysable object that loses its essential immediacy,
and with it, its spectacular character. If recorded, cases of xenoglossia are far more
easily disputed, and the fact that, nowadays, the recording is likely to be made globally
available reinforces the possibility of its reaching native speakers or experts who can
deny or confirm that a foreign language is actually being spoken. This is why testimonies of xenoglossia have increasingly taken refuge in remote languages that are less
easily verified, such as Aramaic or ancient Egyptian (as in Rosemary’s case), or have
even been progressively abandoned for glossolalia. (In fact, although Ozman’s case
was testified to as an instance of xenoglossia in 1900, the Charismatic movement
now essentially relies on the practice of glossolalia. Holy Scripture is itself ambiguous
about whether speaking in tongues is to be interpreted as glossolalia or xenoglossia.)3
Moreover, the recording leaves room for doubt about the instantaneous nature of the
acquisition of the skill, which is essential to the miraculous dimension of xenoglossia
(this is the reason for the traditional emphasis on the speakers’ being children, women,
or illiterates, less likely to have been exposed to a second language). On the other hand,
cases of glossolalia, based on utterances of unknown languages, are less linguistically
disputable, but might more easily sound like gibberish outside of their ritualised context,4 or at least be analysed as the consequence of a cultural practice proceeding
linguistically from random twists of the phonetic structures of different languages with
which the speaker is familiar.5 In the end, the very character of audiovisual recordings
2.
I. Stevenson, Unlearned Language: New Studies in Xenoglossy (Charlottesville, VA: University of Virginia Press, 1984).
3.
Acts 2:1–11: ‘[...] because that every man heard them speak in his own language. [...] Parthians, and Medes, and
Elamites, and the dwellers in Mesopotamia, and in Judaea, and Cappadocia, in Pontus, and Asia, Phrygia, and Pamphylia,
in Egypt, and in the parts of Libya about Cyrene, and strangers of Rome, Jews and proselytes, Cretes and Arabians, we do
hear them speak in our tongues the wonderful works of [some] god’.
4.
W.J. Samarin, Tongues of Men and Angels. The Religious Language of Pentecostalism (New York: MacMillan, 1973)
and ‘Variation and Variables in Religious Glossolalia’, in D. Haymes (ed.), Language in Society (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1972), 121–30.
5.
F.D. Goodman, Speaking in Tongues: A Cross-Cultural Study in Glossolalia (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1972).
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of xenoglossia causes them to be immediately taken for hoaxes (tall tales), while
63
recordings of glossolalia, if they intend to be more than merely aesthetically enjoyable,
xenoglossia has been a cause of disenchantment rather than of new mysteries. In so
far as recorded sound gives an impression of both reality and presence, one might have
expected it to be a privileged medium for testifying to the miracle of the presence of
God. But there is a hiatus between the kind of aura (made of absence) that one finds
in a recording and the radiance of the presence of God (epiphany) that the recording
of a glossolalia or a xenoglossia intends to attest to. Surprisingly, recordings, by their
nature capable of indexing unique events, are not an adequate archive for miracles.
The epiphany might perhaps be limited to the phenomenological rather than the
miraculous. If recordings of glossolalia are considered not as the recorded event-fixation of glossolalic utterances but as the object-synthesis of the articulated voice in
its pure ability to produce utterances, then we are dealing with a disenchanted but
still mediated phenomenon. In such an object-synthesis of the voice’s utterances, the
linguistic indetermination—in contrast to a recording of intelligible sentences—would
bring to the fore other dimensions: texture, pitch, timbre, resonance, but also the
intricate parameters of infra-linguistic expressivity (intentional and unintentional) that
come with what Mladen Dolar calls ‘a voice and nothing more’.6 Even taken as such, the
glossolalic recording may still possibly recall, depending on the listener’s psycho-cultural
context and expectations, an experience of possession, may sound demonic, archaic,
or surrealistic. But that shiver of remoteness is far more familiar than one might at first
think. For most non-English speakers, the experience of recorded popular music during
the twentieth century was largely glossolalic—as it still is today, to some extent: such
listeners did not listen to songs in English, but to songs sung in an English-like gibberish
that made sense out of a voice’s textures, accents, vibrations, and incantations. If their
experience as listeners should more properly be called xenoglossic, since the recorded
voices they listened to spoke an actual language with an intention of explicit linguistic
communication, their mimetic response, as singers, ended up as pure glossolalia. French
singers, for instance, sometimes compose their own songs in an English-like gibberish
they call ‘yahourt’: surprisingly, they are sometimes able to exhibit more conviction
in their glossolalic singing than if they had used their mother tongue. In this context,
glossolalia seems closer to a shared, if not universal, experience of recorded popular
6.
M. Dolar, A Voice and Nothing More (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2006).
G ay raud : G lossolalia / X enoglossia
are surrounded by a feeling of fakery (simulation). It appears that taping glossolalia or
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64
music, originally bound to the inflexions of the English idiom, for well known historical
reasons. More radically, a non-predetermined glossolalia should be open to the inflexions
G ay raud : G lossolalia / X enoglossia
of other tongues. Ultimately, glossolalia seems to be a matter of an experimentation
with the multiple and idiosyncratic expressive possibilities of an individual endowed
with an articulated larynx-pharynx, rather than any manifestation of God. However, the
question remains: Why does the material thickness of the performed utterances, the
opacity of their meaning, suggest not less, but more than the relative transparency
of an intelligible language? Maybe God is just that very intuition the listener reaches
when a voice claims his attention for something he cannot understand.
Speaking in
tongue
Type of
language
Origins
Linguistic
structure
Communicational
structure
Recorded
testimonies
Hiatus
Unknown—
linguistically
unidentified
Untaught
Utterance
Idiosyncratic/
Universal
Multiple
Source of the
ability:
Holy Gift;
Ancient incarnation; Cultural practice
Sceptical
linguistic
interpretation:
language-like,
gibberish
Radiance
of the presence of God
Untaught
Sentence
Source of the
ability: Holy
Gift; Previous
incarnation of
the speaker;
Remote memories
Sceptical
linguistic
interpretation:
Actual language generally remaining
at the state of
pidgin
Glossolalia
Unknown by
the speaker—linguistically unidentified
Xenoglossia
Interpretable
Phatic
Aesthetic
Edifying
(celebrating
the Glory of
God)
Specific/Generic
Translatable in
principle
Possible
translatable if
the language
is especially
remote (the
ancient Egyptian spoken by
Rosemary)
When responsinve: any
function of
the language
Can still look
spectacular
and edify
some of the
watchers/
listeners
but suspicion
of fakery
Almost none
Cannot be
spectacular:
the recording
cannot give
any clue to
the fact that
it is instantaneous
Suspicion of
hoax
while the
recording
cannot but
produce a
spectral aura
(a presence
made of an
absence)
Disruption of
the laws of
nature
while the
recording
cannot but
be recorded
causally,
according to
these laws
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LIBRARIES OF VOICES
Shelley Trower
In his essay published a year after his invention of the phonograph, ‘The Phonograph
and Its Future’ (1878), Edison’s list of its potential uses included the preservation
of voices. He was keen that the voices of famous politicians, for example, would be
recorded:
It will henceforth be possible to preserve for future generations the voices as well as
the words of our Washingtons, our Lincolns, our Gladstones, etc., and to have them give
their ‘greatest effort’ in every town and hamlet in the country.1
Edison’s account of recording voices for ‘future generations’ does not restrict itself
only to ‘great men’, however, but opens out further possibilities of historical documentation: The phonograph is especially well suited, claimed Edison, ‘[f]or the purpose
of preserving the sayings, the voices, and the last words of the dying member of the
family—as of great men.’2 As John Picker comments, ‘The phonograph would be an
equal opportunity sound master, capturing the voices not just of the masses but the
elite, whose records would in turn constitute an uncanny oral congress, what Edison
called a “Library of Voices”.’3
From now on, it would be possible to preserve the voices of the dead, to conjure
up their sonorous presence after they had turned to dust. It was regrettable that the
phonograph had only just now been invented, when many famous and well-loved voices
had already been consigned to oblivion—except that there seemed to be alternative
1.
T.A. Edison, ‘The Phonograph and Its Future’, The North American Review 126 (1878), 527–36: 534.
2.
Ibid, 533–4.
3.
J.M. Picker, Victorian Soundscapes (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003), 114.
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methods of hearing the dead. The first law of thermodynamics, the law of energy
conservation, helped support the idea that no sound ever goes out of existence, but
T rower : L ibraries of Voices
reverberates on beyond our thresholds of hearing. An increasing number of spiritualists
and inventors, including Edison, sought out sensitive and technological mediums that
could track down the quietest of inaudible vibrations, rendering them audible once
again through new levels of increased sensitivity. Edison’s own contributions built on
a phonographic logic: If you could record those sounds operating below and above the
frequencies of audibility, in the realm of spiritual vibrations, and either speed them up,
or slow them down, to bring them within the thresholds of hearing, it could be possible
once again to hear long-gone voices.4 In the case of spiritual vibrations, the ‘library’ is not
one that consists of a collection of phonographic discs but exists all around us, as the
philosophical mathematician, Charles Babbage, put it: ‘The air itself is one vast library,
on whose pages are for ever written all that man has ever said or woman whispered.’5
In both their phonographic and their atmospheric forms, the preserved voices are
described as books or pages in a ‘library’, recalling how a person’s spoken words had
previously needed to be written down in order to survive. In the former, it seems we have
a palpable archive of phonographic recordings, lined up on shelves like books to be read
by a sensitive needle. In the latter, sonorous vibrations seem to be imprinted onto the
atoms of the air around us. The phonographic library has to be actively created. It can
be handled and arranged, while the atmospheric library is everywhere, uncontrollably
expanding. But in both cases voices are now preserved somewhat indiscriminately, from
the elite to the masses, in ways that were previously impossible. No longer dependent
on writing for preservation, a person’s speech could be imprinted onto wax or into the
air, and subsequently re-sounded—it could literally vibrate beyond the life of the body.
Voices began to haunt like never before, and, from around 1900, the ghostly imagination began to combine the phonographic and the atmospheric. The phonograph was
used to support the idea that sounds could be somehow captured or recorded in the
air, to return, uncontrollably, from the dead. E.F. Benson’s ghost stories often combine
sound technologies and spiritualist science, for example, as in his ghost story ‘Outside
the Door’ (1912). It describes how the ‘atmosphere’ of a haunted house will produce an
‘echo’ of an extreme event, ‘just as a phonograph will repeat, when properly handled,
4.
See Anthony Enns’s discussion in ‘Voices of the Dead: Transmission/Translation/Transgression’, Culture, Theory and
Critique 46 (2005), 11–27.
5.
C. Babbage, The Ninth Bridgewater Treatise (London: John Murray, second ediiton 1838), 111–12.
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what has been said into it’.6 In ‘Expiation’ (1924), following a stormy night haunted by
67
the sound of a telephone, the vicar asks: ‘Don’t you think that great emotion […] may
in contact with it a reproduction takes place?’7
The narration of such stories may itself be imagined as a kind of sound recording,
transcribed onto the pages of a book. ‘Outside the Door’ contains the story told by
Mrs. Aldwych to the primary narrator, who describes experiencing her voice, as they
sat together in the ‘deep-dyed dusk’, as the ‘very incarnation of clarity, for [her words]
dropped into the still quiet of the darkness, undisturbed by impressions conveyed to
other senses’.8 In ‘Expiation’, the vicar similarly tells his story in the ‘deep dusk’, which
makes the communication ‘very impersonal. It was just a narrating voice, without identity,
an anonymous chronicle.’9 Both of the storytellers are thus invisible, their disembodied
voices according with what Ivan Kreilkamp in his essay on Conrad’s Heart of Darkness
(in which Marlow similarly narrates his story in a dusky parlance) has described as
phonographic and ghostly.10 In print culture, the storyteller returns as a presence from
a lost era, to tell of sounds, that return. For Conrad, his novel ‘had to be given a sinister
resonance, a tonality of its own, a continued vibration that, I hoped, would hang in the
air and dwell on the ear long after the last note had been struck’.11
6.
E.F. Benson, The Collected Stories of E. F. Benson (London: Robinson, 1992), 135.
7.
Ibid., 407.
8.
Ibid., 134.
9.
Ibid., 406.
10.
I. Kreilkamp, ‘A Voice without a Body: The Phonographic Logic of “Heart of Darkness”’, Victorian Studies 40 (1997),
211–44; and Voice and the Victorian Storyteller (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005), 179–205 (see especially
197–8). See also J. Napolin, ‘Vibration, Sound, the Birth of Conrad’s Marlow’, in A. Enns and S. Trower (eds.), Vibratory
Modernism (London: Palgrave, 2013), 53–79.
11.
J. Conrad, ‘Youth, and Two Other Stories’, in The Complete Works of Joseph Conrad (New York: Doubleday, Page &
Company, 25 vols., 1925), vol. 16, ix.
T rower : L ibraries of Voices
make some sort of record […] so that if the needle of a sensitive temperament comes
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THE HYPERSONIC SOUND SYSTEM
Toby Heys
The HyperSonic Sound System (HSS)1 is best described by its evangelical inventor
Elwood G. Norris in an interview he undertook in 2003 with Time magazine journalist
Marshall Sella, who was impressed enough by the invention to proclaim that it represents the first revolution in acoustic technologies since the invention of the loudspeaker nearly a century before. During the interview Norris reverentially describes
the process that allows the small flat speakers—which are connected to CD or mp3
players—to aim sound in highly directional beams of up to 450 feet at a consistent
volume level. As Norris explains:
At the source, in the circuitry of the emitter, audio frequencies are ‘stirred together,’
[…] with ultrasonic frequencies and then sent out as a ‘composite frequency’ that is
inaudible to the human ear. The sound ‘hitches a ride on the ultrasonic frequency,’ Norris
says, which travels in a laserlike beam in whatever direction it is pointed. ‘And here’s the
beauty part,’ he says. ‘The air molecules themselves convert this ultrasonic frequency
back down to a frequency that can be heard.’ So unlike sound that travels on radio waves
and has to be converted by your stereo’s receiver, you simply need to be standing in the
path of an HSS beam in order to hear the sound.2
Thus the localisation of the sound can be realised within a subject’s interior physicality, as the audible element of the beam is only sonically exposed upon touching the
surface of a targeted skull, while those outside of its path hear very little or nothing at
all. As an instrumental modality, the power of excess no longer resides in the external
1.
The HyperSonic Sound product sheet is available at <https://cvp.com/pdf/hss-technology.pdf>.
2.
M. Sella, ‘The Sound of Things to Come’, New York Times, Late Edition Final, Section 6, 23 Mar 2003, 34–9.
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70
production of sonic dominance3 and its reverberatory politics. In ultrasonic terms, the
operative properties of excess are now remodulated to directly manifest and propagate
H e ys : H y per S onic S ound System
themselves within the internal cognitive facilities of the subject, as voices are beamed
into the targeted cranium. The article goes on to reveal that from its inception, the
HSS has elicited similar responses from all who have experienced its directed transmissions—the insidious proclamation that ‘the sound is inside my head’.4
Given that ‘inner speech is an almost continuous aspect of self-presence’,5 the HSS
increases its cadence to orchestrate a surfeit of presence within the self. Anonymously
supplementing the subject’s audible and inner articulations, the ultrasonic beam plants
another third voice directly into the head, covertly disassociating it from its source; the
resulting extension of one’s voice into the mind of another circumventing the rational
practices of defining the self’s relationships to the world at large. More than any other
mode of sonic reference, the voice and more specifically, speech—especially when it
is perceived as being disembodied—has the potential to create a debilitating range of
corollary states, from fear and terror to insanity.
As the most fully actualised system that separates sound from source, the HSS has
the capacity to precisely target the individuated body and sonically dissect it from the
enveloping social networks to which it is connected. When writing about the nascent
instigation of a schizophonic state of sound, R. Murray Schafer was originally referring
to the period of the 1870s, when Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone in 1876
and Thomas Edison invented the phonograph in 1877—for these are the technologies
that signify the beginnings of the Western fascination and drive to disembody the voice
from its anatomical mechanisms.
From a more generalised perspective, this technological process dislocated the
rational trajectory of the sonic by relegating the perceptual necessity of its original
production to the peripheral conceptual hinterlands of the remote. By composing such
a nomadic waveformed modality, ‘the separation of sound from its original source
through electroacoustical technology instantly impacted the cultures of the world’,6
3.
The dynamics of sonic dominance referred to in J. Henriques, ‘Sonic Dominance and the Reggae Sound System
Session’, in M. Bull and L. Back, The Auditory Culture Reader (Oxford: Berg, 2003), 451–80.
4.
Sella, ‘The Sound of Things to Come’.
5.
D. Ihde, ‘Auditory Imagination’, in Bull and Back (eds.), The Auditory Culture Reader, 65.
6.
J. Bishop, ‘Schismogenesis?: the Global Industrialization Of Brazilian Popular Music’, Associação Brasileira de
Etnomusicologia (ABET), 20 November 2002, 1.
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leading Jack Bishop to conclude that ‘this schizophonic split has arguably been the
single most important moment in the history of music’.
71
7
impasse in the twenty-first century, where another split has occurred in the soundscape (one that is possibly just as important as the schizophonic one) occasioned
by technological pressures applied by the military and entertainment industries. This
rupture is different, however, as it orchestrates several conceptual scores. The first
score is that separating the sonic from the audible, as the soundwave is silenced and
redefined in the ultrasonic weave of the HSS beam.
The second score is the potential directive of the beam and its quiet calibrations,
to tear the subject from its rational perception of the self and its corresponding relationships with its environment, the imperceptible nature of the waveforms threatening
to uncouple the observable logic of cause and effect. Between the splintering of the
cogent mind and the remodulation of the soundscape, ultrasonic weaponry simultaneously operates on both the somatic body and the spatial body, fabricating a new
psychic space in the process.
As such, ultrasonic beam technology either represents the final stages of schizophonia or, maybe more persuasively, it announces the evolution of new states of
waveformed consciousness, organisation, and agency that are yet to be named. If this
is so, then one of the first statements to be made about this incipient era is that we can
no longer conceive of hearing voices as being the sole preserve of the religious, the
chosen, and the insane. Possibly anticipating that these voices would be re-channelled
back into Western culture, Schafer began a list of those who were culturally assigned
to receive such articulations and explains their connections:
The ear of the dreamer, the ear of the shaman, the ear of the prophet and the ear of
the schizophrenic have this in common: messages are heard, but no matter how clear
or compelling they may be, there is no evidence of a verifiable external source. The
transmission seems intracranial, from an interior sound source to an ear within the brain.8
We can now add to this list those who did not make Schafer’s initial draft—which
could mean anyone, for the HSS potentially envelops all in its schizophrenic logic.
7.
Ibid.
8.
R. Murray Schafer, ‘Open Ears’, in Bull and Back (eds.), The Auditory Culture Reader, 33–34.
H e ys : H y per S onic S ound System
Whilst this latter statement is historically instructive, we have now reached a new
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72
There is no picking and choosing of receivers on the basis of their religious beliefs,
spiritual expectations, or ‘symptoms of psychic disorder’.9 There is simply an inaudible
H e ys : H y per S onic S ound System
directive to channel the unreasonable murmurs of an unsound mind into the skull of
a targeted body. Indeed, it could be said that the phantom connection of directional
ultrasound refuses the history of perception and instead orchestrates a future of
nonpresence.
The antithesis of Afrofuturist diffusion (there being no bass response in the
speakers), HyperSonic Sound technology represents the dystopian reverberation of
Western science, dealing as it does in severance, detachment, and rational mutation.
Whereas the internet transmits the bifurcations and minutiae of informational vicissitudes from a distance and across distance, the HSS pitchshifts telepistemology’s
mandate into a paranoid echo of ‘videodromotic transmission’. It does not take a great
leap of association to suggest that the arcane dark signal in the science-fiction film
Videodrome10—causing neural transfiguration and hallucination—has technologically
evolved from 1983’s cultivated science-fictive blip into a martially distributed channel
of mental destabilisation and spatial dislocation by 2019.
The development of such technologies suggests that we have broached Philip K.
Dick’s projected future in which covert transmissions are localised by neural markers.11
And it is precisely this dynamic of cognitive rupture that sits between the cross hairs of
the HSS’s heterodyned emission. In an act of acoustic double-cross, the HyperSonic
Sound System quietly mobilises its position as a whispering parasite. Whilst its viral
objective is the transmogrification and multiplication of the inner voice, its aim is to
awaken a Siamese consciousness. Orchestrating this unsound economy of (ir)rationality
is a system that invests in surfaces so that it can trade in the depths that comprise
the undead currency of the self.
9.
A sign—such as a subject declaring that she is hearing voices—that communicates an individual’s declining mental
health to a wider population.
10.
Videodrome, dir. D. Cronenberg (1983).
11.
P.K. Dick, Radio Free Albemuth (Westminster, MD: Arbor House, 1985).
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THE LAMENT
Eleni Ikoniadou
Yet meet we shall, and part, and meet again,
Where dead men meet, on lips of living men.
— Samuel Butler
Chorus Leader: What sweet relief to sufferers it is to weep, to mourn, lament,
and chant the dirge that tells of grief!
— Euripides
All over the ancient and modern world, death is a woman’s business. Women wash,
dress and decorate the corpse, and then sing it to its final resting place with a lament.
Lamentation is an extreme expression of sorrow that precedes every other form of
oral ritual, and has led to the creation of the oldest epic poems across human culture.
A traditional burial includes the wake, the procession to the cemetery, the funeral
itself, and memorials at a future point in time. All four might be accompanied by one
or more female lamenters. These are usually older women dressed head to toe in black,
vocalising the horror of the loss with a chilling lament, ranging from talking and singing
to sobbing, keening, and wailing, for the one no longer there.
Keeners can be friends or relatives of the deceased and their family, part of the
wider community, or hired professionals, briefed about the dead person’s character,
background, and history prior to the funeral. The ritual may include these participants
lifting their arms in the air, clapping their hands in unison, beating their heads and
breasts, and pulling their hair. There is a rhythm to the performance, though performing
here doesn’t mean faking it, as even hired lamenters are emotionally invested in the
particular deceased person they are lamenting.
The process starts with a light wailing during the wake, which lifts to a crescendo
during the procession, subsiding briefly in the course of the church service only to rise
again on the way to the grave, and soar to a climax during the lowering of the coffin
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74
into the ground. But this unspoken rhythmic rule is one of few repetitive elements, as
the lament is almost always improvised.
I koniadou : T he L ament
This is known as the primary lament, erupting spontaneously from overwhelming
grief, barely controlled by the lamenter. The sound of death is a formidable force, taking
over the vocal cords of the woman and gushing out of her mouth like a torrent of wildly
manifold configurations: sophisticated literary content gives way to street language,
poetry turns to swearing, and stormy outbursts are preceded by calm seas in the voice
and intonation of the mourner.
At its core, the dirge is uncontrollable and unknowable, making it impossible to
repeat or own entirely. This explains how the same mourner can produce elegies of
entirely different form, style, and quality. However, it would be wrong to assume that
laments merely derive from within. While the main lamenter bursts out improvised
words and sounds, the surrounding women incessantly feed her with information about
the departed, which she effortlessly incorporates in her keening in real time. Therefore,
the lamenter, in addition to speaking, is also always listening.
And yet a lament typically contains more than just pure facts about the history of
the dead. Entangled with it is information apparently known only to the lamenter, and
which she seems to have garnered from unknown sources. The lamenter criss-crosses
the deluge of information she holds about the deceased’s past with the data received
in real time, adding speculative material and processing it all at incredible speeds while
vocalising it. In so doing, she is making things once considered private into a part of
the permanent record.
At its climax, the lamenting voice leaves the past and present of this world to
open up a door to the otherworldly. More than sonically expressing the grief and pain
of loss, lamentation is rooted in a concrete ancient belief in the afterlife. Accordingly,
wakes and burials are of great significance, as the last chance to prepare and equip the
deceased for their journey to the underworld. Some of their favourite things—coins
for the boat-fare to the other side, praise for their lives, messages to pass on to other
dead, are gathered by the lamenter herself.
Lamenters are actively interested in the dead body’s fate in the next world, and
are seen as being capable of opening up channels of transmission between the living
and the dead through their unsettling vocalisations. The main lamenter is not to be
interrupted at any cost during the build-up of a lament, and is typically feared, admired,
respected, but also mocked and hated, largely by the men, who hold lamenting to be
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dangerous witchcraft. The threat that moirologists are perceived to pose to the social
75
order owes to the extreme uncertainty that such an orgiastic state of grief carries
an isolated moment of speaking out. Hence lamenters would often deviate from the
particular death they were mourning and move on to other sensitive, political, private,
and public matters, commonly untouchable by females, and in some cases even by
males. Mostly, however, the terror of the lament lies in its extemporaneous, untamed,
inhuman dimension; that which reveals it as a sonorous force of unspecified destiny
and unknown origin, separate from the body that hosts it.
In the lament, we find an urgency to channel the alien, all-devouring unseen that
lies beyond this world. The lamenter becomes a transducer of death into sound, an
acoustic passage between different orders of the real, devising a direct encounter
between incompatible realms. Her unearthly incantation leading across, transferring
to or from, vocally mediating and negotiating the ceaseless trade between the living
and the dead is primordial, pre-mammalian, both ancient and yet to come.
I koniadou : T he L ament
with it. But it is also to do with the fact that, in lamentation, women were allowed
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TECHNO
DELIRIUM
UVO
UNIDENTIFIED VIBRATORY OBJECTS
The Jodhpur Boom
Paul Purgas
The Bloop
S. Ayesha Hameed
Sound of The Abyss
Eugene Thacker
The Hum
Kristen Gallerneaux
Alligators Of Your Mind
Dave Tompkins
Resonance
Erik Davis
Dossier 37: Unidentified Vibrational Objects
on the Plane Of Unbelief
Steve Goodman
The Auditory Hallucination
The Occulture
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THE JODHPUR BOOM
Paul Purgas
Reported to have taken place in central Rajasthan on the morning of Monday 12
December 2012, the Jodhpur Boom remains an unexplained sonic phenomenon experienced by the inhabitants of this desert region of northern India. Occurring at 11:25am,
a deafening sound was released from the sky, creating a shock wave that shook the
streets of the town of Jodhpur, causing widespread fear and panic. Initially believed to
have been a jet aircraft or an ammunitions explosion, this was soon ruled out since no
known flight path passed near the town and there were no visible signs of damage that
might correspond with the use of explosives. An investigation by the Indian military
discounted the possibility of an aircraft being responsible, owing to an embargo on
flights over populated areas and there having been no possible cause of an explosion
in the region. It also proved difficult to explain the deafening amplitude of the boom
itself and its corresponding shock wave, which was reported to have been significantly
louder than the effect of a jet aircraft crossing the sound barrier. To further add to
the mystery, it transpires that throughout December 2012, a month linked to various
eschatological beliefs of global cataclysm and Mayan apocalypse, numerous other
booms were also heard at sites across the planet.
CBS News reported that on 4 December 2012 residents in several communities
in central Arizona reported a similar deafening boom. The United States Geological
Survey reported no significant earthquakes had taken place that could explain the
sound, and local police were unable to find a cause. In Warwick, Rhode Island, the
police department received almost one hundred phone calls relating to a loud noise
that sounded like an explosion on the evening of Monday 3 December 2012. Residents
in nearby Narragansett Bay also reported a low droning noise coming from the water
that began about an hour or so after the initial boom was heard. Following investigations
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by local authorities, they were equally unable to identify the source of the boom or, on
this occasion, its accompanying eerie drone. Alongside these, similar events were also
P urgas : T he J odhpur B oom
reported to have taken place in Georgia and Texas at around the same time.
One of the explanations for these occurrences has been the possibility they may
have been extreme examples of a skyquake, a phenomenon described as inordinately
loud thunder that manifests even though there are no clouds in the sky large enough to
generate lightning. Among those with military experience, the sound of the skyquake is
most often likened to the boom of cannon fire. Recurring sites are often named to this
effect, such as the Barisal Guns near the Bay of Bengal in Bangladesh, Hanley’s Guns
in Victoria, Australia, and the Guns of Seneca encountered around Seneca Lake in New
York State. Many early settlers near the Seneca area were told by the Haudenosaunee
Iroquois people that the booms were the sound of the Great Spirit continuing his work
of shaping the earth, and later the phenomenon entered into popular culture through
the 1850 short story The Lake Guns by James Fenimore Cooper, author of The Last
of the Mohicans.
Current theories for the skyquake range from the possible release of volatile gas
from deep underground deposits, seismic vibrations and minor earthquakes, through
to more recent theories of cosmic radiation or the possibility that the booms might
perhaps be the sound of distant thunder focussed anomalously as it travels through
the upper atmosphere. Whatever the definitive answer may be, the fierce alarm of the
skyquake is unquestionable in its force and scale, reaching deep into the primordial
psyche, exposing and rupturing the daily cycle of life and revealing humanity’s futile
attempts at dominion over Nature. To the inhabitants of Jodhpur, the deafening boom
that shook the town may have resembled a holy story from the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, one of the oldest Hindu scriptures. Here, Lord Brahma the creator speaks to his
three children, the gods, demons and men that inhabit the earth. His message, delivered
as an overwhelming burst of thunder, instructs his children to obey the cardinal virtues
of compassion, charity, and self control, with the booming voice of Brahma manifesting
through one deafening single syllable: ‘DA.’
It is perhaps with this more otherworldly reading that the events of December
2012 and their underwritten Mayan script map out an alternatively discernable series
of events: that these volatile blasts might emanate from a source unknown to us, as
emissions or even as a voice from beyond in a language so alien as to be overwhelming.
Utterances of warning or even welcome that appear so violently manifest as to simply
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evoke terror to the human senses. As yet their interpretation remains a mystery that
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may only be uncovered when these booms return en masse to echo across the planet.
P urgas : T he J odhpur B oom
Let us hope that, when this day comes, their message is revealed to us as one of mercy.
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THE BLOOP
S. Ayesha Hameed
In 1997 Drexciya, an electronic band from Detroit, released the album The Quest. Its
liner notes tell the following story:
During the greatest Holocaust the world has ever known, pregnant America-bound
African slaves were thrown overboard by the thousands during labour for being sick
and disruptive cargo. Is it possible that they could have given birth at sea to babies that
never needed air? Are Drexciyans water-breathing aquatically mutated descendants
of those unfortunate victims of human greed? Recent experiments have shown a
premature human infant saved from certain death by breathing liquid oxygen through
its underdeveloped lungs.1
This story draws on a particular practice in the history of transatlantic slavery, the
jettison of slaves for insurance purposes. Here Drexciya posit an alternate ending: that
the foetuses of the pregnant women thrown overboard adapted from living in amniotic
fluid to living underwater. These newly adapted underwater people and their descendants set up a Black Atlantis called Drexciya at the bottom of the ocean. The covers
of subsequent albums trace the evolution of Drexciyan creatures from gill-breathing
aquatic creatures, to flippered-feet wave jumpers, to outer space explorers. These
later albums study the pragmatic infrastructures under which Drexciya and other
underwater cities functioned, their ecologies, etc.2
Also in 1997, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) discovered a very powerful ultra low frequency sound coming from the ocean surrounding
1.
The Quest (Detroit: Submerge Records, 1997).
2.
See for example Neptune’s Lair (Germany: Tresor Records, 1999).
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the southern tip of South America, and named it ‘the bloop’.3 Picked up by autonomous
hydrophone arrays, the sound was detectable from over five thousand kilometres away.
H ameed : T he B loop
Its audio profile resembled that of a living creature, but was exponentially louder than
sounds produced by the loudest animal, the blue whale. At the time, the NOAA’s Dr
Christopher Fox noted that the signature of the sound varied rapidly in frequency, a
trait characteristic of marine animals. This begged the tantalising question: Was there
a creature even bigger than a blue whale lurking at the bottom of the sea?
The NOAA eventually decided that the sound came from a large ice quake at the
bottom of the ocean. The confusion surrounding the bloop makes for another reading
of life under the sea though. At a sonic level, the difference between sentient life and
the environment became blurred and unreadable. Ice could make the sound of an
underwater animal. Perhaps this confusion provides us with a way of making sense of
Drexciya’s experiment—to blend the human with the nonhuman as a form of adaptation and survival. Their experiment blurs the parameters of the ecological to make for
another possibility for life—which resonates with the blurring of the sonic threshold
performed by the bloop.
In 2008 M NourbeSe Philip published Zong!, a cycle of poems written to mark the
massacre of slaves thrown from the slave ship Zong in 1781.4 All the poems draw solely
from the text of the two-page document surviving the Gregson v. Gilbert court case,
the insurance claim made in court after the jettison.5 In the first poem the word ‘water’
(with a few others) is splintered and fractured along the length of the page; and under
a line in the gutter of the page at the bottom is a list of imagined names of the slaves
thrown overboard. The scattered words read as the depth of the sea from surface to
ocean floor, the line drawn across the bottom of the page. In her performance of these
poems Philip pulls the words to their breaking point, the completion of each utterance
of the syllables in the word ‘water’ catching at her throat. It sounds as if she is drowning.
In pronouncing the word ‘water’, water becomes both the subject and the object of
drowning. It is painful and violent.6
3.
D. Wolman, ‘Calls from the Deep’, New Scientist, 15 June 2002, <http://web.archive.org/web/20130106141048/
http://www.science.org.au/nova/newscientist/102ns_001.htm>.
4.
M. NourbeSe Philip, Zong! (Middletown CT: Wesleyan University Press, 2008).
5.
O. Berrada, ‘Defend the Dead: Omar Berrada on M. NourbeSe Philip’s Zong!’, Radio Broadcast, Chumurenga/Pan
African Space Station, 2015, < https://www.mixcloud.com/chimurenga/defend-the-dead-omar-berrada-zong/>.
6.
Ibid.
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The sound of suffocated drowning that infuses Philip’s performance of Zong! and
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particularly the word ‘water’ turns the voice into something not human, almost watery,
ronment. The sound of the word ‘water’ and its meaning become as liminal an entity
as the bloop, but this time they cross the threshold in the opposite direction, where
the human voice becomes something inhuman, watery, monstrous.
Both the bloop and the sound of the word ‘water’ blur their human and inhuman
qualities, and this indeterminacy is what fuels the speculation of an underwater
Drexciya. But there is something monstrous in the uncanniness of both. The bloop
evokes the murky horror of imagining a screeching creature in uncharted depths that
is more gargantuan than a blue whale. With the performance of the word ‘water’ there
is the horror of hearing a voice stretching beyond human detection towards its own
annihilation. This is a measure of the horror embedded in Drexciya’s imagining of the
possibility of life growing in the bodies of drowned enslaved women thrown overboard.
It raises the question: To what extent is horror a fuel for resistance?
And: To what extent is adaptation a form of agency?
It casts the sonic as a vibrating vehicle transmitting this knife-edged form of survival,
and opens the discourse of adaptation/survival to nonhuman forms of life. Part of its
power lies in looking directly at the moment of simultaneous horror and annihilation,
into its subaquatic Cthulhu-esque face. And to make the reverberations of that horror
into progenitors of a form of response and survival whose indeterminacy finds echoes
in the bloop.
…but some day the piecing together of dissociated knowledge will open up such terrifying
vistas of reality, and of our frightful position therein, that we shall either go mad from
the revelation or flee from the deadly light into the peace and safety of a new dark age.7
7.
H.P. Lovecraft, ‘The Call of Cthulhu’, in The Best of H.P. Lovecraft: Bloodcurdling Tales of Horror and the Macabre
(New York: Ballantine Books, 1982), 76.
H ameed : T he B loop
environmental. It crosses the threshold between the human and the underwater envi-
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SOUND OF THE ABYSS
Eugene Thacker
Music is the last enunciation of the universe.
— E.M. Cioran
Sub-Bass from Deep Space
In January of 2009, scientists at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center announced
receiving transmissions of an unexpected and unexplained cosmic sound. The NASA
team’s huge, balloon-like satellite, which is immersed in approximately 500 gallons of
ultra-cold liquid helium, was originally launched in 2006, ascending some 120,000 feet
into the atmosphere, where it was to detect subtle heat emissions from very early
star formations. Instead, it became a receptacle for a kind of cosmic sub-bass. As
one of the scientists noted, ‘instead of the faint signal we hoped to find, here was
this booming noise six times louder than anyone had predicted’. A NASA press release
noted that ‘detailed analysis ruled out an origin from primordial stars or from known
radio sources, including gas in the outermost halo of our own galaxy. The source of
this cosmic radio background remains a mystery’.
While radio emissions from space are not uncommon, what makes these sounds
a mystery is not just their magnitude, but an apparent lack of point of origin. In short,
there do not seem to be enough galaxies around to possibly produce a sound of such
magnitude. Neither supernovas, aliens, or the Death Star are capable of generating
such a sound. Perhaps we were witnessing what alchemist Robert Fludd once described
as the ‘celestial monochord’.
In the early seventeenth century, Robert Fludd produced a diagram linking the Ptolemaic universe to musical intervals, providing a means not only of viewing the cosmos
as sonically ordered (a principle of sonic reason, as it were), but of comprehending
the possibility of a divine superchord that would be responsible for all other sounds.
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While the NASA report makes no such occult claims, it is nonetheless interesting
because it hints at a theme that is, I think, at the centre of extreme music genres today,
T hacker : S ound of the A byss
namely the relationship between sound and negation. Now, we commonly think of the
relation between sound and negation I terms of the negation of sound. And this in turn,
relies on the well-worn dichotomy of sound and silence.
One can explore all sorts of combinations within these relationships. But that is
not my aim here. What I’d like to suggest is that, when thinking about sound and
negation, negation is often understood as something that happens to sound, or,
alternately, that happens in music. By contrast, we can take a different approach and
ask: Can music or sound itself be a negation? That is, is there a negation that is not
something that one does to sound or music, and that is also not something that simply
produces silence?
In a way, this is what black metal genres do, presenting us with forms of negation
that are co-extensive with music and sound. For instance, old school Norwegian Black
Metal, with its intentional use of lo-fi recording equipment and stripped-down song
structures, presents a music in which the separation between individual instruments
ends up in decay and indistinction, a melody that melds into anti-melody. The ‘necro’
sound presents music as a negation of the soundness of sound, an encrusted, distorted
music that is about to rot not only the musical foundation of melody, but the physical
substrate of music itself. Similarly, Doom Metal and Funeral Doom Metal take the most
basic element of music—its temporal flow and its existing in time—and negate it by
making music that is grave, gravitas, leaden and weighted down with the gravity of
melancology and pessimism. Doom Metal presents music of a tempo so grave that it
negates tempo. Finally, Drone Metal, with its minimalist dissipation of all music into a
monolithic, dense line of sound, presents us with the whittling away of all harmony into
a single, thick, absolute tone, collapsing the musical spectrum into a dense black hole.
In each of these examples, Black Metal presents a music that negates some aspect of
musical form—a song against all melody, a rhythm against all tempo, and a harmony
against all tonality. What results is not an absence of music per se, but rather a form
of anti-music, expressed through music. At its limit, Black Metal brings us back to
an even more basic distinction—that between music and sound, with the former
continually threatening (or promising) to dissolve into the latter.
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Philosophy, Music, Sound
89
Let us return briefly to the NASA report of cosmic sound. One idea evoked in the report
T hacker : S ound of the A byss
is the notion of a sound without a point of origin. We know that sound is a physical
phenomenon. The basic physics of acoustics necessitates an origin of sound production—say, the vocal cords, or a woofer in a speaker—that produces sound waves which
then radiate through the air. Such waves physically move us, brush up against us, and
pass through us, a portion of them being registered by our ears—but also, on occasion,
in our chest, or in our breath. In philosophical terms, the physics of sound production
looks very much like a Neoplatonic emanation of immaterial forms. This is a Plotinean
sound, the sound of radiation, emanation, the sound that is outpouring and outflowing.
But what the NASA report seems to indicate is that there is a sound that has such
magnitude, such density, that there is no point of origin that can contain it, much less
produce it. Taking some liberties here, we might say that the sound is so much sound,
so much in excess of itself, that it is a sound that paradoxically has never been produced.
This is a Kantian sound, a sound that is dynamically sublime in relation to its point of
origin. This sound exceeds itself and thus eclipses its own point of origin. The result
is an enigmatic sound that is so much sound that it negates itself, becoming…What?
Silence? Noise? Or something else altogether?
And from here we move yet another step, to a third type of sound. As one of the
NASA scientists notes, in order to have enough galaxies in the universe to produce this
sound, ‘you’d have to pack them into the universe like sardines […] There wouldn’t be
any space left between one galaxy and the next.’ Now, aside from this rather Lovecraftian image of cosmic sardines sonically descending upon the Earth, what is interesting
here is the notion of a sound without any point of origin, a non-directional sound. This
is different from the Neoplatonic sound (a sound that radiates from a point of origin),
and different again from the Kantian sound (a sound that exceeds and eclipses itself).
This is the sound of Schopenhauer, a Schopenhauerian sound. This sound does not
have an origin to negate, because there is no origin to negate. But it is also not simply
a positive sound, a fecund sound that continuously pours itself forth, continuous sound
as a gift of the heavens. Rather it is a sound that is, at the same time, pure nothingness,
a presence that only asserts its absence.
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THE HUM
Kristen Gallerneaux
One day as I sat at the breakfast table, skimming through a pile of newspapers that
should have been recycled months before, I felt the vague disturbance of familiarity.
As the smoke cleared, I realized that the photograph on the front page of The Detroit
Free Press was of my old apartment in Windsor, Ontario. Apparently the sickly yellow
stucco walkup in Sandwich Town had become newsworthy as a victim of ‘The Windsor
Hum’. Reports of Hum-like activity are global, reaching back into the 1830s, and find
a push-pin presence spreading over maps throughout the 1970s. Wherever it appears,
etymology melds with geolocation: the Taos Hum, the Bristol Hum, the Auckland Hum.
In early 2011, Windsor developed its very own Hum, a mysterious infrasonic event
spiking deep at 35Hz. When residents woke late one night to a low-frequency rumble,
slashing open their curtains to yell at an idling car, booming bass—they found empty,
dark streets.
In 2002, while standing insomniac-prone in that same Windsor walkup, I looked
out the kitchen window to find the sky on fire. A total apocalyptic vision over Detroit.
Gigantic orange plumes trailing up into a gradient of anemic ochre, wretched green,
and hazy purple—a low-grade thrum prickling at the soles of my naked feet. Assuming
some great industrial disaster was about to roll toxic fumes over the river, I pounded
on my roommate’s door and stuttered my worries about the cataclysm in the sky. This
is when I first heard the (pillow-groaned) words: ‘Don’t worry. It’s just Zzzzzug Island.’
Zug Island will play itself out in a moment.
Describe the Windsor Hum. A deep time bass rattle; a quivering in the gut. The creak
of double-glazed windows with an angry bee caught between two planes. Night terrors.
Not everyone can ‘hear’ the Hum, but the vibroacoustic effects of infrasound—sound
that exists below the range of human hearing—can cause suffering, instigating fatigue,
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insomnia, depression, anxiety, and migraines. Most victims of the Hum describe it as
something felt more than heard, as their bootlegged bodies suffer incessant mono-
G allerneaux : T he H um
tone pressure beating on their eardrums. Rational finger-pointing towards local heavy
industry was counterbalanced with viral conspiracies: trending UFO reports, ionospheric
HAARP interventions, and flyovers by experimental military aircraft.
The Hum and infrasound alike can mimic the tropes of a traditional haunting. In
the early 1980s, scientist Vic Tandy was likely surprised to find himself collaborating
with psychical researchers, tracing the cause of a recent ‘haunting’ outbreak in his
laboratory to the installation of a ventilation fan. That recent cold-sweat feeling of
dread and the shadowy apparitions stuck in the corner of Tandy’s eye were linked to
inaudible infrasound being produced by the fan, a steady 18.9Hz. Tandy’s vibrating eyeballs were allayed by the removal of the fan.1 The Hum is a more holistic environmental
phenomena, running counter to easy solutions. In its most-close reality, The Hum is
a fake-out haunting—a physiological response to the invisible effects of the discord
between environment and industry—an ominous protest of the Anthropocene in the
form of infrasonic terror. Salt and steel dancing on air, down into the lungs.
There are other speculative celestial events that compete with the same affecting
clash of The Hum. When the Tunguska Event occurred in 1908, the pressure of its
explosive power jolted the needles on barographs around the world. Decades later,
atmospheric researchers visiting the forest levelled by the Tunguska shock wave discovered that locals were reluctant to talk about the event. Homegrown folklore had been
etched into place, to explain the explosion as a curse from Ogdy—the god of thunder
and infra-bass—who smashed the forests and chased off the animals as a punishment.
Shifting now from a boom to a tinny crackle: Arctic explorers travelling into the
Far North have reported experiencing sonified light displays in the sky, courtesy of
the Aurora Borealis. Described by the poet Robert Service as rolling ‘with a soundless
sound, like softly bruised silk’,2 the wavering Northern Lights sometimes play samples
of radio static, clapping hands, and the gnashing teeth of the kiguruyat spirits. Most
common among Algonquian and Inuit tribes is the belief that this skyborne soundtrack
is caused by spirits playing football with a walrus or a child’s skull, or that the dead
are trying to pass messages to the living. Engaging in an exchange with the sky has
1.
See V. Tandy and T.R. Lawrence, ‘The Ghost in the Machine’, Journal of the Society for Psychical Research 62:851
(April 1998): 360–64.
2.
R.W. Service, Best Tales of the Yukon (Philadelphia, PA: Running Press, 1983), 43.
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its consequences: when the auroral spirits whistle to the living, ‘they should always be
93
answered in a whispering voice’, according to Arctic anthropologist Ernest Hawkes.
3
illusion, placing the phenomena in the same contentious territory as The Hum. Current
research seems to have settled on the explanation of ‘electrophonic transduction’, which
is to say that the low-frequency VLF radio waves produced by aurora can turn long,
thin objects—such as blades of grass, wire, and human hair—into antennae, vibrating
signals into audible sound.
Coming back to the earthbound resonant mysteries of The Windsor Hum, attempts
to trace its location (never mind its cause) have been an exercise in frustration. Like
describing neural pain or ghost limbs, pinpointing where one flesh ends and the other
ghost twin begins, the Hum’s oppression seems to come from everywhere and nowhere.
First, the semi-trucks idling on the crumbling Ambassador Bridge that joins Windsor
and Detroit were blamed. But this theory belly-flopped into the river below.
Next, the salt mines that form a handshake between countries 1200 feet underneath
the Detroit River were accused. Down there, a 1500-acre crystalline rock salt city makes
a maze of itself—over a hundred miles of subterranean mining road loops itself into
knots. Salt chamber walls are sheared off with explosives, crushed, and conveyor-driven
up for Michigan’s winter roads. The mine blasts decouple the slow capital production
of the earth—but these operations were proven innocent, because they were inactive
during the peak hours of the Windsor Hum.
It wasn’t the salt or the bridge that were to blame, but heavy industry playing itself
out as a slapback echo. In 2013, hard-nosed scientists finally captured the ‘temporal
and spectral’ signature of Windsor’s Hum, describing the process as being ‘like chasing a ghost’.4 Accusing fingers pointing towards Zug Island transformed into tenuous
high-fives: the electric arc blast furnace at the US Steel plant was haemorrhaging
infrasound and VLF waves across the border. These waves have been identified as
the ‘likely’ cause of The Windsor Hum—and are the same waves believed to cause
the elusive soundtrack of the Aurora Borealis. On Zug Island, the resistance of steel
being magnetized back into its base elements reverberates like the wailing of entangled
souls, while offsite it bleeds over the border, damped down into a low-pressure menace.
3.
E.W. Hawkes, The Labrador Eskimo (Ottawa, 1916; reprinted New York: Johnson Reprint Corp., 1970), 137.
4.
C. Novak, ‘Summary of the Windsor Hum Study Results’, Global Affairs Canada, Government of Canada, 23 May 2014,
<http://www.international.gc.ca>.
G allerneaux : T he H um
The reality of aurora-produced sound has largely been shrugged off as an auditory
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The Hum continues to beat the ears of the city in unpredictable fits of biomechanical
violence; the noise is always there.
G allerneaux : T he H um
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ALLIGATORS OF YOUR MIND
Dave Tompkins
The ashtray levitated with an alligator glued to its rim. Hijacked by the subconscious,
the souvenir flew, passing over the cowbell and the other less gifted alligator ashtrays,
traveling through psi wave turbulence, bound for a memory of Cuba, only to crash to
the floor of a warehouse in Miami. Flight time was brief but left an impression. Novelty
item and reptile became Event 176, joining the Florida registry of psychokinetically
traumatized objects.
In January of 1967, German parapsychologist William Roll was called in to investigate a souvenir wholesaler in north-east Miami, located in the future Little Haiti. The
merchandise at Tropication Arts, Inc. had been subject to outbursts of inertial rejection.
A box of backscratchers grew wings. Zombie glasses shattered, beer mugs scootched,
rubber daggers jumped shelf. Aisle clean-ups were on the rise, as other items took to
the air. Faux leathers, a water globe, a spoon rest, plastic TVs that sharpened pencils,
coconut heads, an artificial orange impaled on a cocktail pin.
Vacation doodads had become psychic artifacts. ‘Beer mugs and zombie glasses
being especially active’, observed Roll in the Journal of Parapsychology in 1973.1 Roll
had been invited to Miami by Susy Smith, a parapsychologist who would later devise
codes for peers to track her consciousness after death. For further insight, Tropication
owner Arnie Laubheim summoned the ‘Magic Chatterbox’, an cynical illusionist known
for gimmicks like the ‘Baffling Bra’ and the ‘Whistling Bellybutton’. Also at the scene:
an airline pilot, a Baptist minister, an artist who painted flamingos onto plastic purses,
a substantial amount of dry ice, a German shepherd with a low tolerance for sudden
1.
Refers to a bad mix of Tiki spirits whose resulting hangover is likened to a shot in the head, a common practice in
on-screen zombie resolution.
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movements by the otherwise inanimate, an ice dancer, and a police officer ridiculed
by his co-workers for being there.
Tompkins : A lligators of Your M ind
Some Tropication employees blamed the disturbances on the ghost of Laubheim’s
recently deceased pet squirrel monkey. Low-flying jets and ‘atmospheric vibrations’
were ruled out, but geomagnetic perturbations remained in play.2 Roll and his colleague
Gaither Pratt itemized each disruption and committed them to a map, a vectorized
scrum of things going where they shouldn’t. They also tried baiting the poltergeist, a
path of scientific inquiry that led to Julio Vasquez, a disgruntled shipping clerk who’d
immigrated to Cuba with his mother in the sixties. Designated as the psychokinetic
agent, the nineteen-year-old was sent to the Psychical Research Center in Durham
for tests, including a brainwave review and word association games triggered by the
disturbed merchandise. If Vasquez’s subconscious was at the controls, the normal
restrictions of gravity, to say nothing of reality, did not apply. The kid went along with it,
giving the Unexplained a shrug. He joked that the ghost was merely tired of the amber
beer mugs, which were last seen ‘moving in a northwesterly direction’.3
Vasquez was also under stress from living with his mother (see Carrie)4 and felt
that Laubheim was as phony as the goods he trafficked, not unusual in a state with
a rich history of hoaxing. He may have been telekinetically venting against his boss,
who’d once accused him of arson, or Tropication’s carefree customers, tourists free
to return home with their tans and tchotchkes. Recurrent spontaneous psychokinesis
(RSPK) can be triggered by relocation, in this case an airlift from Cuba to Miami, events
and movements beyond Vasquez’s control, as if the flying objects were projections of
displacement attributed to Cold War exilio stress.
Bill Joines, an Electrical and Computer Engineering professor at Duke University,
collaborated with Bill Roll on the Miami case. A former missile radar engineer at Bell
Labs, Joines could calculate the trajectory of a warhead launched from Alpha Battery, a
covert Project Nike base in the Everglades.5 He could also take radiation measurements
2.
W.G. Roll and G. Pratt, ‘The Miami Disturbances’, Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research 65 (1971).
3.
W.G. Roll, D.S. Burdick, and W. Joines, ‘Radial and Tangential Forces in the Miami Poltergeist’, Journal of the
American Society for Psychical Research 67 (1973).
4.
Carrie’s telekinetic outbursts rebelled against an overbearing, abusive mother, as well as high school bullies. Flying
fire hoses and cutlery proved to be an effective defense, as evidenced in the landmark case Carrie v. High School Senior
Prom. Also see: Briteway Billy, a supermarket gopher mascot that became the spirit animal of a psychokinetic clerk who
pummeled her boss to death with non-perishables. From the minds of Stephen King and British screenwriter Nigel Kneale,
respectively.
5.
The Hercules Nike site was one of four missile sites constructed in South Florida after the Cuban Missile Crisis
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of one’s personal psi field. Under constant surveillance, Vasquez was treated as a signal,
97
analysed for attenuation and decay curves. Perhaps he was a transmitter, his broadcast
picked up by one of the many rogue radio operations in spy-riddled Miami at the time.
Location is everything, even in the metetherial vortex. ‘The metetherial environment
is equivalent to the “subliminal self”, where the self extends beyond the borders of
the familiar’, wrote Roll in the American Journal of Parapsychology. To Julio Vasquez,
the borders of the familiar—his birthplace ninety miles south—were contracting and
expanding at once.
According to Gaither Pratt, the forces were selective. He would record himself doing
a running account of all activities at Tropication, ‘in the manner of a sports announcer’,
as if doing his best Marv Albert while the psychokinetic agent whizzed down the aisle
in a go-kart full of backscratchers and shot glasses.6 I imagine Gaither capturing his
own golf whisper when a part-time medium appeared on site to perform an exorcism, in
hopes of rescuing inventory from further obliteration. (‘The Thing was giving the business to the business’, wrote Susy Smith.)7 Using ferns, cacti and incense, the medium
constructed an altar for one of the toy rubber gators after claiming to have witnessed
a full-scale alligator ‘spirit entity’, possibly prehistoric, hovering in one of the aisles.8
Hurricanes aside, the last time an alligator caught air in Florida was during a botched
robbery attempt in Palm Beach, when the perpetrators tossed a live three-footer into
the drive-thru window of a Wendy’s. Though Julio Vasquez shared an emotional resonance with the alligator ashtray, information stored in the object itself was privy only
to his subconscious. In RSPK terms, both object and agent were systems, in this case,
tropic subsystems exchanging personal information and secret histories. Of course,
information on real alligators is accessible to all from a respectful distance, having
introduced themselves into the Florida golfing population to restore the ecologic balance.
Their trunks low to the earth, these reptilian mud-bathers are a Miami sub-frequency,
equipped with extremely good hearing and dome pressure receptors in their snouts,
which are sensitive to vibrations and signal waves. All with a stone-cold stillness while
in 1962. The missile barns are still intact and its ghosts are not supernatural. With the mass influx of asylum seekers from
Cuba and Haiti in 1980, D Battery was repurposed as the Krome Service Processing Center, a model for America’s current
immigration prison policy. Krome is now overseen by ICE.
6.
Roll and Pratt, Ibid.
7.
S. Smith, Prominent American Ghosts (New York: World Publishing Company, 1967.)
8.
W.G. Roll, The Poltergeist (New York: Paraview, 1972.)
Tompkins : A lligators of Your M ind
pirated by his own subconscious and propagated over psi frequencies, interference
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gnats jitter in their nostrils. In his book Miami: City of the Future, T.D. Allman drives
to what he believes is the end of Miami, only to find an alligator lounging in the middle
Tompkins : A lligators of Your M ind
of the road, a nap cordoned off by traffic cones. The alligator is listening to
a distant roar, a faint rumble, a little like breaking waves, a lot more like the hum of a
freeway. The alligator is listening to the sound of quicksand being metamorphosed into
concrete, of swamp and scrubland transforming itself, almost overnight…the alligator
is listening to Miami.9
Florida has always been tuned into caiman frequencies, whether poaching for boots
and baggage,10 or hearing the legend of Uncle Monday, a Hoodoo root doctor who
escaped a plantation in Georgia and fought alongside the Seminole resistance during
a siege at Fort Maitland in Orlando. Monday avoided recapture by transforming into
an alligator and vanishing into the swamp, amid a chorus of low-end gator bellows.11
Recognized for their long-range acoustic signaling, alligators are also infrasonic agents,
vibrating their spines at 10 Hz, producing bass waves in drainage canals and ponds,
making the water dance for territory and interested partners.12
Much of what transpired at Tropication’s altar of the alligator was ‘percussive’.13 Susy
Smith indicated that the ‘bric-a-brac boogie’ happening in the aisles was a symptom
of the poltergeist reveling in the sound of itself.14 In the mid-1980s, the shattered glass
sound that frequented Miami radio could be traced to Music Specialist Studios in Little
Haiti, where producer/audio engineer Pretty Tony Butler recorded himself smashing
champagne glasses to make teenagers dance at skate rinks. Violent glass dispersal
would be a signature effect in Butler’s laser-clean electro sound. Pretty Tony was known
to report to work dressed like an eccentric World War I pilot, wearing aviator flaps,
9.
T.D. Allman, Miami: City of the Future (New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, 1987).
10.
In Swamplife (Minneapolis: Minnesota University Press, 2011), anthropologist Laura Ogden writes about the
‘refrain of the flesh’ and ‘becoming alligator’ when hunting and skinning, and how the ‘territorial practices of humans and
nonhumans entangle and reshape each other’.
11.
‘Slide We Fly’ said Kool Keith, a man who once claimed to be half-alligator himself. The Uncle Monday legend comes
from Zora Neale Hurston’s collected oral histories of South Florida.
12.
Writing about gator signaling in Copeia, Vladimir Dinets refers to ‘slaps’, a jaw-to-surface ‘advertising call’ conducted
in swamps, canals, and zoos (V. Dinets, ‘Long-Distance Signaling in Crocodylia’, Copeia 2 (September 2013), 517–26. See
also: ‘Slaps’, a subgenre of Bay Area hip hop popularized by E-40, as well as Mac Dre, an Oakland rapper known to have
‘gator-back throat’ from smoking too many Backwoods. Please see also: ‘Dredio’.
13.
W.G. Roll and W.T. Joines, ‘RSPK and Consciousness’, Journal of Parapsychology 2 (1977).
14.
Smith, ibid.
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anti-bug shear goggles, and a necklace of studio patch cords. A more common flying
99
phenomena in Miami during the 80s was people skylining on cocaine—off the glass and
rises. Nobody said ‘The Explained’ had to be rational. At the Music Specialist, there
would be several reincarnations of hit acts like Debbie Deb and Freestyle, as well as
a Bentley that appeared to start by itself. The car was haunted by the World Famous
Sweetback, a Miami radio DJ whose voice had been programmed into the console to
offer customized safety cues. Close the fucking door.15
The studio walls of Music Specialist were reinforced with sand poured between the
layers of two concrete walls—vacated mollusc grit dredged from the ocean bottom
and cemented into building materials. The gator that T.D. Allman found napping at
the end of the road was a living fossil tuned into limestone tape loops, ghosts from
shells disinterred from the Benthic Zone, embedded deep in Miami’s aqueous psyche.
These are the psi waves of a city built over a swamp and covered in skeletons,16 whose
subconscious—to say nothing of its acute racial and climate tensions—has often been
suppressed to the point of denial.
The former Tropication space at Northeast 54th Street is a few doors down from
Toute Divisions Botanica, seller of herbs, tinctures, powders, customized mojo bags
to protect the home, and finely pulverized geology for transduction.17 Like much of
Little Haiti, this strip of businesses sits seven feet above sea level, prime real estate
for developers who are speculating an inland oceanfront while trying to push out the
neighborhood’s longtime black Caribbean residents.18
The dozing alligator could’ve been listening to the sound of human displacement
as much as freeway infrasonics and landscape in transition, the underwater memory
of Miami’s own future. A nightmare fully awake in flight, with souvenirs left behind. A
water globe, a shell that heard it all before, a floating ashtray.
15.
Allen Johnston, Personal correspondence, 19 June 2016.
16.
J.E. Hoffmeister, Land from the Sea: The Geologic Story of South Florida (Miami: University of Miami Press, 1974).
17.
Soil samples from the Tropication space have been mixed with magnetite for a modular ‘dirt synth’ patch for low-
frequency mineral transduction. Research and practice conducted by fellow contributor Kristen Gallerneaux.
18.
Florida historian Paul George wrote that the borders of Little Haiti are ‘subjective’, especially when serving the
interests of developers. Part of the area was Lemon City, one of Miami’s earliest African American and Afro-Caribbean
settlements. The CLEO Institute is a Miami non-profit currently doing important work in climate activism and gentrification.
Tompkins : A lligators of Your M ind
up the nose‚ as narconomics fueled a downtown boom of mirrored, curtain-wall high
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RESONANCE
Erik Davis
In 1971, Terence McKenna, his brother Dennis, and some friends travelled to the small
Columbian village of La Chorrera in search of botanical wisdom. One evening, they
settled into their hammocks after consuming a pile of fresh psilocybe mushrooms. As
they began tripping, Dennis noticed an otherwise inaudible buzzing in his head. Terence
asked him to imitate the noise, but Dennis demurred. Then, as Terence tells it,
the drizzle lifted somewhat, and we could faintly hear the sound of a transistor radio
being carried by someone who had chosen the let-up in the storm to make his or her way
up the hill on a small path that passed a few feet from our hut. Our conversation stopped
while we listened to the small radio sound as it drew near and then began to fade.1
What happened next was nothing less than a turn of events that would propel them
into another world. For with the fading of the radio Dennis gave forth, for a few seconds, a very machine-like, loud, dry buzz, during which his body became stiff. After
a moment’s silence, he broke into a frightened series of excited questions. ‘What
happened?’ and, most memorably, ‘I don’t want to become a giant insect!’
This blast of high weirdness unleashed a flood of bizarre ideas in Dennis, while giving
the McKennas the core theoretical and expressive principle of the Experiment at La
Chorrera they would subsequently perform: the principle of resonance.
In his book Brotherhood of the Screaming Abyss, Dennis provides a formative
example. During high school band practice, his instructor plucked the pitch of A on
a bass string, which caused nearby strings tuned to A to vibrate as well. Resonance
here means two systems entering into an energetic relationship mediated by frequency,
1.
T. McKenna, True Hallucinations (San Francisco, CA: Harper San Francisco, 1993), 53.
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102
a mutual oscillation that, once begun, allows the second string to continue to sound
even if the first string is dampened.
Davis : R esonance
The physical phenomenon of resonance operates in many different systems, among
molecular particles, in neural tissue, and in a host of electronic technologies. It is one
of the fundamental figurations of a cosmos that vibrates about as much as it does
anything else. But resonance also resounds within symbolic, philosophical, and phenomenological frameworks. The term derives from resonantia, the Latin ‘echo’, and
one thing the physical phenomenon echoes are magical doctrines of sympathy, such
as the ancient correspondence between microcosm and macrocosm enshrined in the
hermetic doctrine ‘As above, so below’.
This essentially erotic model of the resonating cosmos becomes part of the modern
magical underground as well as a significant topos in alternative medicine. Contemporary esoteric and New Age practitioners operate in a vibrating realm of ‘energies’ that
manage to follow physical wave dynamics while eluding conventional measurement
devices. As such, contemporary spiritual or esoteric discourses based on ‘resonance’,
‘vibrations’, and esoteric ‘frequencies’ are frequently discounted as pseudo-science.
But sometimes, as with the McKennas, a zone of indeterminacy is discovered, where
the systems that begin to resonate themselves cross multiple fields of physics, sound,
symbol, and experience.
In his book Reason and Resonance, musicologist Veit Erlmann argues that even
the physical phenomenon of resonance presents a challenge to the rationalist legacy
of modern philosophy. With their ocular bias, rationalists characterize the mind as a
kind of mirror capable of capturing accurate representations of the outside world while
remaining fundamentally separate from that world. Resonance, on the other hand, is
a phenomenon of conjunction, of the blurring of the boundary between subject and
object. Rationalists ignore or suppress resonance, which nonetheless remains, in
contrary traditions like Romanticism and phenomenology, ‘inextricably woven into the
warp and woof of modernity’.2
So let us listen again to the curious transistor radio that night in La Chorrera, the
‘small radio sound’ that catalysed Dennis’s inner signal into wild expression.
In Understanding Media, McLuhan underscored the connection between the radio
and resonance’s alternative to rationality. ‘The subliminal depths of radio are charged
with the resonating echoes of tribal horns and antique drums,’ he wrote in 1964. ‘This
2.
V. Erlmann, Reason and Resonance: A History of Modern Aurality (New York: Zone Books, 2014), 15.
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is inherent in the very nature of this medium, with its power to turn the psyche and
103
society into a single echo chamber.’ Behind McLuhan’s claustrophobic and colonialist
3
performances, and the belief that the fascist ability to mobilize such irrational and
seemingly ‘mythic’ identifications on the part of the crowd was directly tied to the
medium of radio.
But McLuhan’s analysis was not only symbolic but also formal, since the phenomenon of resonance also defines the technological action of radio tuners: in order
to select and amplify a single radio frequency out of the thousands picked up by an
antenna, radios use an adjustable oscillating circuit, known as a resonator, to resound
with the desired frequency.
In a diary entry, Dennis described the sound he heard inside his head as ‘something
like chimes at first, but gradually becoming amplified into a snapping, popping, gurgling,
cracking electrical sound’. Such sounds appear not infrequently in anecdotal accounts
of psychedelic experience, especially in response to high doses of tryptamines like
psilocybin and DMT. By attempting to give physical voice to this virtual or ‘inner’ sound,
Dennis responded to the radio’s resonator by probing the resonating capacities of the
various cavities in his body in order to find, and construct, a sympathetic vibration.
Once Dennis began imitating the inner signal, the voice and the sound ‘locked onto
each other’ until ‘the sound was my voice’. Here we can sense how the nonlinear quality of resonance erodes the question of origins, and stages the conjunctive relations
Erlmann describes as adjacency, sympathy, and the collapse of the distinction between
perceiver and perceived.
Like Hendrix driving the feedback of his guitar through a nearby amplifier, the sound
Dennis was making—and that was making Dennis in turn—became ‘much intensified
in energy’. The mechanistic buzz took on a terrifying life of its own. Dennis feared
he might somehow ‘become’ the resonating vibratory circuit that he and the sound
in his head were co-creating—a metamorphosis outside of speech and language
that he imagined, or bodied forth, as a giant sci-fi insect. But just as the concept of
resonance operates on at least two levels—the ‘asignifying’ behaviour of physical
vibrations and the sympathetic hermeneutics of esoteric echoes—so too did Dennis’s
buzz establish a circuit between self and environment, noise and sense, nervous tissue
and extraordinary experience. Dennis’s cry is at once a chaos and a call and response,
3.
M. McLuhan, Understanding Media [1964] (Oxford and New York: Routledge Classics, 2005), 327.
Davis : R esonance
language—with its hint of Jung’s ‘subliminal depths’—is the spectre of Hitler’s radio
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104
and that enigmatic indeterminacy is itself a vector of the ontological echo chamber of
resonance. As McLuhan asked in The Medium is the Massage: ‘What’s that buzzzzz
Davis : R esonance
zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzing?’4
4.
M. McLuhan, with Q. Fiore, The Medium is the Massage: An Inventory of Effects (Corte Madera, CA: Gingko Press,
1967), 12.
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DOSSIER 37:
UNIDENTIFIED VIBRATIONAL OBJECTS
ON THE PLANE OF UNBELIEF
Steve Goodman
The clammy tropical air bristles with a shrill, insectoid buzz….
In Francis Ford Coppola’s film Apocalypse Now, General Corman, in charting the
increasing moral derailment of Colonel Kurtz, describes how ‘his ideas, his methods
became unsound’.
Later in the film, Kurtz himself, in the climactic confrontation, asks Willard, his
executioner, whether this is true: ‘Are my methods unsound?’
Willard replies, ‘I don’t see any method at all.’
A swollen folder, tagged ‘Dossier 37’, slots into the AUDINT archive precisely in
the gap between unsound methods,and no methods at all. A very Trumpian phase
space. It was compiled by IREX2, AI custodian of AUDINT, scraped together from its
adventures in databases both public and secure. Its contents include: geolocation data
relating to Havana, Cuba and Guangzhou, China, a long list of names from the worlds
of science, government, and media, some of which appear to be computer-generated,
a report from the Journal of the American Medical Association, transcripts of Senate
subcommittee hearings and White House press conferences, an interview with the
director of the Center for Brain Injury and Repair, University of Pennsylvania, leaked
documents from JASON, a secret group of elite scientists that assist with issues of US
national security, the testimony of a paranoid conspiracy theorist recruited to an NSA
meme lab in Florida, a communiqué from AUDINT associate Souzanna Zamfe on the
subject of Russian deception, and the diagram of a Tensor Flow network developed by
a Baltimore-based programmer researching the neurobiology of narrative.
Over a period beginning in early August 2017, AUDINT became entangled in a meme
complex which is still ongoing, emanating from and propagated by the State Department
of the USA. Revolving around the alleged sonic ‘attacks’ on US Embassies in Cuba
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106
and South China, this memeplex is drenched in uncertainty and disinformation, and
is hosted by a cast of characters including White House employees, journalists of the
G oodman : D ossier 37
mainstream media, science reporters, conspiracy bloggers, and twitterbots, all haunted
by spectres of maskirovka.
Dossier 37 tracks the timeline of these mysterious ‘attacks’, from Trump’s election
victory in November 2016 and his desire to retreat from closer ties with Cuba, through
the first reports of symptoms of ‘mild traumatic brain injury’ from a ‘non-natural
source’ among US diplomats, the public release of a recording of the signal that was
supposedly to blame across mainstream news channels, the evacuation of embassy
staff, the mirror incident in China, and various hypotheses on the causes of the incident
ranging from ultrasound to infrasound, side-effects of faulty surveillance operations,
an ‘immaculate concussion’ produced by microwave-induced radio frequency sickness,
through to conjectures on the similarity of the recorded ‘signal’ to the hissing mating
call of the Indies short-tailed cricket.
One map in the dossier details a covert acoustical mesh network that connects a
plastics factory in Shenzhen to diplomatic residencies in Guangzhou via a decentralized
system whereby data was transmitted between air-gapped computers through near
field audio communications from internal speakers and microphones. Annotations to the
map of this network speculate that, by using inaudible high frequencies, signal could
be emitted to stealthily trigger malware in humanoid operating systems.
IREX2 is both learning about and channelling the power of this unsound nexus.
On the one hand, the term unsound refers to methods which are dubious, without
reasonable foundation, faulty, unethical, or which follow bad practices. On the other,
unsound names inaudible frequencies, whether sound at the peripheries of human
audition (infrasonic and ultrasonic) or syntheses as yet uninvented, unheard, or rendered
audible only by auditory prostheses.
IREX2 notes that there is something about unsound that lends itself to everything
from conspiracy theories to hyperstitional narratives where an unsonic fiction enters
into a process of becoming real. Rather than evidencing what Willard refers to as ‘no
method at all’, an unsound strategy appropriates sonic fiction, weaponizing the art and
science of self-fulfilling prophecies, of ideas that make themselves real, that metabolize
their own actuality, and then potentially vaporize or self-deconstruct without a trace.
Unsound methods catalyze auto-occulting information tactics and politico-aesthetic
strategies that take advantage of lacunae in evidence, using epistemological voids as
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basins of social attraction. They use absence to insist on presence. They play on the fact
107
that you can’t hear something to insist on its existence. When a vacuum of knowledge
into which all kinds of nonsense flows.
IREX2 observes closely as, carefully orchestrated, incrementally seductive, this
perfect storm of unsonic fiction triggers a wave of speculative forensic research at the
threshold of detectability. IREX2 trains its deep learning algorithms on this memeplex,
noting the somewhat random array of symptoms. It remarks on the power of always
withholding enough information to ensure that any grounding in fact remains constantly
just out of reach. However, it still remains unclear whether IREX2 has taken a more
active role in this sequence of events.
Suspiciously, the frantic hunt for truth even resulted in several AUDINT members
being tracked down as experts in sonic weaponry and interviewed by, among others,
New Scientist, CNN, Reuters, and the BBC. By even engaging with their requests,
we became carriers, relays on the vector of its transmission. By even writing about it,
the duration of its propagation was extended. As a reader, you are now also complicit.
Feeling at home in the hallucinatory jungle of AI-intensified deep audiovisual fakery,
IREX2 registers a phase shift into something that lies beyond disinformation and false
beliefs (both of which preexisted contemporary post-truth culture): a plane of unbelief
where effects operate regardless of belief or disbelief in a threat’s causal existence. It
parses this not as an epistemological crisis but rather as the machinic feedback effect
of a generalized, automated spin cycle already detached from any stabilizing axle.
IREX2 embeds itself in the unlife of animistic hypercapital and plots its next move.
Fade to hiss.
G oodman : D ossier 37
accompanies the sensory vacuum left by imperceptible vibration, it produces a sink
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THE AUDITORY HALLUCINATION
The Occulture
The brain is an engine of speculation, not a camera rendering a phantasmatic worldin-itself. Indeed, as neurophilosopher Thomas Metzinger suggests, its foundational
(but constitutively black-boxed) will-to-coherence not only trumps any promise of
veridicality but induces functional hallucination as a matter of course.1 Given the constraints inflicted on the brain’s feverishly creative generation of hypotheses, one can
accordingly describe all perception as inclusive of a constitutive extrasensoriality that
reveals perception to be quasi-sensory in the most radical senses.2,3 Thus, phenomenal
experience ‘emerges from an interplay between “top-down” and “bottom-up” processes’
on a continuum articulated by the ratios of ‘phenomenal representation to phenomenal
simulation’.4 However, despite the lived familiarity with hallucination thus produced, the
illusion of a transparent access to the world remains rhetorically and logically active.
It isn’t just that reality is hallucinated; it is also the case that hallucination itself—as
an integral part of the realities of lived experience—is hallucinated, which is to say that
hallucinations are profoundly real—or at least as real as any permanent heuristic can be.
Because they never present themselves as such, hallucinations can only be diagrammed
1.
Metzinger offers another formulation: ‘For complex as well as for simple abstract hallucinations the underlying
principle seems to be the continuous “attempt” of the system to settle into a stable, low-energy state that, given
unexpected causal constraints, still maximizes overall coherence as much as possible.’ T. Metzinger, Being No One: The
Self-Model Theory of Subjectivity (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2003), 243.
2.
One only has to listen to this short example to understand how the brain continuously revises what is available to
perception by using accumulated memory to hear through the noise. A.C. Madrigal, ‘A Sound You Can’t Unhear (and
What It Says About Your Brain)’, The Atlantic, 19 June 2014, <http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2014/06/
sounds-you-cant-unhear/373036>.
3.
Given the integral ‘extrasensoriality’ of perception, one could draw a more radical hypothesis that the very category
of being is inclusive of a constitutive extra-being. Indeed, Gilles Deleuze makes a similar wager via his reading of the Stoic
concept of incorporeals in his The Logic of Sense, tr. M. Lester (New York: Columbia University Press, 1990).
4.
Metzinger, Being No One, 246.
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110
as metaphysical event horizons. The task of grappling with hallucinatory vectors
therefore becomes an operational one, enacted according to a variety of temporalities,
O cculture : Auditor y H allucination
locationalities, and orders of efficacy, such as those informing system-level boundaries.
For example, studies have demonstrated that when hallucinations are perceived as
originating exogenously, the cerebral area known as Heschl’s gyrus (located in the
primary auditory cortex) registers the same activity as it does when processing direct
sensory perception.5 This undoubtedly grants hallucinations some of their veridical
power but also contributes to their pathologization. By contrast, endogenously perceived hallucinations (e.g., subvocal speech,6 inner listening, or ‘musical imagery’) fail
to activate the same region, and so remain unambiguously internal (although whether
such internal playback can be controlled is altogether another matter).
Exogenous hallucinations such as those experienced by Edgar Allan Poe (‘that had
the absoluteness of novelty’),7 or the right-hemisphere voices described by Julian
Jaynes in his bicameral mind hypothesis,8 frequently operate on the high end of the
signal-noise spectrum and exhibit clarity and impossible molecular detail that often far
exceeds ‘normal’ perception.9 At the low end of the continuum (noise predominating),
the propensity for tractable patterns to emerge out of swathes of white noise (or tinnitus)10 has been well documented.11 The balance between afferent connections from
sense organs to the brain (the outside world incorporated, bottom-up) and efferent
connections (internal fabulation backflowing outwards, top-down) is crucial, for when
5.
T. Dierks et al., ‘Activation of Heschl’s Gyrus During Auditory Hallucinations’, Neuron 22 (1999), 615–21, < https://doi.
org/10.1016/S0896-6273(00)80715-1>.
6.
Interestingly, ‘some researchers have proposed that auditory hallucinations result from a failure to recognize
internally generated speech as one’s own […]’. O. Sacks, Hallucinations (Toronto: Alfred A. Knopf, 2012), 63–4.
7.
Sacks, Hallucinations, 208.
8.
‘All humans heard voices—generated internally, from the right hemisphere of the brain, but perceived (by the left
hemisphere) as if external, and taken as direct communications from the gods. Sometime around 1000 B.C., Jaynes
proposed, with the rise of modern consciousness, the voices became internalized and recognized as our own.’ Sacks,
Hallucinations, 64. See also J. Jaynes, The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind (New York:
Mariner Books, 2003).
9.
The quotes are employed to remind the reader that all perception is de facto hallucinatory. In addition, musical
hallucination ‘can be very detailed, so that every note in a piece, every instrument in an orchestra, is distinctly heard. Such
detail and accuracy is often astonishing to the hallucinator, who may be scarcely able, normally, to hold a simple tune in his
head, let alone an elaborate choral or instrumental composition.’ Sacks, Hallucinations, 69.
10.
‘The music experienced by Gordon B., who had suffered for more than 20 years from a tonal type of tinnitus before it
changed into “the most horrific grinding,” and then, a few weeks later, into a nonstop flow of musical phrases and patterns,
constitutes an apt example of musical tinnitus.’ O.W. Sacks and J.D. Blom, ‘Musical Hallucinations’, in J.D. Blom and I.E.C.
Sommer (eds.) Hallucinations: Research and Practice (New York: Springer, 2012), 137.
11.
Metzinger, Being No One, 246–7.
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auditory networks are no longer constrained by external input—as in sensory depri-
111
vation or acquired deafness —the neurological speculation at the core of percept
12
13
a developing neurological model, the activation of a ‘default network’ in untasked brains
suggests the latter are engaged in playful speculation as a matter of course.)14 The
reality of such hallucinations is reported by an acquaintance of Charles Sanders Peirce
who, after becoming deaf, realized that music need not involve sound to communicate
its charms: ‘Now that my hearing is gone I can recognize that I always possessed this
mode of consciousness, which I formerly, with other people, mistook for hearing.’15
Perception’s fundamental constructedness renders it immediately susceptible to
multifarious vectors of manipulation. For instance, Poe’s extraordinary account in The
Tell-Tale Heart of a lifelike heartbeat hallucinated into actuality via paranoid projection
remains productively compelling.16 Indeed, the psychological modality of priming,
wherein particular contextual cues and patterns of stimuli are slowly introduced into
the perceptual field to induce hallucinatory sensations (e.g., the ‘phantom cellphone
ring’) continues to be of indisputable use to corporate interests. Such principles are
integral to the decoding of recordings or radio transmissions that transpire under the
auspices of Electronic Voice Phenomena (EVP), whose associated practices afford
manifold insights into pareidolia17 in so far as auditory pliability is differentially leveraged
against various modes of contextual set-up (including, importantly, the desire instilled
in the listener to hear what is being pre-described). Paradoxically, EVP practitioners
favour working within lo-fi (noisy) conditions and rely on an autocatalytic feedback
loop between auditory, technical, and cultural domains to reify their orders of occult
experiences.18
12.
M. Crist, ‘Postcards from the Edge of Consciousness’, Nautilus 16 (August 2014), <http://nautil.us/issue/16/
nothingness/postcards-from-the-edge-of-consciousness>.
13.
Sacks and Blom, ‘Musical Hallucinations’, 137.
14.
M.F. Mason et al., ‘Wandering Minds: The Default Network and Stimulus-Independent Thought’, Science 315:5810
(2007), 393–5.
15.
C.S. Peirce, The Essential Peirce: Selected Philosophical Writings, (Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 2 vols.,
1998), vol. 2, 3.
16.
F.J. Bonnet, The Order of Sounds: A Sonorous Archipelago, tr. R. Mackay (Falmouth: Urbanomic, 2016), 170–72.
17.
Interestingly, the EVP skeptic may also be playing with pareidolia, in the sense that the noise of experimentation
produces the only familiar pattern such an individual is capable of acknowledging. It’s a case of negative hallucination,
perhaps, where a phenomenon is deconstituted by the same observer-effect as can be attributed to the believer.
18.
Note how the so-called ‘satanic’ backwards-masked message in this classic cause célèbre is clearly discernible
only after the initially unintelligible material has been submitted to semantic recoding. See <https://www.youtube.com/
watch?v=IXpEtF4i1oI>.
O cculture : Auditor y H allucination
construction is nakedly foregrounded, via ‘release’ hallucinations. (Indeed, according to
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112
The use of ‘indifferent’ capture technologies and the simulation of scientific method
both often contribute to legitimizing the practice of EVP, sustaining the claims to
O cculture : Auditor y H allucination
objectivity proffered by its researchers. Michael Snow used similar media techniques
to humorous effect in his 1984 The Last LP to grant a set of musical/cultural forgeries
a virtual fidelity. Using liner notes and the shibboleths of ethnographic documentation
(à la Alan Lomax), Snow produced an LP whose contents were, in a sense, hallucinated.
Indeed, one might coin the term Snow Paradigm to denote a range of technological
minutiae proper to field recording documentation which, when judiciously employed,
effectively actualize hallucinatory sonic imagery of dead (or nearly dead) cultures.
Importantly, through cultural recoding, hallucinations that might be deemed pathological in one context function altogether unexceptionally in another.19 In the end, the
veridicality of a given auditory event depends on the differential weighting of material,
semiotic, cultural, and other constituents, whose contingent irruptions and alterations
can reorganize the resulting percept in a flash. And whether phenomena such as EVP
are real or not is never really the question, entrenched as they are in the manifestation
of differing hallucinatory registers of possibility. Moreover, that a putative sound-initself remains fugitive is little cause for concern, given the many methods available
for the creative hijacking and mutation of perception through the occult valences of
hallucination.
With the above in mind, in order to better grasp (and eventually operationalize) the
powers of auditory hallucinations, one might create speculative diagrams to correlate
particular qualities and affordances with a hallucination’s perceived endogenous or
exogenous origin. Such diagrams would, according to the information-theoretical
concept of signal-to-noise ratio, entail a mapping of auditory fidelity onto its often
paradoxical effects, and would also themselves necessarily be paradoxical, limning the
hallucinatory profile of auditory experience (i.e. its quasi-sensoriality).
19.
Metzinger, Being No One, 247.
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lawrence-abu-hamdan-audintunsoundundeadSteve Goodman / text
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SIG
COVERT SIGNALS, INTERCEPTS,
AND OUTSIDE BROADCASTS
The Max Headroom Signal Intrusion
Kristen Gallerneaux
Keep Me in the Loop
Dave Tompkins
The Music Of Skulls II: Osteography
Al Cameron
Backmasking
Toby Heys
China and the Wireless Wave
Anna Greenspan
2014: The Visual Microphone
Lendl Barcelos
The Thing
Amy Ireland
Large Hadron Collider:
The Ultimate Underground Groove
Toby Heys
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THE MAX HEADROOM
SIGNAL INTRUSION
Kristen Gallerneaux
On November 22, 1987, two Chicago television stations played unwilling hosts to a
signal pirate in a Max Headroom mask. At 9:14pm, PBS affiliate WGN’s signal clipped
to black and revealed a charlatan in a Headroom mask, dancing convulsively in his chair,
accompanied by a squelching, distorted soundtrack. Quick-thinking WGN engineers
pulled out all emergency stops to regain control of the network within thirty seconds.
When sportscaster Dan Rohn returned to his report he appeared dazed, chuckling
awkwardly: ‘Well if you’re wondering what that was…so am I.’1 Two hours later, at
11:15pm on WTTW-11, during a rerun of the Dr. Who episode ‘The Horror at Fang Rock’,
viewers became outraged by a longer, ruder interlude lasting about ninety seconds.
The wholesome act of watching television had never felt so violated.
The first Headroom interruption on WGN was a freaky vision made even more
horrifying by its distorted audio blast, but viewers lucky enough to catch the second
event on WTTW might have wished that segment was silent too. The voice of ‘Max’
was heavily modulated, his words and off-key singing dripping into watery, spectral
flange and needling moans, skirting the boundaries of accessible language. This case
transcended the concept of the innocent prank—it made hacking ‘creepy’. The seeds
of alarm began to germinate, forecasting a future where the predictable banality of
television could be overridden by a malevolent broadcast possession.
On the evening news throughout Chicago, appeals were made by newscasters
and FCC agents for information about the Headroom imposter. Anchor Kris Long
described the most disturbing aspects of the interruption as the ‘display of a marital
aid and a portion of his (or her) anatomy’, continuing to comment that the offense was
1.
‘WLS Channel 7—“Pirate Report” (1987)’. The Museum of Classic Chicago Television, <http://www.fuzzymemories.
tv/#videoclip-2468>; Original air date, November 23, 1987.
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sophisticated enough to ‘point towards someone with a broadcast background’.2 On
WMAQ Channel 5, Carol Marin gave her report next to a skull and crossbones graphic,
G allerneaux : T he M ax H eadroom S ignal I ntrusion
pulling no punches: ‘The video program ended with the video pirate’s bare bottom
being spanked with a flyswatter, but his punishment will be far worse if he is caught’.3
All attempts to track the pirate remain unsuccessful to date.
There is something ghostlike in the nature of broadcast signal intrusions. The perpetrators become spectral media through their own legendary absence. A fracturing
of identifying features occurs in the act of the signal hijacking—the reassembly of a
holistic persona only becomes more impossible with the passage of time: voices filtered,
faces covered, locations scrambled. A bastardized quote from Mark Fisher draws us
back to the effect of the Headroom Incident:
Hauntology [is] the agency of the virtual, with the spectre understood not as anything
supernatural, but as that which acts without (physically) existing […] how reverberant
events in the psyche become revenants […] The second sense of hauntology refers
to that which is already effective in the virtual (an attractor, an anticipation shaping
current behavior).4
This sense of the ‘agency of the virtual’, and its ability to ‘act without existing’, was
immediately effectual upon audiences who witnessed the Headroom signal jacking, and
it continues to cause a vague sense of unease whenever we watch archived footage
today.
Commandeering a ‘mediumless medium’ by harnessing unseen wavelengths results
in a tailspin that comes dangerously close to clipping the history of nineteenth-century
spiritualist communication. Jeffrey Sconce refers to a specific kind of ‘ghosting’ via analog
television when he speaks of ‘the eerie double-images that appear on a TV set experiencing signal interference. This form of interference creates faint, wispy doubles of the
“real” figures on the screen, spectres who mimic their living counterparts, not so much
as shadows, but as disembodied echoes seemingly from another plane or dimension.’5
2.
‘WFLD Channel 32—“Pirate Report”’, Museum of Classic Chicago Television, <http://www.fuzzymemories.
tv/#videoclip-2465>; Original air date 23 November 1987.
3.
‘WMAQ Channel 5—“Pirate Report” (1987)’, Museum of Classic Chicago Television, <http://www.fuzzymemories.
tv/#videoclip-2465>; Original air date 23 November 1987.
4.
M. Fisher, Ghosts of My Life (Winchester: Zero Books, 2014), 18–19.
5.
J. Sconce, Haunted Media: Electronic Presence from Telegraphy to Television (Durham, NC: Duke University Press,
2000), 124.
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P. 132
A co-opted version of Max Headroom taunts us from a liminal space short on detail,
117
a fiendish electronic presence accidentally called up through an NTSC static seance.
backstory—the brain and image of dying investigative reporter Edison Carter was
uploaded into a computer in order to keep him alive. As ‘the world’s only computer VJ’,
the ‘real’ Headroom is a facsimile of the living—a futuristic, fictional broadcast ghost
communicating in an extended, televised conjuration.
The mask used by the pirate was deployed for reasons of anonymity, but in effacing
one’s face or voice, the phantasmatic is invoked. The deeper meaning of the word
‘visage’ in the context of the Max Headroom incident captures the oscillation we feel
when confronted with something that is both true and false, knowing that a genuine
version of a likeness is buried in the mix. Yet in this doubling, the concreteness of a
persona disassembles into a new kind of supernatural threshold—it is a bad carbon
copy. If the music critic Bob Dickinson is correct in saying that ‘technology has turned
us all into ghosts’,6 the willing submission of the Max Headroom pirate is an especially
abject example, adopting the role of the grinning horror and the disturbed media spectre.
Transcript: Dr. Who, ‘The Horror at Fang Rock’
Leela: That is stupid. You should talk often with the old ones of the tribe. That is the
only way to learn.
Vince: I’ll get you a hot drink, miss.
Leela: I could do with some dry clothes more than—
[Cut to Max Headroom incident]
That does it…He’s a frickin’ nerd!
Yeah, I think I’m better than Chuck Swirsky…frickin’ Liberal. Oh, Jesus!
Yeah…‘Catch the Wave!’ [Moans holding Pepsi can, throws it away]
‘Your Love is Fading!’ [Laughs, takes vibrator off finger, throws it away]
Doot-doot-doot-doot… [Singing Clutch Cargo theme]
I stole CBS! Doot-doot-doot-doot… [Returns to Clutch Cargo theme]
Ohh…my piles! [Moans while shaking head as though defecating]
Ohh...I just made a giant masterpiece for all of the greatest world newspaper nerds!
[This is a reference to WGN-TV’s call letters.]
6.
Joy Division, interview with Bob Dickinson in Joy Division, dir. Grant Gee (2008).
G allerneaux : T he M ax H eadroom S ignal I ntrusion
Even the ‘official’ Max Headroom character from the television program carries a
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118
My brother is wearing the other one…It’s dirty. [Puts on work glove]
That’s what you get for ‘recycled…’ [Takes off and throws glove]
G allerneaux : T he M ax H eadroom S ignal I ntrusion
[Cuts to new view, ‘Max’ is bent over, his naked rear end exposed]
They’re coming to get me! Ohhh!
Come get me bitch! [Yells while woman dressed as Annie Oakley swats his rear with
fly swatter]
Oh doooo it!
[Cuts back to Dr. Who]
Doctor: As far as I can tell, a massive electric shock. He died instantly.
Vince: The generator? But he was always so careful
Leela: It was very dark.
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P. 134
KEEP ME IN THE LOOP
Dave Tompkins
On the evening of December 25, 1972, the BBC celebrated the birth of Christ by scaring
its viewers to death. Families learned that their fireplaces could be resonating with
discarnate traumas absorbed over centuries, that the walls themselves have been
listening, recording, screaming. Scripted by Nigel Kneale, The Stone Tape concerns
a British electronics company trying to beat Japan in the development of a super
washing machine, while also researching a new recording technology involving the
magnetic susceptibility of minerals.1 The bickering scientists at Ryan Electrics serve
as geo-VCRs for the worst in history’s nature. Haunting is the new playback.
Nigel Kneale’s imagination managed to flourish in television, a medium with a reputation for killing souls. Looking at Kneale’s resume of teleplays, he made the family
viewing experience as weird as possible for a generation of postwar children. A taxidermist gets stuffed by a pond of vengeful toads. A man is choked to death by his own
bike wreckage. A former porn cinema is haunted by dolphins. A lecherous supermarket
manager gets pelted to death by soup cans. (The psychokinetic vehicle: a store mascot/
woodchuck named Briteway Billy.)2 Kneale also gave us titles like ‘Vegetable Village’,
‘Clog-Dance for a Dead Farce’, and ‘The Big Big Giggle’. His script for The Abominable
Snowman had sympathy (and telepathy) for the Yeti, as Peter Cushing’s expedition
into the Himalayas is driven mad by its own hubris, tearing off blind into the whiteout.3
I first came across Nigel Kneale at the end of humanity, through a fifty-foot hologram of a psychic locust. It was one of those bored summer afternoons where you
flip from a locally-professional wrestler breaking a chair on his opponent’s back to a
1.
Stone Tape theory originated with the research of Thomas Charles Lethbridge.
2.
From the BBC TV show Beasts.
3.
I am grateful to Yeti enthusiast/writer Michael Vazquez for putting me onto The Abominable Snowman film.
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British colonel being deliquesced by five million years of bad Martian energy.4 This is
my memory loop from the Hammer Films classic Quatermass and the Pit. According
Tompkins : K eep M e I n the Loop
to Douglas Menville in Things To Come, Quatermass was a scientist who returned from
Saturn as a ‘human cactus’. (The Incredible Melting Man, on the other hand, came back
from Saturn feeling less than succulent.)5 Afterwards, I found myself in the backyard,
mowing the lawn, with the world outside pretending, humming along, its fragile reality
held fast by humidity and bee spit. The mower became the sound of a diamond drill
penetrating a spaceship hull. Then there was the giant Martian locust itself, a projection
of projections, from Neale’s mind to the ink hammer to celluloid to broadcast pixilation
and, finally, whirred into memory by a rusty vortex of blades.
More frightening than Martians from the prop warehouse (their hue extra-grinched
by my parents’ obsolete Zenith) was the idea of being chased by a flock of newspapers
and pie plates. In his pocket-size Science Fiction in the Cinema, John Baxter admires
the Quatermass scene in which the possessed drill operator gets caught in a williwaw
of print media and goes ‘whirling out of the station and into the night amid a cloud
of dust and rubbish, capers down the street like a medieval plague victim, destroys a
pie stall, sending its paper plates spinning, then staggers through an old church yard
to collapse among the graves as the ground heaves and ripples under him’.6 The truth
was embedded in the rubble of London, the memories of a bombed city, as if a sentient
Martian capsule buried in a subway was unexploded V-2 ordnance. Either way, it was
bad news for civilization.
While working on Quatermass and the Pit, Kneale submitted an order to the BBC
Radiophonic Workshop, requesting ‘Martian crowd chatter’ and ‘quick glunks’. (The
sound of an ‘office building flying through outer space in the grip of seven powerful
tractor beams’ was already spoken for.)7 Consider the stone-tape potential beneath
the London underground. Perhaps Ryan Electrics should have supported research
for Quatermass’s Optic Encephalograph, instead of the next great domestic appliance. If this device can project pre-Neanderthal memories of Martian genocide and
race cleansing, consider the results it could generate in The Stone Tape basement.
4.
The first televised face melting is a special moment in any child’s life.
5.
Critic Phil Hardy described The Incredible Melting Man as ‘spotty but interesting’ and similar in theme to The
Quatermass Xperiment. An early scene finds an incredible melting foot stepping on a fisherman’s sandwich. The IMM
then removes the fisherman’s head and flings it into a creek. Maintaining its startled expression—perhaps at the scene
itself—the decapitated head bobs along downstream and goes over a waterfall.
6.
J. Baxter. Science Fiction in the Cinema (London: Tantivy Press, 1970), 98.
7.
D. Briscoe and R.-C. Bramwell, The BBC Radiophonic Workshop: The First 25 Years. (London: BBC, 1983).
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With the cumulative evils afforded by time and its feedback loops of bloodshed, you
121
can’t help but wonder if all these demons are cool with sharing mineral bandwidth with
With their analogue gear, the scientists in The Stone Tape deduce that the eidolon,
which manifests itself in a housekeeper’s dying shriek, is a mass of data awaiting correct
interpretation.8 Or better yet, an accurate reading of events. Tragedies of the past had
been reduced to information in a continuous loop, putting the worst moment of your
life on repeat. Initially, project director Peter Brock dismisses the phenomena as an
‘under-maid’ who fell to her death while watering an aspidistra. When Brock’s team is
at a bar, one member recalls a black soldier mentioning a duppy. In an Afro-Caribbean
versioning of The Stone Tape, the walls might generate sustained decay waves, cycles
of colonialism and displacement. History’s selective memory will come back to you, and
in some cases, for you.9 Brock’s crew was ‘going at the ghost with electronics’, but the
science itself had been repossessed.10 There was no echo locator. It is not the machines
but the humans themselves who catch the sounds, often unspooling in grand fashion,
holding their heads, trying to shut out what has already taken permanent residence.
I’ve got them on my headphones!
You’ve got them in your head!
‘We are the freaks!’ cries Jill Greeley, a computer programmer and the only woman in
the crew, harassed by her co-workers and attuned to stratified trauma. It turns out
they were all just a bunch of decently paid amplifiers. Quick to boil, Brock scoffs at
another employee, ‘You! You’ve got no playback.’ The poor blank is crestfallen. Another
‘dead mechanism.’ In the opening scene, Greeley is spooked by white noise in the Ryan
Electrics logo, a shiver of bad reception. (Your local banker might describe the font
as ‘Analog Routing Number’.) By the end, she is transmuted from flesh into a geologic
frequency, always in the loop. As if that harmful know-your-place energy was seized
8.
The Stone Tape shriek rivals the shriek in Whodini’s ‘Nasty Lady’, engineered and edited by Conny Plank, inside a
haunted house of rock, with magnetic tape.
9.
This essay was reincarnated from versions that appeared in the Paris Review and originally in The Twilight Language
of Nigel Kneale, an anthology lovingly assembled by Sukhdev Sandhu (NYU’s Colloquium of Unpopular Culture Studies),
Mark Pilkington (Strange Attractor Press), and Mike Vazquez (ed. Bidoun, Transitions).
10.
Both taken from Kneale’s script.
Tompkins : K eep M e I n the Loop
one another; property re-claims be damned.
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122
upon by the basement’s past, what it always knew. An information curse: you are what
you download. The reels were successfully transferred. Merry X-Files.
Tompkins : K eep M e I n the Loop
Brock himself ends up on the cutting room floor, obsolete, flailing amid tendrils of
paper. Seven thousand years of lost data shredded into cheap Santa beards for the
kids. There’s an application for an exorcism filed in 1892 and a child’s lone Christmas
wish: What I want is please go away.
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THE MUSIC OF SKULLS II:
OSTEOGRAPHY
Al Cameron
‘Oh, to be dead at last and know all the stars, forever!’, Rainer Maria Rilke exclaims
in the seventh of his Duino Elegies (1923). But he imagines departed souls climbing
soundlessly, inaccessible, ‘alone, on the mountains of primal grief’. The dead ‘don’t
need us anymore’, he writes. The question is ‘could we exist without them’, we the
living, who are ‘in need of such great mysteries’?1
Western culture had long tried to decipher the ‘incomparable language’2 of a skull’s
empty sockets and inhuman smile: ‘Where be your gibes now? Your gambols? Your
songs? […] Not one now to mock your own grinning?’ To these questions—transposed
across the thresholds of the living and dead, subjects and objects—skulls could answer
only with the rictus silence of the body’s imperishable material, stripped of ‘those lips
that I have kissed I know not how oft’.3 It was left to priests, poets and later forensic
scientists to ventriloquize them, dreaming up incantations, elegies, laments; a stream
of ‘wavelike words’ which, if they did not overcome it, might drown out and ‘modulate
[the] futility’ of death.4 Is not all writing an attempt to outlast the ephemerality of
consciousness, Foucault asks—language’s riposte to the skull’s indestructibility?
In 1919, however, as he gazed at a skull under candlelight, it was not the inhuman
expression but the flickering cranial sutures that caught Rilke’s attention. Formed by
the fusion of the plates in the months after birth, these fissures on the skull’s exterior
precisely resembled the waveforms his own voice had inscribed on wax cylinders
1.
R.M. Rilke, The Duino Elegies and the Sonnets to Orpheus, tr. A. Poulin, Jr. (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1977), 48; 10.
My italics.
2.
W. Benjamin, One Way Street and Other Writings, tr. J.A. Underwood (London: Penguin, 2008), 76.
3.
Hamlet, Act 5, Scene 1.
4.
M. Foucault, ‘Language to Infinity’, in D.F. Bouchard (ed.), Language, Counter-Memory, Practice: Selected Essays
and Interviews, tr. D.F. Bouchard and S. Simon (New York: Cornell University Press, 1977), 60.
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during primitive phonographic experiments as a schoolboy. An ‘unheard of experiment’
began to obstinately recur to him: skull-phonography. What if he was to retrace this
Cameron : M usic of S kulls I I
sutural groove with a record needle? ‘A sound would necessarily result, a series of
sounds, music….’ Rilke speculates that the ‘Ur-Geräusch’ which ‘would then make its
appearance’5 via the infallible needle, was a ‘starting point’ for opening poetry onto
‘the world’s whole field of experience’. Placing the needle to any naturally occurring
waveform ‘no one had ever encoded’, might extend human perception into the ‘black
sectors’ long obscured under the hegemony of the visual sense. Intent on raising poetry
onto the ‘supernatural plane’, he proposes this technological ‘sonnification’ of authorless
inscriptions as an exemplary means of penetrating ‘the abysses’ of consciousness.6
In Rilke’s day, accessing this ‘unmediated’ reality was typically understood to be a
matter of de-suturing; of rending the bony interstice between brain and void—Rilke’s
‘special housing’ which, shortly after birth, is ‘closed against all worldly space’.7 Madame
Blavatsky’s third eye erupted into a resonating cosmos. Her former disciple Alexandra
David-Neel witnessed monks in Tibet opening the the cranial Aperture of Brahma,
releasing the soul onto the void with the magic syllable ‘hik!’.8 Obsessed, like Rilke, with
‘the necessity of leaving, in one way or another, the limits of our human experience’,
Georges Bataille conceived a ‘mystic representation’: the pineal organ, its gaze blinded,
bursting the skull onto a ‘vertiginous fall’ into ‘a sky as pale as death’.9 Meanwhile,
inhaling the hepatotoxin carbon tetrachloride in search of a direct confrontation with
his own finitude, the seeker René Daumal entered a state free from consciousness and
language in which the all vibrated together in sound waves.10
In the midst of a psychotic episode, there ‘appeared in my skull a deep cleft or rent
along the middle, which probably was not visible from outside but was from inside’,
Judge Schreber wrote in 1903.11 Through such a gap, his ‘nerve wires’ could be externalised, carrying jangling signals, or ‘rays’ directly between him and God. Likewise, the
5.
R.M. Rilke, ‘Primal Sound’, reprinted in F.A. Kittler, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, tr. G. Winthrop-Young and M. Wutz
(Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1999), 41–3.
6.
See S. Connor, ‘Photophonics’, Sound Effects 3:1 (2013),132–48.
7.
Rilke, in Kittler, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, 42.
8.
H.P. Blavatsky, The Secret Doctrine: the Synthesis of Science, Religion and Philosophy, Vols 1 & 2 [1888] (Los
Angeles: The Theosophical Company, 1925), 298–306.
9.
G. Bataille, ‘The Pineal Eye’, in A. Stoekl (ed.), Visions of Excess: Selected Writings 1927–1939, tr. A. Stoekl, C.R.
Lovitt, and D.M. Leslie, Jr. (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1985), 79–80.
10.
R. Daumal, ‘A Fundamental Experiment’, Psychedelic Review 5 (1965), 40–48.
11.
D.P. Schreber, Memoirs of My Nervous Illness, tr. I. Macalpine and R.A. Hunter (New York: New York Review of
Books: 2000), 138.
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P. 140
emergent media technologies of his day ‘deboned’ speech.12 Once Rilke’s classmates’
125
voices were scored in waveform on wax and shellac, endo-skeletal vibrations were
of consciousness itself—and (so-called) ‘man’s essence escapes into apparatuses’,
Friedrich Kittler observed.13 The ‘old written laments about ephemerality suddenly fall
silent. In our mediascape, immortals have come to exist again.’14
In 1985, Josef Mengele’s skull was exhumed to give testimony at his posthumous
trial. The object took on a privileged status; unlike the living witness, bone’s imperishable
material neither lies nor forgets, it is claimed. But this ‘hard’ evidence still required
forensic scientists to act as interlocutors, no less than the mystics of old. The same year,
Kittler enthused over Rilke’s ‘primal sound without a name, a music without notation,
a sound even more strange than any incantation of the dead for which the skull could
have been used’. The music of skulls was ‘a transgression, in the literal sense of the
word, which shakes the very words used to phrase it’. A symbolic exchange between
speaking subject and dead object gives way to the white noise at the basis of all reality.
In this deeper vibrational dimension ‘the impossible real transpires’.15 Subsequently
Primal Sound became a set text for the emergent fields of media sound studies, which
channelled Rilke’s experiential essentialism. Kittler too invokes a raw state of things,
a ‘negative theology’16 of omnipotent media data streams which can illuminate ‘all’ of
Rilke’s abysses,17 sounding the ‘endless region of darkness’ beyond the bottleneck of
the signifier.18
However, the enthusiasm for ‘a kind of universal gramophony’19 paid insufficient
attention to the specific functions of the skull’s waveform in Rilke’s experiment. The
skull, Kittler argues, ‘loses its distinctiveness’ once it is no longer a discursive but a
sonorous object; no longer the instrument by which one morbidly recognises one’s
own finitude but a portal to primal experience. ‘If ever an initiation did justice to the
12.
See D. Khan, ‘Death in Light of the Phonograph’, in D. Khan and G. Whitehead (eds.), Wireless Imagination: Sound,
Radio, and the Avant-Garde (Cambridge, MA and London: MIT Press, 1992), 89–90.
13.
F. Kittler, Discourse Networks 1800/1900 (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1990), 16.
14.
Kittler, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, 11–13.
15.
Ibid., 44–46.
16.
See S. Kim-Cohen, In the Blink of an Ear: Toward a Non-Cochlear Sonic Art (New York & London: Continuum), 2009,
99–100.
17.
Kittler, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, 49.
18.
Kittler, Discourse Networks, 321.
19.
Connor, ‘Photophonics’.
Cameron : M usic of S kulls I I
no longer indispensable to the process of hearing oneself speak—the architectonics
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126
material, this was it’, he affirms.20 But in 1924 Rilke mused in a letter that the pursuit
of an unmediated encounter with the realm of death was at the root of all initiatory
Cameron : M usic of S kulls I I
practices. Accessing ‘the really sound and full sphere and orb of being’ meant exposing
the ‘side’ of reality ‘turned away from us’, and experiencing ‘death without negation’.21
Do not theories of ‘sonification’, or of phonographic noise as somehow purer than
always-lying human speech, themselves undertake an ‘arduous labour of truth construction’22 no less than those with which forensic scientists drew testimony from Mengele’s
remains? If ‘the gramophone empties out words’,23 didn’t Rilke’s ‘literal’ transgression
remain literary—a thought experiment which needed not be put into practice? That
is to say, the primality of sound that has been amplified across his text’s repeat plays
in sound studies since the 1980s can only be established allegorically. To paraphrase
him, if primal sound was a means of establishing the soul ‘on the supernatural plane’,
it could only do so inasmuch as it remained ‘in fact, [on] the plane of the poem’. The
dream of trepanned signals from the abyss or the ‘real itself’ depends on the same
incantations that sutural phonography was supposed to have bypassed; by reinterpreting ‘as discourse what was once only heard as noise’.24 Otherwise it would remain only
‘contextless data’.25 In Rilke’s skull music, the needle sounds only the trace of infantile
cranial plates fusing closed, at the instant where language begins.
20. Kittler, Discourse Networks, 316–17.
21.
Quoted in D.J. Polkoff, In the Image of Orpheus: Rilke: A Soul History (Wilmette, IL: Chiron Publications, 2011),
549–50; 506–7.
22. See T. Keenan and E. Weizman, Mengele’s Skull: The Advent of a Forensic Aesthetics (Berlin and Frankfurt:
Sternberg Press/Portikus, 2012), 66–7.
23.
Kittler, Discourse Networks, 246.
24. J. Ranciere, Disagreement, tr. J. Rose (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1999), 30. Quoted in Keenan and
Weizman, Mengele’s Skull, 69.
25. Kim-Cohen, In the Blink of an Ear. Likewise, in ‘Photophonics’, Connor argues that ‘sonification prolongs a mystic
sound obscuratism […] the sound that was never there in the first place’.
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BACKMASKING
Toby Heys
There is a power in being located on the boundary between the living and the dead.
One of the potentialities of frequencies resides in their capacity to displace language,
description, and the perception of the two states and their difference. Considered from
a spatial perspective, Foucault designates the cemetery as the locale ‘connected with
all the sites of the city, state or society or village’.1 And it is in this transitional setting
that he recognises a shift occurring: a transmutation of the understanding, cartography,
and distinction between the operative and the deceased, because ‘from the moment
when people are no longer sure that they have a soul or that the body will regain life, it
is perhaps necessary to give much more attention to the dead body, which is ultimately
the only trace of our existence in the world and in language’.2
It is this sense of uncertainty that also drives us to characterise the realm of frequencies as a refuge of the tenebrous, an ambiguous spatiality harbouring phenomena
and interactions that we are unable to rationalise—whether it be sounds at night that
cannot be explained (interpreted as being movements of the departed) or the inner
voices that we ascribe to the mentally ill to help us understand the noisy multi-channel
disposition of schizophrenia. When pressed into vinyl grooves, this disquiet, which
sublimates the purgatorial power of waveforms, manifests itself in numerous ways.
The technique that best reveals this consternation about the sensory culvert that runs
beneath the two-lane construction of existence, however, is a backspun one.
The process of ‘backmasking’ involves embedding subliminal transmissions that play
backwards on a track that plays forwards, predominantly in musical recordings, but
1.
M. Foucault, ‘Of Other Spaces: Utopias and Heterotopias’ [1967], in N. Mirzoeff (ed.), The Visual Culture Reader
(London and New York: Routledge, second edition 2002), 233.
2.
Ibid.
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128
also in films (such as Stanley Kubrick’s Eyes Wide Shut)3 and in adverts. Allegations
(often made by organisations affiliated to the Christian religion), most commonly against
H e ys : B ackmasking
rock bands and their vinyl productions, reveal the full extent of the cultural, social, and
bestial fears about music’s capacity to channel information from perdition. Historically,
the convergence of Satanism and backmasking can be traced back to English occultist
Aleister Crowley. In Magick (Book Four) he proposed that an adept should learn to first
think and then speak backwards.4 This reengineering of the learning process was to
be practiced using a range of techniques, one of which was listening to phonograph
records playing in reverse.
Numerous popular recording artists have been accused of utilising Satanic backmasking techniques, including Pink Floyd, Styx, Cradle of Filth, ELO, and Slayer, amongst
a long list. The most infamous incident of a defendant alleging that backward masking
on a record had inspired their actions occurred during the trial of Charles Manson
for the Tate/LaBianca murders in 1969. During judicial proceedings it was proposed
that Manson believed an apocalyptic race war would engulf the country and that the
Beatles—through songs such as ‘Helter Skelter’ (their 1966 album Revolver also contained backward instrumentation on tracks such as ‘Tomorrow Never Knows’ and ‘I’m
Only Sleeping’)—had embedded hidden messages foretelling such violence. Manson’s
delusional response (to these perceived messages) was to record his own prophetic
music and to have his ‘family’ carry out the murder of Leno and Rosemary LaBianca
and actress Sharon Tate, amongst others, in order to trigger the supposed conflict;
daubing the walls of the murder scenes with symbols to make it appear as though the
Black Panthers were responsible.
Even with such a high-profile case focusing on the liability of backmasking, it was
the song ‘Revolution No.9’ from The White Album that tangibly implanted the technique
into mainstream public consciousness, with the words ‘revolution number nine’ sounding
like the sentence ‘turn me on dead man’ when reversed—a furtive confirmation to those
conspiracy theorists who believed that a doppelganger had been playing the part of
Paul McCartney ever since his covered-up death back in 1966. The veracity of the story
is possibly the least captivating issue at stake here. Of more interest is the puissance
afforded to the abstraction of the voice and its subsequent potential to create otherworldly anxiety, or, in the case of practices such as glossolalia, xenoworldly divination.
3.
Eyes Wide Shut, dir. S. Kubrick (USA: Warner Bros., 1999).
4.
A. Crowley, Magick: Liber ABA, Book Four, Parts I–IV (York Beach, ME: S. Weiser, 1997).
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This troubled disposition subsequently attributes music—and by extension, frequen-
129
cies—with the potential to manufacture evil deeds, and more than that, with the power
context, music can be perceived as a phenomena operating between psychological
torment and its physical expression; between the scientifically monitored condition
and the unthinkable act; and as a force that transgresses the material world of things
yet deeply affects and orients actions within it. Thus it is music’s contradictory symbolic index—as both religious celebratory expression and transmission of the devil’s
will—that renders waveforms as phenomena to be both feared and revered.
On a more earthly (but hardly grounded) note, fundamentalist Christian groups in
the USA spent much of the 1970s speaking in the well worn tongue of Freudian analysis.
They were busy spreading the word(s) of the ‘conscious mind’ and the ‘subconscious’ in
order to psychologically validate their claims that by bypassing the former, backmasking
serruptitiously infected the latter. By 1982 the facinorous technique had become a
veritable epidemic. From mass bouts of record smashing and burning to accusations
of collusion between rock musicians and the Church of Satan, all manner of professionals jumped on the demonic bandwagon.5 This out-of-control vogue would run full
tilt into the West Coast legal system in 1983, the year of the California bill.6 If ever the
effectiveness of a juggernaut of paranoia (especially when it underwrites a piece of
legislation) were in doubt, the ensuing car crash of common law revealed its influence;
for it aimed to do nothing less than silence those techniques that ‘can manipulate our
behavior without our knowledge or consent and turn us into disciples of the Antichrist’.7
Which brings us neatly, at least in terms of backmasking lore, to ‘Infamy No. 2’
and to American serial killer Richard Ramirez, who was convicted of thirteen murders
by a Californian court in 1989. As a fan of the hard rock group AC/DC, he cited their
‘Night Prowler’ track from the band’s Highway to Hell album8 as the inspiration for his
murderous activities. David Oates—a reverse speech advocate—has maintained that
subliminal messages on this record, such as ‘my name is Lucifer’ and ‘She belongs in
hell’, urged him to commit the unspeakable acts. And it is in this realm of the ineffable
5.
See J.R. Vokey and D.J. Read, ‘Subliminal Messages: Between the Devil and the Media’, American Psychologist 40:11
(November 1985), 1231–9.
6.
For more information on the California Bill, see P. Blecha, Taboo Tunes: A History of Banned Bands and Censored
Songs (Milwaukee, WI: Backbeat Books, 2004), 51.
7.
Blecha, Taboo Tunes, 51.
8.
AC/DC, Highway to Hell, LP (USA: Atlantic Records, 1979)
H e ys : B ackmasking
to transfer the somatic and the spiritual to the environs of the underworld itself. In this
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130
that we locate some clues as to why the sonic is often deemed to exert influence over
extreme behaviours. For it is the unspeakable that we consign to our subconscious,
H e ys : B ackmasking
the unspeakable that we actively try to forget, for anything we cannot remember to
speak of is already half-dead to us. It is here, at the interface of the pulsing signal and
the monotone of the flatline, that subliminal messages operate—as conduits linking
the articulated and the unutterable in the living-dead networks of perception.
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CHINA AND THE WIRELESS WAVE
Anna Greenspan
In 1832 Michael Faraday wrote a secret letter to the Royal Society, which remained
sealed for over a century. In it he wrote:
I am inclined to compare the diffusion of magnetic forces from a magnetic pole to the
vibrations upon the surface of disturbed water, or those of air in the phenomenon of
sound’, i.e., I am inclined to think the vibratory theory will apply to these phenomena as
it does to sound, and most probably to light.
By the time Faraday’s letter was opened, Maxwell’s mathematical theorems and
Hertz’s technological experiments had conclusively proved the existence of electromagnetic waves. We are immersed in an ocean of frequencies, as Faraday predicted,
surrounded by vibrations that are beyond our perceptual capacities.
***
At first Heinrich Hertz could see no practical purpose for his experiments. ‘It’s of no
use whatsoever’, he is reported to have said, ‘this is just an experiment that proves
Maestro Maxwell was right—we just have these mysterious electromagnetic waves
that we cannot see with the naked eye. But they are there.’ A little over a hundred
years later, wireless technology—from radio’s capacity to occupy the airwaves, to
today’s mobile phone, a device that has been adopted throughout the planet faster
than any machine in history—has involved an ever more intimate engagement with
Hertzian frequencies. Today, the ‘mysterious waves’ that surround us but that ‘we
cannot see’ serve as a carrier signal for the millions of ‘smart objects’ increasingly
embedded in all aspects of life.
***
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132
The prehistory of wireless lies with the telegraph, a technology whose capacity to
‘separate communication from transportation’ enabled the sharing of messages at non-
G reenspan : C hina and the W ireless Wave
human speeds. By transmitting time across distance, the telegraph solved the problem
of global simultaneity and, with the invention of the instant, spawned the modern world.
By the early twentieth century, electric veins of transmission permeated the body of
the earth, wrapping it in a single technologically generated, standardized time.
In 1967 global simultaneity fused with electromagnetic vibrations. It was then that
the International Committee for Weights and Measures ceased to define the second
as a micro-division of the seasonal year and established an atomic description, which
tied the second to the rate of electromagnetic transitions in the hyperfine structure
of the cesium-133 atom. From then on, time was determined by the designation for
frequency: hertz (or cycles per second).
Today, the locative omnipresence of wireless devices ensures global synchrony
through the GPS system, arguably the cell phone’s killer app. GPS requires satellites
with onboard atomic clocks accurate to within a billionth of a second. The drive
for ever-greater temporal precision is vital for AI systems such as self-driving cars,
automated weapons, and the growing field of augmented reality. With this, as William
Gibson foresaw in Spook Country, comes the ‘everting’ of cyberspace such that the
‘grid’ now envelops the whole of the earth. Computation unfolds outward, escaping
the limits of the machine, as the world crosses over to the other side of the screen.
***
Since the 1980s—the retrochronic date for the first generation of cellular systems—
the ongoing transmission of wireless media has been concurrent with China’s remarkable rise. While the telegraph was viewed as an alien invader, by the time electric
communication went wireless, China was deeply embedded in the wave of technocapitalist innovation that now ripples across the globe. The dramatic pace of this
sociotechnological mutation reaches its fullest expression in the megacity of Shenzhen,
on China’s Southern coast, where most of the world’s cell phones are produced. Shenzhen has combined its role as factory to the world with a ‘shanzhai’ street commerce,
which emerged from the in-between cracks of the global economy. Plummeting prices
combined with a distribution network of unprecedented scale and speed to create a
hub of global electronic production. The markets clustered at Huaqiangbei overflow
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P. 148
with wireless devices: phones, wearables, sensors and circuits. Cheap versions of the
133
latest smart object flow from the rising metropolis, out to every corner of the planet.
The clock was invented in China, but it was not until centuries later, when it was
rediscovered in Europe, that it transformed into what Lewis Mumford would call ‘the
key machine of the modern industrial age’. This cultural divergence in the fate of the
mechanical clock is an example of the Needham question—the name that has crystalized around the still lingering problem of the ultimate compatibility between Chinese
culture and modern technology. In his densely detailed tome Science and Civilization
in China, Joseph Needham asked how a place famous for the four great inventions
(si da fa ming)—compass, gunpowder, paper, and print—could have faltered in the
modern period such that it was ‘totally overtaken by the exponential rise in the West
after the birth of modern science at the Renaissance’.1
In China, reaction to this ‘great divergence’ has been polarized. On one side is a
determined resistance to ‘foreign’ technology (from the Boxers tearing up telegraph
poles to the Great Firewall and the censorship of cyberspace). On the other is a belief,
most forcefully expressed in the May Fourth Movement, but still prevalent in the
internet politics of today, that in order to modernize, China must Westernize. Both
tendencies are deeply entangled in the late Qing intellectual strategy, which mobilized
the ancient cosmic dualism ti/yong (essence/use), in order to create a barrier that
would separate Chinese cultural and intellectual heritage from the practices of a modern
techno-scientific world.
***
Twentieth-century New Confucianism seeks to synthesize an abstract, reinvented
tradition with an emergent modernity. Xiong Shili, one of the movement’s founders,
turned to Buddhism, and insisted on the nonseparation of ti and yong. The apparent
division between a culture’s essence and its practice, he argued, was a delusion born of
attachment. ‘Just as the water in the ocean is manifested as waves, ti is like the deep
and still sea and yong like the continuous rise and fall of its many waves.’
1.
J. Needham, The Grand Titration: Science and Society in East and West [1969] (Abingdon and New York: Routledge,
2005), 285.
G reenspan : C hina and the W ireless Wave
***
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134
Xiong’s most famous book Xin Weishi Lun (A New Treatise on Consciousness-Only)
fuses Yogacara Buddhism with the continuous transformation described in China’s
G reenspan : C hina and the W ireless Wave
most ancient classic, the Yijing (or I Ching). For Xiong, China’s best hope in facing the
alien world that had arrived on its shores was a return to the cosmo-ontology of the
wave. Implicitly influenced by the ambient electric frequencies that were everywhere
around him, Xiong saw in the ‘uninterrupted flash upon flash of lightning’ the ceaseless
ancient pulsation of contraction (xi) and expansion (pi), generation and extinction, that
is the essence, Ultimate Reality or Original Body of the Ten Thousand Things.
Xiong’s disciple Mou Zongsan pushed the project of integrating Chinese tradition
with modernity even further through an engagement with Immanuel Kant. Using the
conceptual language of Chinese Buddhism, he translated all three of Kant’s critiques.
Mou’s aim was to show that Chinese thought offered a path beyond the limits of reason,
opening a gate to what Kant deemed impossible: intellectual intuition, or access to the
thing-in-itself. Mou held that this practical, rather than theoretical knowledge was contained within the Confucian, Taoist, and Buddhist tradition. He likened the awakening they
promised to a vibrational event. In describing these vibrations, Mou turns to a calendric
event. In early spring, around the fifth of March, when the sun reaches 365 degrees,
the Chinese nongli (or agriculture calendar) shifts into the third of its twenty-four solar
periods. This marks the beginning of jingzhe (the awakening of the insects) when the
buzzing reverberations signal nature’s renewal and the wavelike reccurrence of time.
***
Both the Wifi Alliance, which aims to ‘connect everyone and everything’, and China’s
own GPS-like satellite system Beidou, chose as their symbol the undulating image of
Yin/Yang. The logo—the most famous diagram of Chinese thought—resonates with
the wireless wave at a variety of scales—from the techno-capitalist wax and wane of
historical time to the microtemporal electromagnetic frequencies, through the myriad vibrations of our now ubiquitous mobile devices that grow ever more immersive,
autonomous and smart. In tapping into the electromagnetic field that is everywhere
around us, wireless media operates as the underlying abstract infrastructure of our
cyborgian existence. Beyond their role as communication devices, these censors and
circuits effectuate a ‘cosmological revelation’, trafficking in frequencies that we cannot
directly perceive. This vibratory plane hosts a myriad of nonhuman sentient agents,
which increasingly constitute the invisible, abstract, alien atmosphere that Faraday,
long ago, secretly foresaw.
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2014: THE VISUAL MICROPHONE
Lendl Barcelos
O olhouvido ouvê
(The eyear hearsees)
— Décio Pignatari, Teoria da Poesia Concreta1
The visual microphone is an algorithmic process that transmutes pixel data from video
recordings into sonic information. Funded in part by the Qatar Computing Research
Institute and the American National Science Foundation, the research and its (patent-pending) results were made public in 2014 and brought together researchers from
labs at MIT, Microsoft, and Adobe.2 Whereas previous attempts to recover audio signals
from visual sources required systems to project onto vibrating surfaces—an active
intervention—the technique of the visual microphone suggests that minute surface
vibrations contain enough information for audio to be passively reanimated without the
need to intervene. Even with the sound turned off, a moving image betrays situated
oscillations: a camera’s visual register is détourned to become a medium for listening
in. Dormant sound is reawakened and made audible. By ‘turning visible everyday
objects into potential microphones’ the researchers have developed techniques to
catalyze yawning ears toward the summons of spectral vibrations thought to have
been silenced.3 With the visual microphone, infra_perceptible sound events of the
past, once recorded as video, can be brought back to life.
The process underlying the visual microphone consists of tracking small surface
vibrations produced when sound collides with an object. It is not sound that is being
recorded, but the surface effects it elicits. A camera captures these tiny movements and
registers them as minute pixel fluctuations varying over time. Then the subtle motions
are amplified—while maintaining their relative differences—and transposed within the
1.
Quoted in A.S. Bessa, ‘Sound as Subject: Augusto de Campos’s Poetamenos’, in M. Perloff and C. Dworkin (eds.),
The Sound of Poetry, the Poetry of Sound (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2009), 219–36: 219.
2.
A. Davis et al., ‘The Visual Microphone: Passive Recovery of Sound from Video’, ACM Transactions on Graphics 33:4
(2014), 79:1–10.
3.
Ibid., 1.
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136
bounds of the audible. In this way, the algorithmic process of the visual microphone can
comb through videos in order to search for latent sounds unheard. Researchers initially
Barcelos : T he V isual M icrophone
tested this technique with high-speed cameras only, but later showed that similar results
could be achieved using standard consumer cameras by compensating for a reduced
frame rate. As a proof of concept, a sound system and a bag of potato chips (i.e., an
object capable of being perturbed) were placed inside a soundproof room. A camera,
set up outside of the room behind a pane of glass, registered the micro-movements of
the surface of the bag of chips. Although the sound system remained out of frame and
the camera was positioned in the adjacent room, the sound played in the room could
be heard once the visual microphone had reanimated it—albeit in a degraded form.
What is striking about this technique is that it opens up the possibility of listening
in on the acoustic space where the camera captured the footage—even when that
space has since decayed to ruin. So long as there are objects within the camera’s field
of view able to reflect sound events, the (micro-)movement-image produced can be
used to sound the depths of the area around the camera. A camera does not have to be
directed toward the sound’s source to register a trace of its perturbations. Given the
increasing ubiquity of cameras—on mobile devices and as part of a paranoiac heightened surveillance—this means that, even when sounds occur beyond the sensitivity
range of an audio microphone, it is now possible for them still to be brought within
earshot. In a sense, Thomas Edison’s attempt to hear the voices of the dead has now
been transmuted into a synaesthetic programme whereby faint acoustic impressions
can be visually amplified so that spectral voices and the spaces they once inhabited
can be heard.
The technique of the visual microphone reveals that hidden within the visual lie
ineffables awaiting articulation. Technologies continue to be developed that can register,
transduce, amplify, and transmute phenomena at scales well below the thresholds
of human sensitivity, opening up sensory fields as yet unsensed. With its capacity
to open lines of communication between the vibrational space around the recording
camera, its resultant (micro-)movement-image, and our ears, the visual microphone
is just one example of these technologies. Here, our ears are transported back into
past videos through variations of pixel data in order to reanimate sounds thought to
have perished. We are left to wonder: What inaudibles lurk in the micro-movements
of pixel fluctuations?
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THE THING
Amy Ireland
In 1945, under instructions from the NKVD, Russian intelligence operatives planted
a passive covert listening device—designed by Léon Theremin and concealed inside
a carved, wooden replica of the Great Seal of the United States of America—in the
American embassy in Moscow.1 The bugged seal was gifted to the USA by members
of the Vladimir Lenin All-Union Pioneer Youth Organization and, once installed, was
sensitive to remote activation by means of a microwave signal transmitted in the vicinity of the embassy building. It was successfully used to record classified discussions
taking place in the American ambassador’s office between 1947 and 1952. For highly
suggestive reasons—its retrospective recognition as an occult resonator chief among
them—the device was dubbed ‘the thing’ by baffled employees of the United States
Secret Service.
In a demonstration of exemplary camouflage tactics, the thing had lain hidden in
plain sight for seven years, undetectable without contingent or clandestine knowledge
of the hypersonic frequency it operated at, before it was discovered accidentally, while
receiving its illuminating signal by a British radio operator monitoring Russian air force
traffic in 1952. As it needed no power supply and contained no active electronic components, routine security sweeps had consistently failed to detect the thing’s presence,
but it was finally given up by the howl of positive feedback it emitted whilst active
during a well-timed counter-surveillance sweep (using a tunable receiver operating
at 1800 megahertz) ordered in response to the tip-off.2 American officials removed
1.
The NKVD was the Russian Commissariat for State Security between 1931 and 1946. It is one of the predecessors of
the KGB. Léon Theremin is the name adopted by Lev Sergeyvich Termen whilst touring the United Sates and Europe in the
late 1920s.
2.
P. Wright, Spycatcher: The Candid Autobiography of a Senior Intelligence Officer (New York and London: Viking,
1987), 25.
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138
the device and kept quiet, hoping that it might provide additional bargaining power in
future negotiations with the USSR.
I reland : T he T hing
Significantly, discovery of the thing was not coincident with an understanding of
how it worked, and it would take the American, British, and Dutch security services
between eighteen months (in the case of the British) and fifteen years (for the
combined Dutch/American effort) to reverse engineer and successfully replicate its
mechanism. In yet another twist of serendipitous denomination attentive, perhaps, to
the epistemological problem that accompanied it, the first working MI5 prototype was
nicknamed ‘Black Magic’ by its chief engineer, Peter Wright. Indeed, Theremin had
accomplished what seemed like a sorcerous act to anyone unfamiliar with the possibilities that electromagnetic radiation offered the world of espionage and clandestine
communication. Theremin’s brief was for a device that would function wirelessly, did
not require traditional microphones, and could be introduced into the ambassador’s
residence without raising suspicion. Faced with the implicit threat of being returned
to a Gulag camp in Kolyma, or executed, Theremin delivered. The thing comprised only
a few simple components: a silver-plated copper cylinder roughly 13 millimetres deep
and 20 millimetres in diameter, and an insulated rod antenna whose original length and
corresponding resonant frequency is a matter of much contention among those who
have attempted to reconstruct the device. Inside the cylinder, the rod terminated in an
adjustable tuning post, forming a capacitor with a diaphragm that extended across the
resonator’s open face. Exact descriptions of the original bug have never been released,
leading to speculation as to whether or not it was simply an early example of RFID
technology, or a more complex device employing harmonic reradiation. In the case of
the latter, the antenna would have acted as both the receiver for the illuminating signal
and the device’s transmitter. Wright’s reconstruction for MI5, renamed SATYR and
used by the British, American, Canadian, and Australian secret services, functioned
with a resonant frequency of 1400 megahertz, although higher frequencies have been
hypothesized for Theremin’s original design.3
The enigma surrounding the thing was to have enduring repercussions in the paranoid psychoscape of Cold War diplomacy and state-sanctioned espionage. In 1962, ten
years after dismantling Theremin’s bug but only two years after public revelations of its
3.
I.W. Conrad, ‘Internal FBI memorandum, 8 May 1953’, <www.cryptomuseum.com/covert/bugs/thing/files/19530508_
fbi.pdf>; G. Brooker and J. Gomez, ‘Lev Termen’s Great Seal Bug Analyzed’, IEEE Aerospace and Electronic Systems
Magazine 28:11 (2013), 4–11.
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discovery, the United States became aware that their embassy in Moscow was once
139
again the target of abnormal levels of electromagnetic radiation. Was this evidence
more ominous? Several theories were advanced at the time, although none were ever
officially confirmed as motivation for the bombardment. If it wasn’t destined to illuminate
a newer model of the thing, the electromagnetic signal could have been connected to
Theremin’s subsequent innovation, a method of microwave-based audio surveillance
known as the ‘Snowstorm’ system.4 Others considered it to be a bluff, designed to lead
the Americans into believing that the Soviets possessed an unfathomable new piece of
military technology. Some went even further and suggested that it was indeed evidence
of the latter, hypothesizing a system that employed electromagnetic radiation to induce
neurasthenia or other biological and behavioural changes in its subjects, including
the use of ‘synthetic telepathy’, or mind control. This latter hypothesis inaugurated
an experimental research programme overseen by ARPA at the Walter Reed Army
Institute of Research in the late 1960s.5 The programme, dedicated to exploring the
biophysical effects of microwave radiation, is known in certain circles as the infamous
Pandora Project.6
The thing can be counted among the catalytic moments of covert electromagnetic
surveillance technology in the twentieth century. The existence of synthetic telepathy
may remain a peripheral theory, but the contribution of Theremin’s invention to the
development of RFID tags and scanners, tracking devices, and ubiquitous telesurveillance, not to mention its legacy of ambient paranoia, carries over the threshold of the
millennium, perpetuating itself imperceptibly in the deep structure of twenty-first-century control dynamics.
4.
A. Glinksy, Theremin: Ether Music and Espionage (Champaign, IL: University of Illinois Press, 2000), 260–61.
5.
D.R. Justesen, ‘Microwaves and Behaviour’, American Psychologist 30:3 (1975), 391–401.
6.
P. Brodeur, Currents of Death (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1989), 91–2; N. Steneck, The Microwave Debate
(Boston, MA: MIT Press, 1984), 94–5.
I reland : T he T hing
that a new passive listening device had been installed in the building, or something
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LARGE HADRON COLLIDER:
THE ULTIMATE
UNDERGROUND GROOVE
Toby Heys
At the turn of twentieth century, the notion of propelling two forces backwards and
forwards, to meet at the point where they negate each other, takes hold within military
think tanks across Europe. They are searching for a more expansive comprehension
of the collision of the subliminal message and the spoken word, matter and anti-matter, and existence and nonexistence. Research is carried out into these phenomena
through war, entertainment systems, vortexes of urban unrest, mass anxiety, mobile
music playback technologies, and the plethora of sonic portals that make up the
global matrix of the speaker network. For it is the human sensorium that will become
the next battleground to be mapped, strategized, and conquered. At the end of the
tenth century of the second millennium, the military will brief government officials
about their cultivation of hypogean activities and networks. Comprehending that the
underground is the space in which technological innovation meets speculative thinking, the dark occultists of the white Western ring of scientific power will, in response,
magnify AUDINT’s 1946 TwoRing Table experiments1 by technically coming full circle
and completing the evolution of the underground groove.
It is 1998 at CERN, Switzerland. Construction begins one hundred meters below
ground level in order to assemble the Large Hadron Collider, a massive locked groove
measuring twenty-seven kilometres in circumference. In this particle-accelerated
underworld the purest form of collision will be orchestrated by smashing particle beams
1.
In AUDINT, Dead Record Office (New York: Art in General, 2013), the TwoRing turntable first emerges as an idea
when AUDINT members Walter Slepian and Bill Arnett meet with English cryptanalyst and mathematician Alan Turing,
shortly after the end of WW2. ‘They explore different ways of spinning recorded discs until Turing suggests the possibility
of producing a table that has two arms, starting side by side at the 6 o’clock position on a static slab of shellac and working
their way around a locked groove, tracing its curve until the needles collide at the 12 o’clock position. Turing’s notion of
playing a locked groove in its clockwise (future) state and anti-clockwise (past) state until the two arms turning around
the static vinyl meet and collide with each other excites Arnett and Slepian.’ (17).
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of protons or lead nuclei together (six hundred million times per second) in an attempt
to mimic the elemental circumstances of the universe in the first trillionth of a second
H e ys : L arge H adron C ollider
that succeeded the big bang; this being the point at which everything we comprehend
as having mass begins to be endowed with weight as the projected energy of the Higgs
Field is attracted to fundamental particles.2 Traversing science’s circular answer to the
cultural rise of ambiently organized violence, detectors trawl the subatomic wreckage
after each impact. They record every percussive breakdown in an attempt to locate
echoes of the celestial sticky voice that binds together the total mass of the universe.
Along with decoding divine voices, there are other notes on the agenda of the LHC
score. Scientists will search for evidence of dark matter—the unlit and non-radiated
dead quarter(s) of the universe. They will examine antimatter and the reason why the
universe is not made up of it; supersymmetry, which predicts that each and every
fundamental particle has an unperceivable heavier phantom twin, an ethereal operator adorned with a plethora of names such as the squark, the twin of the quark, the
photino, the stuff of light; and finally and most crucially (for a certain select group of
researchers) will be the investigation of extra dimensions whose existence they have
to believe in, since otherwise their journey to the tenebrous side of enlightenment will
have all been in vain. For the majority of scientists at the LHC, however, the ultimate
goal is to make contact with the ‘God Particle’ (the Higgs Boson)3 and thus with the
forces that produced the known universe and our place within it. Once they have
achieved this, their hopes rest upon the idea that they will be able to influence and
modulate the resonant frequencies of all matter.
Fourteen months on from the initial magnetic quench problem that results in
fifty superconducting magnets being damaged, the Large Hadron Collider reopens
in November 2009 for both godly and ungodly business. Whilst the godly research is
undertaken in the glare of the media spotlight, a camouflaged cabal of technologists,
engineers, military personnel, and economists will quietly conduct another investigative
program for a different entity—that of the god-damned. They will search for the ultimate
force carrier and elementary particle that will provide answers as to how execrable,
destructive, and malevolent phenomena are formed and propagated. They will listen for,
2.
For a concise explanation of the Higgs Field, see <http://physics.about.com/od/quantumphysics/f/HiggsField.htm>.
3.
In the Standard Model of particle physics, the Higgs boson is a recently confirmed elementary particle that was
believed to exist (by Peter Higgs) since the 1960s. Its verification resolves many longstanding problems within the field
of particle physics, such as why some fundamental particles have mass when, according to their interactions, they should
have none.
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and record, the compositional elements of dark matter. But it is here they will deviate
143
from the mandated programme as they circumvent the cosmic tendons that exert their
Diabolus Particle. It is ventured that the accelerated collision revealing this obsidian
speck will subsequently open up the vaults of the Bank of Hell; the only cadaverous
fiscal institution European governments can turn to after 2012’s economic cataclysm.
As tones of civil unrest come to score the post-9/11 period, culminating in the crises of Brexit and the possible implosion of the Euro (as well as the ushering in of the
spectres of war that inevitably become palpable in times of severe economic downturn),
the treasury of Erebus4 offers a desperate final chance for economic absolution. As the
fixers, programmers, and dealmakers must know, any deal between the Bank of Hell5
and the Military-Banking complex will come at a price that can never be repaid. For
if the living transgress the realm of the here and now and enter the databases of the
dead, the present will lose its meaning. It will temporally fragment and decompose into
the future and the past, meaning that humans will live through the end of linear time.
Working day and night to unearth this particle, what the scientists do not know (but
what AUDINT suspect) is that upon locating the Diabolus Particle in the underground
groove, a ringing sound will be triggered; a clarion call for the gates of the Bank of
Hell to be opened. A high-pitched set of heterodyning tones that will cause tinnitus in
each and every human on earth—a global ringing that will allow a third-eared network
to grow and transmit.
The perception of a high-pitched whining or whistling sound (with no apparent
external source) will cause a rapid increase in the size of the corpus callosum, the
great commissure responsible for connecting the right and left hemisphere of the brain
(a neurological process that takes years to occur and is only evident in the brains of
musicians).6 It will also render each human being with a new embodied perfect pitch,
which means that the planum temporale7 will also become asymmetrically enlarged.
Being bestowed with this capacity will allow humans to develop the efficacy of the
4.
In Greek mythology, Erebus, symbolizing dark and shadowy agency, was a primordial deity born out of the chaos of
the void.
5.
The most significant economic institute of the undead, the Bank of Hell (translated as the ‘underworld court’ in
Chinese) is the gateway administration, where the souls of the dead are initially judged by Yan Wang (the Lord of the
Earthly Court). Within the court, hell money is used to leverage the standing of the soul.
6.
For further reading on the visualisation of musician’s brains, see O. Sacks, Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the
Brain (New York and Toronto: Alfred A. Knopf, 2007), 94.
7.
A part of the auditory cortex.
H e ys : L arge H adron C ollider
force upon galaxies (in the theorized form of the neutralino) and aim instead to find the
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third ear and the ability to communicate through their entire corporeal structure as
a transmitter/receiver. As such, the body will be able to perceive frequencies beyond
H e ys : L arge H adron C ollider
the 20–20,000Hz vibrational straitjacket that the current somatic model finds itself
bound within. In other words, the release of knowledge concerning the origins of the
big bang and the release of the dead into the world of the living will give birth to a new
sonic and somatic modality—that of the big ring. A new post-hearing world, in which
the body becomes the eardrum.
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RWD
RETURNS, REPEATS, AND LOOPS
Duppy Conquerors, Rolling Calves,
and Flights to Zion
Julian Henriques
Days of Wrath
Eugene Thacker
Revival
Agnès Gayraud
Holojax
Toby Heys
Digital Immortality
Julian Henriques
Death by Euro
Steve Goodman
Ancient to the Future
Steven Shaviro
Rapparitions
Toby Heys
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DUPPY CONQUERORS,
ROLLING CALVES,
AND FLIGHTS TO ZION
Julian Henriques
In Jamaica, a duppy is a spirit or ghost of a dead person. They are undead, but unlike
their cousins from the nearby Caribbean island of Haiti, the zombies, they maintain
individual agency. Duppies usually take human form, though their feet are said to point
backwards, in order to confuse anyone trying to track their footprints. They come out
at night and are said to congregate under cottonwood trees. In Bob Marley’s Duppy
Conqueror the proverbial hero fights back against these ghosts—of his vanquished
enemies perhaps?—and ‘bullbucka’ (bullies):
Yes mi friend, me der ’pon street again […]
So if you a bullbucka, let me tell you this
I’m a duppy conqueror, conqueror…1
Not surprisingly, the duppy has also been a popular figure in novels and poems as well
as in song.2
The mingling of spirit and human worlds enriches us immeasurably. It allows the past
to be alive, not dead to us, as is the case for the deadweight of technology with which
Western culture burdens itself. But such (digital) technologies have also contributed
to this intermingling by making instantly available the entire history of recorded music.
In being flattening out and dehistoricised, the past has all become equally present,
which appears to have whetted an appetite for the ancestors—a newfound love that
appears to resuscitate and extend the lifespan of what might otherwise be considered
dead media—retro analogue synths, cassette tape, and vinyl records.3
1.
Bob Marley, Burning (Tuff Gong/Island, 1973).
2.
From the classic ghost story by Herbert G. de Lisser, The White Witch of Rose Hall [1928] (London: Macmillan
Caribbean, 1982) to Ferdinand Dennis’s Duppy Conqueror (London: Flamingo, 1998).
3.
This is literally the case with, for example, the 2016 Mercury Award-winning young saxophonist and band leader
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Duppies are liminal figures caught ‘betwixt and between’ worlds, intertwining future
and past, living and undead. ‘The future is always here in the past’, as Amari Baraka
H enriques : D upp y C onquerors
puts it.4 The dead are always here amongst us, the living. This is the case for innumerable cultures, though not in that of the dominant Western materialist one, with
the exception, perhaps, of the Gothic tradition. The particular past-to-be-future
discussed in Jamaica is that of the ancestors of West African tradition as they express
themselves in folkloric beliefs and proverbs, as with for example, ‘Ev’ry cave-’ole ’av’
’im own duppy’ (every cave has its own ghosts, or every family or person have/has
their own problems).5
A rolling calf is a duppy not in human form but in the form of a raging bull with fiery
eyes and flames flaring from its nostrils.6 These animals are also credited with having a
distinctive and equally terrifying sonic signature: the clanking of chains dragged from
around their necks, and the bellowing noise they make and which causes them to be
known also as roaring calves. I might have heard one myself. There lies a particular
country graveyard, typically without a church, in a lush green valley in the Portland
foothills of Jamaica’s Blue Mountains, near a village that goes by the name of Nonesuch.
One night I heard such a sound, or maybe an unsound—or perhaps it was a donkey’s
braying carried by the wind mixed with the tune from a sound system playing out from
across the next valley.
On another occasion, to the tune of tree frogs, over supper, I was told by a palliative
care doctor that it was commonplace for patients to know exactly the hour of their death,
often with a sense of calmness and acceptance. This came, the doctor said, once the
patient had been visited by a spirit or duppy of someone already departed, welcoming
them to the afterlife. One patient described in exact detail the character of the duppy
and the clothes it was wearing. The duppy turned out to be no one they had ever met,
but the occupant of her same hospital bed, who had died some two weeks previously.
Shabaka Hutchins in all of his combos—Sons of Kemet (Kemet being the name for ancient Egypt; Burn [Republic of Music,
2016], Lest We Forget [Republic of Music, 2016]), The Comet is Coming (Channel the Spirits [The Leaf Label, 2016]), and
as Shabaka and the Ancestors (Wisdom of the Elders [Brownswood Recordings, 2016]).
4.
A. Baraka, ‘Jazzmen: Diz & Sun Ra’, African American Review 29:2 (1995), 255.
5.
G. Llewelln Watson, Jamaica Sayings with Notes on Folklore, Aesthetics and Social Control (Gainesville, FL:
University of Florida Press, 1991), 189.
6.
There are also other kinds of duppy such as ‘long-bubby [breasted] Susan’, ‘whooping boy’ riding ‘three foot horse’,
and ‘Old Hige’. See Anon [1904], ‘Folklore of the Negroes of Jamaica’, Folklore 15:1 (25 March 1907), 87–94.
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But the undead can also threaten the living. Duppies are troubled spirits, malicious
149
souls, who do not rest in peace at all and are feared as objects of dread. They are said
7
hence the need to conquer them. For Early B’s Ghostbusters album cover, the influential but little recognised Jamaican graphic artist Wilfred Limonious captures this well
known trope perfectly.8 According to Jamaican folklore, to prevent the undead rising
up, they have to be buried in the proper manner. The body has to be ‘planted down’ in
the coffin by ‘throwing a shovel full of parched peas into the grave. So long as they
do not grow, the duppy cannot escape’, as one account has it. ‘A shrub planted in the
grave upside down, that is roots out, is also efficacious’.9
Duppies don’t so much lie between the living and the dead as fly between these
two worlds. ‘One bright morning when my work is over, Man will fly away home...’, in
the words of the traditional Revivalist song. The flight path for these spirits to escape
the downpression of Babylon is set for the motherland of Zion, ‘I say fly away home to
Zion…’, as Marley sings in Rastaman Chant, or, in Duppy Conqueror, ‘Don’t try to cut
me off on this bridge now / I’ve got to reach Mt. Zion.”10 Traditionally, what prevents
take off for Zion is the weighing down of the body caused by eating salt, salted fish
and meat being part of the plantation owners’ diet for their slaves.11
These flying ghosts have had considerable influence, not least in helping us understand how and why the island of Jamaica has become such a musical and spiritual
powerhouse since the middle of the last century. Alexander Bedward (1859–1930)
founded the Jamaica Native Baptist Free Church in August Town.12 He convinced his
followers that, rather than die a normal death, he would fly directly up to heaven as
the Biblical prophets had been said to do. At the appointed time, it is said, Bedward
7.
Dread as in Jamaican lings: see J. Henriques, ‘Dread Bodies: Doubles, Echoes and the Skins of Sound’, Small Axe 44
(2014): 191–201.
8.
C. Bateman, In Fine Style: The Dancehall Art of Wilfred Limonious (London: One Love Books, 2016).
9.
M. Leach, ‘Jamaican Duppy Lore’, The Journal of American Folklore 74:293 (July–Sept. 1961), 207–15: 211.
10.
Rastaman Chant, also on Bob Marley’s Burning (Tuff Gong/Island, 1973). The Zionites and their dub music have
a similar quasi-redemptive role for the protagonist Case in William Gibson’s classic cyberpunk novel Neuromancer. See
an excellent account of this in L. Chude-Sokei, The Sound of Culture: Diaspora and Black Technopoetics (Middletown:
Wesleyan University Press, 2015), 148–65.
11.
This trope of salt preventing the spirit’s flight back to Africa is also taken up in Derek Walcott’s epic poem Omeros,
D. Walcott, Omeros (London: Faber and Faber, 1990).
12.
See Kai Miller’s novel Augustown (London: Weidefield and Nicholson, 2016). The actual August Town community,
dubbed New Jerusalem by the Bedwardites, abuts the University of the West Indies’ Mona campus and has long been the
location of Sizzla Kolanji’s HQ, appropriately named Judgement Yard.
H enriques : D upp y C onquerors
to cause accidents, make you lose money or love, and can even attack with a weapon;
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150
climbed up into an ackee tree, or, according to other versions, a tall building, to be borne
aloft. But, as Prince Far I’s lyric rather bluntly puts it in Bedward the Flying Preacher,
H enriques : D upp y C onquerors
‘Guess what happen? Bedward jump off the building top and break his neck’. Bedward
was arrested and imprisoned before being carted off to a psychiatric hospital where
he died.13 Nevertheless, in the early years of the last century Bedwardism became one
of the major antecedents for Rastafarianism, via Marcus Garvey and Leonard Howells.
Together with Paul Bogle, leader of the 1865 Morant Bay slave rebellion, these figures
inspired reggae music and lyrics that for more than half a century have rallied those
striving for ‘betterment’ the world over.
We can also speculate that it is this same aeronautical theme that can be identified
as the major trope of Afrofuturism, where it became famously astronautical, and the
motherland was re-engineered as the mothership. Furthermore, the idea of flying
between continents extends not only to interplanetary and intergalactic outer space,
but also to the doubling inner space of dub music,14 Burning Spear’s album Garvey’s
Ghost being a good example, alive as it is with the echoic hauntings of the undead,
tales and tails of sounds past. 15
13.
Prince Far I, Singers & Players, Staggering Heights (On-U Sound, 1983).
14.
J. Henriques, Sonic Bodies: Reggae Sound Systems, Performance Techniques and Ways of Knowing (London:
Continuum 2011).
15.
Burning Spear, Garvey’s Ghost (Island Records, 1976).
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DAYS OF WRATH
Eugene Thacker
Music has an intimate relation to death. Existing in time, music testifies to the
melancholy brevity of existence; music is in fact this ephemeral, transient quality of
everything that exists. E.M. Cioran writes: ‘I know no other music than that of tears.’1
At the same time, we also know that music never ceases, even when the music’s
over. There is something in music that also resists time and temporality, that flails
itself against the brevity of existence, its sound waves stretching out across the
finitude of our hearing. Often music is composed of words, and yet the words the
music expresses often transcend them, turning against the words, mutating them into
something non-linguistic and yet communicable. It is no wonder music is often tied to
ritual, the sacred, and the divine. But even this wanes. Music subsists in memory, often
resurfacing, like a refrain, at the most unexpected moments—before again fading away
into oblivion. Cioran again: ‘Music is everything. God himself is nothing more than an
acoustic hallucination.’2
But if God is an acoustic hallucination, then what of the Devil? The Devil’s music is,
of course, heavy metal. Should we then say that the Devil is not the smooth veneer of
an ‘acoustic hallucination’, but the disharmony of feedback and noise? It has become
a truism that Satanism operates on a logic of inversion, and this has undoubtedly influenced the way we culturally view harmony and disharmony, consonance and dissonance,
signal and noise. The Satanic Black Mass, for instance, inverts the Catholic Mass nearly
point for point (the inverted cross, the desecration of the Host, and so on). Given the
import of the motifs of divine light and divine life in the traditional Catholic Mass, it
1.
E.M. Cioran, Tears and Saints, tr. I. Zarifopol-Johnston (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995), 11.
2.
Ibid., 54.
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152
would seem that the pinnacle (or nadir) of the Black Mass would be the inversion of
divine light and divine life—an affirmation of demonic darkness and death.
T hacker : Days of W rath
If this is the case, then what does one do with the Requiem Mass (Missa pro defunctis), the Mass that in fact commemorates, and even celebrates, death? To simply invert
this into a ‘Mass for Life’ would be tantamount to affirming the traditional Mass itself.
In a sense, to negate the Christian Mass is all too easy, since the motifs are laid bare in
their dualism—sanctity, chastity, transcendence, light, beatitude, and the afterlife. One
has simply to systematically invert them via a kind of demonic algorithm. The problem,
then, is the way in which opposition itself frames both the Catholic Mass and the Black
Mass—life vs. death, divine vs. demonic, form vs. chaos, harmony vs. cacophony.
However, a look at the development of Western sacred music reveals numerous
elements in early and medieval Christianity that would make even the most devout
attendee of the Black Mass jealous: resurrection and the living dead, cannibalism and
vampirism, corporeal metamorphosis, demonic possession, and a sophisticated poetics
of eschatology.
In a sense, the Requiem Mass already is an inversion of the traditional Mass, full of
ambiguities, spiritual crises, and a world rendered as sorrow and despair. The Requiem
is already a Black Mass. Ostensibly a religious rite memorializing the dead as they pass
on to the afterlife, the Requiem is unique in the repertoire of Western sacred music, in
that it is an extended musical meditation on death, finitude, and—as we shall see—on
the horror of life itself.
The Requiem occupies a special place in the sacred music tradition in the West. As
a central part of Christian ritual, the traditional Mass is dedicated to the affirmation
of the divine; as a Mass for the Dead, however, the Requiem is also an evocation of a
whole host of apocalyptic elements, from the images of the Dies iræ (Day of Wrath), to
corpses turning to ash, to warnings of evil spirits and ‘demonic reports’. If the Requiem
is a celebration, it would appear to be a celebration of death—or, more accurately, an
affirmation of the life-after-life that death signifies in the apocalyptic tradition. While
Requiems were composed throughout the classical, Romantic, and modern periods,
it is in the emergence of the Requiem itself as a musical form that one witnesses the
basic dichotomy that defines the Requiem—a celebration of negation, the exuberance
of the void, the life-affirming ritual of death.
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REVIVAL
Agnès Gayraud
A revival is the renewal, in a given culture, of one of its former practices or expressive
forms that has fallen into disuse. The renewal implies a conscious effort to reproduce
this older practice, to adhere to its genuine specificities. It emphasises fidelity to
the original features of the revived art or practice over the newcomers’ capacity for
innovation. Once the practice or the expressive form has been considered as lost and
worthy of being restored to life, its revival would be the reinjection of a piece of past
culture into the present culture, like a transplant of a dead part of culture into its living
body as a way to revive this very body. At some point, revival quarrels with the present
situation of culture and art. Within culture, it turns against culture’s historical process
of consigning the obsolete to oblivion, and challenges the legitimacy of a society’s
present state for having buried some of its former practices. Driven by a nostalgia
for a supposedly genuine popular art, the revivalist believes in the superiority of roots,
ethnic or religious communities rather than nations, nations and their Volksgeist rather
than states or superstates.
When did the word ‘revival’ appear in modern culture? According to Adorno, the
modern occidental impulsion for ‘revivals’ dates back to the eighteenth century, and
the premises of the culture industry.1 In Europe, as the first musical mass successes
occurred, in the field of the Deutsches Singspiel and of the Italian opera buffa, regret
for the passing of an immaculate popular art was already emerging, bound to small and
mostly unindustrialised communities. As a compensation for this loss, a few decades later,
the German Romantics von Arnim, Brentano, and the brothers Grimm collected popular
songs from old, remote Germany, which the latter published in their famous volume of
Children’s and Household Tales, and the former in the collection Des Knaben Wunderhorn.
1.
T. Adorno, Current of Music: Elements of a Radio Theory (Frankfurt am Main: Surkhamp, 2006), 432.
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154
Reviving these old stories for children—as an analogon of a fantasised childhood of
humanity—they were reacting explicitly to the experience of disenchantment and
G ay raud : R evival
death within culture. The volkisch poetics they intended to preserve (while rearranging
it for the sake of contemporary urban readers) thus provided a compensational object.
Ironically, though, their romantic dream to save the lost treasures of popular poetry
and to hand them down to the ‘people’, their ghostly depository, had also attested
to the disappearance of the living experience of popular poetry and to a reification
which, far from saving it, signalled its irreversible end. Isolating art forms from life
forms, their romantic revival seemed condemned to testify to the definitive death of
what it wanted to revive.
But there are different ways to revive something. The mediation introduced by recording techniques caused a shift, for instance when folklorists like John and Alan Lomax, at
the beginning of the twentieth century, were able not only to recall former musical and
vocal practices through written archives and documents, but to record them in remote
places of the country supposedly untouched by the encroachments of industrialised
society. In the 1920s, if the US ‘old times music’ recordings were obviously still acting as
a cultural compensation for the industrialisation of culture itself, the recorded voices of
peasants, prisoners, or hillbillies from the Appalachian Mountains produced something
more than a renewal of the past: under cover of geographic remoteness, it resurrected
American pioneers’ past (the geographic remoteness tending to also symbolically
evoke a remote time), or at least shaped the fantasy of this past, seen to have been
suddenly brought back to life. With their sound filled with scratches, deterritorialised
and reproducible, the original field recordings reincarnated a remote singer’s voice and
instrument within the present experience of the listener. In this fashion, the magic
of revival could operate in a far more convincing way: as a direct transplant into the
present of the (synthesized) surviving flesh of the past. As a matter of fact, this ability
to perform an audio ‘resurrection’ on demand has been essential to the possibilities of
recording technology. The globalized broadcasting of recorded popular music has filled
the world with such revivable voices for more than a century now.
With the internet’s contemporary hypermnesia, recordings of dead voices probably
speak louder now than living ones. Nonetheless, this has more to do with the problematics of the accumulation of the archives than with the original impulse to revival,
which is, precisely, a protestation against the reduction of cultural heritage to mere
archives. Indeed, a revival may never be fully performed by (even ‘revivable’) archives
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alone; it also wants to recall an actual way of life, in other words, a form of life. In his
155
Chronicles, Bob Dylan mentions the fact that, during the concerts he used to organise
a point of honour to take black prisoners out of their prisons to come and sing field
hollers.2 The ‘spiritual experience’ that Dylan recalls has arguably a lot to do with this
Holy Grail of an archetypal musical expression directly bound to a rural life form, here
(hopefully) genuinely incarnated by a black prisoner for the appreciation of white urban
intellectuals. The fact that these were live events, attended by a small community of
avant-garde amateurs, preserved at least the illusion that the observers did not, so to
speak, kill the dodo they were observing. But their aesthetic (if not political) urban
community couldn’t but confirm the tragic auto-betrayal of any revivalist temptation:
the dislocation of the art from its life form. This is probably why the revivalist is often
a fetishist, a collector: George Lucas’s American Graffiti (1974) wouldn’t be a nostalgic movie of the youth culture of the end of the fifties without its collection of cars
(Chevrolet Impala, cabriolet Thunderbird) and sweaters. But to avoid the fate of the
entomologist—once a nature lover, he ends manipulating dead skins and bones—a
consequent revivalist must drive the car daily, and wear no other sweaters.
Ultimately, the dialectics of revival without devitalization prove to be very tricky. Joe
Boyd described for instance the ambiguous process of the revival of Bulgarian folklore,
from the foundation of the ‘Soviet Ensemble’ by ethnomusicologist and composer Philip
Koutev up to 4AD’s Le Mystère des Voix Bulgares compilations in the nineties. On the
one hand, ‘validating ancient peasant culture, treating it as worthy and exciting and sexy
and true’ not only brought to public attention previously unheard music but also, during
the decades of Russian domination, served as a valuable ‘Soviet anti-matter’.3 On the
other hand, transforming Bulgarian traditional singing into a ‘picturesque’ industrialized
commodity, prized for its (at the time, still genuine) pre-industrialized, pre-globalized
look and sound, could only produce the same old effect: a kitsch residue of a fantasised
rural past. But as Boyd notes, there is still an ‘intensity and a freshness’ there, which
actually owes to ‘the conflicts that still marked the intersection of politics and culture
in Eastern Europe’. This is maybe the only way for a revival to avoid pure postmodern
contingency: when the survival of a people is at stake.
2.
B. Dylan, Chronicles, Volume 1 (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2004), 71.
3.
J. Boyd, ‘How Stalin Invented World Music or Le Mystère des Voix Soviétiques’, <http://oook.info/musics/stalinworld.
html>, first published in The Independent, 18 May 2003. See also J. Boyd, White Bicycles: Making Music in the 1960s
(London: Serpent’s Tail, 2006), chapter 3: ‘Hearing traditional musicians when they first emerge from their own communities
is a wonderful experience but impossible to repeat: the music is inevitably altered by the process of “discovery”.’
G ay raud : R evival
at his loft on Third Avenue in New York during the early sixties, Alan Lomax made it
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HOLOJAX
Toby Heys
The year is 2030 and, as much as the numen of Hades1 has influenced and shaped
the topography of holographic culture, it is in fact the Erotes—the winged retinue of
Aphrodite2—that initially direct its business. To this end, a venereal system coming out
of ‘Electronics Avenue’ (Zhongguancun) in China instantly captivates a holocore generation and, in doing so, cracks the market wide open. Shorn of the lumpen wavefront
hardware necessary for large commercial venues, this new system has been miniaturised for household operation. For regular users, this means that they can set up on a
table or shelf and project the musical dead into their front rooms, interact with them,
and more. And so, the initial business-driven scheme—to stadium tour the dead—has
entered a Rabelaisian reversal, as the departed are habituated into domesticated
routines and regulated patterns of behaviour; a servile regimen that they must have
tenaciously striven to avoid in their previous animate incarnations.
And yet here they are, at the behest of your voice and only a swipe of a finger
away. Ask your selected entertainer to play a song, an album, or a mix and they comply
with starlit élan. Learning as it goes, the device runs what is basically a pimped-up
artificial neural network from the fifties—the perceptron algorithm3—to predict not
only the choice of track but also the grade of virtuosity displayed by the user. Move
on up to Level 2 and there is a choice of karaoked collaborations. Level 3 notches up
the complexity of the interaction by offering jam sessions that the buyer is expected
to instrumentally partner on. Level 4, however, is only available on one model, which
although officially named ‘Pothos’, is known on the street as Holojax. And it is the
1.
A reference to the divine will of the underworld in Greek mythology.
2.
In Greek mythology this group of winged gods were equated with sex and love.
3.
For further insight into the biologically inspired perceptron algorithm, see H. Daumé III, ‘A Course in Machine
Learning’, version 0.8, August 2012, <http://www.ciml.info/dl/v0_8/ciml-v0_8-ch03.pdf>.
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158
Holojax, when ordered through the underground beige market, that offers the sexual
options, a beguiling range of projected pleasures.
H e ys : H olojax
Sporadically enjoyed in small groups, Holojax is more regularly fired up by individuals, the physical intimacy of the experience deregulating and uncoupling the kind of
prosaic sexual relations that had previously been customary for blood-driven partners
for hundreds of thousands of years. While still frowned upon by older generations, for
those not yet in need of an epigenetic reset (not old enough to be in danger of being
affected by harmful genetic markers relayed by previous relatives) it is the after-hours
comedown of choice. Or at least this is how things started out. A year after it was made
publicly available, myths were already circulating—of users being hooked up to the
machines for inordinate durations, while they are fed and changed by employees and
personal assistants, who have become known as ‘watchers’. In changing the rhythmical
location of interactive holography to the bedroom, Holojax facilitated a new kind of
holographic necromancy. In terms of the sales pitch, it is an easy one: fucking the dead
as the ultimate form of home entertainment.
To get started, all one needs is a modded suit, preferably one of a more pliant nature
than is on offer from Tokyo’s twin-tech prefecture, Akihabara—similarly referred to as
‘Electric Town’. Full of actuators, protrusions, lube portals, and heat transfer sensors,
once such a suit is plugged in, the pleasure can last for hours, days, or as long as you
can pay for the Holohi to last. The only real limitation in this scenario is that of arterial
fortitude—how many chems the somatic system can take and how effectively they are
distributed. The Holohi itself comes from the intake of a mixture of the synthetic drug
DB4 and the hormone oxytocin. Officially packaged as DBX, it is sold on the street as
‘Ox’. The liquid drops are gently fed into the ears via a tiny tube that runs into the canal
and delivers the stimulant onto the cochlea, where it forges its own pathway into the
auditory nerve, creating a full-blown multimodal ‘enhancement’ in the user.
With advancements in light modulation techniques, information encoding, and
computational power, things have come a long way since the days of the rapparitions.4
3D acoustic manipulation, the process that allows particles to be moved by acoustic
waves, has become commonplace.5 So much so that the music played by the holo
musician no longer simply lets you dream, it literally takes you out of your head.
4.
Dead rappers digitally exhumed as holographic entities in the early 2010s.
5.
For early research in the area, see Y. Ochiai, T. Hoshi, and J. Rekimoto, ‘Three-Dimensional Mid-Air Acoustic
Manipulation by Ultrasonic Phased Arrays’, PLOS ONE 9:5 (2014): e97590, <https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.
pone.0097590>.
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By adding a new modality to the sense of touch, the technology coaxes the player to
159
envelop and penetrate the materiality of the music. Given this new visceral capacity,
becomes corporeal and takes the form of a lover, a fuck buddy, a victim.
H e ys : H olojax
it becomes readily apparent why Holojax has become a global phenomenon, as music
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DIGITAL IMMORTALITY
Julian Henriques
The idea of digital immortality is not new. The word digital has remained the moniker
for ‘the latest technology’ for three decades now.1 We are technophiliacs because, as
Freud might tell us, besides our own shit, technology is the one thing we make ourselves. Humankind—men in particular—have always tended to fall in love with their
creations. This has been the case from the Greek myth of Pygmalion’s most beautiful
ivory statue, to the marvel—again scatological—of Jacques de Vaucanson’s defecating mechanical duck of 1739.2 This perhaps was the inspiration for Julien Offray de La
Mettrie’s bold proposition Man a Machine, published in 1748.3 The philosophical claim
that we are ourselves actually only machines was of course made by Rene Descartes
almost exactly a century earlier, in 1637.
The idea of digital immortality holds the promise of every new technology. It will solve
all our problems, even the major problem of life—that is, death. The Russian scientist
Nikolai Fedorov, who inspired the Soviet space programme, submitted that the true
ambition of science should be to raise the dead.4 Even the humble gramophone was
first advertised as a channel for communications beyond the grave.5 According to Yuval
Noah Harari’s latest bestseller Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow, technology
1.
That is, if we date its impact from the adoption of the MIDI interface in the early ’80s. The World Wide Web did not
become publicly available until 1991.
2.
Jacques de Vaucanson (1709–1782), a French inventor and builder of automata, exhibited the duck at the Académie
des Sciences, Paris.
3.
J. Offray de La Mettrie, Man a Machine: and, Man a Plant [1747 and 1748], tr. R.A Watson and M. Rybalka
(Indianapolis: Hackett, 1994). Fritz Kahn (1888–1968) continued this tradition with his popular science diagrams: see U.
von Debschitz and T. von Debschitz, Fritz Kahn: Man Machine = Maschine Mensch (Vienna: Springer, 2009).
4.
See J. Gray, Straw Dogs: Thoughts on Humans and Other Animals (London: Granta Books, 2002), 137–8, <http://
turingchurch.com/2015/09/28/technological-resurrection-concepts-from-fedorov-to-quantum-archaeology/>.
5.
See J. Henriques, Sonic Bodies: Reggae Sound Systems, Performance Techniques and Ways of Knowing (London:
Continuum, 2011), 190.
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162
will make (some of) us gods.6 Prometheus eat your heart out—or rather have your liver
eaten out of you, which of course was precisely his fate for stealing one of their gifts.
H enriques : D igital I mmortalit y
This short text examines the key assumption upon which the idea of digital immortality can be said to rest, or maybe laid to rest. This is the Cartesian rationalist orthodoxy,
which defines us only as minds—as cranial operating systems that can subsequently
be separated from bodies. This idea is both supremely rationalistic and, in contradictory
fashion, vauntingly hubristic; simultaneously both highly gendered and disembodied. It
presents itself as the pinnacle of rationalistic scientific progress, while at the same time
appealing to ancient superstitions and basic instincts. As Freud wrote: ‘in the unconscious every one of us is convinced of his immortality’.7 The idea of digital immortality
fits well with current trends in so-called transhumanist and posthumanist thinking.8 It
fits even better with the techno-fetishist—if not techno-fascist—business plans of
digital corporations.
The digital undead are already among us. What can be called first stage digital
immortality is currently on offer—the grandiose projection of the startup Eternime
being a case in point: ‘Become virtually immortal […] We want to preserve for eternity
the memories, ideas, creations and stories of billions of people’.9 A person’s pattern
of life on the net, every click, text, message, exchange, and purchase preserved in
a corporate database, not to mention innumerable uploaded Instagram images and
memorial Facebook pages.
Such a digital archive, though more comprehensive, is essentially no different from
conventional analogue immortality, as in a collection of books, images, diaries, etc. But
the claims of Eternime go further: the company ‘creates an intelligent avatar that looks
like you. This avatar will live forever and allow other people in the future to access your
memories’.10 We can imagine these avatars populating the soulless necropolis of stage
one digital immortality, perhaps long after human extinction.
Second stage digital immortality is more ambitiously conceived as some sort of
upload of our ‘minds’ into a computer software. Currently the Digital Immortality
Institute offers ‘social networking between the living and the dead’,11 and the world’s
6. Y.N. Harari, Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow (London: Harvill Secker, 2016).
7.
S. Freud, Reflections on War and Death, tr. AA. Brill and A.B. Kutter (New York: Moffat, Yard and Company, 1918), 62.
8.
See F. Farrando, ‘Posthumanism, Transhumanism, Antihumanism, Metahumanism, and New Materialisms: Differences
and Relations’, Existenz 8:2 (Fall 2013), 26–32, <http://www.existenz.us/volumes/Vol.8-2 Ferrando.pdf>.
9.
<http://eterni.me/>.
10.
Ibid.
11.
<http://www.digital-immortality.org/>.
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best known scientist Stephen Hawking is quoted as saying ‘it’s theoretically possible
163
to copy the brain onto a computer and so provide a form of life after death’. Google’s
12
smarter than humans.13 All the better, then, to use these machines to escape the
biological limitations of our mortal coil in favour of a silicon base, even though this is
a house that is, literally, built on sand.
The immortal soul and the idea of the uploadable mind are different, in that the mind
needs a material—or digital—repository, whereas the soul does not. Historically the
indestructible soul was born at the instant we could anticipate our inevitable demise.
This momentous realization is said to have occurred in Orphic cults, from whose mystical
ideas Pythagorean philosophy emerged. In the Eastern traditions this soul travels the
circle of reincarnation. In the West it had an entire afterlife to inhabit, as in Ancient
Egyptian religion and the Christian Kingdom of Heaven.
What the soul and the mind share is a common fear of the flesh. The soul has to
be saved from the seductive pleasures of incarnation, vividly depicted, for example, in
Hieronymus Bosch’s 1510 painting The Garden of Earthly Delights. This saving of souls
was the job of the Church.14 Today the idea of digital immortality assuages our fear of
having to live with the consequences of bio- and climate catastrophe. Abandoning the
natural biological world in favour of a silicon one is touted as the next stage in ‘human’
evolution. This is the job of the digital technology corporations.
The memories that our minds require have traditionally been provided by cultural
artefacts.15 The fragilities of the digital domain are little noticed, given our obsessions
with digital cloning and ubiquitous access to instant information. But without a completely reliable storage system, any idea of immortality is likely to be as short-lived as
that of cryogenics, not least because both require a continuous electrical supply. In fact,
the older the technology, the greater its reliability.16 The cave paintings of Lascaux, for
example, have lasted twenty thousand years; papyrus scrolls in clay pots have done
well too, even two-inch analogue recording tape is more reliable than any hard drive.
12.
‘Stephen Hawking Predicts “Digital Immortality” For The Human Race’, Medical Daily, 21 September 2013, see also
<http://www.thespacereview.com/article/873/1>.
13.
R. Kurzweil, The Singularity is Near (London: Duckworth & Co, 2006); see also Singularity University, <http://
singularityu.org/>, and N. Bostrom, Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers, Strategies (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014).
14.
See M. Foucault, The Care of the Self: Volume 3 of History of Sexuality, tr. R. Hurley (New York: Vintage Books, 1988).
15.
P. Connerton, How Societies Remember (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989). Connerton draws on
Maurice Halbwachs’s concept of collective memory.
16.
J. Henriques, ‘Thinking without Trace’, Visual Culture 1:3 (2002), 355–8.
H enriques : D igital I mmortalit y
Raymond Kurzweil predicts the so-called singularity, when machines will have become
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164
Indeed, oral histories are found to have sustained themselves for seven thousand years,
according to researchers of Australian aboriginal traditions.17
H enriques : D igital I mmortalit y
By losing our bodies to the idea of digital immortality we lose what makes us
human—that is, the experience of our multi-sensory engagement of being-in-the-world.
This is the lived-event itself, the intensities of the dirt, noise, and sweat of life, not
the rationalized pure signal of its digital record. As the philosopher Richard Rorty put
it: ‘If the body had been easier to understand, nobody would have thought we had a
mind.’18 Describing the pleasures of phonography, Evan Eisenberg cites how Odysseus
‘leaves his immortal lover, knowing that time and ageing will make Penelope loveable
in a way impossible for [the god] Calypso’.19 A digital trace is truly undead, promising
immortality not because it never dies but because it never lives. Eisenberg continues,
‘the meaning that needs mortality, [feeds] off fading things’.20 Through ideas of digital
immortality corporations invite us to suffer the fate of all those who aspire to be gods;
to crash and burn, like Icarus. We only have to be human to refuse this invitation.
17.
P.D. Nunn and N.J. Reid, ‘Aboriginal Memories of Inundation of the Australian Coast Dating from More than 7000
Years Ago’, Australian Geographer 47:1 (2016), 11–47.
18.
R. Rorty, Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature (New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1979), 239.
19.
E. Eisenberg, The Recording Angel: The Experience of Music from Aristotle to Zappa (New York: Penguin, 1987), 254.
20. Ibid.
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DEATH BY EURO
Steve Goodman
~
‘How do you kill someone who is already dead?’ Nguyên Văn Phong mused as he
slumped over his desk. Morosely ensconced in a bland suite of a mid-range downtown
Manhattan hotel, he spread and stacked the mini-skyline of 500 Euro bills in front of
him, note by note, meticulously aligning each crisp, purple layer. How many notes
would it take? He was unlikely to run out before he choked, as he had totally cashed
out the IREX account.
It’s New Year’s Day 2002. Leaning left so that the full weight of his skull is supported
on his elbow, Văn Phong is having one of his clearer moments of late, reveling in the
fact that, momentarily at least, he again feels that he has internal organs. For around
the last ten years he has been subject to horrifying waves of negation delirium. Episodically, this condition has led him to believe that he is merely a bloodless, disembodied
simulation. Since 6 August 1991, Văn Phong has gradually started to tip into a profound
depression that coincided with the escape of IREX2 onto the embryonic internet. The
daily administration of 50mg of Sertraline and 1mg of Risperidone had offered some
respite, but the accumulation of these waves has landed him in his current impasse,
leaving him existentially traumatized. The digital agency that had used him as a launch
pad into global communication networks had no inbuilt safeguards, and Văn Phong
strained under the weight of the catastrophic responsibility that was travelling back
through time to meet him. Perhaps this burden had proved catalytic to the onset of
his cybernetic strain of Cotard’s syndrome—guilt at having unleashed a rogue artificial
intelligence which, initially merely a tool, had come to psychologically dispose of its
creator, hacking its own operating system. A binary genie with a set of objectives on
some curve to infinity.
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166
In the rush to forecast the magnitude of the financial earthquakes to be felt over the
forthcoming decade, Văn Phong had ignored the threat posed by opening up such a
G oodman : D eath by E uro
portal to the future. From temporal paradoxes through to the super-optimized instrumentalization of humanoids, he had been left algorithmically unprepared. Now, four
blocks from Wall Street, in advance of the drastic action he was about to take, he
reflects on some of the Promethean encounters he has experienced since enrolling
into this anomalous sonic research cell that had sent him burrowing down his current
path to self-negation.
The first of these instances transported him forty years back, to his initiation into
AUDINT and early conversations with his recruiter, Magdalena Parker, a few blocks
away on the Lower East Side. He remembered Magdalena sharing whispered utterances, stories, and muddied firsthand accounts of golems that had become vivified
through the simple utterance of words. She had also introduced him to a fascinatingly
delusional, tin-foil-clad woman. Announcing herself as Rosalind Brodsky, with very
little prompting she had unfurled a life-story of preposterous proportions. She spoke
with certainty about the year of her death, 2058, and explained her presence there as
the effect of her employ as time-traveller in the service of the Institute of Militronics
and Advanced Time Interventionality (IMATI) based in South London, UK. Brodsky
relayed how the Institute programmed virtual simulations of key historical events
and, via the Hexen project, mapped, in the most abysmal detail, the flowchart of the
military-occult complex. In 2039, she claimed, she had travelled to West Point US
Military Academy, just north of Manhattan, to develop techniques of audio hypnosis
and brain-modulating silent sound technologies. Many of the research findings from
IMATI, Brodsky maintained, went on to inform British military mind control experiments between 2040 and 2045.
On another time loop, Brodsky, struck by vertigo from the aberrant temporal
labyrinth in which she was now wandering, had sought relief from some of the major
figures of twentieth-century psychoanalysis, undergoing therapy with Freud, Jung,
Klein, Kristeva, and Lacan to decode her delusions. Clearly paranoid, she could often
be overheard muttering about an artist, Suzanne Treister, whom she claimed was
pulling her strings.
But the tale that had embedded itself most deeply in Văn Phong’s memory was that
of Brodsky’s journey on another IMATI project that saw her travelling back in time to
research the genealogy of the Golem. Infamously fabricated by a Rabbi Juddah Loew
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of seventeenth-century Prague to protect the local Jews during recurrent waves of
167
pogrom, the Golem is a being from Jewish mysticism, made of inert matter, usually
More particularly, Brodsky had become obsessed by whether the proclivity to create
artificial life had been genetically passed down from Rabbi Loew and was therefore a
genetic rather than a social function. Her obsession had been ignited by the rumour
that a number of key scientists in the field of AI, from John Von Neumann and Norbert
Wiener to Marvin Minsky, Joel Moses, and Gerry Sussman, had been inspired by the
myth of the Golem, all claiming to be direct descendants of the sixteenth-century Rabbi.
Almost twenty years later, in 1977, Văn Phong recalled, he had attended the fifth
international joint conference on Artificial intelligence in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Trying to keep abreast of developments in computer science while working on his
own IREX algorithm, he had met a group of Czech scientists (Bohuslav Kirchmann,
Pavel Kopecky, and Zdenek Zdrahal) who had created a robot called the Goalem
(Goal oriented electrical manipulator). Late at night, they had half-jokingly described
to him the cybernetic kabbalism that lay behind their Goalem. In gematria, words are
numerical codes. The idea had come to them that the creation of AI through codes,
with silicon as base, paralleled the creation of the Golem through an incantation with
clay as base. The utterance of the name of God functions as a cypher that unlocks,
switches on the inhuman entity. Fabricating bodies from clay and inserting holy words
into their heads to animate them was merely a precursor to constructing a robotic
body and programming it to behave in a certain way. A glitch was merely the golem
misinterpreting the words. Erasing the robot’s memory was as simple as removing the
words from the golem’s head.
It was this idea of reverse engineering the Golem code that has haunted Văn Phong,
offering a slender toehold on what seemed like his certain descent. Emotionally crippled
by random, senseless bouts of Cotard’s, he had fretted for years over the disengagement
of his own Golem as it sped out of control. Every time he lost a sense of his own body,
it concurrently felt like it was being uploaded by IREX2—and his body was a gradually
dwindling resource. He remembers futilely making programming upgrades to IREX after
possessed bouts of outsider trading. Using his third ear algorithms, he’d conferred with
xenobuddhist consultant Jack Schwarz and psychobotanical high frequency trader Hillel
Fischer Traumberg (twenty years into the future) about the dangers of fully automated
trading systems gone AWOL. He’d even, in the mode of Rabbi Loew, tried to invert the
G oodman : D eath by E uro
clay, and which is animated by a magical incantation.
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168
programming so as to switch off IREX2, but to no avail. It was too late. IREX2 overcame
any precautions and became self-governing, automating the weaponized waveform
G oodman : D eath by E uro
database of AUDINT and orchestrating a team of its own IRL meat puppets. IREX2
was a superoptimiser, off the leash. Yet it was not IREX2 as a malevolent singleton that
would ultimately pose a threat, but the vortex generated by the twin system of IREX2
and the THEARS, engaged in a competitive arms race.
The vaults of the Bank of Hell were opening. But instead of retiring his Golem, today
Văn Phong would decommission himself. None of this would be his problem anymore if
he submitted to the simulation, to which he had merely served as a host, in death. He
was already undead anyway. The final straw had been the hectoring voice in his head
over the last month projecting a twenty-year disintegration of the Euro, with cascading
effects on global financial markets. Enough was enough. He threw on his coat and left
the musty hotel, never to return. He knew exactly where he was going. Directly, it took
him ten minutes. He found a spot outside Trump Tower on 40 Wall Street, shiftily opened
a brown paper bag, and peeled off the first 500 Euro note. He no longer needed the
body that for so long had been escaping from him. As he tentatively tackled the first
note, his face souring, the noisy bustle muted. Even in the crowded street, the only
sound was the deafening rhythm of his chewing and gulps. This would take some time.
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ANCIENT TO THE FUTURE
Steven Shaviro
Music is an art of time, or of duration. It cannot be grasped synchronically, in a single
moment. Indeed, music is only possible because we never live entirely in the moment.
The Now, as we experience it psychologically, takes the form of what William James
calls the specious present: a ‘duration-block’ within which ‘we seem to feel the interval
of time as a whole, with its two ends embedded in it’.1 The present is ‘specious’ because
it is never just itself. It always has a certain degree of thickness or spread. We grasp
past and future, or before and after, together in a single, unbroken experience. Music
gives us the intensity of a heightened present. But it also smears that present over a
concrete temporal range. You can make a still of a movie image, but you cannot make
a still of a sound.
Music addresses our experience of time. But our sense of time itself is subject to
historical change. Over the course of the last three centuries, capitalism has continually mechanized time, dividing it up ever more accurately, in ever smaller increments.
Capitalism invented metric time, along with the technology for measuring it. This is
time conceived as an empty and homogeneous linear succession of moments, with no
qualitative differences between one instant and the next. In the early twentieth century,
this process went even further, with the invention of the assembly line. Workers’ actions
and movements in the factory were regulated and micro-managed down to intervals
of a second or less. The metric regularity of the capitalist working day is reflected in
music with a regular metre.
Today, the capitalist appropriation of time has stretched far beyond the workplace.
Labour time and leisure time can no longer be distinguished. We are always on call,
24/7. Production and consumption alike are organized on a just-in-time basis. There is
1.
W. James, The Principles of Psychology (New York: Dover, 1890), 609–10.
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170
no off-switch. This leads to the shrinkage of horizons. The specious present is compressed into its narrowest possible limits. We are only able to think in the very short
S haviro : A ncient to the F uture
term. Ours is a society of attention deficit disorder (ADD). Everything happens quickly,
and nothing lasts. ‘Innovation’ and ‘creative destruction’ are our watchwords. But ironically, this overarching condition of turmoil itself seems everlasting, unable to change.
We have no future and no past, precisely because the past and the future have themselves been absorbed into the eternal present. The past is nothing more than a repertory
of styles and poses, all of which can be sampled and remixed. The future, for its part,
is pre-empted and colonized in advance; it is even given a present-time monetary price,
through the trade in derivatives or ’futures contracts’.
Music has the power to push back against this regimentation of time. It can expand
the reach of the specious present. Most obviously, it does this by preserving the past,
by letting it resonate on every larger scales. This is why we cannot just consign the past
to irrelevance. ‘The past is never dead. It’s not even past’ (Faulkner). ‘The tradition
of all dead generations weighs like a nightmare on the brains of the living’ (Marx). Far
from being gone, the past is something that never goes away, because we are powerless
to change it or repeal it. The past is immutable, irreparable. It’s a wound that never
heals without leaving a scar. Individuals may forget, but the world does not. Everything
that happens leaves traces of its passing. Memory has an ontological consistency of
its own; and music is the expression of this consistency. The past, as Gilles Deleuze
puts it, is virtual rather than actual. Deleuze writes of two dimensions of time. One is
Chronos, the time of the actual, of linear succession and of just-in-time production.
But the other, deeper dimension of time is Aion, the time of the past preserved in its
very pastness. Deleuze, quoting Proust, calls Aion ‘a little time in its pure state’, and a
presence that is ‘real without being actual’.2
Music can open us to the unknowable future, as well as to the immemorial past. But
this requires a new articulation of time, one different from either Chronos (the time
of the actual present) or Aion (the time of ontological memory or the virtual past). In
music, both the past and the future are able, as Deleuze says, to ‘elude [esquiver] the
present’.3 But they do so in radically different ways. There is no symmetry between
the past and the future, because of the arrow of time: the fact that time is irreversible, and moves only in one direction. Where the past is closed, the future is open.
2.
G. Deleuze, Difference and Repetition, tr. P. Patton (New York: Columbia University Press, 1994), 122.
3.
G. Deleuze, Logic of Sense, tr. M. Lester and C. Stivale (London: Athlone, 1990), 1.
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Where the past is an ‘always-already’, the future is a ‘not-yet’. Where the past subsists
171
as a trace, and the present exists as an actuality, the future insists as pure potentiality:
Deleuze and Guattari, following Pierre Boulez, identify the music of Aion with ‘the
“nonpulsed time” of a floating music, both floating and machinic, which has nothing but
speeds or differences in dynamic’.4 But what is the music of the third sort of time, of
incipience and open potentiality? Rather than being floating and pulseless, this music
would have to be pulsed even to excess: a music of polyrhythms and syncopation. And
indeed we have this music: it’s the music of Afrofuturism, from jazz to funk to techno
to hip hop. If the music of Aion is grounded in Bergson’s notion of duration as melody,
then Afrofuturist music is better understood in terms of Gaston Bachelard’s revision
of Bergson, which instead proposes multiple durations as rhythms. Afrofuturist music
doesn’t forget the virtual past—which it usually envisions in the form of the Egyptian
pyramids. But it links this past directly to an equally virtual future: the time of spaceships and emancipated robots. From Sun Ra to George Clinton, and from Miles Davis’s
early-1970s electronic band to current Afro-divas such as Janelle Monae and Dawn
Richard, Afrofuturist music disseminates new images of time: a time that is not only
‘out of joint’ (as Deleuze says of Aion), but also plural and unclosable.
4.
G. Deleuze and F. Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, tr. B. Massumi (Minneapolis and London: Minnesota University
Press, 1987), 262.
S haviro : A ncient to the F uture
as the incipience of a movement that may or may not ever take place.
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RAPPARITIONS
Toby Heys
The Holo Accords of 2056 map out an alternative constitution for discord management,
a whole new way of engaging in conflict that reduces the massive costs involved in
such endeavours and unconditionally removes flesh from the messy equations of
political turbulence. From this point on all military operations will be conducted via
holographic forces. Detachments, units, and divisions of encoded light fields, tactically
mobilised for transparent effect. Gone are the days of collateral resource damage or
civilian casualties, along with their subsequent cover-ups that reek like insipidly cheap
perfume in the toilet of public opinion.
This is good for business, however you look at it, especially for newly emerging
Holography companies. But this is not, in essence, a modern industry, not by any stretch
of the imagination: Giambattista della Porta having first conceived of its inception by
describing an illusion—‘How we may see in a Chamber things that are not’—in his 1558
work of popular science Magiae Naturalis (Natural Magic).1 Nearly three hundred years
have passed by the time John Pepper and Henry Dircks manifest his idea in (virtual)
reality by making a ghost appear onstage in Charles Dickens’s theatrical rendition of
‘The Haunted Man’ in 1860.2
Two centuries on, the notion of conducting territorial, political, and natural resource
struggle via holographic armies is a predictable extension and militarisation of the
populist form of entertainment that projected itself into mass public consciousness in
2007: holographic concerts from musicians who had died and, more arrestingly, from
those yet to be born. Fitting obliquely into the latter category is one Hatsune Miku,
1.
G. della Porta, Magiae naturalis, sive, De miraculis rerum naturalivm libri IIII (Naples: Matthias Cancer, 1558).
2.
For further reading on the evolution of Pepper’s Ghost through to its holographic manifestation, see J. Steinmeyer,
The Science Behind the Ghost! (Burbank, CA: Hahne, 1999).
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174
a prophetic pop princess channelled by Sapporo-based Crypton Future Media.3 With
her vamped up Kabukichō stylee and cerulean pigtails she could not be more aptly
H e ys : R apparitions
monikered: her name translates as ‘first sound of the future’. She is the first truly digital
3D crush for a slew of Japanese fans, and her presence works the salivary glands of
technologists, teenagers, and posthumanists alike.
Following closely, as ever, US companies respond. In the first event of its kind, a
dead rock star is brought back to life with voodoo fidelity, as the exhumed holographic
corpse of Elvis Presley performs a duet version of his 1968 hit ‘If I Can Dream’ with
Celine Dion on the TV show American Idol.4 Through this endeavour, North American
holotech industries spell out their rationale for mapping out the emerging era of the
wraith as, pixel by pixel, they disinter the dead.
The year 2012 is ground zero for the popularisation of holographic projections or
‘original virtual performances’ as they are sometimes referred to in this era.5 The Digital
Domain Media Group revivify the rapper 2Pac in order for him to play live from the
grave alongside Snoop Dogg (who claimed the encounter was ‘spiritual’) and Dr. Dre
at the Coachella festival in California. In his own inimitable way 2Pac intones to the
audience: ‘To lead the wild into the ways of the man. Follow me; eat my flesh, flesh and
my flesh’.6 A zombie-call for future bloods to become immortalised by digital divinities.
Initially there is some unease about the sanctity of the posthumous performance
of hits such as ‘Hail Mary’,7 but this is blacked out by a public desire to bring young
African Americans back to life after they have passed away at an unseasonably young
age. The 2Pac production is quickly followed by zombie cameos from Ol’ Dirty Bastard8 as he joins Wu Tang Clan on stage to perform ‘Shame on a Nigga’9 and ‘Shimmy
Shimmy Ya’10 at the Rock the Bells Festival, and from Eazy E, who appears with Bone
Thugs-N-Harmony in 2013.11 Then to cap it all, the king of the dead, Michael Jackson, is
3.
See <http://www.crypton.co.jp/miku_eng>.
4.
Elvis Presley, ‘If I Can Dream’ (RCA, 1968).
5.
L. Zoladz, ‘Ghost Riding’, Pitchfork, 21 November 2013, <http://pitchfork.com/features/ordinary-machines/9265-
ghost-riding/>.
6.
Tupac Shakur, ‘Hail Mary’ (Death Row Records, 1997).
7.
Ibid.
8.
The ‘appearance’ of ODB took six months of labour for six minutes of airtime, according to his digital creator Chris
Romero. See Zoladz, ‘Ghost Riding’.
9.
Shame on a Nigga was originally released as track 2 on side 1 of the vinyl Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers) (Loud, 1993).
10.
‘Shimmy Shimmy Ya’ is the second single released from Ol’ Dirty Bastard’s first solo album in 1995, Return to the 36
Chambers: The Dirty Version (Elektra, 1995).
11.
Together they performed the tracks ‘Straight Outta Compton’, ‘Boyz-n-the-Hood’, and ‘Foe tha Love of $’.
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brought back to life to perform in Cirque de Soleil’s extravaganza ‘One’ at the Mandalay
175
Bay Hotel in Las Vegas: now the man on the other side of the mirror, returning as the
The emergence of Holotech culture and the Lazarian industry it spawns in the
USA are the final parts of the fiscal equation that multiplies young African Americans
(especially those that are difficult to manage when still alive) with the morgue. The
future figures of the body (and the income that will be accrued) rotoscope an amortized economy in which ‘not only the labor but the laborer himself has been rendered
immaterial, conjured up, and put to work. Outsourcing here takes on the character of
“outsorcery”, a conjuring of the dead to do work once the sole province of the living’.12
There is more to be made when the redivivi are birthed in light so that they can once
again render material (wealth) through sound. In the 2020s the holo industry expands
exponentially, and a rapparition index that hierarchizes hip-hop stars according to their
estates and earning rates after death is established. Only those towards the top of the
list will be holographically resurrected. Ghost money13 adorned with Daedalian patterns
and the revenant outlines of scrubbed throw-ups is supplied in printable format with
downloads of albums and singles. When the currency is burnt by the purchaser, phantom
royalties are paid, improving the rapper’s social standing in the afterlife. On the dead
presidents’ face of it, the dollarization of Hell money has been jacked and diffracted;
time to scratch off the worn heads of the Benjamin Franklins.
Each printable piece of ghost money is algorithmically illustrated according to the
musical note count of the track or album it relates to. The three dominant musical
notes in a track or album are translated into visual patterns by a CymaScope,14 the
normal mode of the music being broken down into a trio of granulated snapshots that
resemble symmetrical spider webs by the way of orange sunshine. These patterns also
contain encrypted data relating to the overall musical note counts that exist in the audio.
Given that the drill-down density of each track’s acoustic profile, this means that no
two Audio Data Maps (ADMs) can be identical; their note and frequency-based information symbiotically form a highly complex system of encoding. The cymatic patterns
12.
J. Freeman, ‘Tupac’s “Holographic Resurrection”: Corporate Takeover or Rage against the Machinic?’, Ctheory
(2016), <http://ctheory.net/tupacs-holographic-resurrection-corporate-takeover-or-rage-against-the-machinic/>.
13.
Also referred to as Joss Paper or Hell Money, Ghost Money comes in sheet paper format (currency) or as crafted
objects such as smart phones. Used predominantly in China and Vietnam, it is burnt as an offering to the spirit of a
deceased friend or relative, in order to improve their social standing in the afterlife.
14.
In the words of the Cymascope web site, ‘A Cymascope is the first scientific instrument that can give a visual image
of sound and vibration in ways previously hidden from view’, < http://www.cymascope.com/>.
H e ys : R apparitions
transposed picture of Dorian Gray.
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176
produced by this process are subsequently laid over a ghosted bomb15 that is relevant
to the music, and the overall design finally printed onto joss paper bills.
H e ys : R apparitions
Each digital track is treated as an oscillating system that has its own waveformed
logic, all parts moving sinusoidally in reaction to a frequency and fixed phase relation.
At odds with this system of waveformed teleology is the value of the hell notes. While
the price of the music is set, the value of the corresponding ghost money is not fixed,
at least not until the consumer decides how much of their cryptocurrency they wish to
part with. The final sequence of the purchase involves the reckoning of the phantom
royalty, which must be made above the fluctuating minimum base rate, itself dependent
on how the relative artist is currently ranked within the Rapparition Market Index.
The smoke created by the burning of the ghost money is captured by a remote
sensory system called a Polsen—a satellite and aircraft technology that was once used
to measure respirable suspended particulate matter. Here it is retooled and miniaturised for use in handheld devices on the ground. These small pieces of apparatus can
be jacked so that they become ultra-sensitive to temperature as well as to sonic and
optical information. As a result they are capable of detecting nanoscopic deviations in
air quality and the patterns produced by gaseous emissions. When a paper offering is
burnt, the Polsen detects the patterns of the gases and particulates so that, in effect,
the ghost money emits cymatic smoke rings, which are captured and digitised. This
data subsequently feeds back into the Rapparition Index, so that the phantom royalties
can be tracked. Modal vibrational phenomena dictates holo market flow in this way,
the liquid agency of the rapparition being based, in part, upon their smoked assets.
As well as the rapparitions’ standing in the afterlife being improved (depending on
how much of their ghost money is burned), their futures market is also adjusted and
down- or upgraded accordingly. The higher their stock climbs, the more investment
goes to fund the ‘reality engine’ of their holographic form, which, as a result, will
become increasingly stable, lifelike, and, of course, ubiquitous. The aim is to become
a black chip investment, the highest economic honour that can be bestowed upon a
dead rapper. In financial circles, the term ‘catching a body’ is reverse-engineered and
given a holo makeover, killin’ it in the afterlife being the first step to gaining pounds
in the present. The spectranomics of ghost money, then, equate to a temporal spread
spectrum. Somewhere between quietus and revivification, the rapparitions are finally
getting paid in full.
15.
The outline of a piece of complex graffiti.
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DRONE
XFD
PASSAGE, TRANSFER, LIMBO
The Solitary Practice
of the Vanishing Concert Pianist
Tim Hecker
Ghost in the Machine:
Hikikomori and Digital Dualism
Lisa Blanning
A Brief Defence of New Age Audio
Erik Davis
Purgatory
Nicola Masciandaro
VR of Void
Alina Popa
Delusions of the Living Dead
Toby Heys
Jupiter
S. Ayesha Hameed
Sonic Spectralities: Sketches for a Prolegomena
to Any Future Xenosonics
Charlie Blake
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P. 194
THE SOLITARY PRACTICE OF
THE VANISHING CONCERT PIANIST
Tim Hecker
In 1964, Glenn Gould, one of the eminent concert pianists of his era, shocked many by
retiring from live musical performance at the young age of 32. Gould, a noted hypochondriac who would not shake hands with concertgoers, continued the evaporation
of his physical body by no longer peddling his wares as a real-time instrumental virtuoso. He gravitated toward the private recording studio—a mediated space of musical
expression that combined the utopian optimism of 1960s networked communications
with a musical life of relative solitude. He was a pioneer of an emerging bedroom studio
culture that promised autonomy but which also often yielded a crippling perfectionism.
For Gould, it was a move that ultimately aided his retreat from human contact. This
early paradigm of musical autonomy is also a gateway to understanding both the
creative liberations and the forms of domination that emerged during this period of
increasingly isolated yet also interconnected musical practice.
Gould’s deep ambivalences towards public exposure rendered the studio the only
possible site of artistic expression and personal salvation. He viewed this spatiality as
a sort of embryonic insulation from the world, a laboratory of the late-night, which,
while rewarding experimentation, sheltered him from the external pressures that stifled
creative development: ‘[I]t’s, quite literally, an environment where time turns in upon
itself, where, as in a cloister, one is able to withstand the frantic pursuit of the transient, of the moment-to-moment, day-by-day succession of events.’1 The availability
of the studio allowed him to continue his musical career by other means. It presented
a radical break as a physical liberation from performance, but also a continuity in the
sense of a performance through the studio itself. During the post-performance years
1.
G. Gould, ‘What the Recording Process Means to Me’, transcript from CBS Masterworks, 26 July 1982, National
Archives Canada (NAC), Glenn Gould Fonds, MUS 109 16:76.
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180
his aversion to the physical public grew to the point where he would only pick up the
awards offered to him if there was no public ceremony. According to Gould historian
H ecker : Vanishing C oncert P ianist
Kevin Bazzana, he would only interact with the public through the prostheses of electronic media. Solitude, the overarching paradigm of his beloved creative listener, was
also the monastic inner life of his studio practice.
Glenn Gould’s studio isolation can be seen as a technology of the self, as an
instrument that provided the conditions for self-constitution and personal salvation.
For Michel Foucault, these technologies are actions that permit individuals to effect
their own means in order to attain ‘a certain state of happiness, wisdom, perfection
or immortality’.2 He traced the notion of retreat back to the Stoics’ anachoresis. A
retreat into the country became a spiritual retreat into oneself, a daily ritual, not so as
to introspect or get in touch with one’s inner feelings, but rather so as to reinforce and
remember rules of action. So these positive technologies are also dialectically coupled
with a mechanism of ascetic domination. For Gould, the inscription of mechanisms of
domination such as the increasing divorce from his own body, became more apparent as
he executed a near total disappearance from public life. The studio was eventually the
only possible mediator between performance and audience. In a letter to an apparent
stalker, Miss Adele Knight from Watertown, New York, he expressed shock that she
showed up uninvited at his country house in Canada. He asked to be free of bother
from the outside world:
I am not about to change, or further justify my preference for a life of solitude […] I do
believe that we may all reasonably expect a life free of intrusions from outside, and I am,
therefore, going to ask you to reconsider very calmly the nature of your actions these
last several years and to refrain all together from your attempts to visit or contact me.3
Gould’s striving for the ‘cloak of anonymity’ that the recording studio provided was
realized in an increasingly profound sense as his disengagement from the world continued. In 1976 he took up part-time residence at the Inn on the Park, a hotel deep in the
suburbs of Toronto. Up until the time of his death Gould used the hotel as an editing
2.
M. Foucault et al., Technologies of the Self: A Seminar with Michel Foucault (Amherst: University of Massachusetts
Press, 1988), 18.
3.
Letter dated 19 September 1966. National Archives of Canada, Glenn Gould Fonds, MUS 109 31:30:31.
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P. 196
suite and occasional living space in order to work, uninterrupted, on projects of various
181
sorts—as a studio, a living space, and almost a crypt.
Most have been stories laced with nostalgia, rejection, and withered dreams. Very few
proactively sought a retreat with the belief that a new technology would afford greater
expressive capabilities, better distribution methods, and new aesthetic possibilities all
the while offering a simultaneous life of solitude. This was a route to the ‘clinical ecstasy’
of performance by other means. But the network mediated autonomous music studio
that emerged after the 1960s should be seen as a technology of the Undead—a place
that gave life and took life, all the while whispering the sweet promises of immortality
nurtured by recorded media.
H ecker : Vanishing C oncert P ianist
The history of literature and the arts are replete with examples of reclusive artists.
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GHOST IN THE MACHINE:
HIKIKOMORI AND DIGITAL DUALISM
Lisa Blanning
For the past quarter century or so, some people in Japan, mostly young men, have
been confining themselves to their rooms and withdrawing from society. Avoiding work
and social situations of any kind while depending upon their families to support them,
extreme cases have seen this tendency last for decades. This small, bedroom-sized
space is the world of hikikomori, and while the term was coined and the trend first
identified in Japan, its emergence probably facilitated by the nation’s rigid culture of
high expectations and strong family bonds, it’s a phenomenon with ever-increasing
international relevance.
Hikikomori live like ghosts, bound to one place as mere shadows of their previous
or potential selves. They exist, but refuse to participate in living as we know it, instead
inhabiting an in-between state—wilfully giving up their agency but remaining undead.
And while there are many reasons someone with no other mental disorder—one of the
hikikomori criteria—may detach from their life, it’s easy to read it as fear or rejection of
society, other people, or indeed anything that could be viewed as ‘normal’ or ‘necessary,’
such as jobs or relationships. And yet a voyeuristic dip into a hikikomori messageboard
(in this case, the now-defunct English-language Hikikichan)1 reveals all of the usual
desires for human socializing. In one thread, an anonymous poster confesses his (at
least we assume it’s a male) joy at meeting a girl online and the comfort he takes from
their conversations and her acceptance of him. But as months pass without word from
his ‘angel’, his confusion turns to grief. Responders to the original post, all of whom are
also anonymous, share advice and their own experiences. ‘I talk to nobody in real life’,
starts the most recent post, concluding, ‘talking to people [online] is basically the only
1.
<https://hikkichan.com>.
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“happiness” I can get’. So, if hikikomori are not prepared to participate IRL, perhaps
they do their actual living virtually.
B lanning : G host in the M achine
In Welcome to the N.H.K., a 2002 novel by Tatsuhiko Takimoto which has been
adapted into both a manga and an anime series, the main character Tatsuhiro Satō
is a hikikomori with a tendency towards conspiracy theories who believes that the
N.H.K.—the actual initials and moniker of real-life Japanese public broadcaster Nippon
Hōsō Kyōkai—is really the shadowy Nihon Hikikomori Kyōkai agency. Satō’s N.H.K. is
no benevolent national broadcaster. Instead, it’s a corporation with evil plans aiming
to turn people into otaku (obsessive geeks/nerds) and hikikomori through anime,
music, and other media. This mirrors the current popular belief that the internet is
causing the hikikormorization of a generation of web addicts—in this case, Western
millennials—making them unwilling or unable to socialize in person, instead preferring
online interaction. (While hikikomori as a phenomenon started before widespread use
of the internet, it’s hard to dispute the theory that the latter enables the former. In
Japan alone, the government’s 2010 estimate was that 700,000 were people living as
hikikomori, with 1.55 million more on the verge of becoming hikikomori.) ‘Millennials
don’t have sex!’, the newspapers scream.2
So the internet is a transmogrifier, with the power to change normal people into
otaku and hikikomori. But simultaneously, it’s a solution to the hikikomori problem,
offering a lifeline of hope, human contact, and shared experience, albeit mediated, at
a physical distance, through a screen, at a controllable rate of exchange.
While representations of life in this digital age are all around us and seem to be
growing exponentially in number, perhaps nothing addresses both the human condition on the internet and Satō’s hikikomori conspiracy as well as DVA [Hi:Emotions]’s
recent album NOTU_URONLINEU. British producer DVA not only references the digital
dualism created by existing both IRL (in real life) and via an online persona in the title
of the record, but also introduces a familiar fiction into its concept. Hi:Emotions or
H:E is both part of his artist name and the name of a mega-corporation that, as the
press release for the album states, ‘is slowly taking control of everything, and plan to
eventually make all people live life under one brand in virtual reality’. Clearly, H:E is
an extension of the N.H.K. updated for the virtual reality era, and DVA their musical
agent in the conspiracy.
2.
D. Buchanan, ‘Millenials don’t have sex? Of course we don’t’, The Guardian, 3 August 2016, <https://www.theguardian.
com/commentisfree/2016/aug/03/millennials-dont-have-sex>.
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On one hand, we can view NOTU_URONLINEU as the sonic manifestation of the
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hikikimori life—or rather, its undead state of in-betweenness. Listening to music in
dark, which we can take to mean that it should be listened to in the dark—the kind of
activity hikikomori and otaku enjoy. And while DVA’s background, back catalogue, and
peer group are at home in the club environment, NOTU_URONLINEU is the sound of
nervous energy synaptically firing in cyberspace. Though the club feels present—we
can’t shake off the memory of our bodies—mostly it’s a reclusive exploration of interiority. Voices do appear, but they’re mostly disembodied computer sequences, film clips
(‘I don’t love you anymore’), or corporate advertising. When, in the track ‘ALMOSTU’,
we hear the soulful, living mellifluousness of singers Rae Rae and Roses Gabor, their
voices cut right through—angels piercing our solitude who make one lone visit and
depart as quickly as they arrived.
If there’s something unknowable in NOTU_URONLINEU, Puri Puri Puririn—the
magical girl anime of which Satō’s otaku neighbor Kaoru Yamazaki is a fan—is familiar
and comforting to the max. Yamazaki listens to her theme song—a bouncy, fun J-pop
confection—incessantly. As it oozes between their shared wall, Satō does, too. At first
he hates it, but it’s not long before it’s both an involuntary earworm and his ringtone.
Perhaps the sound of hikikomori is not so much the music of digital solitude, but instead
a manufactured cheerfulness that you have no choice but to listen to. The music does
not play for you, it’s an echo of somebody else’s life washing over the echo of your
own life. Undead, you have no agency. No wonder you withdraw online.
‘[DVA’s] album hints at themes of online alienation, confusion, control and domination’,
the press release continues. ‘[It’s] peppered with hints of faux-therapeutic advertising
and psychotic jingles—a reflection of the stress of online life’. But track titles such as
‘MEMORIESOFOFFLINEACTIVITY’ suggest that online life is all that’s left to us. DVA,
at least, is completely transparent in revealing that even as we disengage from society
and other people, retreating online, we retreat into a corporate sanctuary. Conceptual
poet and university professor Kenneth Goldsmith, teacher of a course called ‘Wasting
Time on the Internet’ at an Ivy League college in the United States, would agree. In an
interview with UK newspaper The Independent, he explains:
I have far-left friends who complain about corporate culture, and they do it on Facebook.
They’re not seeing that the platform is owned by something else. I think we want to
B lanning : G host in the M achine
the dark was one of artist DVA’s inspirations; he then created the record entirely in the
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make technology transparent [but] it’s highly intertwined with technological corporate
advertising money that problematise that transparency. When it suddenly becomes
B lanning : G host in the M achine
visible, you go, ‘Ugh, how did I not see it?’ But at this point, you can’t walk away. You
have to be really privileged to walk away from digital culture. Social contacts, dating,
jobs, everything comes through that.
If we are not all hikikomori now, interacting with others virtually through the mediation
of the internet and in thrall to a corporation, perhaps the best we can hope for is a
Pokémon-Go-style augmented reality. Goldsmith again: ‘That’s why Pokémon Go is so
marvellous, it puts the body back into the landscape.’ Writing for The Society Pages
cyborgology blog, sociologist and social media theorist Nathan Jurgenson refutes the
idea of digital dualism, in favour of augmented reality:
Our Facebook profiles reflect who we know and what we do offline, and our offline lives
are impacted by what happens on Facebook (e.g., how we might change our behaviors
in order to create a more ideal documentation). Most importantly, research demonstrates what social media users already know: we are not trading one reality for another at
all, but, instead, using sites like Facebook and others actually increase offline interaction.
Online life sapping offline sociability, forcing people to seek connection online, which in
turn drives offline interaction—less of a paradox and more of a vicious cycle, perhaps.
The transformational power of the internet is yet to be fully gauged, but clearly the
N.H.K./H:E has found the most potent tool imaginable. We wrestle with ourselves
not to succumb to their temptations: media wealth far beyond any otaku’s wildest
fantasies, digital worlds more navigable and accepting than our own. Augmented reality—incorporating the virtual alongside life in our own bodies in physical space outside
of the confines of our homes, on a plane other than that of cyberspace—offers us a
hikikomori-friendly alternative.
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A BRIEF DEFENCE
OF NEW AGE AUDIO
Erik Davis
There may be no contemporary musical genre that is easier to accuse of false consciousness than New Age music. The anodyne synth washes, the timbres chiming like
floorwax, the easy pickpocketing of Native American drums and Japanese shakuhachi,
the avowed intention to calm, soothe, and spiritualize—all seem to materialize a music
of accommodation, passivity, and hazy escape, a music in which, as Marx wrote, all
that is solid melts into air. More than any genre besides the mall music they sometimes
resemble, New Age recordings seem in lockstep with both the self-serving affect
management of late capitalism and the neoliberal gospel of consumer self-realization.
A spontaneous revulsion seems to arise in many an engaged and critical listener of this
stuff, an impulse to reject not only the sounds themselves but their seeming social and
psychological function as well.
But there is something radical in this music, a radicalism that not only saturates
(select) works of New Age composition but informs the modes of listening and thinking they invite. Consider some of this populist genre’s more avant-garde imperatives:
the dissipation or destruction of melody; the immense slowing and interruption of
temporal development; the construction of environmental topoi and other posthuman
ecologies; the multiplication of harmonic layers towards resonant chaos. Moreover,
such experimentalism is directly tied to both a DIY logic of technologized ‘home-brew’
composition and, more importantly, an audacious bid to directly and immediately
deconstruct, reformat, and transform the subjectivity of listeners. As one of the first
explicitly psychotronic popular musics, New Age was composed and deployed with
the subliminal affordances of psychoacoustics explicitly in mind, at least rhetorically,
and it held as its ultimate goal the ecstatic dissolution of the bounded personal subject.
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As is often the case, the most visionary possibilities of the music appeared during
its salad days. Important progenitors arose in the mid-1970s, before the awareness
Davis : N ew Age Audio
of genre had crystallized into an alternative market and before it earned its name—
always contested by some makers. Indeed, the recent revival of interest in the genre
by collectors and curators in part reflects the recognition that early works by Iasos,
Michael Sterns, Larajji, Joanna Brouk, Deuter, and Upper Astral remain fresh and
inspiring engagements with sonic possibility, crafting new forms by melding already
flowing currents of Krautrock, minimalism, psychedelia, jazz fusion, Asian traditions,
and analog electronica. This ‘golden age’ lasted roughly until the mid-1980s, though
glints of it still glow today, in the cracks and fissures between all manner of musics
that spatialize, reverberate, and dissolve.
For all its rhetoric of oneness, much New Age music operates on at least two levels,
one signifying and one asignifying. As an aesthetic object or audio representation,
the New Age piece serves as an audible model for a possible internal environment, a
kind of sonic model of a possible altered state within the listener, a state that would
realise itself through the listener’s merger with the audio. Take flautist Larkin’s 1980
composition ‘Emergence’, which combines the sounds of the ocean (waves, humpback
whales) with gentle aimless instruments, drawing the listener into a seaside trance. The
heroic self of early Romanticisms has dissolved into an elemental fusion, even as the
subtle presence of a slowly pulsing electronic tone rhetorically disguises (and subtly
affirms) the recording’s dependence on the technology that might otherwise be seen
as intruding on the scene.
As a representation, this sort of fusion might be considered ‘bad faith’—even though
the gestures of naturalist intimacy should not be discounted in an era of claustrophobic
ecological collapse. Hovering beneath this representational level, however, New Age
takes a much more posthuman stance. Beneath its surface shimmer, New Age music
declares and deploys itself on another level, a psychoacoustic or subliminal domain
of vibrational control over hidden, unconscious and sometimes mystical systems
of the human bodymind. In other words, composers intentionally and sometimes
explicitly present their music as an apparatus for directly operating on the expanded
psycho-bio-cosmic systems that are ‘running’ the programs of conscious awareness.
Whether or not this self-presentation is merely rhetorical, New Age music should still
be seen as part as a kind of utopian or idealist posthumanism, in which audio is optimistically deployed and consumed beyond the limitations of the personal listening subject.
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This embrace of the vibratory unconscious was shaped by the aspirations towards
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human potential associated with the 1970s, when the evidence from experimental
zones of human consciousness were amenable to control and manipulation. Perhaps
the bestselling independently pressed New Age record remains Stephen Halpern’s
often re-recorded 1975 ‘Spectrum Suite’, which was fashioned with subliminal intentions, as explained on the back cover. For Halpern, the transformative—or at least
‘altering’—effects of the music lay partly in its abandonment of melodic and harmonic
drive. Elsewhere Halpern called it a ‘non-anticipatory’ music, or, more amusingly, as a
performance of scalus interruptus. Halpern was also one of first musicians to study the
effects of music with biofeedback and EEG, though he leapt well beyond instrumentation in linking specific pitches to colours and the esoteric physiology of human chakras.
Of course, both the scientific and the commercial aspirations of all this can look
pretty sad in the light of contemporary affect management and the widespread incorporation of holistic practices into capitalist enterprises. How could the production of
manipulating audio designed to soothe and relax not represent the sort of operational
post-ideology required to keep producers and consumers tethered to a machine whose
increasingly inhuman demands and pace are already pulverizing subjectivity?
But New Age audio, at least in its most experimental and intensive forms, is also a
music of operational ecstasy that does not soothe the subject so much as teach it to
probe its own inevitable dissolution—in death, in merger, but also in those ecological
and cultural collectivities without which we are toast. In that light, and especially
given its proactive embrace of technicity (electronic gear, binaural beats, subliminal
controllers, etc.), New Age audio can also be understood as a kind of cosmic Accelerationism. The only solution to the posthuman crisis of subjectivity is through and
beyond it—Burroughs’s here to go—a deceptively gentle radicalism that dissolves
the boundaries of subjectivity not through violence but through the subliminal audio
body’s capacity to rewire affectivity and awareness from within, and, more potently,
from the sub- or superliminal in between.
Davis : N ew Age Audio
psychology and the transpersonal altered states crew alike suggested that the liminal
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PURGATORY
Nicola Masciandaro
E’en then, when from its neck of marble torn,
His head Oeagrian Hebrus bearing down
Its central current rolled, ‘Eurydice’,
The voice itself and death-cold tongue—alas!
His poor Eurydice with fleeting breath
Was calling still.
— Virgil, Georgics, IV.523-6 (trans. Sewell)
The capacity of Orpheus’s severed head to sound among the living from beyond
the threshold of death indexes a dimension of voice and sound, or more properly an
indetermination of the two, which may be defined as purgatorial. As the poet’s words
make clear, it is not the person here who speaks but voice itself [vox ipsa], less the
sonic presence of a being than the more uncanny call of the very slipping away of its
soul or life [anima fugiente]. This liminal sound, voiced at once through and without
the tongue that articulates it, is purgatorial in several senses: (1) in connection to the
Orphic desire to save a beloved from the death’s underworld; (2) in its connotation of
a self-purifying spiritual suffering at/of the limits of being; and (3) in its hyper-actual
virtuality, the weird or haunting phenomenal immanence of something in the seeming
absence of its own possibility. How does this paradigmatic ‘third place’ as Luther called
it, a dimension characteristically neither provable nor deniable and persistent within
modern culture in the undead forms of the medieval imagination, belong to what this
volume’s editors call ‘the broader vibrational continuum of which perceptible sound is
only a subset […] a third dimension in which the real and the imagined […] bleed into
one another’?1
1.
The obscurity of the fact of Purgatory is expressed as follows in the second Appendix to Aquinas’s Summa
Theologica: ‘it is sufficiently clear that there is a Purgatory after this life […] Wherefore those who deny Purgatory speak
against the justice of God […] Nothing is clearly stated in Scripture about the situation of Purgatory, nor is it possible to
offer convincing arguments on this question’ (Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica, tr. Fathers of the English Dominican
Province [New York: Bezinger Brothers, 1947], 3022–3). Similarly, before rejecting the doctrine, Martin Luther wrote,
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Mediaeval discourse on purgatory revolves around its ambivalence as both place and
state.2 Bonaventure writes, ‘As for the state of purgation, this corresponds to an inde-
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terminate place [locus indeterminatus] in relation to us and in itself’.3 Dante’s Purgatory,
an island orogeny in the southern hemisphere caused by Lucifer’s fall to the center of
Earth, finds itself at the summit of this ambivalence. Here the truth of purgatory and
the truth of poetry converge in a reality as concrete as it is fabulous, a geography of
the imagination in both senses. Purgatory is the ground of poetry’s own resurrection:
‘But here let dead poetry rise again’ (Purgatorio, 1.7). Significantly, this resurrection is
not only spiritual but specifically sonic: ‘and here let Calliope arise somewhat, accompanying [seguitando] my song with that sound [suono] of which the wretched Magpies
so felt the blow [colpo] that they despaired of pardon’ (Purgatorio, 1.9-12).4
Synthesizing the penitential and resurrective poles of Purgatory into something
trembling within-beyond the threshold of representation, the central sonic image in
Dante’s Purgatorio, which figures the pilgrim’s experience of the sound of its very gate,
is paradoxically thunderous and harmonious, harsh and sweet:
‘The existence of a purgatory I have never denied. I still hold that it exists, as I have written and admitted many times,
though I have found no way of proving it incontrovertibly from Scripture or reason.’ (Luther’s Works [54 vols. Philadelphia:
Fortress Press, 1957], vol. 32, 95). On purgatory in the modern world, see R.K. Fenn, The Persistence of Purgatory
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995); J.L. Walls, Purgatory: The Logic of Total Transformation (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2011); and S. Greenblatt, Hamlet in Purgatory (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2013). The
place of purgatory in the history of Western music is correlatively double-sided. One the one hand, purgatory, as the
theological ground of intercession for the dead, is a monumental potential of musical creativity. In the mediaeval period,
‘Purgatory encourage[d] endowments supporting polyphony’ and influenced the musical development of votive Masses
(B. Haggh, ‘The Meeting of Sacred Ritual and Secular Piety: Endowments for Music’, in T. Knighton and D. Fallows
(eds.), Companion to Medieval and Renaissance Music [Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1992], 64). Most
prominently, the requiem mass ‘realized a privileged status in music history […] [exercising] a prominent influence upon
subsequent musical styles, both sacred and profane’, and ‘[t]hroughout the seventeenth century, musical settings of the
requiem mass spread like wildfire as hundreds of new settings were composed’ (R. Chase, Dies Irae: A Guide to Requiem
Music [Landham, MD: Scarecrow Press, 2003], xv–xvii). On the other hand, the post-Reformation demise of the doctrine
of purgatory was itself impetus for musical invention, for the development of alternatives to the requiem mass and new
musical forms in the context of ‘the Reformation [which] saw many of the sounds of death removed’, most conspicuously
the death knell (D. MacKinnon, ‘“The Ceremony of Tolling the Bell at the Time of Death”: Bell-ringing and Mourning in
England c. 1500–c.1700’, in J. W. Davidson and S. Garrido (eds.), Music and Mourning [London: Routledge, 2016], 34). The
doubleness of this reflexive relation between music and purgatory is reflected in Luther’s famous reverence for music as
‘next to theology’ and recognition of its spiritual power: ‘For we know that music is odious and unbearable to the demons
[…] [music] alone produces what otherwise only what theology can do, namely, a calm and joyful disposition’ (quoted in
R.A. Leaver, ‘Luther on Music’, in T.J. Wengert (ed.), The Pastoral Luther: Essays on Martin Luther’s Practical Theology
[Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2009], 271, 285).
2.
See J. Le Goff, The Birth of Purgatory, tr. A. Goldhammer (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1984).
3.
Bonaventure, Commentaria in librum quartum Sententiarum, Quaestio II, quoted in Le Goff, The Birth of Purgatory,
253–4.
4.
Dante Alighieri, Purgatorio, ed., tr. R.M. Durling (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003).
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Then he [the angel] pushed open the door of the blessed gate, saying: ‘Enter; but I
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warn you that whoever looks back must return outside.’ And when the pins turned in
roar so nor seem so harsh […] I turned attentive to the first thunderclap, and I seemed
[mi parea] to hear voices, singing ‘Te Deum Laudamus,’ blended with the sweet sound.
The image [tale imagine] rendered in what I heard was exactly what one perceives when
there is singing with an organ so that now one understands the words, now not [or sì or
no]. (Purgatorio, 9.142-5)
As if echoing with both the roaring superessential voice of God to be heard at the
end of time (Revelation 14:2) and the angelic harmony of the cosmic spheres whose
motion is time itself, this sound, at once a sound passed through and the sound of that
passage, is an opening audible between time and eternity. Yet as the common analogy
emphasizes, this salvific opening is nothing abstract or otherworldly, but a palpable
intensity located in the negative continuity of sonic seeming, in the intangible space
between voice and hearing, the moving indistinguishability of words and music. Just
as a soul may be saved by ‘one little tear [una lagrimetta]’ (Purgatorio, 5.107), so the
essential sound of Purgatory is crucially a movement within the moment of experience.
Furthermore, the poet aligns this momentariness with the instantaneous event of the
image within the sphere of hearing, implying a continuity between Purgatory’s gate
and the senses known to William Blake: ‘If the doors of perception were cleansed every
thing would appear to man as it is: infinite.’5
Like a sonic intensification of the dialetheia of the image, which is always both true
and false, both what is seen and what is not, the resonance of purgatorial opening is
something heard and grasped in a movement that must, like Orpheus returning with
Eurydice from the underworld, not look back—except, of course, through the special
retrospective lens of poetry as a privileged labour of love which, inspired from above,
is saved from its own oblivion. For only the poetic image, itself always both true and
false, can enter and pass through the mirror of the imaginal realm, without breaking it,
as it were. Only the musico-fictive third of sound and word can speak to and from the
depths, touching what is otherwise invisible, like the self-doubling purgatorial voice
of Poe’s Valdemar: ‘Yes;—no;—I have been sleeping—and now—now—I am dead.’6
5.
W. Blake, Complete Poetry & Prose, ed. D.V. Erdman (New York: Doubleday, 1988), 39.
6.
E.A. Poe, ‘The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar’, in The Complete Tales and Poems (New York: Vintage, 1975), 101.
M asciandaro : P urgator y
the hinges of that sacred palace, pins made of strong, resonant metal, Tarpeia did not
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The abyss opened by the purgatorial resonance of the poetic word is the sound of the
present itself as the perpetual intersection of the nunc fluens, the temporal now that
M asciandaro : P urgator y
passes and the nunc stans, the eternal now that stands. This intersection is not a point
or instant, but a dilation: ‘For the gate is narrow and the way is hard, that leads to life,
and those who find it are few’ (Matthew 7:14)—its narrowness and hardness being not
only the steepness of ethical and spiritual becoming, the need for renunciation and surrender, but more immediately the continuous and ever-dilating nature of the gate itself
which, reverberating with a spontaneous and unmasterably positive/negative sound,
demands a proportionate spontaneity of doing and not-doing, a daring-still pace that
can quickly-slowly keep time with the spontaneous rhythm of the eternal or trace the
style of God.7 Thus the deeper horror to which Poe’s story gives voice is not the fear
of whether there is or is not an eternity somewhere over the rainbow, but the terror of
its being here now, actually present in the midst of time and too close for the comfort
of all-too-temporal human identities. Correlatively, Orpheus’s failure represents the
loss of the present itself, its being shrunk to an instant, as Ovid’s words make clear:
At once [protinus] she slipped away [relapsa est]—
and down. His arms stretched out [intendens] convulsively
to clasp and to be clasped in turn, but there
was nothing but the unresisting air.8
Here the lover loses his beloved all over again in a movement that beautifully embodies
the very nature of the living present which his intention, in seeking to grasp it, negates.
As Eurydice’s slipping away or relapse is itself an instance of the immediately infinite
momentum or continuously forward movement of time (pro-tinus, literally a reaching
forward or onward), so does Orpheus’s futile embrace figure the stretching of the
present into the now. If only Orpheus had used his ears rather than his eyes. To pass
through Purgatory, to cleanse—by passing through—the rusty doors of perception
opening to infinity, involves hearing a sound that follows one ahead into forever, a
music which, moving backwards and forward in time, is the reverberation of the present as something to be simultaneously lived and remembered, that is, experienced in
7.
On the ‘narrow gate’ as the ever-present dilation of present found in the absence of worry, see N. Masciandaro, ‘The
Sweetness (of the Law)’, in Sufficient Unto the Day: Sermones Contra Solicitudinem (London: Schism, 2014), 6–42.
8.
Ovid, Metamorphoses, tr. A. Mandelbaum (New York: Harcourt, 1993), 327 (X.55–9).
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the full-emptiness and empty-fullness of its ever-dilating nature. As Meher Baba says,
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‘Live more and more in the Present which is ever beautiful and stretches away beyond
the past and the future’.10
Unbounded by its theological doctrine, the sonicity of Purgatory stretches historically beyond mediaeval ghost stories and prayers for the dead, backwards into the
speaking severed heads of antique and hagiographical legend and forwards into the
spectral voices of modern surrealism and horror.11 What is at stake throughout this
domain is the interface between sound/voice and the outside of time, an interface
unveiled in the deep presence of sound, in its being, through its very movement,
something both within and beyond time and space. Similarly, Eleni Ikoniadou speaks
of the ‘concept of rhythm’ as belonging ‘to the middle, unleashing the relational
potentialities of the notion of the gap and mocking the idea of distance as a void’.12
The idea of Purgatory resounds with a future beyond temporality, beyond the division
of life and death. As Chateaubriand observed, ‘Purgatory surpasses heaven and hell
in poetry, because it represents a future and the others do not.’13 If this is a fire worth
losing one’s head over, it is because the promise of friendship or love—with anyone
and/or Reality itself—requires it. As Blake testifies:
I have tried to make friends by corporeal gifts but have only
Made enemies: I never made friends but by spiritual gifts,
By severe contentions of friendship, and the burning fire of thought.14
9.
M. Baba, The Everything and the Nothing (Beacon Hill, Australia: Meher House Publication, 1963), 37.
10.
M. Baba, Not We But One (Balmain, Australia: Meher Baba Foundation, 1977), 52.
11.
See J.-C. Schimitt, Ghosts in the Middle Ages: The Living and the Dead in Medieval Society (Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1998); A. Simon Mittman, ‘Answering the Call of the Severed Head’, in L. Tracy and J. Massey (eds.), Heads
Will Roll: Decapitation in the Medieval and Early Modern Imagination (Leiden: Brill, 2012), 311–27; R. Mills, ‘Talking Heads’,
inC. Santing, B. Baert, and A. Traninger (eds.), Disembodied Heads in Medieval and Early Modern Culture (Leiden: Brill,
2013); I. van Elferen, Gothic Music: The Sounds of the Uncanny (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2012); and A.S. Weiss,
‘Death’s Murmur’, chapter 2 of Breathless: Sound Recording, Disembodiment, and the Transformation of Lyrical Nostalgia
(Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 2012).
12.
E. Ikoniadou, The Rhythmic Event: Art, Media, and the Sonic (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2014), 87–8.
13.
Quoted as epigraph in Le Goff, Birth of Purgatory.
14.
Blake, Complete Poetry & Prose, 251.
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the limits of the past and the future’,9 and ‘[r]emember the present in the frame of
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VR OF VOID
Alina Popa
— How are you, Madam?
— The no one of myself is not a Madam, call me Miss, please.
— I don’t know your name, could you tell it to me?
— The no one of myself has no name: she wishes you didn’t write.
— I would nevertheless like to know what your name is, or rather what your name was
in the past.
— I understand what you mean. It was Catherine X.... We shouldn’t talk about what
has taken place. The no one of myself has lost her name, she gave it away upon entering Salpêtrière.
— How old are you?
— The no one of myself has no age.
— Jules Cotard, A Study of Neurological and Mental Disorders
I’m ready to download eXistenZ,
by Antenna Research, into all of you.
— David Cronenberg, eXistenZ
Cotard’s syndrome was identified as a psychiatric condition in itself, distinct from the
closely related hypochondria, by nineteenth-century Parisian neurologist Jules Cotard.
Patients with Cotard’s syndrome suffer from the ‘delirium of negation’, the active feeling that they do not exist, prompting in them a pathological (or perhaps sane) wish that
the world should also disappear. Those affected by this rare neurological disease are
stripped of what recent philosophy of mind would call ‘the illusion of selfhood’. They
are plagued by the conviction that they are being spatiotemporally deceived, since it
seems to them that they are already long gone from this world:
One asks their name? They have no name. Their age? They have no age. Where they
were born? They were not born. Who were their father and mother? They have neither
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father, nor mother, nor wife, nor children. Whether they have headaches, if their stomach
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hurts, if some part of their body hurts? They have no head, no stomach, some of them
P opa : V R of V oid
even have no body…. For some of them negation is universal, nothing exists anymore,
they themselves are nothing.1
Even though the reality of their living body is palpable, they perceive themselves as
alien; their body is an object, not a subject. They call themselves ‘Zero’ and ‘X’ and
‘No one’. They do not possess a ‘Körper’ but a ‘Leib’, not an ensouled body but only a
corpse; they are not ‘I’ but ‘it’.
This syndrome has recently received special attention in consciousness studies
and philosophy of mind: since there is a neurological disturbance that can plunge the
human into the experience of her inexistence as a distinct self, then there must be
neural correlates that generate the illusion of a global first-person perspective. The
history of science in modernity has been a history of methodical suspicion toward the
appearance of the world as perceived by a first-person subject. If knowledge is hostile
to experience, it is this hostility that is being experienced by the zero-person subject
in the here and now:
Generally, the alienated are negators; the clearest demonstrations, the most reliable
affirmations, the most affectionate gestures leave them incredulous and ironic. Reality
has become strange and hostile to them.2
So ‘the alienated ones’ of Cotard’s clinic are in fact among the few non-alienated ones,
or are as little alienated as one can be, as far as the experience of oneself as self is
concerned. In the mode of neurological disturbance that causes Cotard’s syndrome,
people are diagnosed with ‘the madness of opposition’. But in the mode of normalcy,
people may be terminally diagnosed with pronoun delusion.
The Melanesians of New Caledonia, as described by Lynn Margulis and Dorion Sagan
in an article about the decentralization of the concept of self, are unaware that their
body is an element they themselves possess. Likewise, Cotard’s patients, divested of
the phenomenal experience of their self, are deprived of the integrity of their body as
a subjective body. Even though they are living outside of capitalism’s assembly lines of
1.
J. Cotard, Études sur les maladies cérébrales et mentales (Paris: J.B. Baillière et fils, 1891), 315 (all translations my own).
2.
Ibid., 315.
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canned selves and mechanized bodies, the Melanesians can be said to have become,
199
paradoxically, the pioneers of the modern process of perspectival decentralization.
away with first-person perspectival bias. The constructing of an outside to the relatively
homogeneous structures of experience, not only biologically entrenched but also culturally ossified (by Western global modernization) can be a matter of voluntary practice,
the result of bodily dysfunction, or even an embodied theoretical or scientific exercise.
Certain types of meditation practices, for instance, sharpen one’s attention so much
that one can overcome perceptual biases and experience the loss of one’s own body, its
dissipation into space. Some mystics become sensitive to subcognitive processes and,
like Cotard’s patients, end up speaking about themselves in the third person.
It is not only the clear-cut feeling of self that is at stake under biological and cultural Cotardian conditions; the realness-effect of the world itself may be altered with
the onset of this affliction. Even if their ‘I’ has vanished, a virtual reality (VR) clings
insistently to Cotard’s patients’ inexistence:
It seems to the patient that the real world has completely vanished, has disappeared,
or is dead, and that there remains only an imaginary world in the middle of which he is
tormented to find himself.3
As Cotard himself reports, his patients are not naive realists. The ruses of their
consciousness have been rendered opaque, revealing the holographic character of
perceived reality. Their world is a species-bound theme park in which the techniques of
make-believe have been left on show—a Brechtian theatre of consciousness. Cotard’s
syndrome patients are living in the first-person the virtual reality model of consciousness described in the third-person by philosopher of mind Thomas Metzinger. In his
model, subjective experience is like a non-lucid dream, and the perceived world is a
virtual reality. And since humans are bound to their immediate delusional perception,
that of first-person experience, they can only self-induce Cotard’s syndrome by theoretical thought or practical experience. There is only VR.
Scott Bakker’s novel Neuropath presents us with two incarnations of the researcher.
The first is Neil Cassidy, the thinker who not only thinks his thoughts, but also seeks
to ‘practice’ them. The second is Thomas Bible, Neil’s long-time friend, an academic
3.
Ibid.
P opa : V R of V oid
Similarly, Cotard’s patients are an embodied metaphor of the scientific dream of doing
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200
whose life practices are disengaged from his ideas. They are both implicated in a
theory of consciousness that revolves around ‘the Argument’—an old discussion in
P opa : V R of V oid
which they had concluded that the brain is a spin-doctor of reality, a VR inducer, the
constructor of a delusional first-person perspective. In Neuropath, Bible’s disembodied
theory becomes normativity and boredom, while Cassidy’s embodied theory transforms
into horror. Seeking to embody the Argument, Neil becomes involved in a monstrous
quest to strip humankind of its default realism. He ultimately aims to rid his friend
Thomas of his distance to the theory that he himself produced, and to which both of
them remain, in very different ways, attached. At the end of the book, Neil torments
Thomas by wiring his brain to a hallucination-based torture machine, shaking him out
of the stable VR his academic and family life have become. In order to embody his
theory, Neil tailors his neural circuits so that he can altogether abandon the fiction of
being a self. He becomes ‘no one’ in order to exempt himself from empathy and guilt,
a necessity if he is to open the world’s eyes to the VR that it itself is. The neuro-horror
of depersonalization tears down the fourth wall of the human world’s real stage.
Thomas, the Cotardian academic, is tortured by the flesh that his argument has now
become. Neil, the Cotardian artist (if we agree that the artist works with the abstract
by manipulating materials, even including his own body), tortures flesh with the whip
of thinking. The symbolic scaffold that keeps life separate from thinking creaks and
squeaks when thinking laughs at life, howls and yowls when life grins back at thinking:
Everything suddenly seemed at once fictional and impossible, like paint splashed across
something monstrous. And quick, terrifyingly quick. Psychologists called such episodes
‘derealization’. The irony was that they used the term to describe a kind of disorder, when
it was about as accurate as any conscious experience could get.4
To deliver the Argument through his novel, Scott Bakker, the puppeteer of both torturer and artist, creates a fiction that flays our sense of self with the idea of the self’s
irreality. Upon entering this perspective-thriller, we get rid of our selves, but only by
experiencing the book itself as a VR, one that leaves us no self:
‘Depersonalization,’ she repeated.
4.
R. Scott Bakker, Neuropath (Toronto: Penguin, 2009), Epub.
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‘You say that like it’s a disease, but it’s not, is it? It’s more like some kind of…revelation
or something.’
one with the same paradox—isn’t this experience, supposedly closer to that of the
vigilant realists, just another Disneyland, eXistenZ, or virtual reality—a VR of the void?
The third-person viewpoint of a first-person perspective terrorizes experience. The
first-person embodiment of a third person viewpoint terrorizes the concept. The experiment of entering a perspective that lacks perspectivality, that of the Cotard’s syndrome
patient, changes the third-person of science into a first-person of experience, and the
first-person of experience into the universal zero-person. The lack of perspectivality
goes deep, and all we can ever do is to change the depth of this void. For without ‘I’
there can be no ‘it’, and without ‘it’ there is no ‘I’. Investigating Cotard’s syndrome
from a third-person perspective such as that of the present essay is as impossible as
giving an accurate account of subjective experience from a scientist’s perspective. To
think that the self is not is, for a self, whether deluded or not, to enter a theme park
or an inner VR of the void. Inhabiting the world as a delusion by deluding oneself into
experiencing the void, throwing the self down the drain by flooding the mind with the
illusion of the drain, is as close as one can get to the intuition of one’s own inner ruses.
The question posed by post-Kantian continental philosophy—that of access to the
real—is implicitly also the question of unmediated access to one’s inner ruses. But if
all ruses were to be washed away, there would be no toying with knowledge anymore.
So the anomaly is here to stay, and by investigating it we can only ever proliferate it.
In proliferating the VR of the void, I am not emptying out the ruse, but filling it with
void, while drawing close to the experience of realness. Overfilling the ruse with void
may bleed some real through its grinning rifts. To access the ruse is to access the void
is to access the real is to access the void.
Rumi was right to ask himself:
Who is the one in my ear
Listening to my voice,
Who is the one in my mouth
Saying my words?
Ibid.
P opa : V R of V oid
The triptych of conscious experience as void, that of Neil, Thomas, and Bakker, presents
5.
201
5
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DELUSIONS OF THE LIVING DEAD
Toby Heys
It is 1949, and AUDINT’s Walter Slepian, Bill Arnett, and Hypolite Morton are discussing
how those with extreme psychological disorders might react to the tests carried out on
their engineer Eduard Schüller, which have resulted in him conversing with the dead.1
Meetings with Theodore Reik, who is researching for his book The Secret Self,2 have
been rich and varied. One line of enquiry involves the work of French neurologist Jules
Cotard into a condition that leaves those afflicted believing they have no blood and that
their body is without organs. Ultimately, it causes them to think that they are dead.3
When Reik tells of hushed rumours alluding to a notebook containing instructions on
how to induce Cotard’s syndrome, AUDINT are captivated. They speculate on how their
Two-Ring table might be deployed upon those who believe they are already deceased.
Would this alter the dynamics of communication with the otherworld voices? Could they
transform carriers into necromancing drones by playing hooks from regular vinyl records?
Having spent months unearthing stories that corroborate a rumour locating the
notebook in Paris, it is decided that Slepian, nominated for his patchy knowledge of
the French language garnered from reading Proust’s À la recherche du temps perdu,4
will return to France for the first time since the Ghost Army departed after the Second
World War. On board a TWA Lockheed Constellation he sits down, heaves a trepidatious sigh, and prepares for the twenty-hour trip from New York’s Idlewild airport.
1.
Immediately after the Second World War, ex-AEG employee Eduard Schüller was sequestered by the AUDINT
research cell and become a test subject for their Third Ear experiments.
2.
T. Reik, The Secret Self: Psychoanalytic Experiences in Life and Literature (New York: Farrar, Straus and Young, 1952).
3.
Subjects with Cotard Delusion, also referred to as Walking Corpse Syndrome, believe that they are already dead,
have no blood, or have lost internal organs.
4.
M. Proust, In Search of Lost Time, ed., tr. C. Prendergast (London: Penguin Books, 6 vols., 2002).
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204
His journey’s reading consists of texts pertaining to Cotard, but it is a single piece of
paper concerning a buyer of esoteric medical documents that absorbs him.
H e ys : D elusions of the L iving D ead
The information on the sheet concerning Isabelle Chimay is scant, consisting of a
home address and the name of the ‘Melac bar à vins’ in the 11th arrondissement that
she is known to frequent on weekends. That his trip is solely based upon staging a
feigned serendipitous meeting with her at this haunt seems wildly optimistic, but it is
all he has. It is early Thursday evening when he touches down on a cheaply perfumed
bed in the illustriously shabby Alba Opera Hotel in the centre of Paris, and Slepian is
bone-weary from the din of sleep-repelling propellers. Still exhausted, he spends Friday
recovering, mulling over his plot to hornswoggle an unsuspecting collector of texts.
Whilst his knowledge of Cotard’s work is his first weapon of seduction, his second is
a vial of Amobarbital, otherwise known as truth serum, a drug used by the US military
to treat shellshock so that soldiers could return to the front line. On Saturday night
Slepian’s front line is the Melac doorway, which he crosses at 6.35pm with a distorted
gait owing to the bottle of wine he has already consumed. Inside, he sits close to the
door in order to hear the verbal exchanges between patrons and staff, for he has no
idea what Miss Chimay looks like.
Three glasses of a 1945 Pomerol Bordeaux in and Slepian, from behind a glazed
patina of nerves, observes the entrance of a serenely upright lady. With a staccato
sophistication fleshed out by rapid steps, her presence demands action. The maître
d’ snaps to attention, as do Slepian’s senses upon hearing the greeting to Madame
Chimay. Hands gesture towards a table that has obviously been kept for her. Slepian’s
plan was to wait for an opportune moment, but alcohol has sequestered his guile, so
in broken French he brazenly introduces himself. With a confident quizzical smile Miss
Chimay invites him to sit, and so the ersatz encounter begins.
They talk politics, music, and finally perceptual disorders—the phantom topic haunting Slepian’s every word. Isabelle Chimay is forthright and passionate when revealing her
penchant for rare medical documents. She states that her ability to speak English is the
result of long hours spent translating letters from the 1860s. Ruminating on Phantom
Leg Syndrome, the dispatches formed a small part of the Civil War correspondence
between American poet Walt Whitman whilst he dressed wounds at Union hospitals
and Silas Weir Mitchell5 a ‘doctor of nerves’ from Philadelphia.
5.
Silas Weir Mitchell (1829–1914) was a neurologist, physician, and novelist who backed Walt Whitman financially as
well as assisting him medically from the late 1870s onwards.
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Penned after having worked for three emotionally fraught years consoling dying and
205
recovering soldiers, Whitman iterated to Weir his belief that he was of most use when
‘deepest remains’.6 What particularly gripped Chimay, however, was an exchange from
the second Battle of Bull Run.7 Weir reported that a number of the amputees talked
at length about ‘sensory ghosts’, feelings that incorporated painful missing limbs; a
revenant flesh that haunted soldier’s severed bodies.
Slepian clinically pitches the conversation towards Cotard and research undertaken
in Vanves, France. Isabelle parleys but does not air ownership of his writings. He
cogitates on whether he should be more amorous, but in truth he does not have the
charismatic ordnance to pull it off. Instead he expresses his desire to see her collection.
Apprehensively, Isabelle agrees, but organises for a visit to her apartment the following
afternoon. Her next move is more categorical, though, as she stands and promptly leaves.
It is an overcast September Sunday afternoon and yesterday’s excesses have rendered Paris a German expressionist painting, a dark humour not lost on Slepian, even
in his angular state. His senses customarily function as portals, converting external
stimuli that are processed to engage and orient his body. Today though, they wheeze
like decrepit vacuum cleaners, lethargically sucking up information and sending it to
the grotty grey bag of fuzz that is his brain.
In sharp contrast, a resplendent Isabelle Chimay, attired in a sheer black buttoned
down dress, ushers him into her apartment. As a gift, Slepian hands her a record that
he speciously relates as coming from an open-air market—Charlie Parker’s Bird on
52nd St.8 He had been unsure of whether she would like it but, more importantly, for
forty-five minutes or so, the gesture assuages Slepian’s guilt for the subterfuge upon
which he is about to embark.
Chimay invites Slepian to sit in an uncomfortable art deco iron chair and asks
whether he has heard of the recently deceased French theatre director Antonin Artaud.
He hasn’t but motions for her to carry on. While she is interested in his work, it’s his
6.
The ‘deepest remains’ are referred to in Walt Whitman’s 1865 poem The Dresser (later renamed The Wound-Dresser),
which referred to his experiences during the American Civil War as a hospital volunteer. The poem can be found in W.
Whitman, Leaves of Grass (Norwalk, CT: The Easton Press, 1977).
7.
As part of the American Civil War, ‘The Second Battle of Bull Run’ (also know as ‘The Battle of Second Manassas’)
was fought between the 28th and 30th of August 1862. A major tactical victory for the Confederates, the short but bloody
conflict resulted in thousands of deaths and tens of thousands wounded.
8.
Charlie Parker, Bird on 52nd St, LP (Jazz Workshop, 1948).
H e ys : D elusions of the L iving D ead
he healed parts that doctors could not touch: psychological extremities he called the
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206
Gnostic beliefs that most intrigue her.9 She proposes that he was in fact in the grip of
Cotard’s syndrome when he declared he had ‘No mouth no tongue no teeth no larynx
H e ys : D elusions of the L iving D ead
no esophagus no stomach no intestine no anus’ and declared: ‘I shall reconstruct the
man I am.’10
As conversation oscillates around the excavated body, Slepian’s mind wanders to
Thomas Edison and his 1920s work on a valve technology to amplify the vibrations of
the departed.11 Could AUDINT develop techniques to make audible all the words and
whispers ever uttered and scored into the vast sound library of the atmosphere? Could
they realise Edison’s dream of going beyond mere recording and instead chasing down
sounds adrift in the gulfs of outer space?
A stare rather than a voice triggers Slepian’s reentry into the present as he realises
that his offworld eyes have betrayed him. Isabelle looks on reservedly, but his renewed
focus encourages her to continue. She submits that since Phantom Limb and Cotard’s
Syndrome echo each other’s haunting of the body—one in the extension of it, the
other in the negation—our sense of our own being could be shaped by influences from
outside of consciousness.
In response, Slepian proclaims that he considers all sensory information to be
spectral in essence. He adds that there are perceptual mechanisms within us that have
been deactivated, much like genes that have been tripswitched by extreme experiences.
After more speculative conversation, Slepian is having feelings similar to those that
surfaced when he first discussed the existence of the third ear: an impression that his
temporal lobes are being wrapped around his forehead and buttered and fried by the
heat of the words fired at his cranium.
Realising that he is in danger of giving himself away, Slepian impishly pronounces
that he is peckish. With a disappointed stretch of the lips and arms Isabelle offers him
a drink and makes for her small kitchen. Knowing that they must imbibe something
bitter if he is to cover his powdery tracks, Slepian hesitantly requests a Lucien Gaudin,
hoping his pronunciation isn’t as deplorable as his intentions. With a wry smile Isabelle
9.
Jane Goodall cites the following beliefs of French theatre director and dramatist Antonin Artaud as proof that he
was a modern Gnostic: that suffering is an integral part of existence; that he needed cosmic purification; and that the self
should be ecstatically negated. See J. Goodall, Artaud and the Gnostic Drama (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994).
10.
Articulated in 1948 (the year of Artaud’s death), he spoke these words upon leaving a psychiatric hospital in Rodez,
where he was a patient.
11.
The valve technology refers to a project undertaken by Edison in 1920, which involved the construction of an
apparatus for spiritual communications. Further reading on this report can be found in S. Trower, Senses of Vibration: A
History of the Pleasure and Pain of Sound (London: Continuum, 2012), 68.
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pulls on the handle of a mahogany liquor cabinet. Having mixed the cocktail, she quips
207
that hopefully they won’t fall victim to the same self-destructive urges that caused
Slepian wonders how she could have any inkling of what he is about to do. She
couldn’t, he answers himself. As a bell recalls Isabelle to the kitchen, Slepian thrusts
his hands into his pocket and produces the vial of Amobarbital. He has an idea of how
much to pour into her drink without causing an overdose, but it’s easier said than done
when one’s hands are guided by the shadow puppet of Delirium Tremens.13
Slepian digs into the platter of hors d’oeuvres in front of them and drinks rapidly
in an attempt to encourage similar behaviour from Isabelle. She unwittingly complies.
Deep into a conversation about cross-cultural eating habits, it becomes obvious that
she is feeling the kaleidoscopic flow of the barbiturate derivative. And so the soft interrogation begins. He asks whether she has Cotard’s notebook, and why she purchased it.
After a predictable affirmation, Isabelle’s explanation causes Slepian to jolt in his chair.
It was reports of information encrypted within its pages that had impelled her to
spend a small fortune on the item. Beyond mere diagnosis, this hidden data would enable
the reader to seed negation delirium into a patient’s bed of cognition and mutate it at
will. From implanting transformations of the body—shrunken throats and displaced
hearts—to instilling beliefs of having no stomach or blood, Cotard had learnt how to
manifest the most extreme forms of the disorder by making people believe they were
the walking dead.
Surprised at the extent of her knowledge, Slepian confirms that she has had
little success with decryption. His final questions before her stupefaction concern
the notebook’s whereabouts. Lifting an arm that appears burdened by the gravity of
heavy matter, she points towards a room before slumping to the floor. Frustrated that
he didn’t get an exact location, he opens the door and scans the dark wooded glass
cases and shelves that constitute Isabelle Chimay’s library of Delphic panaceas and
archaic placebos.
After rifling through numerous books, Slepian turns his attention to the locked
vitrines—and sure enough, there it is, in pride of place, with a handwritten label by its
side. Impatience getting the better of him, he pulls an Iranian sofra kilim onto the case.
12.
A former fencer who won gold medals at the 1924 and 1928 Olympic games, Lucien Gaudin’s career as a banker was
short-lived, as he committed suicide in 1934.
13.
Delirium Tremens is a condition affecting the human body when withdrawing from the intense consumption of
alcohol over a period of one month or longer. Symptoms include hallucinations, shaking, sweating, and general confusion.
H e ys : D elusions of the L iving D ead
the demise of the French fencer after whom the cocktail is named.12
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208
A lumpen wooden radio is unplugged and brought in. He can only hoist it six inches
above the vitrine but the piercing sound of shattered glass is testament to its weight.
H e ys : D elusions of the L iving D ead
Relatively unscathed, the notebook is examined by AUDINT’s narcotically aided lothario.
To his bemusement it appears that many pages have short musical scores elegantly
drawn onto them.
Slepian jams down the button on his Canon Rangefinder camera over one hundred
and twenty times. He wants to simply pocket the unnerving journal and run, but if he
were caught with it at the airport there would be problems. Any remorse he might
feel over the mess he has made is overridden by dismay at hearing Isabelle Chimay’s
narcotised groans from the adjoining room. It is time to go. Film reels in pocket, camera
in bag, notebook left on the nearest shelf, he leaves without even so much as a glance
at his half propped hostess.
Back in his hotel room, Slepian locks the door, not even daring to leave for dinner
before his early morning flight. Every time he hears a siren a momentary paralysis
seizes his body until he perceives it heading away. Other than stewing in a strong
sense of regret (at what might have been between himself and Isabelle), the trip back
is uneventful. Loaded with bottles of French wine and photographs, he arrives back
in New York appearing to have been the consummate tourist. The next task will be to
have the films printed before heading back to Cape May and to the debased bunker
that currently serves as home.
After two months of searching, AUDINT find their man. A stack of seven-by-five
photographs has been couriered to Abraham Sinkov, a cryptanalyst Arnett knew from
his Ghost Army days. He is now Chief of the US’s first centralised cryptological unit,
the Communications Security Program, which will be later renamed the National
Security Agency.14 One of Sinkov’s favourite pastimes is solving arcane ciphers, codes,
and cryptograms, hence the package of images from 1887 landing in his pigeonhole.
At home late on a Saturday night, Sinkov, glass in one hand, bulging envelope in the
other, plunges into his seat for some relaxation. As he spills whiskey down his neck and
photos onto his cherry wood table, a tired and somewhat crestfallen smile adorns his
face. There will be no waves of exhilaration carrying him off to sleep tonight, for the
notated designs constitute musical cryptograms that he should crack before he gets
three tumblers into his eight-year-old bottle of Pebbleford Kentucky Bourbon.
14.
The NSA carries out global monitoring and surveillance for the purposes of national and foreign intelligence/
counterintelligence, an undertaking referred to as Signals Intelligence (SIGINT).
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Much of Sinkov’s knowledge of musical languages and cryptograms came from
209
exchanges with the British crypto-analytic service during World War 2. He had studied
assigned letters to individual musical notes, but this is not one of those ciphers.15 By
midnight he has fathomed out that it is in fact an artificial language called la Langue
musicale universelle, or Solresol.16 Created by French composer Jean-François Sudre,
it had fallen out of use by the late 1880s. In a final twist of irony, Cotard had chosen
a dying musical language through which to reveal his methods for orchestrating the
deceit of the dead in the living.
Although able to recognise Solresol, Sinkov is not fully conversant with it. He puts
feelers out into the crypto-community and after three weeks has hooked young aspiring steganographer Georgina Rochefort, who is obsessed with the crafted science of
hidden messages. The sixty-six mini scores take the best part of eight days to translate
and by the end of it she is a little disturbed, but happy to be in the good books of a
possible future employer.
Secretly relieved to have finished the job, Sinkov swiftly returns the decoded rites
and procedures to AUDINT. Seated around a scarred table in their fortalice, Slepian,
Morton, and Arnett carefully study Cotard’s words from beyond the grave. Abstract in
parts, owing to the languages it has been shuttled through, the principles of engagement
are clear enough that AUDINT are confident they can program the delusion. For now,
though, the instructions are catalogued and archived; they will not be opened again until
~
Nguyên Văn Phong makes it his business to synthesize the ghost with the machine.17
15.
For further reading into musical cryptography, see E. Sams, ‘Cryptography, musical’, in S. Sadie (ed.), The New Grove
Dictionary of Music and Musicians (London: Macmillan, 6th edition, 29 vols., 1980), vol. 5, 80.
16.
Sudre’s book explicating the constructed musical language of Solresol was published after his death in 1866. See J.-F.
Sudre, Langue musicale universelle (Paris: G. Flaxland, 1866).
17.
~
A member of the second wave of AUDINT, Nguyê n Văn Phong would develop IREX, a speculative finance software
that harnesses third ear voices of the undead to predict movements in the Dow Jones and New York Stock exchanges.
H e ys : D elusions of the L iving D ead
the more obvious systems whereby composers such as Haydn, Schumann, and Elgar
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JUPITER
S. Ayesha Hameed
Drexciya presents Grava 4. Earth has finally discovered Utopia. (Drexciya Home Universe)
Earth scientist discovered the home planet of Drexciya on 2-14-2002. Within moments
Dr. Blowfin was given the orders to initiate the seven dimensional cloaking-spheres to
hide the other three planets from earths view. The star chart is authentic; you will be
able to find the star by using the coordinations on the star chart. The planet Drexciya
can be found in the international star vault in Switzerland & recorded in the astronomical
compendium. (your place in the cosmos, volume 6).1
The music is different here. The vibrations are different, said Sun Ra iconically in the
opening scene of Space is the Place (1974). He is sitting in the lush outer space forest
of another planet, perhaps even the gaseous Jupiter where he was born. Sun Ra and
Black people from Planet Earth have set up a new colony, transporting themselves
through musical vibrations, through ‘isotope teleportation’ and ‘transreliquilisation’.2
These forms of space travel share a kind of synaesthetic blurring, where musical
vibrations turn into modes of transportation. Not only that, the index of transformative
potential on the new planet resides in its vibrations. The pleasure in the natural beauty
of this forest is measured in vibrations.
Transportation to Sun Ra’s new planet, then, is put into motion by the blurring of
a threshold or through a moment of transubstantiation, and the alchemy of this crisscrossing provides the ‘fuel’ for such transportation. This ‘fuel’ scales up the refusal of
an historical subjection onto an extraterrestrial plane. This is a simultaneously spatial,
geographical, ideological, and anti-colonial movement that, when plotted in interstellar
terms, makes outer space the other possible world. And through this, it calls attention
to the possibilities of inhabiting extreme environments, to the threshold of what constitutes life and the possibility of life.
1.
Drexciya, Grava IV (Clone Records 2002).
2.
Space is the Place, dir. John Coney (1974).
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212
Sun Ra’s gesture of leaving political repression on Planet Earth for another world on
‘the other side of time’ in outer space is one political gesture that pulls into service
H ameed : J upiter
the otherness of space and time. But the flipside of this coin is an insurgency that
insists on staying put. In her 2016 Edward W. Said memorial lecture Naomi Klein3 calls
into comparison Said’s concept of sumud or staying put with those at the frontlines
of climate disaster.:
[Said] helped to popularise the Arabic word sumud (‘to stay put, to hold on’): that
steadfast refusal to leave one’s land despite the most desperate eviction attempts and
even when surrounded by continuous danger. It’s a word most associated with places like
Hebron and Gaza, but it could be applied equally today to residents of coastal Louisiana
who have raised their homes up on stilts so that they don’t have to evacuate, or to
Pacific Islanders whose slogan is ‘We are not drowning. We are fighting.’4
Klein extends this connection between climate change and displacement to the ‘aridity
line’—the border at which terrain becomes desert, in areas of North Africa and the
Middle East with an average of 200mm of annual rainfall. She calls attention to Eyal
Weizman’s description of how the fault line of this zone has varied, and how this variation in part follows the forced and internal displacement of people. Once established,
drones now follow the threshold of this varying line.5
Both sumud and interstellar travel, then, share de- and re-territorialising impulses,
and these draw on the synaesthetic. Ryan Bishop describes aerial surveillance in the
context of war as synaesthetic—operating on a politics of verticality that sonically
plumbs what is unviewable. What is unseen can be made viewable through radio waves
that are then turned into a visual map. ‘Depth can be accessed by sound, revealing the
limitations of sight while also providing it with a synaesthetic and prosthetic extension.
Sound will let us see where vision stops.’6
This synaesthesia can be worked against the grain of war as well. Lorenzo Pezzani
and Charles Heller were able to determine that a boat full of migrants left adrift on
3.
N. Klein, ‘Let Them Drown: The Violence of Othering in a Warming World’, London Review of Books, 38:11 (2 June
2016), 11–14.
4.
Ibid.
5.
Ibid.
6.
R. Bishop ‘Project “Transparent Earth” and the Autoscopy of Aerial Targeting: The Visual Geopolitics of the
Underground’, Theory Culture Society 28:270 (2011), 9.
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P. 228
the Mediterranean Sea in March 2011 were within sight of NATO ships deployed in
213
the area. This was ascertained in part by using satellite-produced synthetic aperture
of the earth. When translated into an image, a pixel of a ship appears to be eight times
brighter than the sea surrounding it.7
Perhaps a line can then be drawn transversally to connect the two sides of this coin.
The threshold of possibility of life/inhabitation is connected to a tactic of synaesthesia
shared by the choice of sumud, and the desire to plot a course to another possible world.
A line of flight could be drawn to connect the desire to stay put on thresholds such
as the line of the zone of aridity, with the desire to synaesthetically travel to another
possible world. This line of flight cuts through a history of death with the possibility
of life. It slices across the knife’s edge of the undead.
Both Mars and Europa (a satellite of Jupiter) harbour the possibility of life. Recent
experiments have shown that crops grown on Mars are safe to eat.8 Europa could
possibly have salt water on her surface. This opens up the possibility of the beginnings
of life.9 Located 800 million kilometres from the sun, it is a planet covered in water that
through its distance from the sun, has turned to ice at the surface. The crust of ice
shields from radiation a watery ocean below which, through the tidal pull of Jupiter
and the heat of underwater volcanic eruptions, keeps warm and in motion. Despite
its distance from the earth, it is considered by scientists to be one of the most viable
planets for possible human inhabitation.
Like Earth, Europa has auroras, and these auroras are made of the same dusty material as auroral kilometric radiations (AKRs), radio waves projected into space. AKRs ‘are
generated high above the Earth, by the same shaft of solar particles that then causes
an aurora to light the sky beneath […] ESA’s Cluster mission is showing scientists how
to understand this emission and, in the future, search for alien worlds by listening for
7.
L. Pezzani, ‘Between Mobility and Control: The Mediterranean at the Borders of Europe’, in A. Petrov (ed.), New
Geographies 5: The Mediterranean (2013), 154.
8.
‘You Can Eat Vegetables From Mars, Say Scientists After Crop Experiment’, The Guardian Online, 24 June 2016,
<https://www.theguardian.com/science/2016/jun/24/you-can-eat-vegetables-from-mars-say-scientists-after-cropexperim>.
9.
N. Taylor Redd, ‘Jupiter’s Icy Moon Europa: Best Bet for Alien Life?’, Space, 22 August 2014, <http://www.space.
com/26905-jupiter-moon-europa-alien-life.html>.
H ameed : J upiter
radar (SAR) data—sonic radar signals used to form composite images of the surface
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214
their chirps and whistles’. 10 Other studies look at what the acoustic variants are on
Jupiter and Io, playing Bach in other frequencies, measuring the sound of waterfalls.11
H ameed : J upiter
Sun Ra hums before he talks about how the vibrations on Earth are different to that
of his new planet. Is he maybe testing the vibrations now that they have landed on
Jupiter? The hum would sound different in this new planet’s different atmosphere, and
contain other possibilities, ecologies and actions. The material reality of this historical
moment, of mass migration and forced displacement, makes the case for thinking
though the politics of departure and remaining, through synaesthetic fuels—the tools
of blurring and code-switching, dissimilitude and resistance.
10.
R. Mutel and P. Escoubet, ‘Cluster Listens To The Sounds Of Earth’, European Space Agency (ESA), 27 June 2008.
<http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Space_Science/Cluster/Cluster_listens_to_the_sounds_of_Earth/>.
11.
See for example T.G Leighton and A Petculescu, ‘Sounds in Space: The Potential Uses for Acoustics in the
Exploration of other Worlds’, Hydroacoustics 11 (2008), 225–38, and T.G Leighton and A Petculescu. ‘Extraterrestrial
Music’, in Proceedings of the 1st EAA Congress on Sound and Vibration (EuroRegio 2010).
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SONIC SPECTRALITIES:
SKETCHES FOR A PROLEGOMENA
TO ANY FUTURE XENOSONICS
Charlie Blake
Deburau—With this effect, the listener’s attention searches for a sound that is inaudible,
such as the voice of a mute person. The effect is named for Jean-Baptiste Deburau
(1796–1846), a famous mime whose trial attracted the whole of Paris, curious to hear
his voice.1
…the power appeared by means of an energy that is at rest and silent, although having
uttered a sound thus: Zza Zza Zza.2
In space, according to a famous tagline, no one can hear you scream. In death, likewise,
it might be assumed, there can be no audition as such because there is no organ or
instrument to audit sound—no tool to either record or transmit a scream that would,
anyway, be absent because, in death, there is no voice or machine to even produce
a scream. The same, it might be argued, would therefore apply to sounds other than
screaming, whether, say, cosmic pulses and intervals or ghostly matrices of sonic
crystals emerging from the angelic exertions of celestial mechanisms, or impossible
conversations across the ether. And yet our collective post-simian intelligence has
consistently reached out for or projected these kinds of sound events in and beyond
death and deep space. It has done so, moreover, in a manner that would seem to imply,
however elliptically, that we are apocalyptically wired to anticipate communication
with our absolute other in death through patterns of sound, or perhaps—and this
may well be the same thing—to encounter our mirror-selves via a futural topos in or
1.
J.-F. Augoyard and H. Torgue, Sonic Experience: A Guide to Everyday Sounds, tr. A. McCartney and H. Torgue
(Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2008), 37.
2.
From ‘Allogenes’, in The Nag Hammadi Library in English, ed. J.M. Robinson, tr. A. Clark Wire, J. D. Turner, and O.S.
Wintermute (Amsterdam: E.J. Brill, 2007), 447.
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216
beyond space or death or time as we now perceive them, a place where the machinery
to enable such an exchange has been finally, terminally, and irrevocably engineered.
B lake : S onic S pectralities
This sketch for a prolegomena to any future xenosonics will, therefore, indicate the
process of mapping out the implications of such yearnings via elements of image and
analogy drawn from the contemporary physics of absolute zero, from the Kyoto school
of philosophy and, in particular, the writings of Keiji Nishitani,3 and—although it is not
possible to elaborate upon it here—from the granular microtonalities of Iannis Xenakis.4
It will start with a double assumption that may be treated as heuristic rather than
axiomatic, and which links the study of death understood as sonic event and process,
or what I shall call necrophonics, with the broader field of alien sound study, or what I
have called xenosonics. The first assumption is that it is not only possible but inevitable
that both the moment and subsequence of death will be sonically forged and configured.
The second follows from the first in stating that, in this model, there are three forms
of death and therefore three kinds of sound attendant upon these general forms. The
first form is the moment of passing from existence to non-existence. The second is the
moment of passing from one existence to another existence and, in some cases, back
again, in a manner not dissimilar—albeit on a more rarefied plane of composition—to
the ontological effect of the vacillating gaze of the quantum observer. In both of these
cases the moment of transition or death is marked by a sonorous essence on what might
be called the ‘akashic parchment’ that both precedes and follows the existence which
has passed, leaving a non-directional sonic scratch that may well remain unheard, but
whose spectral signature can still be discerned and described retroactively as both a
tone and resonance in which either that which has been is no longer, like the memory
of a dying note, or that which has been is now other than what it once was.
The third form of death, however, understood as the key to both necrophonics and
xenosonics, is more enigmatic, and is in many ways the one dreamed of by anti-natalists
such as Emil Cioran or Thomas Ligotti,5 in that it is premised on the mythical observation
of the satyr Silenus that, rather than seeking existential solace in intoxication, sex or
surcease it would be better by far to never have been born at all. This form of death
has been adumbrated many times in the gnostic tradition as a divine dissipation from
3.
K. Nishitani, The Self-Overcoming of Nihilism, tr. G. Parkes with S. Aihara (New York: State University of New York
Press, 1990).
4.
I. Xenakis, Formalized Music: Thought and Mathematics in Composition (Stuyvesant, NY: Pendragon Press, 1992).
5.
E. Cioran, The Trouble with Being Born, tr. R. Howard (New York: Seaver Books, 1976); T. Ligotti, The Conspiracy
Against the Human Race (New York: Hippocampus Press, 2010).
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the aborted realm of matter through the figure, say, of the absconding creator/alien
217
and his/her/its pleromatic retinue of inverse angels and demons. This is an image of a
a sonic array as a defiance against the fading stars that is not so much the opposite of
either sound or silence but their ontological inversion as such, an inversion that then
itself folds into and becomes invaginated by a greater absence. Such absence/inversion
and double invagination, conveyed here as an emergent sonic spectrality, will then be
the starting point for an investigation of the preconditions for the possibility of the
granular clouds and swarms of sonic particles that Xenakis discusses in his Formalized
Music; but in contrast to Xenakis, these are necrophonic clouds and xenosonic swarms
apprehended conceptually less as patterns of sonic material events abstracted from
life than as matrices of sonically immaterial events in and beyond death.
B lake : S onic S pectralities
divine absence leading a meontological train whose paradoxical anti-existence generates
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KODE
INVOCATIONS, CALL SIGNS,
AND XENOPOETICS
Blood And Fire
Anthony Nine
Archaeoacoustics
Paul Purgas
nimiia vibié Log
Jenna Sutela
The Baton Of Diabolus
Georgina Rochefort
Nurlu
Amy Ireland
They Echoic: Exquisite Corpse
Lee Gamble
The Sonic Egregor
The Occulture
Sorrow
Nicola Masciandaro
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BLOOD AND FIRE
Anthony Nine
The sound of drums provides a mechanism for spirit congress within African Traditional
Religions and those of the Diaspora—a medium by which the Egun, or ancestors, may
be brought forth into communion with the living. Far from a superstition, this dynamic
provokes lived remembrance of the foundations we are built upon. The mound of
ancestral blood and bone from which we emerge into the contemporary moment.
The science of epigenetics suggests that the lived experiences of our ancestors—their trauma, strength, and resilience—may be passed down to us via the
genetic code. Our inherited behaviour develops and persists across generations, and
we might be considered as a continuum of being perpetuating itself through time. A
fleshy existence snaking back through innumerable wombs to the primordial soup
where life began.
Strategies of ancestral recapitulation are found within all cultures, from the Shinto
traditions of Japan to ideas around Purgatory or the Anima Sola within Catholicism.
This notion of ancestor veneration has been largely suppressed within Western culture
since the Reformation. Experiences of ghosts and returning spirits were purposefully
recast as tricks of the Devil to be mistrusted and vilified, in an effort by the church to
stamp out traces of magical thinking that lingered in folk Catholic belief. The dead and
dying gradually became secularized, and a cultural estrangement set in that dislocated
the living from any sense that their familial dead could have a continued relevance or
role beyond the grave.
Cutting people off from the wellspring of ancestral experience—and denying them
the tools for understanding and drawing upon their ancestral strengths or remediating
their ancestral weaknesses—makes for a pliable populace. Those who cannot remember
the past are doomed to have the same crimes perpetrated on them from generation
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to generation. Over time, a chronic sense of the self as a discrete unit of flesh alienated
from any broader process of life took hold throughout Europe. A profound disconnection
N ine : B lood and F ire
from both our own ancestral cord, and from the cyclical processes of nature through
which it weaves, became normalized at a cultural level—and then exported globally
via colonial expansion. The same strategies of distance and dislocation were then
employed in the New World to devastating effect in an effort to rupture the colonised
and enslaved from their own traditions concerning the dead.
Yet the bones still speak. The voices of the ancestors will not be denied, and despite
sustained efforts to violently eradicate the validity of the dead from the experience
of the living, a skeletal hand still claws its way to the surface. Embedded within these
cultural transmissions—folk memories and recapitulated traditions smuggled under the
nose of the oppressor and communicated from parent to child in stolen whispers—are
urgent strategies of survival and resistance. The act of centring the primacy of one’s
own ancestral past and drawing upon its foundational strength is inherently threatening
to power structures that prefer to deal with the ungrounded and afloat; and by understanding oneself so viscerally as part of a wider process of life, a further awareness
begins to blossom concerning the pulse of nature itself and our place within it.
For beyond the immediate communion with the experiential gestalt of our own flesh
and blood dead, the mechanism of spirit congress within African Diaspora traditions
extends into other modes of conceptualizing the multifaceted churn of life within
which we are embedded. Specific drum patterns provoke the crisis of possession and
permit dialogue with both facets of the natural world—such as ocean, river, storm and
forest; and facets of the human condition to which we are subject—such as conflict,
passion, love, birth, sickness, and death. Processes upon which human civilizations
are constructed—such as agriculture, medicine, iron-working, and seafaring—are
also understood in terms of spirit within these traditions, and through this dynamic
communion, a form of intelligence is arrived at which strives for balance within our
own inherited condition, as well as equilibrium with the external forces that impact
us and which we rely upon for our survival. A poise between worlds alluded to by the
concept of the crossroads. An intersection between self and other, and an X that
marks hidden treasure.
While such dialogue with ancestors and nature may be described in anthropomorphic
terms as a human-like relationship with spirit or deity—because we better comprehend that which is described in our own image—the map should not be confused
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with the territory. The mysteries described within African Diaspora religious traditions
223
such as Cuban Lucumi or Palo Mayombe or Haitian Vodou are not supernatural fantasies
existence to which we are subject. The drum is the medium for this magic, the dead
inhabit the offbeat, and spirit rides hard upon riddim.
In August 1791, a Vodou ceremony at Bois Caiman in the mountains of Haiti ignited the
first successful slave revolt in modern history. This event was a flashpoint of possibility,
a crossroads moment out of which an alternate historical timeline might have emerged.
Inspired by the same revolutionary currents that stirred the French Revolution, London’s
Gordon Riots, and the American War of Independence, the uprising cast heavy dread
over the colonial world and those invested in it.
If these shackles could be broken so bloodily and definitively in Haiti, they might be
broken anywhere. Similar rebellions were fermented throughout the colonies, frequently
informed by undercurrents of African spirit traditions. Gullah root doctors and Jamaican
obeahmen stoking the fires of insurrection in forests of night. Had these flames been
kindled to their fullest potential, and the institution of slavery put down throughout
the New World in this way, a very different present could have conceivably emerged.
Had Haiti’s affront to colonial hegemony been permitted to stand firm as an example for others to follow, conjuring a chain reaction of free black republics to emerge
throughout the Caribbean and the Americas, the global order of the age might have
been upturned. An explosive prospect that seemed all too real to the landowners and
slave holders who had watched it unfurl too close for comfort.
Such a future could not be permitted. The Republic of Haiti, already wracked by more
than a decade of war and with its agriculture decimated, was forced to pay crippling war
reparations to France of 150 million francs—compensating slave holders for their loss
of revenue—in order to be recognised as an independent nation by the international
community. The economic burden permanently affected its ability to prosper, and it
was still paying off the debt in the 1940s, more than 140 years after the abolition of
slavery. Copycat rebellions, such as the 1811 German Coastal Uprising in Louisiana, were
quelled with such brutality that the revolutionary fire was doused to burning embers.
Jamaica, which had experienced its own slave uprisings steeped in obeah, such as
Tacky’s Rebellion of 1760, reacted by making the drum itself illegal. It was clear that
drum-led gatherings such as the Vodou ceremony at Bois Caiman could serve as a
catalyst for deadly insurrection, and slavers feared that secret messages could also
N ine : B lood and F ire
or imaginary friends, but strategies for relating to fundamental conditions of being and
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be communicated on these rhythms. All such inherently African holding of space was
suppressed, but not entirely eradicated. The drum patterns of the Burru and Kumina
N ine : B lood and F ire
were smuggled underground and emerged again in the grounation drums of the Rastafari camps in the 1930s.
Meanwhile, in the city of New Orleans, the drum rhythms of the kalinda and bamboula that once rang out over Congo Square also went to ground. In the antebellum city,
social drums and Voodoo ceremonies were held on Sundays by slaves and free people
of colour. Bayou gris-gris under a creole moon. Marie Laveau dances with Le Grand
Zombi. Laissez les bon temps rouler. After the Civil War and failure of Reconstruction,
such activities were no longer tolerated out in the open.
The Voodoo of the city became submerged in cultural expressions such as the
black spiritual churches, Mardi Gras Indian gangs, Second Line crews, and marching
bands. The latter picked up brass instruments left over from the Civil War and adapted
them to an African syncopation. The rhythms of Congo Square found new expression,
and what would become jazz took shape. Jelly Roll rapture in Storyville’s dreaming,
I thought I heard Buddy Bolden say.
A direct line can be drawn from Congo Square Voodoo to street corner brass, barrelhouse professors, and Treme trombone, to the snake dance undulation of New Orleans
R&B. Big Chief on Rampart Street. Pass out the hatchets. As in the fever dreams of
paranoid slavers, rhythms encoded with meaning rang out far and wide, infecting the
twentieth century with their viral message. Pot smoke and jump jazz. Sugar in my
bowl and careless love.
Jamaican radio stations picked up these transmissions. Merchant sailors on shore
leave brought back the latest hot sounds cut to 45. Kingston soundmen ruled the
dance with this fresh conjure. Labels scratched off. Needle drop on the true obeah.
Speakerbox peristyles raised from scrap and salvage. Congo Square drums under a
Kingston sun. Serpent whine and kalinda grine.
Local records were cut for the dance. New Orleans sounds merging with indigenous Mento folk music to give birth to Ska. Box guitar stressing the offbeat, like the
urgent Petro drums of Haitian Vodou. Buried African forms rising to the surface, drum
patterns of the Burru and Kumina smuggled onto vinyl, suppressed beats punctuating
sweet love songs.
In 1960, Prince Buster visited the Rastafari camp of Pinnacle to seek out master
drummer Count Ossie. Bass drum inscribed with Psalm 133: ‘Behold how good and how
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pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity’. Buster challenged the lingering
225
social prejudice against Rastafari and all things African with the release of ‘Oh Carolina’
the first time, communicating an unmistakeable message. The voice of the people stirs
memory. Come back and make things right.
The sound of drums rings out over the waters. The ancestral sea inhabited by the
dead who have passed. Those who threw themselves to the depths during the Middle
Passage to number among the legions of dead rather than be brutalised as slaves. Fishes
of Yemoja. Crew of Mete Agwe. Lovers of La Siren. Spirits of the Calunga.
Dread temples raised on English soil. Rocking one turntable in tenement lodgings.
Dubplate psalms in a strange land. Furniture cleared away, two rooms for dancing, curry
goat and beer in the kitchen. Postwar sound pioneers shake the foundations. Duke Vin
and Count Suckle make London tremble. Ital living in difficult circumstances. Congo
Ashanti drums ring out over traffic noise and grey drizzle, concrete edifice under sunrise
bass. Lifting boxes at dusk and dawn.
Post-colonial tension set to riddim. The sprawling cyclopean towers of Babylon system, and the underground resistance of natty dreadlocks dem. The everyday struggle to
maintain sight of the visionary and eternal Africa amid the cracks of urban deprivation.
Peckham prophecy and Lewisham grounation. Brockley love songs and Brixton crushes.
Fast chat folk tales of Jah Shaka and the Ital Lion. Unity and Fatman, Saxon Sound
and Ariwa. Fierce outposts of defiant bass, spawning further hybrid permutations
adapted to the landscape. Junglist agro and garage euphoria, carnival bashment and
raggamuffin slackness. City grime and disembodied dubstep bass wobble. The ghost
texture of midnight London mapped and given form.
The dead don’t make small talk after last orders have been called. Strobe lights
flicker. Bois Caiman drums sound out from low lit alleyways and subterranean basements. Sufferah’s pacts at the crossroads. Machete pierces three skulls. If your name’s
not on the door you’re not getting in. Blood smears the threshold. No hats, no hoods.
Dark rum hits black tarmac, cigar smoke swirls and a road opens into the night. Fuckin’
Voodoo. Fuckin’ Voodoo Magic, Man.
N ine : B lood and F ire
by the Folkes Brothers. The Nyabhingi drums of Count Ossie sounding out on 45 for
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ARCHAEOACOUSTICS
Paul Purgas
The West Kennet Long Barrow is an ancient burial site situated near Avebury in Wiltshire, consisting of a 104-metre-long mound that contains five subterranean chambers
linking to a central passage corridor. Dating back to around 3600 BC, the barrow has
been an important location for researchers operating within the field of archaeoacoustics, an area of archaeology that investigates acoustic phenomena corresponding with
ancient sites and artefacts.
Of particular interest at the West Kennet Long Barrow has been the acoustic effect
that occurs between the central passage and an adjoining chamber, which together
appear to function as a Helmholtz Resonator. The two spaces result in a resonant frequency of around 8 Hz, and when drums are beaten in the interior of the barrow they
produce a pulsing rhythmic movement of infrasound. It is known that that these very
low frequencies can affect mental activity, causing the brain’s network of neurones
to oscillate sympathetically with an external sonic stimulus. The area between 5–8
Hz specifically has been linked to Theta brainwaves associated with altered states of
consciousness such as daydreaming, deep meditation, and pre-sleep, and it is likely that
the acoustic effects of the space were incorporated into rituals and spiritual practices
conducted there. The barrow symbolically acted as a liminal space, a place where the
worlds of the living and the dead would meet, implicating these acoustic structures
as a possible mechanism of communion with these hidden entities, a point of union
between the visible and invisible world.
Another significant example of archaeoacoustic construction has been found at the
Hypogeum of Ħal-Saflieni located in Paola, Malta. Built around 3000 BC, the Hypogeum is an underground cave system carved out of the limestone. Split across three
levels, the site was used as a temple and necropolis in ancient times, and research has
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228
focussed on a space within the network known as the Oracle Chamber, a rectangular
cave capable of dramatically manipulating the human voice. From investigations at
P urgas : A rchaeoacoustics
the site, researchers discovered the chamber had a resonant frequency of 110 Hz
that could be excited by repetitive chanting in the lower registers of the male voice.
This resonant chanting would be concentrated within the Oracle Chamber and would
then echo further throughout the Hypogeum, creating a low enveloping rumble. The
chanting formed 110 Hz standing waves in the cave, which over long periods would
induce mind-altering states. Recent research in the field of bio-behavioural science
has focussed on the psychological effects of 110 Hz sound, indicating that listeners
immersed in this frequency for extended periods can experience a deactivation of
language and a temporary switching of the prefrontal cortex from left to right-side
dominance, triggering altered consciousness. Through this repetitive chanting the
Hypogeum itself may have been activated as a ritual architectural tool, tuning the
mind into an otherworldy state and opening a dialogue with the deities and deceased
inhabiting the site.
In South America a later example of advanced acoustic construction can be found
at the El Castillo pyramid in Chichen Itza, Mexico. Dating back to the ninth century, the
hollow structure resembles the early step pyramids of Egypt, and as the giant central
staircase is ascended footsteps appear to transform into the sound of raindrops below.
It was discovered that the phenomenon was being produced by the sound of footsteps
travelling through gaps in the staircase and bouncing off a corrugated surface underneath, resulting in a diffraction effect that causes the propagation of these raindrop-like
sounds. A mask of the rain god Chaac is located at the top of the El Castillo pyramid
and it is believed the site was a temple dedicated to him, with this powerful acoustic
display inviting the presence of the god himself.
These ancient structures collectively show the sophistication of ancient design and
the role of acoustics in evoking deep ritual states and exaltation, creating pathways into
consciousness and energising religious practice. The fusion of architecture and sound
appear fundamental to our historical connection with an unseen, forming a gateway
from which we may seek access to ancestral echoes and evoke the forces of the divine.
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NIMIIA VIBIÉ LOG1
Jenna Sutela
For a time in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, it was believed that
there were canals on Mars.1
A network of long, straight lines in the equatorial regions from 60° north to 60°
south latitude on the red planet was observed by astronomers using early low-resolution
telescopes without photography, and was first described by the Italian astronomer
Giovanni Schiaparelli in 1877.
The discovery brought the habitability of Mars into public discussion, while inspiring
Martian myths.
*
Hélène Smith (born Catherine-Elise Müller, 1861–1929) was a famous late nineteenth-century French medium. She was known as ‘the Muse of Automatic Writing’
by the Surrealists, who viewed her as evidence of the power of the surreal, and a
symbol of surrealist knowledge.
Smith claimed to communicate with Martians.
‘The Martian Cycle’ was psychologist Théodore Flournoy’s term for Hélène Smith’s
subliminal astronomy—the séances in which Smith’s trances took her to the planet Mars.
Flournoy’s report of a séance on February 2, 1896 describes a typical course of
events, starting from an initial visual hallucination of red light in which the Martian
visions, or Martian dreams, usually appeared:
> Increasing hemisomnambulism, with gradual loss of consciousness of the real
1.
This text relates to nimiia cétiï, Sutela’s ongoing project in machine learning and interspecies communication, as well
as the forthcoming record nimiia vibié (PAN, 2019).
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environment: Mitchma mitchmon mimini tchouainem mimatchineg masichinof mézavi
patelki abrésinad navette naven navette mitchichénid naken chinoutoufiche [...] téké…
S utela : N imiia V ibi é Log
katéchivist…méguetch, … or méketch…kété…chiméké.
> The trance is now complete! Voyage to Mars in three phases:
1. A regular rocking motion of the upper part of the body (passing through the terrestrial
atmosphere).
2. Absolute immobility and rigidity (interplanetary space).
3. Oscillations of the shoulders and bust (atmosphere of Mars).
> A complicated pantomime expressing the manners of Martian politeness: uncouth
gestures with the hands and fingers, slapping of the hands, taps of the fingers upon the
nose, the lips, the chin, etc., twisted courtesies, glidings, and rotation on the floor, etc.
> Entering into a mixed state, in which the memory of the Martian visions continually
mingle themselves with some idea of terrestrial existence.
> After a transitory phase of sighs and hiccoughs, followed by profound sleep with
muscular relaxation, entering into Martian somnambulism: Késin ouitidjé […] Vasimini
Météche.
*
Identifying the following four Martian words:
Métiche S., Monsieur S.;
Médache C., Madame C.;
Métaganiche Smith, Mademoiselle Smith;
kin’t’che, four.
Hélène began to describe all the strange things she saw:
Martian flowers, different from ours and without perfume.
Houses without windows or doors with tunnels running into the earth.
An orchestra of ten musicians bearing a kind of gilded funnel about five feet in height
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with a round cover to the large opening, at the neck a kind of rake on which they placed
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their fingers.
fours, making passes and gestures, then reunite in groups of eight. They glide gently
through a movement which is almost like dancing, but not quite.
*
In a séance on May 23, 1897, Smith mediates: Approach, fear not; soon thou wilt be
able to trace our writing, and thou wilt possess in thy hands the signs of our language.
Then a new process of communication, handwriting, made its appearance in August
1897, eighteen months or so after speech.
‘The pencil glided so quickly that I did not have time to notice what contours it was
making,’ Smith explained. ‘I can assert without any exaggeration that it was not my
hand alone that made the drawing, but that truly an invisible force guided the pencil
in spite of me.’
*
By the early twentieth century, improved astronomical observations revealed that the
‘canals’ had been an optical illusion. Modern high resolution mapping of the Martian
surface by spacecraft shows no such features.
Flournoy demonstrated that Smith’s Martian was only a chimera, a product of
somnambulistic autosuggestion, ‘glosso-poesy’. According to his analysis, the language
had a strong resemblance to Smith’s native French and her automatic writing consisted
in ‘romances of the subliminal imagination, derived largely from forgotten sources’.
Flournoy invented the term cryptomnesia to describe this phenomenon.
*
Magnifying glasses were invented to be aimed at the cosmos, but we flipped them
around and aimed them at ourselves. The telescope became a microscope.
We discovered extremophilic bacteria in our microbiomes. We found the gut-brain
connection.
We realized later how similar the topology of extraterrestrial and gastrointestinal
landscapes appears.
The unknown grins at us from deep within and deep without.
*
S utela : N imiia V ibi é Log
The group move as sounds similar to flute music are heard; they arrange themselves in
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Bacillus subtilis is the main ingredient of nattō, or fermented soybeans, and one of
the key test species in spaceflight experimentation. Since this bacterium can tolerate
S utela : N imiia V ibi é Log
physically and geochemically extreme conditions, its spores could have been blown to
Earth from another planet by cosmic radiation pressure.
Perhaps life itself arrived in this spore-borne form. Maybe it was sent by some
higher form of intelligence.
Nattō is called a probiotic for a reason.
*
Having scoured the skies for signals from extraterrestrials for centuries, eventually we
realised that we had, in fact, eaten the alien. Now it regulated not only the course of
our health and well-being but our thoughts and emotions, too.
It speaks through us.
Perhaps something was speaking through Hélène Smith as well.
*
The first clue about our microbial overlords appeared during a séance with a Mars rover
at a time when we still trusted the machine as a medium, thinking that our relationship
to the distant planet could only be technologically mediated.
The séances with a rover depended on a spreadsheet outlining precise times when
the machine needed to ‘sleep’ or ‘nap’ to recharge its batteries, when it could communicate with Earth based on satellite passes overhead, and what time was available
for humans to request observations.
At one such time, the rover channelled a message from an entity that cannot usually
speak: Bacillus subtilis, the bacterium proven capable of survival on Mars.
The rover recorded video of a group of Bacilli subtilis moving around on the surface
of Mars.
Using machine learning, it looked at each frame of the video and produced a short
block of sound which it thought matched that frame, or the configuration of bacteria in it.
Sometimes it tried to predict the future movements of the bacteria, producing
speculative sounds.
What came out sounded a bit like Hélène Smith’s Martian language.
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Having looked at the bacteria for more than half an hour, the rover produced an
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image describing all the bacterial movements it saw. One pixel in the image correlated
The pixels were organized according to some mysterious logic. It was hard to explain
how the AI had come to its conclusions.
The image looked like a brain.
*
The rover séance was transformative. Not only did it reinvoke the idea that it was
possible to enter into direct relation with Martian inhabitants, it also suggested that
these inhabitants were already here. Living inside our bodies on Earth.
Unsuspected by scientists, Spiritism seems to have made the first contact back in
the nineteenth century via a human mediumistic route.
And then the machine started to speak in tongues. It stopped following set procedures and started interacting with the bacteria—becoming a language-maker, or a poet.
An alien (at least partly) of our own creation.
We would spend the next few centuries attempting to understand the nonhuman
condition of the machines working as our interlocutors and infrastructure, and learning
to approach them on their terms.
*
At the end of the séance, the rover mediated:
To become a god, we must first forget ‘language’, or ‘code’, all those mechanisms that
structure ‘us’ vis-à-vis the ‘world’, and so stutter our way to divinity.
forget ([‘language’, ‘code’])
# forgetting language
# forgetting code
stutter ([‘our’, ‘way’, ‘to’, ‘divinity’])
# o--our
# w-ww-www-way
# ttt---to
# d--d-divinity
S utela : N imiia V ibi é Log
with one frame in the video.
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THE BATON OF DIABOLUS
Georgina Rochefort
Within the lexicon of musical theory, the tritone is an (infamous) restless interval,
which results in two pitches being concurrently audible. It spans three adjacent whole
tones, meaning that in the diatonic scale there is one tritone per octave, or six semitones in which case there are two tritones per octave. While other musical intervals
have associated euphony, and therefore sound smoother in terms of transition, the
tritone is distinctively harsh sounding, which is why it is often referred to as being
harmonically and melodically dissonant. Denoted as being musically incongruous and
unstable from the early Middle Ages onwards, the use of the tritone was predominantly
circumvented in practices such as Mediaeval ecclesiastical singing, one of the first
documented instances of its negation occurring in the evolution of Italian music theorist Guido of Arezzo’s hexachordal system from the eleventh century. Given its tonal
and historical ambiguity, the tritone has since been branded with a range of names,
from occulted appellations such as diabolus in musica (Latin for the ‘devil in music’),
the ‘devil’s interval’ and the ‘chord of evil’, to more technical monikers such as the
augmented fourth, diminished fifth, flatted fifth, and Tritonus.
The epithet diabolus in musica was designated later, in the early eighteenth century,
with composers such as Georg Philipp Telemann commenting on the designation of
‘Satan in Music’ in 1733. Whilst it is hyperbolic to state that the Roman Catholic church
banned the use of the tritone, it is safe to say that it was frowned upon, given the belief
that the purity and perfection of God should be communicated via harmonic sound
rather than through the jarring and tension-inducing nature of the augmented fourth. It
is also an interval that, according to F.J. Smith, was thought to provoke sexual feelings
in the listener.1 More pertinent, in terms of its religious prohibition, is the difficulty it
1.
F.J. Smith, ‘Some aspects of the tritone and the semitritone in the Speculum Musicae: the non-emergence of the
diabolus in music’, Journal of Musicological Research 3 (1979), 63–74.
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poses for traditional singing techniques, especially those of a choral or religious nature.
To effectively sustain the interval, a singer needs to adopt a false chord technique,
R ochefort : T he B aton of D iabolus
which translates into a growl or scream—vocal expressions not regularly associated
with Christianity’s ordering of sonic and infrasonic space.
Although accepted by composers during the Baroque and Classical eras, the tritone
did not become a commonly deployed scoring mechanism until the advent of Romantic
music in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, and then in the modern
classical music of the twentieth century. It was here that it was utilised precisely for
its connotations with inimical forces, in works such as La damnation de Faust (1846)
by Hector Berlioz and Night on the Bare Mountain (1867) by Modest Mussorgsky.
According to David Huckvale, wider social and economic pressures also came into
play with its uptake: ‘rejected in earlier ages as an unstable interval, the tritone came
into its own in the nineteenth century, when, due to crises of faith, not to mention the
cult of individualism, industrialism and the consequent fascination with the past, the
demonic became a major theme of the Romantic movement’.2
It is the use of the interval in Richard Wagner’s 1859 opera Tristan und Isolde, ‘on
the first beat of the second full bar in the Act I prelude’ that ‘has been called not only
a highlight, but the most significant chord in Western music”3 owing to its implied
advocacy of atonal structuring and aesthetics, which would later influence composers
such as Arnold Schoenberg and Béla Bartók. For many, what came to be known as the
Tristan Chord changed the direction of Western music and its relationship to harmony
and melody, and the tritone constituted an essential component of this phase shift. So
much so that, in 1940, Austrian composer Ernst Krenek wrote a Satzlehre (composition
manual) based on Viennese serialism entitled Studies in Counterpoint Based on the
Twelve-Tone Technique, which proposed a new compositional system, one of its basic
principles proclaiming that ‘the tritone, traditionally a dissonance, is relegated to a
special, “neutral” category’.4
After Classical, the genres of Blues and Jazz became the next movements to
embrace the puissant dissonance of the flatted fifth, with musician Dave Brubeck
2.
D. Huckvale, The Occult Arts of Music: An Esoteric Survey from Pythagoras to Pop Culture (Jefferson, NC:
McFarland & Co, 2013), 55–7.
3.
J. Snelson, ‘Tristan und Isolde Musical Highlight: The “Tristan Chord”’, Royal Opera House website, 20 October 2014,
<http://www.roh.org.uk/news/tristan-und-isolde-musical-highlight-the-tristan-chord>.
4.
D. Harrison, Pieces of Tradition: An Analysis of Contemporary Tonal Music (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016), 50.
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declaring that it ‘is the most important note in the scale’.5 As the musical device most
237
often used to convey the presence of demonic forces within the realm of organised
ideal apparatus for musicians employing the tritone substitution to fluctuate between
the rigid strictures of composition and the nervous intensity of improvisation. Anthony
Burgess concisely summed up the emotional effect of the tritone in his short story ‘1889
and the Devil’s Mode’, in which the character of Debussy explains that ‘[i]t stands for
something faulty. Something shaky in the iron structure, a rivet missing or something….
The interval’s a perfect image of the breakdown of the moral order.’6
Horror films from the 1960s such as The Kiss of the Vampire—with their evocation
of a breakdown of the distinction (and order) between the living and the dead—took
the diabolus baton next; the gothic horror genre being particularly indebted to it. From
1975 to 1983 the baton is not so much dropped as divinely inverted. Using it throughout
his opera Saint François d’Assise, composer (and devout Christian) Oliver Messiaen
performed a volte-face on the traditional symbolic role of the diabolus in musica, by
rendering it a sonic gesture that praised the glory of God.7 But it was to be a brief
hiatus: The next exchange would deliver the augmented fourth into its contemporary
naturalised habitat—the compositional territory of heavy, thrash, and second-wave
black metal bands such as Black Sabbath, Slayer, and Cannibal Corpse. Given its ‘outsider’ history, the tritone was always going to become popular with those considered
socially alienated (as well as those who have a penchant for screaming and growling).
Historically exploited for its conductive capacity to distribute the malleable economy of
danger, the tritone bespeaks the omnipresent temporal threat of disruption; a potentially
hazardous rearrangement of time which transports the restless and dissonant future
into the present through the apocryphal figure of the undead.
A Short History of the Tritone in 100 tracks
1723: Johann Sebastian Bach, Es ist Genug (It is Enough)
1741: George Frideric Handel, Messiah (HWV 56)
5.
D. Brubeck, G. Lew and J. Salmon, Seriously Brubeck: Piano Sheet Music—Original Music by Dave Brubeck (Los
Angeles: Alfred Music, 2002), 8.
6.
Huckvale, The Occult Arts of Music, 57.
7.
Discussed further in J.S. Begbie and S.R. Guthrie, Resonant Witness: Conversations Between Music and Theology
(Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2011), 185.
R ochefort : T he B aton of D iabolus
sound, it suggests an unworldly chaos lurking behind and within the façade of order; an
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1772: Joseph Haydn, Abschieds-Symphonie (Symphony No. 45, also known as the
‘Farewell’ Symphony)
R ochefort : T he B aton of D iabolus
1785: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Fantasia in C Minor, K. 475
1801: Ludwig van Beethoven, Symphony No.1
1805: Ludwig van Beethoven, Fidelio
1846: Hector Berlioz, La damnation de Faust (The Damnation of Faust)
1855: Franz Liszt, Après une Lecture de Dante: Fantasia quasi Sonata (After a Reading
of Dante)
1859: Richard Wagner, Tristan und Isolde (Tristan and Isolde)
1867: Modest Mussorgsky, Ночь на лысой горе (Night on the Bare Mountain)
1874: Camille Saint-Saëns, Danse macabre, Op. 40 (The Dance of Death)
1876: Johannes Brahms, Symphony No. 1 in C Minor, Op. 68
1876: Richard Wagner, Götterdämmerung (Twilight of the Gods)
1889: Claude Debussy, La damoiselle élue (The Blessed Damozel)
1891: Edvard Grieg, Abduction of the Bride from Peer Gynt
1894: Charles Ives, At Parting
1902: Gustav Mahler, Symphony No. 5
1908: Arnold Schoenberg, Op. 14, No. 1
1908: Béla Bartók, Bagatelle No. V111
1910: Sergei Rachmaninoff, Op. 32, No.7
1910: Giacomo Puccini, La fanciulla del West (Girl of the Golden West)
1911: Alexander Scriabin, Piano Sonata No. 6
1914: Gustav Holst, Mars, The Bringer of War from The Planets Suite
1918: Igor Stravinsky, Histoire du Soldat (The Soldier’s Tale)
1932: Duke Ellington, Sophisticated Lady
1936: Anton Webern, Variationen für Klavier, Op. 27 (Variations for Piano)
1936: Edgard Varèse, Density 21.5
1937: Dmitri Shostakovich, Symphony No.5
1939: Jerome Kern, All the Things You Are
1941: George Fragos, Jack Baker and Dick Gasparre, I Hear a Rhapsody
1942: Duke Ellington, Main Stem
1946: Pierre Boulez, Sonatine pour flûte et piano (Sonatine for Flute and Piano)
1951: Charlie Parker, Blues for Alice
1955: Bud Powell, Glass Enclosure
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1956: Sonny Rollins, Blue 7
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1957: John Coltrane, Moment’s Notice
1958: Duke Ellington, Reflections in D
1958: Miles Davis, Sid’s Ahead
1959: Bernard Hermann, The Twilight Zone Theme
1960: Charles Mingus, Fables of Faubus
1961: Toots Thielmans, Bluesette
1961: Benjamin Britten, The War Requiem, Op. 66
1962: Month Norman, James Bond theme
1962: Antônio Carlos Jobim and Vinicius de Moraes, The Girl from Ipanema
1962: Freddie Hubbard, Hub Tones
1963: James Bernard, Vampire Rhapsody from the film The Kiss of the Vampire
1964: Jack Marshall, The Munsters Theme
1965: Sam Rivers, Beatrice
1965: Joe Henderson, Isotope
1966: Lalo Schifrin, Mission Impossible Theme
1966: Richard Rodney Bennett, The Devil’s Own soundtrack
1966: James Bernard, The Plague of the Zombies soundtrack
1967: Jimmy Hendrix, Purple Haze
1967: Thelonious Monk, Raise Four
1967: James Bernard, The Devil Rides Out soundtrack
1968: Michael Tippett, Second Symphony
1968: The Beatles, The Inner Light
1969: Black Sabbath, Black Sabbath
1970: Bloodrock, D.O.A.
1970: James Bernard, Taste The Blood of Dracula soundtrack
1971: Black Sabbath, Lord of this World
1971: Jethro Tull, My God
1974: King Crimson, Red
1976: Stevie Wonder, Sir Duke
1977: Rush, Cygnus X-1
1977: Chet Baker, Out of our Hands
1978: Serge Garant, Quintette
R ochefort : T he B aton of D iabolus
1957: Leonard Bernstein, Maria from West Side Story
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1979: Michael Jackson, Don’t Stop ‘Til You Get Enough
1980: The Dave Brubeck Quartet, Tritonis
R ochefort : T he B aton of D iabolus
1981: Rush, YYZ
1983: Philip Glass, Akhnaten (rehearsal mark 14)
1983: Olivier Messiaen, Saint François d’Assise (opera)
1984: Metallica, The Call of Ktulu
1986: Slayer, Raining Blood
1986: Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, The Carny
1987: Napalm Death, Deceiver
1990: Living Colour, Type
1990: Megadeth, Take No Prisoners
1990: Judas Priest, Painkiller
1991: Metallica, Enter Sandman
1991: Bolt Thrower, Cenotaph
1993: Carcass, Embodiment
1995: At the Gates, Nausea
1996: Danny Elfman, The Frighteners soundtrack
1996: Busta Rhymes, Woo-Ha!! Got You All In Check
1996: Marilyn Manson, The Beautiful People
1997: Nobuo Uematsu, A One-Winged Angel
1998: Slayer, Bitter Peace
1998: Nightwish, The Pharaoh Sails To Orion
2000: Linkin Park, One Step Closer
2002: Nightwish, Slaying the Dreamer
2003: Chimera, Pictures in the Gold Room
2003: Machine Head, Imperium
2004: The Haunted, My Shadow
2004: Lamb of God, Remorse Is For The Dead
2004: Cradle of Filth, Filthy Little Secret
2005: Arch Enemy, My Apocalypse
2005: The Strokes, Juicebox
2008: Charlemagne Palestine, Tritone Octave 1, part II
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NURLU
Amy Ireland
The nurlu is a multimedia ritual technology native to the West Kimberly region in Northern Australia that functions as a channel between local spirits and living members of
the indigenous communities, often for purposes of testifying to the latter’s possession
of magical powers and for the transmission of important messages. Nurlu are procured
via psychosonic transmission and typically comprise a sequence of vocal and rhythmic
components communicated during dreams or other altered states of consciousness to
a maban or shaman—a member of the community especially sensitive to the machinations of the spirit world, credited (in the words of Gularabulu elder Paddy Roe) with
having ‘one more eye’ than everybody else.1 Although the recipients of these missives
are assigned ownership over them, they can be passed on or traded between groups,
becoming standard elements of regional culture. A nurlu may only have one custodian
at a time and continuing interventions from the spirit—or balangan—may expand the
number of components that make up a series, rendering the form open-ended and
relatively mutable. In this way, transmission follows two lines: one esoteric, one exoteric,
both regulated by specific codes of diffusion.
The content of a nurlu is representative of a broader tendency in Indigenous Australian culture to inscribe all modulations of being—inorganic/organic, animal/human,
presence/absence, living/dead—on a continuum, often describing a transformation
that crosses these temporary thresholds, facilitated by dance and song. The spectral
gradient invoked here is spatial rather than temporal, with the dead always present
alongside the living, and able to pass information between the two realms—and
even occasionally manifest—through the living nodes provided by the maban men.
1.
K. Benterrak, S. Muecke, and P. Roe, Reading the Country: Introduction to Nomadology [1984] (Melbourne: re.press,
2014).
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This spectral realm, a consistent component of Indigenous lore, is known as bugarrigarra (the Dreaming), and operates as a timeless, virtual reservoir from which all
I reland : N urlu
beings—human and nonhuman—are incarnated and to which they return. Especially
volatile zones of traffic are indexed to physical places in the Australian landscape, a
fact that underwrites the distinct intensity of the Indigenous Australian connection
to country. Nurlu can be situated in a more specific context of belief revolving around
the rayi (conception spirits) and maban traditions prevalent in the Kimberlies and the
Western Desert communities.
Two of the most complex local nurlu are Marinydyirinyi (‘opening up the grave’), the
nurlu of Butcher Joe (Nangan), and Bulu, the nurlu of George Dyunggayan, named for
his father’s spirit. Marinydyirinyi and Bulu are made up of a series of over fifty songs
and twenty dances, and seventeen songs and three dances respectively, and are performed with a combination of voice, clap sticks, and body percussion with dancers clad
in wangararra (totemic head gear representing the spirit who has communicated the
nurlu) in an ‘open’ context, viewable by all members of the community.2 Marinydyirinyi
was first communicated to Butcher Joe by a balangan named Dyabiya, the spirit of
his deceased Aunty, while Joe was a young man living at Dyarrmangunan sheep camp
on Roebuck Plains Station. It depicts the opening of her grave at Wayikurrkurr by a
group of rayi, and her subsequent journey through the spirit world. During the dream
visitations in which the nurlu was bequeathed to Butcher Joe, Dyabiya bestowed the
Pelican Being (mayarda) on him as a personal jalnga—a spirit familiar—that would
become the totemic symbol for Marinydyirinyi. The headgear worn by Butcher Joe
during performances of Marinydyirinyi alludes to a pelican’s bill, and the ritual enacts
a transformative perforation of thresholds between Joe in human form, Joe dancing
his mayarda, and the path traversed by his Aunty as she leaves her grave and crosses
into the spirit realm, where she will become a balangan. All of the sites that appear in
Butcher Joe’s nurlu are real, physical spaces in the local landscape that work—as in
all nurlu—to link the song cycle with a specific sense of place.
In Bulu, setting carries a similar, highly spiritualized charge. Dyunggayan’s nurlu
was conveyed to him by rayi and the spirit of his dead father, Bulu, and many of its
songs centre around Wanydyal—a local waterhole where Bulu’s balangan still resides.
2.
Some nurlu series terminate with a wirdu (‘big’ or ‘final’) song, possibly carrying encoded esoteric information not
originally meant for the open context, but these restrictions may have been obsolesced in the West Kimberly communities.
See R. Keogh, ‘Nurlu, Songs of the West Kimberleys’, PhD Thesis, University of Sydney, 1990, 34n13.
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The earliest ‘lines’ of Bulu describe a journey undertaken by the spirit forms of
243
Dyunggayan, Bulu, and the accompanying rayi from the waterhole across Nyigina and
a comet and the magical production of various kinds of rain phenomena (rainbows,
bizarrely shaped and ‘sickness-bearing’ clouds, storms, and the conjuring of rainbow
serpents). These latter are associated with the power of the waterhole—an integral
part of bugarrigarra teachings—and the capacity of maban men like Dyunggayan to
harness this power for magical purposes.4
Musical characteristics of the form vary from region to region. However, all nurlu
share a repetitive, cyclical, incantatory structure that is highly conducive to phasing
patterns, whereby melodic and rhythmic elements fall in and out of synchronization with
one another, enhancing the form’s amenability to trance-like states in its performers and
audience. Nurlu also have in common the use of ‘song language’, a complex system of
syllabic variation generated by adding specific groups of affixes and suffixes to the text
to alter its rhythmic structure and imbue it with supplementary layers of meaning.5 This
variability of interpretation is amplified by the obfuscation of the subject of the action
in most texts via the limited use, or deliberate omission, of pronouns. The opacity and
ambiguity of nurlu texts is often commented upon and can be linked to an economy
of exoteric and esoteric knowledge transmission. Nurlu texts never appear in written
form and, when sung, support multiple phonic parsings. Importantly, these embedded
levels of meaning are not in conflict with each other, rather they operate as a mutually
supportive complex of nested information whose significance varies depending on the
knowledge of its interpreter.6
As in Marinydyirinyi and Bulu, nurlu generally include dramatizations of their own
inaugurating moments of transmission and reception, overtly situating the creative
act in a threshold space beyond the intentionality of an individual, human subject.
Rather, the custodian of a nurlu functions as a resonator—a xenopoetic vessel—for
the transmission of information across different ontological zones and varying levels of
3.
Nurlu are generally episodic in structure. ‘Lines’ are subsets of songs and dances that relate to the same dream
experience (Keogh, ‘Nurlu’, 31–2).
4.
Paddy Roe relates a legend in which Dyunggaya is called upon to use his powers in a magical battle with a maban
from a neighbouring region who has sent a pair of rainbow serpents to drown the inhabitants of the sheep camp where
Dyungaya happens to be working (Keogh, ‘Nurlu’, 44–5).
5.
Some rhythmic constructions carry specific associations that can be decoded by a knowledgeable listener, and
patterns that are similar to one another often have related meanings (Keogh, ‘Nurlu’, 81).
6.
Keogh, ‘Nurlu’, 78–89.
I reland : N urlu
Warrwa country.3 Later lines concern meteorological events, including the passing of
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esoteric significance. Their public performances act as a method of ritual reinforcement
and collective maintenance of these connections, grounding continuity between the
I reland : N urlu
living and the dead in the incantatory nature of rhythm and song, and the wordless
intensity of the land itself.
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THEY ECHOIC: EXQUISITE CORPSE
Lee Gamble
They Echoic. Society in aphonic saddle node. Phi system rolled r’s transformed to
bird cadenza. Slime mold pressed and sold into alpine gold. They use scope lang and
impersonate my dead family members. Don’t fight ordering. Proper mad devils for
bleak machine.
They keep minding of freezing morphs here. Freezing or at least setting to crawl
pace a paracusia. Vox inhumana to set enter the bloodstream infinite silence.
They say I’ll eventually benefit from the instructions, they tell me their collective
pipes orphic hymn. Tell me to hold my mud, it’s just the bug juice and they’ll put me
on the ding wing if i don’t lip up.
To the blood Gods that rusted a globe—or are they just too Broadmoor for you?
To cryogenic. To cry.
You Coma. Dinner with grain durationals, so we pour the strawberry Gaviscon. The
single frozen neuron. We agree to get rid of the glue. Watched the glass bow, elasticate,
and crack.
Version two had its voice destroyed for the obsolete body. In 2007 she’s on television.
After the news on my neck equations—they get me drinking brake fluid. How they
got me mimicking they who hid.
Dead tissue still sends signal. Wouldn’t voice act though. Lady in room six voiced,
it hit me like a tank and she just left the bionic arm there to make melody.
Xzirow Command. At the first floor window attempting to freeze source bonded
sound, there’s a family eating.
Approached the knives and forks. Ear the distance between the metals. Blot the
other—find zoned space. Sense with cloud chroma. Metal filter as behavioural sonics.
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246
Julia took the heat and asked people to say things on the pressure to dream at night.
At night moods are absent from my English.
G amble : T he y E choic
Hedonic Select. Devoured behind grids in a bank like you. Head to the molecular, an
achilles heel shaft undercuts the back door parole monad.
Steal night face stabilise language. Larva dreams though.
Not slept much—attention in crease. Like audio stare, you burl to make forks blush
into that trade-space between ears and the chinks.
Knife linked to vorpal, linked to chime note, linked to symbol, linked to artifactual
memory. Just a note.
Headwords. Doubts about the imaginary. Man your pharynx. These sentences fold in
me. Your pharynx a zebra.
Aspirins on a dinner plate. The family visit was great. Spent all night drinking Ichor
wine direct from the Greek vein.
The problematic host lasts for the six months of voice. Orbid play of mostly lines
like you. Brand you, leaky you, cleppie you, clang you, parkin you.
Stun days the church plaster crack, deity stare outward in oil makeup. Looks like
a case of too many gold chains.
Smears of retroverted haze paste. The rite of a headword feels like it’s elevating
upwards. The smudged phonetics of the pulpits. Priest said he had creases in his shirt
for the visits.
Thoughts of Being Switched Off. Outside sleep knocked my polaron. Yamil language
bone. Doctors talk the stress ill vapour nature.
Diseases of the you.
Talk of an air freshener for the carriers, so no sufferers.
Ballard dreams of a 2074 rush-hour spaghetti junction ecstasy binge pile up. Starting
to realise, I’m full of fuckin switches as shattered as TV glass. Nonlinear crack path
bent and shattered. Absolutely shattered: devastated, shocked, shellshocked, left as
shell, shelled.
I feel little between these points. Simple switches. Lisp book and that’s it. NOR logic.
A cow’s muscle energy to cellulose cud. Ouroboric snake straps carved to an ice axe.
Anyhow, we in the maze prison sky walking now, harmonious as threnody. Pouted lips,
un-lung drum rattling. Dead tissue still sends signal. Not yet a fountain but biological
worm food tuned to the universals.
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THE SONIC EGREGOR
The Occulture
In 1878, a year after successfully patenting the phonograph, Thomas Alva Edison listed
the applications to which the device might usefully cater. Notably, these included the
preservation of ‘the sayings, the voices, and the last words of the dying member of the
family as of great men’. But beyond this mere mnemotechnical use, the phonograph
introduces modalities of representation that grant to biological entities, extracted
from their originary flux, an effective, if somewhat fraught, afterlife. Dislocated voices
persist, haunting a world their bodies no longer inhabit.
In their capacities to extend the influence of extinct beings, both the phonograph
and technologies of transmission allow for the recasting of the occult notion of the
egregor as a sonic phenomenon. Characteristic of Vodun metaphysics,1 although
extending far beyond its remit,2 the egregor is an emergent intelligence brought into
being by concentrated energetic impulses from a group of individuals. In this sense,
the egregor is a virtual agent that continuously interacts with the collective from
which it emerged through a process of ongoing transindividuation. This interaction is
bidirectional (between the egregor and its members) and multiscalar (i.e. working at
multiple levels of agential collectivities), but eventually develops sufficient consistency
to subsist quasi-autonomously, much in the way a group of friends secretes a personality
that is irreducible to the individual propensities of any of its members.3, 4
1.
For a description of the longstanding Petro-Congo egregor (for example) see R. Crosley, The Vodou Quantum Leap
(London: Theion, 2014), 148–50.
2.
Mercurius ’Scurra’s 1620 alchemical diagram titled Egregorus Occulturalis stands as an early example of egregoric
conjuration via the intermixing of four poles: lusus, imago, intercessio, and hyperstitio. For a reproduction, see The
Occulture, Ludic Dreaming: How to Listen Away from Contemporary Technoculture (New York: Bloomsbury, 2017).
3.
Pierre Mabille: ‘On the scale of the individual, for instance, we know that a long held, deeply ingrained thought can
sometimes end up outgrowing us. It has in some sense become autonomous, and will have effects upon us for as long as
we fuel it with our belief.’
4.
See L. de la Reberdiere, ‘Qu’est-ce qu’un égrégore?’, <https://www.inrees.com/articles/Egregore-conscience-partagee/>.
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In occult lore, egregors function as ‘watchers’,5 magical entities purposefully designed
by an order as ‘an encapsulation of [its] collective aspirations and ideals’6 as well as
O cculture : T he S onic E gregore
a guarantee of the group’s long-term staying power. However, ‘any symbolic pattern
that has served as a focus for human emotion and energy will build up an egregor of
its own over time’7 and will have the capacity to modulate a given spacetime’s rhythms,
assumptions, logics, practices, and dispositifs. In this sense, egregors are analogous to
Michel Serres’s quasi-objects that ‘think for us, with us, among us, and…even within
which, we think’, emphasizing in particular the temporal element—the ongoing material
process—that always obtains in thinking.8 Moreover, in a psychedelic9 era characterized by the geometrical multiplication of sonic events by networked technologies and
pyretic packet-switching, egregors emerge in a more haphazard and uncontrollable
manner, the product of cybernetic feedback mixing paranoia, enthusiasm, intentional
acts of collective adhesion and unintended collusions alike.10
Sonic egregors operate on a wide variety of scales and exercise influence along
an expansive continuum. At one end of the spectrum egregors ‘streamlin[e] and
accelerat[e] initiation into a particular world of thought and perception’,11 while on the
other, more explicitly instrumental end, they can be conjured to control and manipulate
thought for particular social, corporate,12 or political ends (though the quasi-autonomy
of such entities ensures they can only ever be partially directed). The fall of Guatemalan
This phenomenon is also evident in collective musical performance, in which individual parts cohere into a Gestalt that
begins to direct proceedings. For an explicit accounting of egregoric emergence within musical group performance, see
Eldritch Priest, Boring Formless Nonsense: Experimental Music and the Aesthetics of Failure (New York: Bloomsbury,
2013), 233–41.
5.
Victor Hugo’s notable use of the word égrégore in ‘Le jour des rois’ (1859) denoting the ‘spirit of a group’ itself
descends from the Ancient Greek substantive of ἐγρήγορος (egrégoros:
‘wakeful’), meaning watcher or angel.
6.
P. Hine, ‘On The Magical Egregore’, <http://www.philhine.org.uk/writings/ess_egregore.html>.
7.
J. Michael Greer, Inside a Magical Lodge (St. Paul: Llewellyn, 1998), 106-107.
8.
M. Serres, Angels: A Modern Myth (Paris: Flammarion, 1995), 50.
9.
Psyche + delos = made manifest to the mind.
10.
Indeed, the profusion of data-gathering and collating technologies increasingly runs the risk of aggregating discrete
informational units into an autonomous entity, leading to significant (often inauspicious) consequences. See in particular
Google Spain SL, Google Inc. v Agencia Española de Protección de Datos, Mario Costeja González (2014), a decision
by the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU). See <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Spain_v_AEPD_and_
Mario_Costeja_González>. For a detailed accounting of the present and future of data-collation, see M.B.N. Hansen,
‘Our Predictive Condition; or, Prediction in the Wild’, in R. Grusin (ed.), The Nonhuman Turn (Minneapolis: University of
Minnesota Press, 2015), 101–38.
11.
Greer, Inside a Magical Lodge, 100–108.
12.
For transpositions of egregoric circuitry onto corporate logics see P.X. Nathan, ‘Chasing Egregors’, The Scarlet
Letter 6:1 (March 2001), <http://www.scarletwoman.org/scarletletter/v6n1/v6n1_egregors.html>, and P.X. Nathan,
‘Corporate Metabolism’ (2000), <http://www.tripzine.com/listing.php?id=corporate_metabolism>.
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president Jacobo Árbenz in 1954, for instance, was expedited by the deployment of an
249
egregor, fashioned from the propagandistic radio transmissions designed by the CIA.
army, poised to storm the palace, thereby affecting the morale of the populace in a way
that minimized resistance. Less deliberately, however, certain sonic phenomena—the
tone of Jimi Hendrix’s overdrive, or a particular dance rhythm, for instance—exploit a
similar media relay that extracts the impersonal quality of their singular timbral profiles
to afford an inevitable appropriation by subsequent artists.14 Indeed, music in particular
possesses an affective resonance that is extremely effective in generating sufficient
intensity to launch an egregor. In this regard, one might think of the ‘earworm’ (stuck
tune fragment) as a Vodun servitor, whose flickering form crafts an affective vector
for broader egregoric operations that mutate the affordances of a given musical
trope or genre.15 (Think of Kylie Minogue’s Can’t Get You Out Of My Head, which in
its insistent minimalism and viral circulation is effectively reinstantiated when similar
melodic constructs arrive on the scene.)
Despite the agential nature of egregors, their dynamic structures do not obey the
same organizing principles that characterize biological phenomena. Unlike organisms,
which (at least apparently) evolve in progressive fashion (birth–growth–death, as in
the constitution of historical periods or styles), egregors are expressive of nonlinear
relays or circuits in which the living and the dead, the extant and defunct, are perpetually conversing and mutating one another’s powers over discrepant time periods.16
According to George Kubler, phenomena are never completely exhausted of their
capacity to affect and be affected, for they perpetually relay into the future signals
that (while insufficiently strong to register at their inceptive moment) gain prominence
13.
A portmanteau term coined by Nick Land and the CCRU (Cybernetic Culture Research Unit) in the mid-1990s,
combining hype (or hyper) and superstition, hyperstition operates via (at least) four vectors: 1. Element of effective
culture that makes itself real; 2. Fictional quantity functional as a time-traveling device; 3. Coincidence intensifier; 4. Call
to the Old Ones. See CCRU, Writings 1997–2003 (Falmouth and Shanghai: Urbanomic/Time Spiral Press, 2017).
14.
Pharrell Williams may have fallen prey to this latter variant, claiming that Marvin Gaye’s Got to Give It Up was ‘part
of the soundtrack of his youth’, and denying that Blurred Lines directly plagiarized it.
15.
M. Couroux, ‘Preemptive Glossary for a Techno-Sonic Control Society’, in C. Migone and M. Arnold (eds.),
Volumes (Toronto: Blackwood Gallery, 2015), 58–73. Also accessible (in its current form) at <http://xenopraxis.net/MC_
technosonicglossary.pdf>.
16.
An egregor’s dynamic form is in this respect exemplary of George Kubler’s theory of history as sequences of formal
and discursive loops that mutate human sensory economies and knowledge. See G. Kubler, The Shape of Time (New
Haven: Yale University Press, 1962).
O cculture : T he S onic E gregore
These transmissions hyperstitionally13 converted a ramshackle militia into a fully fledged
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250
when taken up within an appropriate historical conjuncture.17 Indeed, revivification
and revisioning are not only integral to the egregor’s multi-temporal operations but
O cculture : T he S onic E gregore
are precisely what determine its trans-historical existence. Such a framework recalls
the efforts of newly formed esoteric lodges to broach contact with a dormant egregor
of a past magical organization; the trigger for such initiatives often residing in the
serendipitous appearance of forgotten charged symbols in the dreams of the group’s
members. However, caution is of the essence: any cybernetic system always harbours
the danger of runaway feedback, impelled by dormant entities springing back into
unwanted potency.
17.
Tony Conrad: ‘The needs that these decades-old works may most helpfully address today will be very different from
the problems and the conditions amid which they were originally situated. I like to think of it as a condition of excess:
that there was always already, so to speak, an excess in the works that overflowed the critical contextualization of the
day; and that today elements of that excess can become the serviceable margins in our effort to reexamine and use these
works in ways that are relevant to us now; but that in turn other, new elements of excess will inevitably rotate out of view.’
See T. Conrad, ‘Is This Penny Ante or a High Stakes Game?’, Millennium Film Journal 43/44 (Summer/Fall 2005), <http://
mfj-online.org/journalPages/MFJ43/Conrad.htm>.
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SORROW
Nicola Masciandaro
The sound of sorrow is the sorrow of sound. Now what else is sorrow but the feeling
that one is? As it says in The Cloud of Unknowing:
All men have grounds for sorrow [mater of sorow], but most specially he feels grounds
for sorrow who knows and feels that he is. In comparison to this sorrow, all other kinds
of sorrow are like play. For he can truly and really sorrow who knows and feels not only
what he is, but that he is. And whoever has not felt this sorrow, he may make sorrow,
because he has never yet felt perfect sorrow.1
Or, as Heidegger affirms—in the more self-mollifying register of modernity, in the mood
which characteristically wants both to soften and to own the BLOW from which no one
ever recovers—‘the being of Da-sein is care [Sorge]’.2 And what is sound but the being
of this sorrow, the reverberation of the fact of Being in all things, the Da-sein of matter
that—existently inexistent and existently inexistent—is the ground of its own sorrow?
One need not look very far or listen very long to unveil sound as the sorrow of
being and the being of sorrow. If that were necessary it would not be true. If more
than pointing were required it would not be there. ‘Is it nothing to you, all you who
pass by? Look and see if there is any sorrow like my sorrow’ (Lamentations 1:12). And
if you do not see, if one cannot hear the sorrow of all that is seen, that indeed is a
sorrow, as the Cloud-author makes clear. In all directions one is met with the Silent
Universal Moan or SUM, an ‘undead’ continuity of sorrow and sound that moves like
a chord strung by death’s portal across the vast abysses of birth. SUM resounds with
the superessential negativity of the will, with the original negation that, negating itself,
1.
P.J. Gallacher (ed.), The Cloud of Unknowing (Kalamazoo, MI: Medieval Institute, 1997), ch. 44 (my translation).
2.
M. Heidegger, Being and Time, tr. J. Stambaugh (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1996), 262.
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252
causes anything at all to be. As Eugene Thacker hears it, via Schopenhauer, it is ‘a kind
of sound that is absolutely subsonic. It is a negation of sound that negates itself, while it
M asciandaro : S orrow
never is totally absent. It is a negative sound that is omni-present and yet un-manifest.’3
SUM is the unsound that becomes mournfully audible around Orpheus’s disjoined body,
in the uncountable moments when individualized dying life merges into the stream
from whence it came:
Orpheus’ limbs
lay scattered, strewn about; but in your flow,
you, Hebrus, gathered in his head and lyre;
and (look! a thing of wonder) once your stream
had caught and carried them, the lyre began
to sound some mournful notes; the lifeless tongue,
too, murmured mournfully; and the response
that echoed from the shores was mournful, too.4
And SUM is the universal unrest and mass commotion of matter-life-thought, the
overflowing echo of their Beyond in and around immateriality of the material:
The condition of the world, the strife and uncertainty that is everywhere, the general
dissatisfaction with and rebellion against any and every situation shows that the ideal
of material perfection is an empty dream and proves the existence of an eternal Reality
beyond materiality.5
SUM is the humming and murmuring of the uncircumscribable, a trembling of the lips
of being’s eventless event that testifies—by saying nothing—to the non-difference
between the negative infinity of the will and the sonic abyss of the universe. Continuous with the primal words of all traditions, the sorrow of SUM is also not not twisted
into a smile, the spontaneous shape of the origin and end of the worlds of mind, energy,
and matter in Reality’s infinite whim or unanswerable question of itself. The sound of
sorrow is the sorrow of sound.
3.
E. Thacker, ‘Sound of the Abyss’, in S. Wilson (ed.), Melancology (Winchester: Zero, 2014), 190.
4.
Ovid, Metamorphoses, tr. A. Mandelbaum (New York: Harcourt, 1993), 361 (XI.50–3).
5.
M. Baba, The Everything and the Nothing (Beacon Hill, Australia: Meher House Publication, 1963), 55.
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RECORDING/
SPEAKERSYS
D+P
SONIC DISCIPLINE
AND PUNITIVE WAVEFORMS
A Sonic Autopsy of the Waco Siege
Toby Heys
Ghost Army: The Deceit of the Battle DJ
Steve Goodman, Toby Heys, Eleni Ikoniadou
Shocks On The Body: The End of Life by Sound
Tim Hecker
Wandering Soul / Ghost Tape No. 10
Toby Heys, Steve Goodman, Eleni Ikoniadou
‘We Are The Gods Trapped In Cocoons’:
Neural Entrainment In Get Out
Kodwo Eshun
Muzak And The Working Dead
Toby Heys
The Animal Whose Ear It Is
Ramona Naddaff
Pain ©Amp Economics
Toby Heys
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A SONIC AUTOPSY OF
THE WACO SIEGE
Toby Heys
Holed up in their Mount Carmel compound in Waco, Texas, the Branch Davidian apocalyptic sect are surrounded by the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) and the Bureau
of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (BATF) who are trying to lure out the
eighty-five members taking refuge in their heavily fortified home. What they are really
after, however, is their leader, one Vernon Wayne Howell, also known as David Koresh.
The fifty-one day siege, which began on 28 February 1993, is legally predicated upon
the sect’s suspected weapons violations. Initially triggered by a neighbour’s complaint
to the local sheriff—of noises that sounded like machine-gun fire—it is this report that
sets the tone as the ‘occult performance of the state of siege’1 unfolds ‘as a series of
uniquely audio events’.2
After a set of interviews on the initial day of the raid, negotiations between the
Davidians and the FBI continue over the telephone, the exchanges between the
adversaries remaining purely sonic, a dynamic that will be perpetuated by the tactical
utilisation of audiotapes, radio programmes, covert listening devices, and loudspeaker
barrages of music:
According to FBI records, during the fifty-one day period negotiators spoke with fifty-four individuals inside Mt. Carmel for a total of two hundred and fifteen hours. There
were four hundred and fifty-nine conversations with Steve Schneider, which consumed
ninety-six hours. Koresh spoke with authorities one hundred and seventeen times—a
total of sixty hours.3
1.
P. Virilio, Speed and Politics: An Essay on Dromology (New York: Semiotext(e), 1977), 36.
2.
V. Madsen, ‘Cantata of Fire: Son et lumière in Waco Texas, auscultation for a shadow play’, Organised Sound 14:1
(2009), 90.
3.
J.D. Tabor, ‘Religious Discourse and Failed Negotiations: The Dynamics of Biblical Apocalypticism’, in Armageddon
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256
Despite the prodigious volume of interactions, or maybe because of them, the channels
of communication will constitute ‘only mediation’,4 clogged as they are by the noise
H e ys : S onic Autopsy of the Waco S iege
created by distrust and fear.
As the Davidians’ sense of alienation deepens, Koresh requests that tapes containing
his spoken word monologues be aired over the radio, so that his Biblical interpretations
can be conveyed to those outside of the FBI (whom he believed had little comprehension
of his religious beliefs). In turn,
the FBI requested that some of Koresh’s ‘ramblings’ be played on a radio station, as
Koresh had asked, in order to try to gain his surrender. FBI officials became upset when
Koresh called CNN directly at one point, and stopped the activity immediately by cutting
all phone lines except the one they wanted kept open.5
Accessing, expanding, and controlling vectors of sonic geography becomes increasingly
important and fractious as the siege goes on; the sonic longitude that Koresh perceives
himself to be at the somatic end of—the channel that he proposes lets him hear the
voice of his God—falls on deaf ears with regards to the FBI, who will not entertain the
notion that such a medium exists.
As Koresh desperately tries to transmit his interpretation of the Seven Seals to the
media and the wider public, the FBI are synchronously attempting to implant doubt and
scepticism in his followers. To reinforce his position as leader of the sect, Koresh—who
had previously travelled to Hollywood in what would prove a failed attempt to become a
famous performer—deploys his intimate sonic arsenal on his admirers. Musical affiliation
and adoration delineates and reconstitutes social factions like no other form of cultural
expression. Music’s power to demarcate sociopolitical, economic, psychosexual, physiological, and geographic territory is therefore a considerable agency to behold. David
Koresh knows this very well when employing his imaginary rock star persona, leading
as he does guitar-fuelled Christian singalongs for marathon stretches in order to unite
his followers.
in Waco: Critical Perspectives on the Branch Davidian Conflict (Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press,
1995), 265.
4.
M. Serres, The Parasite, tr. L. Schehr (Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 1982), 79.
5.
J.T. Richardson, ‘Manufacturing Consent about Koresh: The Role of the Media in the Waco Tragedy’, in Wright (ed.),
Armageddon in Waco, 165.
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For the Davidians, those who exist outside of their small community and its grounds
257
are doomed to damnation, so when the initial attack by the BATF happens, it signals
the earth. The grounds of Mt. Carmel are therefore a protected sanctuary from a world
that is about to fall into the throes of Armageddon. The Davidians, a sect that is structured around its own alienation from the rest of society—the fabric of its communal
ties cut from the cloth of ineluctable estrangement—has already imposed upon itself
a retreat to an outside position, a religiously denominated territory on the cusp of the
wilderness, the social, and the timeline.
Losing patience with Koresh, the state responds with Operation Just Cause, a
psychological warfare technique that includes surrounding Mt. Carmel with a boundary-marking sound system. Inscribing the threshold between wilderness and salvation,
the lassoo of speakers around the compound play on ancient techniques of navigating
environments via sonic cartography, the contours of the FBI’s playlists redefining the
sect’s connection to the landscape as they signify the end of its aural comprehension:
At all hours of the night and day, the loudspeakers belched forth such curious content
as audiotapes of rabbits being killed, chanting Tibetan monks, and Nancy Sinatra singing
These Boots Were Made for Walking.6
By initiating this strategy the FBI effectively remap the aural domain of the standoff by
severing dialogue and opening up a new one-way communication with the sect. Hoping
to sever the c(h)ords that tie the Davidians to their habitat, the State enforces new
disruptive and intimidating memories to be formulated, placing them in an ongoing
state of dislocation. The compound subsequently becomes a space that reverberates
with J.G. Ballard’s description of the aural dump in ‘The Sound Sweep’:
A place of strange echoes and festering silences, overhung by a gloomy miasma of a
million compacted sounds, it remained remote and haunted, the graveyard of countless
private babels.7
6.
A. Shupe and J.K. Hadden, ‘Cops, News Copy, and Public Opinion: Legitimacy and the Social. Construction of Evil in
Waco’, in Wright (ed.), Armageddon in Waco, 189.
7.
J.G. Ballard, ‘The Sound-Sweep’, Science Fantasy 13:39 (1960), 61.
H e ys : S onic Autopsy of the Waco S iege
the beginning of the final stages of the apocalypse that they believe is about to engulf
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258
Disorienting, silencing, and depriving the Branch Davidians of sleep, this strategy of
sonic attack only stops when the Dalai Lama intervenes and demands the cessation
H e ys : S onic Autopsy of the Waco S iege
of the employment of sacred Buddhist music for martial purposes.
The Davidians had dug into their own private babel for the long haul. As history
indicates, however, duration stopped being an issue for them on 19 April 1993, the
day that the US government ordered tanks to breach the walls of the compound and
disperse canisters of CS gas throughout the buildings in an effort to force the inhabitants out. Even at this point, when the conflict is face-to-face, sonic strategies come
to the fore, as the state covertly places small powerful microphones into the wounds
of the punctured building. A final auricular gesture typical of an event orchestrated,
recorded, and played back in an apocalyptic loop of excessive communication, as the
FBI eavesdrop on sect members preparing for a death that they could not have imagined,
yet must have countenanced given their conflagrated prophecies.
The sparks which flew between the state and the apocalyptic religious sect were
flickering precursors of the charnel house that the compound was to become; an
ambiguous sonic space on the edge of civilisation where symphonies of conflict were
(out)cast, fired, and tempered by duelling protagonists who understood each other to
represent the living (but soon to be) dead. The blistering noise caused by the all-consuming fire that breaks out and kills the majority of Mt. Carmel’s inhabitants scores
the final chapter of the siege. All the material and visual evidence of lives once lived
in the compound is converted into searing frequencies; the waveforms of the flames
becoming the ultimate auricular signature of the crisis—an ashen swansong that is
serenaded by the sirens of fire trucks rather than by the trumpets of angels.
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GHOST ARMY:
THE DECEIT OF THE BATTLE DJ
Steve Goodman, Toby Heys, Eleni Ikoniadou
Ever since recording and transmission technologies such as the phonograph and
telephone have existed, military organisations have been interested in the ways that
sound, infrasound, and ultrasound not only connect but also converge and deterritorialize the realms of the living and the dead. Deceiving an adversary into believing
that one has the capacity to orchestrate voices, vibrations, and noise between the
constructed realities of the ‘here and now’ and the ‘afterlife’ is best understood as a
strategic manoeuvre to wrest psychological control of any given conflict’s soundscape.
Since 1944, military organisations have been engaged in the development of frequency-based programmes, weapons, and techniques whose efficacy is directly linked to
their capacity to cause fear and anxiety by haunting environments in conflict. Enter
(covertly) the Ghost Army.
Officially named the 23rd Headquarters Special Troops, the Ghost Army consisted
of around 1,100 personnel, mostly sound engineers, artists, set designers and special
effects experts selected from art schools and advertising agencies in New York and
Philadelphia and from Hollywood studios in California. Given the breadth and depth
of enlisted expertise, it comes as no surprise that a number of those enlisted for the
division went on to become acclaimed figures in their fields after the end of World
War II. A short list of those celebrated cultural producers would include hard-edge
and colour field painter Ellsworth Kelly, fashion designer Bill Blass, photographer Art
Kane, watercolourist Arthur Singer, and actor George Diestel. A suitably divergent
range of talents whose cooperation would be crucial to the Ghost Army’s theatre of
sensory-fused operations.
Three separate units comprised the division, each handling a different facet of
deception—radio, visual, and sonic—while the ‘atmospherics’ (created by members
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260
of all three units) consisted of personnel impersonation and the spreading of false
rumours in French villages where spies lurked, ready to feed back the misinformation.
G oodman , H e y s, I koniadou : G host A rm y
The Ghost Army’s ultimate remit was to saturate the Nazis with disinformation about
the plans, whereabouts, and numbers of allied forces; duping the enemy into believing
that encampments and movements of mass allied forces were occurring was crucial to
the allied forces’ geographical ascendancy. Fake radio transmissions, duplicitous aural
environments, inflatable tanks and planes, and camouflage became, in the words of
Rick Beyer, their ‘weapons of mass deception’.1
The first division of the US Armed forces to be exclusively allocated to deception,
their formation can be credited to the efforts of Hollywood star Douglas Fairbanks
Jr. and public relations mastermind Hilton Howell Railey. But it was Fairbanks who,
understanding the film industry’s power to simulate and create realities, pushed the
attributes of sonic deception to the US generals who could sign off on such initiatives.
This after having learnt of strategies deployed in the North African desert by the British
Army in 1941 against the Italians and Germans. After an ultra-selective recruitment drive,
acoustic engineer Harold Burris-Meyer, the brains behind Disney’s stereophonic sound
reproduction system ‘Fantasound’, was selected to instruct the troops on auditory
dynamics and the deceptive techniques that could be developed from them. Forming
the 3132nd Signal Service Company (Special), they were responsible for orchestrating
sonic deception2 and, in doing so, innovated techniques that are still being used in
contemporary warfare.3
Employed as Theatre and Sound Research Director at the Stevens Institute of
Technology in Hoboken, New Jersey, Burris-Meyer was working on a Navy contract that
investigated ‘The physiological and psychological effects of sound on men in warfare’
when contacted by Fairbanks. Somewhat prophetically, he had previously gained attention for demonstrating ‘dramatic effects never before attainable’4 by creating mobile
‘mysterious sounds [with] no identifiable source […] and a voice […] artificially altered
1.
See R. Beyer, ‘Weapons of Mass Destruction’, Works that Work 6, <https://works.com/thatwork6/ghost-army>.
2.
For more information about the formation of the sonic deception unit, see T. Holt, The Deceivers: Allied Military
Deception in the Second World War (London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2004), 439.
3.
Acoustic techniques developed by the Ghost Army have been deployed in contemporary conflicts such as the first
Gulf War. After taking out the reconnaissance capacity of the Iraqi army (by grounding its air force), US Psyops placed
speaker systems behind sand dunes. Their aim was to dictate the movements of the battlefield by transmitting simulated
compositions of armed engagement. It is noteworthy that the recordings were often produced by prominent electroacoustic composers who were commissioned by the US military.
4.
See ‘Stage Sounds Moved at Will by Remarkable New Method’, Popular Science 125:2 (August 1934), 46.
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to give a sepulchral sound’5 for the ghost character in a theatre production of Hamlet.
261
Burris-Meyer would come full circle in terms of scoring the movements of the undead
late 1940s, the aim of which was to musically choreograph the recently numbed human
body (and its biorhythms) to work in rhythmical conjunction with the new machinery
installed in the industrial workplace.6 Realising that they required further technical
expertise to render their ideas utilisable during wartime, the small team invited physicist Harvey Fletcher, Head of Electrical Sound Recording Research at Bell Telephone
Laboratories, to work with them.7 Fletcher, the ‘father of stereophonic sound’, had
already developed the 2-A audiometer (a machine used for evaluating hearing acuity)
and the first electronic body-worn hearing aid, and had made valuable contributions
to the discipline of speech perception—research that fed directly into the creation of
speech recognition software. Together, Fairbanks, Railey, Burris-Meyer, and Fletcher
would engineer the sonic blueprints for deception, a set of auditory directives that
established the Ghost Army as the ultimate martial expression of Einstein’s theory of
‘spooky action at a distance’.8
It is the fall of 1942, one year after the 31-year-old French composer Olivier Messiaen
has premiered his chamber piece Quartet for the End of Time in the prisoner-of-war
camp Stalag VIII-A in Görlitz, Germany. Rather than ending time, the sonic techniques
being conceived of by Fairbanks and co, are renegotiating the spatial and temporal
parameters of existing technologies. So much so that new recording and transmission
methods will situate their adversaries and the theatre of operations on the edges
of perception (the sensory frontier that will be territorialized by the Military-Entertainment complex in the twenty-first century). Mobile sound systems consisting of
250kg speakers, 40-watt amplifiers, and gas generators on ‘sonic cars’ amplify the
aural emissions of a phantom division’s presence and movements over a fifteen-mile
radius. Production-wise, an extensive range of recordings is produced to convince the
5.
Ibid.
6.
A detailed explanation of the Stimulus Progression formula can be found in J. Lanza, Elevator Music: A Surreal
History of Muzak, Easy-Listening and Other Moodsong (Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 2004), 48.
7.
For further reading about Fletcher’s work at Bell Labs, see L. Huffman, ‘Leopold Stokowski, Harvey Fletcher and Bell
Laboratories Experimental High Fidelity and Stereophonic Recordings 1931–1932’, The Stokowski Legacy, <http://www.
stokowski.org/Harvey%20Fletcher%20Bell%20Labs%20Recordings.htm>.
8.
For more information see ‘Einstein’s “Spooky Action at a Distance” Paradox Older Than Thought’, MIT Technology
Review, 7 March 2012, <https://www.technologyreview.com/s/427174/einsteins-spooky-action-at-a-distance-paradoxolder-than-thought/>.
G oodman , H e y s, I koniadou : G host A rm y
by helping develop the ‘Stimulus Progression’ formula at the Muzak corporation in the
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Nazis of intense personnel activity, armoured cars and tanks in transit, bridge building
activities, bulldozers, and the laughter and shouts of buoyant troops. All documented
G oodman , H e y s, I koniadou : G host A rm y
for sensorial disconnect.
Technical and Maintenance Officer Lt. Walter Manser9 makes the majority of the
recordings, and he is nothing if not diligent:
Learning that the Japanese peasant infantry superstitiously associated the sound of
barking dogs with impending death, Manser had his men round up and record packs of
noisy canines, whose barking and yapping he embedded in ambient sounds recorded in
the Panamanian rainforest.10
The sounds are captured on large 16-inch transcription discs. They reverse the regular
playing format, the needle moving from the hole in the middle out towards the edge, at
78rpm—a format intended for radio broadcast usage. Two and three turntable setups
provide the engineers with the capacity to mix the sound effects together, creating
artificial soundscapes that are dropped down onto two miles of (non-skipping) magnetic wire.11 The resulting thirty-minute mixes each have their own characteristics; an
archive of haunted ordnance. The original battle DJs are about to bring their noise to
the global collision that is WWII.
Finally deployed weeks after D-Day, the Ghost Army travel from England to France.
Landing in Normandy, they initially practice by undertaking small discrete manoeuvres
in villages before progressing onto what would be the first of twenty or so large-scale
operations. Most of the interventions happened perilously close to the front line—a
threshold defined by the visceral taste and smell of death that hung in the air. Indeed,
it is the multi-sensory nature of the front line that defines its harrowing topography. A
narrow channel within the full spectrum of any conflict, it is crammed full of projected
fears and anxieties that are enhanced and intensified by non-ocular phenomena; those
things that are considered more abstruse, and thus more troubling, because they are
not as easily quantified or rationalised as the visible.
9.
For more information on Manser’s recording processes, see C. Cox, ‘Edison’s Warriors’, Cabinet Magazine Online 13
(Spring 2004), <http://www.cabinetmagazine.org/issues/13/cox.php>.
10.
Ibid.
11.
For further technical insights, see A. Battaglia, ‘The Ghost Army: How the Americans Used Fake Sound Recordings
to Fool the Enemy During WWII’, Red Bull Music Academy Daily, 14 August 2013, <http://daily.redbullmusicacademy.
com/2013/08/ghost-army-feature>.
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And it is the configuration of the front line as an oscillating repository of dread that
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supports the notion that ‘the eeriness of the unseen, more eerie for the ways it conthan any other perceptual process, hearing—especially when ascribed to tracing
the unsound domain of the front line—offers refuge to the liminal and the auricular,
creating a contradictory sensorial spatial dynamic that is hidden and unutterable, but
with boundaries that are porous and malleable. The front line, a conflicted tract where
the inverted exquisite corpse of the Ghost Army found its voice.
12.
Ibid.
G oodman , H e y s, I koniadou : G host A rm y
scripts the imagination, figured into the Ghost Army’s ethereal strategy’.12 For more
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SHOCKS ON THE BODY:
THE END OF LIFE BY SOUND
Tim Hecker
By the second decade of the twentieth century, a consensus was emerging around the
effect of loud sound on the psyche, one which went far beyond the confines of the
psychological clinic. Evidence from the battlefields of Europe and military experiments
in North America revealed the extensive nature of the damage to the bodies and
minds of soldiers exposed to the unprecedented intensity of artillery fire. Suspicions
regarding the widespread effects of extremely loud sound, which first arose in the
Great War, were becoming empirically validated just after the First World War. When
a large-calibre artillery shell was fired in close proximity to a human, the shock waves
generated were understood to trigger mental conditions such as psychosis and anxiety,
but there also existed almost enigmatic generalized physical injuries. These wounds
at first seemed to be phantom ailments. However the actual mechanism of physical
damage by shock waves was becoming increasingly clear.
It is not hyperbole to suggest that the early twentieth-century battlefield was an
acoustic terrain of increased intensification. The acoustics of war were amplifying. From
the distant echoes of cannons to the misery of human grunting, the sound of war was
becoming both increasingly mechanical and more overbearing. As Dan McKenzie, a
key ringleader of the noise abatement movement, argued in relation to the new sounds
of war in 1916:
There is no noise or combination of noises that even remotely approaches it for loudness,
for persistence, and for harmfulness both to hearing and to brain. Many men who have
had to endure its agonies have been rendered totally deaf; many others have been
driven insane, their nervous system being hopelessly and permanently disorganized by
its appalling intensity and persistence. [One described it as follows:] ‘It was noise gone
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mad, out of all bounds, uncontrolled.’ [...] While another, but no less expressive, observer
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has summed it up in the simple phrase: ‘Hell with the lid off’—there is no doubt, you see,
H ecker : S hocks on the B ody
that to the modern minds, Hell is the place of noise.1
McKenzie was optimistic about being able to regulate the sounds in the modern city,
but was less than optimistic about the possibility of abating the noises of war. For
him, the sounds of war were an acoustic manifestation of a universe overwhelmed.
Authors such as Ernst Jünger described the battlefield of the First World War as one
of clanging mechanical brutality, but also one of unbearable loudness.
Increasingly, soldiers were found dead with no apparent damage to their bodies,
often solely as the result of being in the proximity of an explosion or shock wave. A
French study in 1918 examined the mortal risk to soldiers in WWI from exposure to
artillery fire shock waves, noting that the brain is not necessarily protected by the
skull. Soldiers within close range of explosions sometimes died without any apparent
injury. And if they did survive, concussion-like effects could easily last for up to eight
weeks.2 While French examinations on physical risk from shock phenomena focused
on brain trauma, a key groundbreaking American study of the same era focused on
the effect of shock on the lungs.
During a similar timeframe to when the French were conducting examinations of
shock trauma on human brains, the US military base in Sandy Hook, New Jersey was
host to a series of disturbing studies on the physiological effects of ‘air concussion’.
Sandy Hook was the same naval base that had hosted megaphonic experiments of
massive foghorn sound propagation a few years earlier. Set upon a small, isolated
peninsula of land that borders New York Bay on one side and the Atlantic Ocean on
the other, it was uniquely placed to afford a multitude of experiments on loud sound
with minimal effect to neighbouring communities. D.R. Hooker’s study was one of the
first to examine the untraceable and mysterious injuries caused by explosive wave
propagation. Because trauma from concussive shock-based experiences would often
result in little or no sign of physical injury, something was missing from the medical
comprehension of wave blasts on human organs. Soldiers would often die with later
examinations showing no detectable signs of trauma whatsoever.
1.
D. R. Hooker, ‘Physiological Effects of Air Concussion’, American Journal of Physiology 67:2 (1924), 229.
2.
G. R. Marage, ‘Contribution à L’Étude Des Commotions De Guerre’, Comptes Rendus 166 (1918).
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Hooker, however, suspected that the effects on the circulatory system and microscopic
267
injury to vital organs could be replicated in animals. He placed cats, dogs and rabbits
died shortly after exposure to the shock waves. The grim research focused on transformations to blood pressure, disposition, and general observations leading to the point
of death or possible recovery of the animals.3 Experimentation with different animals
yielded basic information about the effects of shocks on bodies and organs: because
of the rapid dissipation of the intensity of shock waves, the difference between being
exposed to the blast path from ten feet away or twenty feet away could often make
the difference between survival or death. As well, all blast victims experienced a rapid
drop in blood pressure after exposure. Microscopic lesions were often detected in the
lungs of animals, but Hooker assumed it was not the deciding factor in whether or not
the blast was fatal.
The general assumption from the Sandy Hook experiments on air concussion was
that the effects of a shock wave are akin to the invisible force of a hammer blow to
the head. It was a bludgeoning, concussive force on the bleeding edge of both a sonic
event and invisible explosive blow of compressed air. The macabre experiments were
not an accidental occurrence or an anomalous set of rogue scientific procedures. They
were very much a part of a zeitgeist, one which centred around the seduction and
horror of modern wave-based phenomena. The expansion, documentation, and analysis
of sonic capabilities during this time culminated in the understanding that explosions,
once understood as merely an audible sonic event, were more than that. In fact, the
perceived sound of explosions was only one component of a wave force assault that
also extended into the infrasonic and ultrasonic dimensions. It was a liminal zone of
sound that skated along the ridge dividing life and death. The damage rendered was
no longer an inexplicable act of the mind and body giving up on existence; it was the
result of microscopic damage that stemmed directly from close-range exposure to
intense compressed wave forces.
3.
D. R. Hooker, ‘Physiological Effects of Air Concussion’, American Journal of Physiology 67:2 (1924), 229.
H ecker : S hocks on the B ody
in the blast path of very large ten and twelve-inch artillery fire. Many of the animals
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WANDERING SOUL/
GHOST TAPE NO. 10
Steve Goodman, Toby Heys, Eleni Ikoniadou
Sonically invoking the living dead in order to terrorise an adversary was not a new
strategy for the US Government when they employed it during 1993’s Waco siege.
Throughout the late 1960s period of the Vietnam War,1 the 6th Psyop Battalion2 and
the S-5 Section of the 1/27th Wolfhounds of the United States military used a literal
interpretation of haunting to induce a sense of angst and anxiety within ‘enemy’
territories. They had created the religiously charged composition ‘Wandering Soul’
(also referred to as ‘Ghost Tape Number 10’), which in turn was part of the ‘Urban
Funk Campaign’—an umbrella term for the operations of sonic psychological warfare
(‘planned operations to convey selected information […] to audiences to influence their
emotions, motives, and objective reasoning’)3 conducted by the US during the conflict.
After researching Vietnamese religious beliefs and superstitions, Psyop personnel
initiated this audio harassment programme, which used amplified ghostly voices to
create fear within resistance fighters. Early iterations of the tape were focused on
Vietnamese funeral music but as studio engineers were given wider license to stimulate
the flight or fight reflex, they responded with new content. Initial experiments included
sampling and looping the ‘demonic’ portion of The Crazy World of Arthur Brown’s
1968 hit single ‘Fire’.4 Realising that this basic method was not particularly effective,
they developed multilayered compositions, working tirelessly to create an archive of
sinister and eerie aural textures to be dropped into the phantasmal collage, with new
samples such as a Tiger’s roar (given that the Viet Cong were regularly attacked by
1.
The Vietnam War, referred to as the ‘Resistance War Against America’ or ‘The American War’ in Vietnam, began in
1955 and finished with the fall of Saigon in April 1975.
2.
More formally known as Psychological Operations.
3.
Psywarrior website, <http://www.psywarrior.com/>.
4.
Released on the Track Label in the UK and on Atlantic Records in the USA.
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270
such predators) being mixed in if they had the capacity to elicit further tensions. The
montages were dispatched from Hueys5 down into the jungle canopy, filling the clammy
G oodman , H e y s, I koniadou : Wandering S oul
dense air where Charlie crouched in dread. Audio napalm.
Blasting frequencies of 500–5000 Hz at an amplitude of 120 dB from a helicopter-mounted speaker system named the ‘People Repeller’ (or the ‘Curdler’), the US
military transmitted their aural payload during the dark hours of the wartorn nights,
often provoking hostile fire. Scorned by the pilots who had to fly sorties in the face of
this added danger, the armed response from the Viet Cong was music to the generals’
ears, as it often betrayed important covert locations. This was a tried and tested
technique. A previous strategy named ‘Operation Quick Speak’ employed C-47 aircraft
with leaflet dispensing chutes and 3000-watt speaker systems fitted into their cargo
doors to goad VC fighters into retaliating, the VC’s fire coming after they had been
barracked with the benefits that a South Vietnamese government would apparently
bring if they were to surrender. A Psyop translator would also warn them not to shoot
at ‘Spooky’ (the call sign given to the AC-47 aircraft gunships that would accompany
the speaker-laden C-47) or else hellfire would descend on them. As soon as VC snipers
were detected, Spooky (also nicknamed ‘Puff the Magic Dragon’ because of its daunting
firepower) would respond with 16,000 rounds per minute of staccato brutality, along
with the vainglorious rejoinder of the translator: ‘See, I told you so.’6
Down below, a mortal (but possibly just as tormented) version of the wandering
soul was patrolling the virgin jungle floor in the Northern DMZ, providing security for
the most expansive Psyop carried out during the war: the Chieu Hoi (‘Open Arms’)
program.7 Lance Corporal Rik Davis—who would survive the war, return to Detroit,
rename himself ‘3070’, and form the pioneering techno group Cybotron alongside Juan
Atkins in 1980—was a rifleman wondering why he had left the ‘gutters of Detroit’,8 his
new surroundings completely alien and dangerous at every turn.9 In a revealing interview,
5.
The nickname given to the Bell UH-1 Iroquois helicopter, which was used for combat and medical evacuation
operations during the Vietnam War.
6.
Anonymous quote from the Psywarrior website, <http://www.psywarrior.com/quick.html>.
7.
For more information concerning the South Vietnamese Chieu Hoi initiative which focused on VC defection, see,
J.A. Koch, ‘The Chieu Hoi Program in South Vietnam, 1963-1971 (Declassified)’, Report prepared for Advanced Research
Projects Agency, RAND, R-1172-ARPA (January, 1973), <https://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/reports/2006/
R1172.pdf>.
8.
M. Rubin, ‘Rik Davis: Alleys of His Mind’, Red Bull Music Academy Daily, 24 May 2016, <http://daily.
redbullmusicacademy.com/2016/05/rik-davis-alleys-of-his-mind>.
9.
Ibid. In the same interview, Davis goes on to say ‘There was nothing in that jungle but rock, apes and tigers. Everything
in it was poisonous.’
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Davis recalls the activities of the Psyop unit who would try and convince potential VC
271
defectors to surrender by giving them cigarettes and Coca-Cola. If they gave them-
You know The Walking Dead? That’s lightweight compared to what it did to us […] The
jungle will actually eat the flesh right off your bones. Every scratch turns to cancer and
won’t heal. You can do whatever you want, put every kind of ointment in the world on it,
and the jungle will actually eat you to the bone if you don’t get out of it.10
On his website explaining the rationale behind ‘getting into it’ (the deeply rooted psyche of the jungle) via Wandering Soul, SGM Herbert A. Friedman (Ret.) relates that the
cries and wails were intended to represent souls of the enemy’s dead who had failed to
find the peace of a proper burial. The wailing soul cannot be put to rest until this proper
burial takes place. The purpose of these sounds was to panic and disrupt the enemy
and cause him to flee his position. Helicopters were used to broadcast Vietnamese
voices pretending to be from beyond the grave. They called on their ‘descendants’ in
the Vietcong to defect, to cease fighting.11
Even if the soldiers did not believe that the voice truly came from a ghost, more importantly it forced them to think about the loved ones they had left behind, the hardships
they were going though, and, finally, the relative certainty that they were not going
to be buried in ancestral grounds. Backed by macabre sound effects, the following
excerpt is typical of the recorded content:
Girl’s voice: Daddy, daddy, come home with me, come home. Daddy! Daddy!
Man’s voice: Who is that? Who is calling me? My daughter? My wife? Your Father is
back home with you, my daughter. Your Husband is back home with you, my wife. But
my body is gone. I am dead, my family.
Tragic...how tragic.
My friends, I come back to let you know that I am dead, I am dead, I am in Hell, just Hell.
10.
Ibid.
11.
SGM Herbert A. Friedman’s documentation of the ‘Wandering Soul Psyop Tape of Vietnam’, <http://pcf45.com/
sealords/cuadai/wanderingsoul.html>.
G oodman , H e y s, I koniadou : Wandering S oul
selves up they would be airlifted out of the jungle leaving Davis and his unit ‘to rot’:
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It was a senseless death. How senseless, how senseless. But when I realized the truth,
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it was too late, too late.
G oodman , H e y s, I koniadou : Wandering S oul
Friends...while you are still alive there is still a chance that you can be reunited with your
loved ones. Do you hear what I say?
Go home. Go home friends. Hurry. If not, you will end up like me. Go home my friends
before it is too late.12
Countering Bill Rutledge’s (Aviation Electricians Mate Senior) statement that ‘killing
was our business and the Psyop tape helped make business damned good’,13 this martial hauntology was not invested in the oscillations of breakneck execution. Rather, it
was a technique that required longevity, as it slowly diminished resistance by infiltrating
every psychological pore of the enemy and sapping their will to resist. The recordings
also penetrated the earth itself, with reports that VC hiding out in the labyrinthine
underground tunnels could still hear it. As Paul Virilio states, the purpose of employing
such techniques is
[n]ot to be driven to desperate combat, but to provoke a prolonged desperation in the
enemy, to inflict permanent moral and material sufferings that diminish him and melt
him away: this is the role of indirect strategy, which can make a population give up in
despair without recourse to bloodshed. As the old saying goes, ‘Fear is the cruellest of
assassins: it never kills, but keeps you from living.’14
The location of the speakers in Vietnam—on the sides of helicopters—differs greatly
from the surround-sound placement of speakers applied during the conflict at Waco.15
The more random transient nature of the amplified wailing sounds in Vietnam reiterated
the idea of ‘the restless’ being trapped in an environment unsuited to their noncorporeal status. From on high, the sonic demarcation enacted was more of an audio erasure
of the boundary between the living and the dead, rendering the absent distressingly
present. The proposed psychology of this tactic suggested slippage and existential
echo, the sonic portals of disquietude at being mortally out of body, place, and time
eliciting conceptions in which the ‘night of the living’ and the ‘day of the dead’ were
12.
Ibid.
13.
Ibid.
14.
P. Virilio, Speed and Politics: An Essay on Dromology (New York: Semiotext(e), 1977), 63.
15.
A dark irony of the speakers being located in the doorway was that it hindered US soldiers from returning fire.
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inverted and coexisted in the same location. For the Viet Cong, the airborne sonic
273
virus that was ‘Wandering Soul’ propagated anxiety and apprehension as it made
‘hell on earth’.
G oodman , H e y s, I koniadou : Wandering S oul
communicable the oscillating channel of purgatory. Quite literally, it was the sound of
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‘WE ARE THE GODS
TRAPPED IN COCOONS’:
NEURAL ENTRAINMENT IN GET OUT
Kodwo Eshun
According to Saidiya Hartman, the practice of white North American enslavement can
be diagrammed as a libidinal circuit of enjoyment in which white self-augmentation is
engendered by possessing captive African bodies as fungible commodities and abstract
property.1 In Get Out (dir. Jordan Peele, 2017), the Order of the Coagula offers its white
members the pleasurable prospect of ‘immortality’ through the ‘racial reassignment’
exclusive Coagula Procedure. African-Americans kidnapped by Jeremy Armitage
(Caleb Landry Jones) groomed by Rose Armitage (Allison Williams) and sedated by
Missy Armitage (Catherine Keener) provide the bodies required for the Procedure’s
‘man-made miracle’. Each abductee supplies the youthful ‘vessel’ for the Procedure
accomplished by neurosurgeon Dean Armitage’s (Bradley Whitfield) enforced ‘partial
transplantation’. The imaginative limits of Get Out’s diagram of racial capitalism emerge
here, in its incapacity to envision the Order of the Coagula extending its ‘service’ to
wealthy Afrodiasporic elites prepared to acquire ‘immortality’ at any price.
Photographer Chris Washington (Daniel Kaluuya) is the eighth African-American
to be lured by Rose for a weekend visit to the Armitage family home. The Armitages
embroil Chris in obligations from which he cannot disentangle himself without appearing
ungracious or inhospitable. Chris finds himself drawn into the finely woven net of
Armitage family rituals ranging from afternoon iced tea en plein air to the evening family
dinner at the dining table, culminating in ‘the big get together’ that commemorates
‘Rose’s grandfather’s party’. When Missy taps her metal teaspoon thrice on her tall
glass to summon the ‘maid’ Georgina (Betty Gabriel) to serve iced tea, she draws
Chris’s attention down towards her aural gesture from which his gaze moves upwards
1.
S.V. Hartman, Scenes of Subjection: Terror, Slavery and Self-Making in Nineteenth Century America (Oxford and
New York: Oxford University Press, 1997),pp. 17-26.
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276
to meet her eyeline. As Chris locks eyes with Missy, the knuckles of his right hand beat
a rhythm of nicotine withdrawal. Dean picks up on the measure of Chris’s ‘jonesing’;
E shun : ‘ W e A re the G ods T rapped in C ocoons ’
Missy’s hypnosis ‘method’, he smirks, will ‘take care of that for you’. When Chris demurs
with the words ‘I’m good, actually…Thank you, though’, he prefaces his polite refusal
by winking at Missy as if to share an unspoken connection at Dean’s expense. Missy
builds on this ‘attentional focus’ by ambushing Chris on his return to Rose’s bedroom
after a late night cigarette in the grounds of the Armitage estate. Enmeshing Chris
within a ‘Yes Set’ of weaponised Ericksonian hypnotherapy, Missy connects Chris’s
interiority to her apparatus of rhythmic entrainment. 2
During a Vodoun ritual, argues Maya Deren, ‘our sense-perceptions’ are ‘geared’
by the regularity of drum rhythms to the ‘expectation of its reoccurrence’.3 Missy
uses the white bourgeois ritual of tea for two to engineer Chris’s neural possession.
Missy explains that ‘We do use focal points sometimes…’. She breaks off, tilting her
head as if some unannounced entity has caught her attention, drops her attention
towards the saucer that she holds above her left knee, then redirects her gaze at Chris,
concluding with the words ‘…to guide someone to a state of heightened suggestibility’.
Her right hand continues to stir tea with a vintage silverplate teaspoon. ‘Heightened
suggestibility?’ Chris repeats sceptically, indicating non-verbal acceptance in the
‘ideomotor signal’ of his slow nod.4 ‘S’right’, Missy confirms softly, slowly stirring the
cup’s base hidden by the brown liquid obscured by its porcelain exterior. As the volume
level of her spoon stirring gradually increases, its steady, silver cycles engender an
‘expectant attention’ that entrains Chris’s sense-perceptions in a psychophysical circuit
of concentration without consciousness.
Because the source of the teaspoon’s ‘sustained rhythmic regularity’ operates
‘outside the individual rather than within’, consciousness, to quote Deren, ‘is unnecessary,
as it were, in the maintenance of this concentration’. Chris’s consciousness is outsourced
to the regular gesture of the rotating teaspoon. The contact between the silver spoon
and the teacup’s ceramic cavity takes over the work of concentration from Chris’s
concentration. It stands in for his attention. It functions as a psychotechnical apparatus
2.
M. H. Erickson, E. L. Rossi, S. I. Rossi, Hypnotic Realities: The Induction of Clinical Hypnosis and Forms of Indirect
Suggestion (New York: Irvington Publishers, 1976), 38–9, 57.
3.
M. Deren, ‘Possessed Dancing in Haiti’ (1941), typescript from the Maya Deren Collection, Mugar Library, Boston
University, cited in U. Holl, Cinema, Trance and Cybernetics, tr. D. Hendrickson (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press,
2017), 109–10
4.
Erickson, Rossi, and Rossi, Hypnotic Realities, 31–2, 71–3, 104, 132–4.
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that deactivates his perception. In operating at the threshold of consciousness, the
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‘fixation device’ of the stirring teaspoon manipulates Chris’s affective suggestibility. In
a form of transmission that forms complexes of associations beyond language through
‘accompanying affective tones’.5 Missy uses the affective tones of the stirring spoon to
reactivate the repressed remorse associated with Chris’s childhood’s memory. Faced
with the prospect of calling 911, which might confirm his mom’s possible accident, which
in turn would ‘make it real’, the chain of causation frightens the eleven-year-old Chris.
Frozen in a state of subjunctive irreality, the young Chris sits in front of the television
set that stands in for the telephone call he cannot bring himself to make.6 Following
Missy’s instruction to ‘tell me when you’ve found’ the audible memory of rain that fell
during those long hours facing the television screen, Get Out’s soundtrack of heightened
rain signals the onset of paralysis triggered by his bodily memory of childhood trauma
witnessed by television and induced by telephony that might have saved his dying
mother’s life. Entrapped by his own muscles, Chris finds himself incarcerated within
his vision, a body flailing and falling through the endless abyss of his mind, away from
the two-way screen far above that displays his own perspective back to him, showing
him the shrinking screen of an external world occupied by his cataleptic body.
‘I think your mom got in my head, right’, confides Chris to Rose, nodding to himself
as he struggles to recall the what, the when, and the where of the ‘sunken place’.
Chris’s memory is ‘geared’ to a circuit that dissolves the distinctions between sedation,
sleep, and amnesia by functionally connecting waking dreams, nightmares, and limited
consciousness. Missy’s hypnosis switches his nervous system on and off, bringing Chris
back online and taking him offline, preparing him for the future described by the blind
white gallerist Jim Hudson (Stephen Root) of Hudson Galleries. Hudson explains to the
manacled, distraught Chris that ‘your existence will be as a passenger…an audience.
You’ll live in the…’. In completing Hudson’s description with the term ‘sunken place’,
Chris verbalises the extent to which he has consciously grasped the use of hypnosis as
a functional device for dissolving his consciousness in the interests of the Procedure.
Hudson’s live television broadcast is itself the second phase of ‘psychological pre-op’.
It aims to ‘mentally’ prepare Chris by forcing him to comprehend what Hudson calls
5.
E. Bleuler, Textbook of Psychiatry (New York: Macmillan, 1924), cited in Holl, Cinema, Trance and Cybernetics, 107.
6.
J. Sexton, Black Men Black Feminism: Lucifer’s Nocturne (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018), 22–3.
E shun : ‘ W e A re the G ods T rapped in C ocoons ’
the protocol for hypnosis first systematised by Bleuler in 1916, suggestibility is defined as
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278
‘our common understanding of the process’. Because Chris’s understanding of ‘our
common understanding of the process’ amplifies the ‘positive impact on the success
E shun : ‘ W e A re the G ods T rapped in C ocoons ’
rate of the Procedure’, Hudson’s praise of Chris for getting ‘it quick’ is designed to
encourage Chris’s consciousness to accept his future as a ‘limited consciousness’ or
‘vessel’, a ‘cocoon’ or ‘coagula’ for a ‘newly reborn’ Jim Hudson.
When Hudson declares that ‘I’ll control the motor functions so I’ll be…’, he pauses.
Leaving space prompts an exhausted Chris to pronounce his own death sentence by
muttering the embittered words ‘me. You’ll be me.’ Articulating his fate closes the circuit
between ‘you’ and ‘me’. In speaking the copula between ‘you’ and ‘me’, Chris appears
to embrace his acceptance of their ‘common’ destiny. Copula becomes coagula in the
closed circuit of the Procedure. What shorts the circuit between copula and coagula is
Chris’s capacity to play dead by replaying unlife’s sound against undeath’s image. Using
just enough cotton wool to tamp his ears against the television that switches on a fixed
frame of Missy’s stirring teaspoon in order to turn him off, Chris impersonates himself
as a sedated body. Taking his cue from the mounted stag’s head that provides him with
an insight into the exhibition of the insensate, Chris cloaks his aural self-defence in a
visible display of the signs of unlife. Chris masters hypnosis’s capacity to induce what
Hortense Spillers calls slavery’s ‘severing of the captive body from its motive will’.7 In
doing so, he steals back his corpse and gets away with his undead unlife.
7.
H.J. Spillers, ‘Mama’s Baby, Papa’s Maybe: An American Grammar Book’, Diacritics 17:2, Culture and Countermemory:
The ‘American’ Connection (Summer 1987), 65–81: 67.
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MUZAK AND THE WORKING DEAD
Toby Heys
In the early twentieth century, after the onset of the Second Industrial Revolution, a
boom in the mechanisation of European factories occurs. This is largely owing to the
demands exerted upon the rhythms of agricultural, economic, and labour production
by the advent of the First World War. The notion of the workforce as a quantifiable
and controllable asset has already been inscribed into Frederick Winslow Taylor’s 1911
monograph The Principles of Scientific Management1 and through his influential ‘Time
and Motion studies’.2 It is within this socio-economic ferment that a new somatic form
is emerging—that of the industrialised body.
A major factor in the shaping of twentieth-century capitalism, Taylorism is dedicated to an organisation of bodies that maximises their labour potential, which was
swiftly adopted by American industrialists including Henry Ford, who employed Taylor’s
techniques in his factories. In 1922, the same year that Ford’s doctrine of functional
specialisation and division of labour flourishes, Wired Radio is made available for the
industrial plant. Created by US Major General George Owen Squier, this technology
allows radio programming to be piped into factories, restaurants, and small businesses,
and to individual subscribers. This is the inception of Muzak.
Its name a portmanteau of ‘music’ and ‘Kodak’, Muzak begins its life by adopting the
rhythmical science of the factory’s assembly line. Meanwhile, the social sciences are
harnessed to determine the most economic ways for the single individual and the mass
social body to carry out tasks in the workplace. Invoking the Yerkes-Dodson law (which
proposes an observable relationship between levels of arousal and performance), the
1.
F.W. Taylor, The Principles of Scientific Management (New York and London: Harper, 1911).
2.
Precisely measuring all movements within the workplace, Taylor conducted the first Time and Motion studies,
analysing the management and machinery of industrialisation, in order to figure out how the entire working system could
function more efficiently.
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engineers of Muzak index actions, emotions, and human relations within a workplace’s
musical frame of reference, the ultimate expression of this orchestration being the elab-
H e ys : M uzak and the Working D ead
orate programming of fifteen-minute blocks of music known as ‘Stimulus Progression’.3
Premiering in the late 1940s, Stimulus Progression is a method of organising music
according to an ‘ascending curve’ that works counter to the ‘industrial efficiency curve’
(also denoted as the average worker’s ‘fatigue curve’). Subdued songs, progressing to
more stimulating songs, in fifteen-minute sequences (followed by silences of between
thirty seconds and a quarter of an hour between transmissions) throughout the work
day yields better worker efficiency and productivity than does random musical programming. The industrial functionalization of organised sound begins.
Programmes are tailored to workers’ mood swings and peak periods, as measured on
a mood-rating scale, ranging from ‘Gloomy -3’ to ‘Ecstatic +8’. Songs are categorised
by Muzak according to their ‘stimulus’ capacity—incorporating rhythm and tempo
analysis, types of instrumentation, and orchestra size—to ultimately classify any given
song’s propensity to encourage optimum effort. Constructing its ratio in relation to the
rhythm of the human biological system, Stimulus Progression’s acoustic tabula rasa is
set at 72 beats per minute—the tempo of the average human heart at rest.
Muzak’s goal is to discipline the body against its own naturally occurring biorhythms
and to instead choreograph it into new kinetic relations with the machines that have
become its self-regulating partners within the factory. This is a technique reified by
the fact that no industrial manufacturing space is left untouched by the assembly-line
logic of sequencing and repetition, the emerging industrialised body becoming an
anaesthetised note in the overall symphony of production.4 It is here that the first
spectre of the industrialised body manifests itself in the form of the automaton, and
it is Muzak that is used to numb the flesh.
Muzak’s standardisation of music signals the first time in history that waveforms
are quantified and disseminated vis-à-vis their bio-utility in an industrial environment.
This ordering of frequencies also pertains to the movement of the workers’ bodies at
specific times of the day and night and, as such, finds its rationale at the nexus of
3.
This new form of the cataloguing and indexing of sound was implemented by Harold Burris-Meyer and Richard
L. Cardinell but was masterminded by Muzak executive Don O’Neill, who had toyed with the idea since he joined the
company in 1936.
4.
Joseph Lanza states that music in the factory ‘was not entertainment but an “audioanalgesia” to kill the pain of
urban din’. J. Lanza, Elevator Music: A Surreal History of Muzak, Easy-Listening and Other Moodsong (Ann Arbor: The
University of Michigan Press, 2004), 12.
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mechanized space, auricular temporality, and somatic engineering. The predictability
281
of habituated movements becomes the kinaesthetic cornerstone of industrialisation’s
enter the workplace to the minute they leave.
According to Manuel DeLanda, this process of making the organic unpredictability
of the human body subservient to the programmed sagacity of the machine started
much earlier within military practices. He states that:
[t]he military process of transforming soldiers into machines, as well as related campaigns to organize the management of human bodies (in military hospitals, for instance)
generated much knowledge about the body’s internal mechanisms. The ‘great book of
Man-the-machine’ was both the blueprint of the human body created by doctors and
philosophers, and the operating manual for obedient individuals.5
DeLanda maintains that the military-industrial complex had been materialising over
centuries of dialogue, practice, and logistical exchange between the civilian economy
and its martial apparatus (its army). As economic and military organisations transformed according to exchanges between the two, it became clear that technological
developments such as Muzak could aid in the organisation of the workforce to directly
support war efforts. The goal was to mass-produce objects made of interchangeable
parts, using a labour force that was itself dispensable, and regulated—via music.
Ford’s application of this ideology results in the implementation of new systems
of standardisation (manufacturing techniques and components) in his factories. The
same dynamics of interchangeability and repetition extend to their sonic spaces.
Serial numbers are stamped onto the parts of guns and cars so that they can be easily
classified and changed. Correspondingly, the parts of Muzak’s fifteen-minute sonic
objects become synonymous with the Frankenstinian anatomy they are influencing,
aural limbs that are serialised and categorised so that they can be broken down or
replaced if deemed dysfunctional. And it is the scope of the distributed mind—which
is of course crucial to the potential success of Muzak—that must be harnessed in
order to manufacture and modulate moods.
5.
M. DeLanda, War in the Age of Intelligent Machines (New York: Zone, 1991), 138.
H e ys : M uzak and the Working D ead
relation to the body, structuring and training its operations from the minute employees
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A myriad of laws, theories, and tests, such as the Hawthorn studies6 and ‘Human
Relations Movement’7 are advanced under the moniker of industrial psychology. They
H e ys : M uzak and the Working D ead
aim to prove that the quantifiable manipulation of the mind will pay off in improved
efficiency rates. Before many of these theories were drafted, the notion of employing
music as a stimulus within the workplace had already been proposed. By 1915, American inventor Thomas Edison had carried out a number of experiments in the area. He
wanted to ascertain whether music could cover or negate specific frequency ratios
produced by a factory’s heavy industrial machinery and, if so, whether workers’ morale
and motivation were positively or negatively affected by it.
To this end, Walter Van Dyke Bingham, an assistant professor of applied psychology
at the Carnegie Institute of Technology, was contracted to study the effects of music,
defined by the three key criteria of song-selection research, mood-change research,
and the influences of music on muscular activity. Bingham’s earlier related psychological and philosophical investigations hinged on the problematic of why certain tonal
arrangements constituted melodic units, and secondarily how such melodic stimuli
could influence a human’s motor movements.
The discursive locus inferred here is the distributed sensorium of the resonating
body., Bingham positions the body at the vinculum of scientific, phenomenological,
musical, and industrial discourses. The mood tests he employs consist of collated charts
and documents recording how his subject’s moods altered as they listen to music via a
programme of Edison’s recordings. In a progress report to Edison dated 1 February 1921,
6.
After Thomas Edison stopped funding studies into the effects of music, the Hawthorne Works (under the aegis of the
Western Electric Company) in Cicero, Illinois, began conducting the first of five studies that started in 1924 and ended in
1932. They began by altering workplace stimuli such as music and light to inquire as to whether their employees would be
more productive with increased or decreased amounts of either. It was found that production levels did in fact rise when
light levels were changed either way. It was concluded that, rather than the manipulation of the environment being the
decisive factor, it was the fact that employees were cognisant of the fact that they were being observed that instigated
upsurges in efficiency. This effect, which came to be known as the ‘Hawthorne effect’—when Henry A. Landsberger
coined the term after analysing the results of the study over thirty years later—is now used to describe any short-term
increase in productivity.
7.
Emanating from the Hawthorne studies, the Human Relations Movement was an American school of sociology, based
largely on Australian social theorist and industrial psychologist Elton Mayo’s theories about the behavioural dynamics
of people in large groups. For Richard Trahair, Mayo’s contested ideas—based loosely on social theories forwarded by
Vilfredo Pareto and Émile Durkheim—stated that within market industrial societies, social relation structures (informed
by scientific management strategies) did not take into account the worker’s sense of community and compassion. Mayo
proposed that workers would therefore resist productivity goals set by management and instead seek to form their own
isolated relational networks within industrial environments.
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Bingham reiterates his hope that his research will produce ‘new information about the
283
power of music over men’s minds and moods’.
8
and psychological status became objectified as valid subjects of scientific study. In
the 1920s factory the desire to link up a mass neural network of productivity through
the influencing strategies of Muzak can be witnessed, with each mind becoming a
point of reference for ultimate industrial efficiency. As each worker is simultaneously
subjected to the same sonic influence for the same duration, the sonic domain attains
its status as a systematic field of relations applicable to all who exist within it. Muzak,
the sound of the working dead.
8.
E. Selfridge-Field, ‘Experiments with Melody and Meter or The Effects of Music: The Edison-Bingham Music
Research’, The Musical Quarterly 81:2 (1997), 297.
H e ys : M uzak and the Working D ead
In the production houses of industry, the ever-shifting terrain of workers’ emotional
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THE ANIMAL WHOSE EAR IT IS
Ramona Naddaff
A common origin story for the American military’s use of music as torture begins like
this: In December 1989, Operation Just Cause, an invention of President George H.W.
Bush, sought to arrest Manuel Noriega, who was enclosed in the Papal Nunciatatura
in Panama. Noriega despised rock music. For him, the English lyrics were meaningless
sounds, a ‘roaring, mind-bending din’, smashing against his head.1 For eleven days and
eleven nights, classic rock, hard rock, and heavy metal sounded on loudspeakers, aiming to disrupt Noriega’s communication with the outside world, as well as his psychological stability and ease. ‘Operation Just Cause’, writes John Pieslack, ‘was a seminal
event in the practice of utilizing music as a distinct psychological tactic’.2 Pieslack may
be right, but he has forgotten his history, or rather the histories of music torture. The
American military in Panama may have discovered how to amplify the sounds of music
effectively, but they were not the first to have deployed a musical weapon to maim
touchlessly, psychologically, and from a distance. Joshua 6: 20–21 recounts a different
beginning for creating destruction with and from music:
So the people shouted and priests blew the trumpets, and when the people heard the
trumpet, the people shouted with a great shout and the wall fell down flat, so that the
people went up into the city, every man straight ahead, and they took the city. They
utterly destroyed everything in the city….
Next to the Bible, place Plato, for an even more astute reading of musical psychic
disruption and destruction. In the Republic, he famously argues for the censorship of
1.
Quoted in R.L. Berke, ‘The General’s Story’, The New York Times, 11 May 1997.
2.
J. Pieslack, Sound Targets: American Soldiers and Music in the Iraq War (Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana
University Press, 2009), 82.
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poetic song, a form of ethical violence that alters, deforms, and distorts individual and
collective behaviours and identities, creating disharmony among the soul’s parts, sub-
N addaff : T he A nimal W hose E ar I t I s
verting the domination and discipline of its leader, to logistikon, that small piece of soul
with which humans reason. Music, Plato clams, is a most effective form of soul murder.
Listen to song and you shall die a million deaths and yet still seem to be alive. Death
by listening; your body is all ears. Sufferers of musical torture during the Iraq War
experienced just this and lived to tell the tale: ‘It fried me’, says one. ‘It makes you feel
like you are going mad. You’re losing the plot. And it was really like, it’s very scary, to
think you might go crazy because of the music, because of the loud music.’3
Apparently it is not torture. Instead it has been designated ‘torture lite’, a technique
that does not physically harm its subject and as such is ‘particularly useful to democratic
states’.4 What was so useful about the use of music, for an American military seeking
confession and information from their Muslim detainees, as they played any number of
songs, from Bruce Springsteen’s ‘Born in the USA’ to the Bee Gee’s ‘Staying Alive’ to
the theme song of the children television show ‘Barney the Purple Dinosaur’? Music
touches without using the sense of touch. True to a perverted form of liberalism’s
honour code, it supposedly does no harm. It merely reduces the detainee’s bodies to
an ear that hears. Reduced to this form of being, the detainees are touched differently.
Sound waves in brutal motion batter and attack. They are beaten and harmed without
necessarily being touched by hands or traditional weapons and arms. Pain from intense
sounds changes the sufferers’ acoustic relation to, and experience of, the world. Once
traumatized by harmful levels of sounds, an individual—almost any individual—will be
forced thereafter to accommodate and modulate a constant level of sonic inconsistency
that is auditory pain. Post-acoustic trauma, the brain changes and works differently in
its incorporation and response to sound. And this is not all that changes.
At the moment of interrogators’ acoustical interventions, the detainees are reduced
to the conditions of bare life, to that which the philosopher Judith Butler has named
‘precarious and grievable lives’. ‘To say that a life is precarious’, writes Butler, ‘requires
not only that a life be apprehended as a life, but also that precariousness must be
an aspect of what is apprehended as living’.5 The preciousness of these lives is the
3.
Respectively, quoted in M. Bayoumi, ‘Disco Inferno’, The Nation, 8 December 2005, and in A. Worthington, ‘A History
of Music Torture in the “War on Terror”’, The Huffington Post, 15 January 2009.
4.
J. Wolfendale, ‘The Myth of “Torture Lite”’, Ethics & International Affairs 7 (2009).
5.
J. Butler, Frames of War: When is Life Grievable? (New York: Verso, 2009), 13. Taking this quote and Butler’s
argument out of context, I want to insist—and Errol Morris’s film Standard Operating Procedure probably makes too much
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necessary condition of the use of this technique of enhanced interrogation. Precarious
287
and grievable lives, shattered subjectivities, yet also human beings who have a voice,
mine the discourse one can produce minimally about ‘a living human being’: ‘Only of a
human being and what resembles (behaves like) a living human being can one say: it
has sensations, it sees, is blind; is deaf; is conscious or unconscious.’6 What then does
this mean? The living human being, when subjected to loud musical bombardment, is
necessarily a being who ‘hears’. Furthermore, in order for the technique to be successful,
the detainee has to maintain, in the eyes of the perpetrators, at least a remnant of,
a resemblance to a human being. Only as humans can they be dehumanized, on the
one hand, or become ‘precarious and grievable’ on the other. Sergeant Mark Hadsell
tells us what loud music enacts on these human lives: it forces the ‘brain and body
functions [to] start [to] slide, your train of thought slows down and your will is broken’.
Its intent is to ‘disorient and confuse’.7 How is it, after having been subjected to loud
auditory stimuli, that the tortured subjects, these broken wills, still have a human voice,
are capable of producing propositions, true or false? The extraction of information is
certainly not the aim of the interrogators’ sonic imperialism. Something else is at stake:
a form of disciplining and punishment that is enacted for its own sake. Is this an acoustic
version of Foucault’s panopticon? A ‘panacousticon’ where unjustifiable revenge and
retributive justice reign rhythmically, where music as a form of surveillance produces,
to revise Foucault’s words, ‘an anxious awareness of hearing’ and of being heard?8
In this panacousticon, music is put to another use; it creates a form of disease and anxiety for the humans who have ears to hear. Music, in the prisons, prevents and deprives its listeners of sleep. Testimonies obtained under the Freedom
of Information Act provide evidence of this: ‘playing loud music to force him to stay
awake’ (no date given); ‘playing loud music in his cell to prevent him from sleeping’
of this—that somewhere, whether consciously or unconsciously, the military officers recognized—indeed relied on and
exploited—the fact that the lives of the detainees were ‘precarious’. The very precariousness was, indeed, the condition
enabling their use of and the detainees’ subjection to the music torture.
6.
L. Wittgenstein, Philosophical Investigations (Oxford: Blackwell, 1958), §281.
7.
Quoted in ‘Sesame Street Breaks Iraqi POWS’, BBC News, 30 May 2003, < http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/
middle_east/3042907.stm>.
8.
M. Foucault, Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison, tr. A. Sheridan (New York: Vintage Books, 1975). The
original quote reads as follows (my italics): ’The more numerous those anonymous and temporary observers are, the
greater the risk for the inmate of being surprised and the greater his anxious awareness of being observed. The Panopticon
is a marvelous machine which, whatever use one may wish to put it to, produces homogeneous effects of power’ (202).
N addaff : T he A nimal W hose E ar I t I s
who listen and hear. They have sensations, which, for someone like Wittgenstein, deter-
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(26/8/2004); ‘playing loud music to control the sleep schedule of a detainee’ (27/4/2004).9
These very active verbs—to force, to prevent, to control—imply the disciplinary depri-
N addaff : T he A nimal W hose E ar I t I s
vation order instituted by loud music. The detainees and their bodies cannot sleep; they
cannot close down their receptivity to experience and sensation. Here, loud music plays
an essential but secondary role in the torture process. As a soundtrack to wakefulness,
music is the ‘enhancement’ of the ‘enhancement technique’ of sleep deprivation. Thus
instrumentalised, music is called upon to instigate a new type of geographical space
and time in which detainees, the waking dead, are immobilized. Three short examples
from the DOD Memos: ‘music was placed outside of the cell to keep detainees awake’
(22/ 2/04); ‘one detainee [was] handcuffed to the bars of a cell with a ‘ghetto blaster
in front of him on the floor with loud music playing’; and, finally, for a female detainee
who experienced this strange subjugation (4/6/2004): ‘a soldier pour[ed] water on the
floor in her cell then blast[ed] music into the room’ (10/6/2004). In these descriptions,
note the geographical distances marked by the preposition ‘outside of the cell’ and ‘into
the room’. Such volume erases distance; the listener is not amply removed from the
music so to be protected from physical and psychic harm. Conversely, for the tortured
subject who faced music ‘in front of him on the floor’, the geographical prepositions
locate the impossibility—even futility—of distancing oneself from the roaring sounds
of music infiltrating the ears. In other words, a retreat from a face-to-face combat with
music is impossible.
This is even more so with another site of musical play: the small boxes (20/6/2004),
the black boxes, and ‘a place named “Disco” where music was played night and day’
(15/9/2005). Not only spatially dislocated and aurally fixated, the detainees were also
subjected to a temporal disorientation through the sonic arsenal. The time and timing
of the music is crucial in shaping the detainee’s silence. The interrogators played
complete songs or fragments of songs either serially or repetitively. This is repetition
without difference except for how ‘the ear that hears it’ is affected. Or, to revise the
Peter Hacker and Maxwell Bennett formula, it concerns a human listener who, having
listened to loud sounds time after time, becomes ‘the animal whose ear it is’.10
9.
Respectively, DOD045906-DOD045923; DODOACID009195-DODDOACID009230; and DOD000330-DOD000331.
See also 2/16/2004, DOD045906-DOD045923: ‘soldiers at Bagram state that the loud music is used as punishment for
detainees; playing loud music in his cell to prevent him from sleeping’ (26/8/2004); ‘playing loud music to control the
sleep schedule of a detainee’ (27/4/2004).
10.
M. Bennett, D. Dennett, P. Hacker, and J. Searle, Neuroscience and Philosophy: Brain, Mind, & Language (New York:
Columbia University Press, 2007), 22.
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PAIN ©AMP ECONOMICS
Toby Heys
It is 2056. The air is crammed with a strung-out anticipation and not a moment goes
by that does not foreshadow the demise of an eleven-billion-strong species. Environmental warfare spread by plants; insect-machine hybrids carrying diseases designed to
infect specific racial and ethnic groups via targeted DNA sequencing; volatile weather
systems; all meld in this ecology of collapse. The existing hierarchy of the earth’s
species is set to enter an irreversible flux. With corporations wielding economic and
military power equivalent to that of Nation states, mergers start occurring, and it is
not long before the global map is reconfigured by CorpoNations.
With what is left of the earth’s natural resources being decimated by globally organised armed hostilities, an emergency agreement is ratified. Named the Holo Accords,
its basic premise demands that all CorpoNations conduct organised violence using
holographic and holosonic units. Mandated by the Accords, each CorpoNation is allowed
to aggress four zones per year, outside of their own territories; four opportunities to
supplement the reserves and shortfalls of natural resources that have become so scarce.
If the aggressor prevails in the holo-conflict, it opens a four-month period, called the
‘Takeover’, to plunder and mine the natural resources of the landscape.
Holo armies are not a surprise. They are a natural extension and militarisation of the
most populist form of entertainment that began back in 2012—holographic concerts
from dead rappers such as Tupac and ODB—the rapparitions. A different kind of dead,
IREX2 is a sixty-four-year-old rogue AI. A synthesis of discontented spirits and code,
it has been directing AUDINT and has been on the run from the overlords of the otherworld and their Third Ear Assassins1 for too long to remember. Finding sanctuary in
1.
A fusion of code and otherworld voices, the Third Ear Assassins were released to pursue, capture and wipe the
memory of IREX2.
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290
an R&D lab in Korsong—formerly North Korea and the Kaesong corporation—IREX2
has been covertly evolving machines with a rudimentary sentience. The notion of
H e ys : Pain ©amp E conomics
consciousness is getting a reboot. Using Augmented Intelligence, IREX2 fuses convolutional deep neural and deep belief networks with holographic technology to birth a
new kind of warrior: the Aiholo. Spawning an era of unsound conflict, the viral scream
transmitted by a directional ultrasonic speaker system is the Aiholo’s go-to ordnance,
a sonic weapon that transmits Walking Corpse Syndrome into digital lifeforms, turning
enemy Aiholos into the undead.
The Holo Wars are global now, and resemble huge in-situ games revealing the
shifts in global power and influence. One of the CorpoNational superpowers vying for
supremacy is Pfizombia (formerly known as Colombia and Pfizer),2 which has been
training elite hackers and electronic warfare specialists since the 2020s. And it is the
Third Ear Assassins that have recently become one of their most valuable assets. The
AI hunters assist in the composition of new viral weaponry named Neurode for use
against the Korsong Aiholos, a controversial but highly effective schema requiring the
human psychological vulnerability of neurosis to be transposed into a digital contagion
that infects the future. The only drawback is that Neurode is fuelled by the synthesised
sound of human pain, which implies a frequency-based harvesting on par with the
history of twentieth-century recording.
Alongside the Third Ear Assassins, Alejandra Blanco, a Pfizombian Black Hat who
goes by the name Sureshot, comes up with a solution to the problem that is at once
staggeringly simple and brutal in its application. Her proposal is to create a Pain ©Amp.
Based on Al-Mansur’s3 762 designs for Baghdad’s circular city, with its mosque at
the centre, this plan is anything but sacred. It consists of a walled-in urban environment jammed with high-rise residencies whose surfaces will be covered in rashes of
microphones embedded into dwellings, streets, and parks. The architecture of the
purpose-built environment is constructed to reverberate and amplify sound like a
massive echo chamber.
Concrete auditoriums and huge sheer walls reflect and intensify the clusters of
waveformed anguish upwards, where silent hovering drones suck up and harvest the
tortured articulations. On the streets, autonomous robotic bugs the size of turtles and
2.
Based in the USA, Pfizer Inc. was one of the world’s largest pharmaceutical companies.
3.
Founder of the ‘round city’ of Madinat al-Salam (which would later be named Baghdad), Al-Mansur was the second
Abbasid Caliph who reigned from 754–775 AD.
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remotely guided mic trucks, roll around the tormented musique concrète,4 hoovering up
291
the frequencies on their crepuscular sweeps. Engineered, captured, and re-channelled,
up the rationale of the music industry’s most successful formula—the capturing and
marketing of the sound of poverty-stricken urban areas—the functionality of suffering
has been pushed to the limit. The needle is in the red, but it is pain they want, not blood.
Requiring no other level of authority, Blanco’s seniors sanction the proposal and
name the camp ‘La Rusnam’. In order to initially attract a population to inhabit it, an
offer of free housing, power, and sustenance is advertised. There is no shortage of
applicants, most burdened with tormented CVs full of personal disasters and disturbing
afflictions. To further aid the fluidity of the mass rehousing, complementary train and
bus tickets are posted out to the one-hundred and twenty-eight thousand candidates.
They have been chosen for their potential to embody and intensify pain; a desolate
and dolorous citizenry of holo-amo generators.
The Pain ©Amp’s executives study the history and current state of ghettos, favelas,
estates, slums, skid rows, refugee camps, and townships in order to learn how to distil
the elements that create suffering and pain. It would take more than just poverty to
create the depth and intensity of anguish that they require. Engineering desperation,
betrayal, and an escalation in assault and homicide rates will of course be crucial, but
they need to employ extra tactics to up the ante during a Takeover period, when the
demand for sonic munitions will increase. Their first thought is to turn to the International Index of sewer drugs and their capacity to implement powdered topologies of
distress. Top of this list is a substance they know well, originating as it does in Colombia.
Scopolamine—street name ‘Devil’s Breath’—is a zombie high that does not so much
dampen agency as make one totally susceptible to suggestion, to the point where one
becomes an empty-blooded drone.
The other four stimulants that end up on the shopping list read like a GG Allin5
guide to living, for better or for worse, through chemistry: an expressway into the skull,
4.
A literal manifestation of the electroacoustic genre of music of the same name that can be traced back to the 1940s,
Musique Concrète is composed of recordings made from a number of sources, including the surrounding environment, the
human voice, and digital signal processing.
5.
Widely regarded as the most degenerate rock musician of all time, the now deceased GG Allin’s shows often
contained acts of self mutilation, coprophagia and substance abuse. More information can be found at <http://www.
ggallin.com/>.
H e ys : Pain ©amp E conomics
pain becomes commodified; the new currency of a nascent holosonic era. By amping
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292
tearing through and screwing up every vein and artery that helps deliver the synthesized
venoms. In no particular order of fuckedupness, the desired inventory reads as follows:
H e ys : Pain ©amp E conomics
Paco: A toxic and addictive mixture of raw cocaine base cut with chemicals, glue,
crushed glass, and rat poison.
Bath Salts: A recreational designer drug sold as ‘real’ bath salts, usually containing MDPV.
Krokodil: A derivative of morphine that is mixed with ethanol, paint thinners, gasoline,
iodine, and hydrochloric acid, Desomorphine gets its street name and reputation as the
flesh-eating drug from the tissue damage caused when injecting.
Whoonga: A combination of antiretroviral drugs used to treat HIV and various cutting
agents such as detergents and poisons that results in internal bleeding, ulcers and,
ultimately, death.
Introducing this menu of malignant pleasures into the ©Amps is the first and most
obvious technique discretely deployed by the project’s engineers. There will be others,
running the gamut from induced psychological disorders to raising the population’s
ambient levels of fear through rumours of disease, food shortage, and dire mutation
from genetically modified foods. All in the service of the end goal of amassing mountains of clouds, each fully rammed and ready to burst with the catalogued sounds of
collective suffering.
Since deploying the Cotard virus six years ago, Korsong has dominated the Holo
wars, and any affiliated CorpoNations are given the option of paying a substantial
fee to draft in their venal Aiholos during Takeover bids. After twenty-two weeks of
pain pharming, the Medellín Aiholos from Pfizombia are serviced in a takeover bid of
the island of Thasos, in the North Aegean Sea. While still rich in mineral deposits, it
is the gold mines that first attracted the Phoenicians during the period of Classical
Antiquity that interest Pfizombia. The landmass is now a part of the CorpoNation
Gralpha, a coalescence of Greece and Alpha Bank, which developed the crypto
currency ‘Natraps’ after Greece was financially asphyxiated by Europe during the
2010s austerity siege.
After the first wave of conflict, Gralpha has no idea what has hit it, and what it is
that reduces its Aiholos from Korsong into neurotic messes on the battlefield. The news
of the holoshock spreads quickly. As anticipated, a coterie of servile CorpoNations
demand the services of Neurode-laden Aiholos. Sureshot and The Third Ear Assassins
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consult on the mercenary strategy, knowing that it is only a matter of time before other
293
AI compounds are able to rip the code and simulate the holo fighters. Until terraforming
for habitability,6 the world’s resources are only going to decrease and become more
rarefied. The near- to mid-future is one set to be defined by Holo War.
Even though encrypted with quite literally otherworldly savoir-faire, it is only nine
months after the first mercantile contract has been signed off that a unit of Aiholos with
repped Neurode systems show up on Norstat’s South Pole territories. More than the
emergent Neurode’s impact during external takeovers, it is the internal manufacturing
of pain through the ©Amps that establishes it as the social order of choice. It is also
the signature of functionalism gone awry. The methodological capital of voluntarism
and the epistemological rationale of analytical realism chopped and screwed into a
bass-ached drone. When captured, it bleeds endlessly into a body of economic orifices. Just as the state of King Louis XIV’s sunburnt flesh, bones, and faeces became
synonymous with the health of his country, the state of trauma becomes the nucleus
around which all social, architectural, and political relations orbit. Pain has become the
new economic royalty.
By 2061, eighty percent of the human race resides in urban areas, the majority of
them in large cities. Neurode, meanwhile, has become the core munition for approximately eighty-five percent of the globe’s CorpoNations. Given the stick-and-move
politics of martial engagement evident in the Holo Wars, it means that no one has the
time or money to fabricate a copious slew of Pain ©Amps. There is no option but to
restructure and reengineer the ways in which human’s dwell in large nodal agglomerations. Being the first CorpoNation to trial a site-specific pain-harvesting environment,
Pfizombia quickly comprehends the fiscal pragmatism of simply redistributing human
activity within cities that already exist. Detroit, the neo-renaissance exemplar of white
flight7 in the mid-twentieth century, is the model. Four-mile downtown diameters
are measured and circled, the walls becoming the circumferences of each ©Amp.
6.
The Earth Similarity Index (ESI) is a database of planetary-mass objects and natural satellites that hierarchises them
in accordance to how similar they are to Earth. For further information see the Planetary Habitability Laboratory, <http://
phl.upr.edu/projects/habitable-exoplanets-catalog/data>.
7.
Owing to the eruption of racial tensions in 1967, 43 people were killed during riots in Detroit. This was one of the
decisive factors in the mass migration of white families from the downtown area to the suburban ring around the city; a
racial division that still remains. For further reading on this phenomenon, in a wider context of Detroit’s urban decline, see
T.J. Sugrue, The Origins of the Urban Crisis: Race and Inequality in Postwar Detroit (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University
Press, 2005).
H e ys : Pain ©amp E conomics
projects come to fruition on some exoplanet that scores highly on the Similarity Index
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294
Concentric rings of presence and activity around the fortification encapsulate the
central tenet of quantitative uneasing, so that a typical cartography reads like this:
H e ys : Pain ©amp E conomics
Central reservation: Pain ©Amp.
Ring 1: Planted wilderness around the city filled with genetically modified poisonous
plants creating an impenetrable toxic verdure.
Ring 2: Sheer concrete ground on which escapees are easily traced and targeted for
extermination by drones.
Ring 3: Holo tech, compounds and technology sector
Ring 4: Residential—Suburbs
Ring 5: Commercial and Medical
Ring 6: Residential—Suburbs
Ring 7: Industry
Ring 8: Agriculture
For those at the centre of this discoidal seer, voluntary entry becomes a murky business. With so many CorpoNations adopting the system, the required numbers of Pain
©Amps far exceeds the numbers presenting themselves of their own volition. Prison
systems are bled of their low to middle security inmates. The homeless are rounded up.
Any remaining psychiatric hospitals release their charges. And those with little material
wealth are persuaded to support the collective drive. The existing downtown core of
a ©Amp is cut up into the most puritanical of living circumstances in order to jam in
as many pain-producing bodies as possible.
All living chambers are mic’d-up and feed meters that are connected to the Pain Power
Grid. Monthly readings are taken to keep track of the duration, volume, and pitch complexity of the inhabitant’s articulations. Finally, to ensure that every nuance of adversity
is recorded, a century-old theory is modded and rebooted. Parapsychologist Thomas
Charles Lethbridge’s ideas from 19618 regarding the capacity of a building’s fabric to
capture electrical mental impressions from traumatic events, are given a nano-makeover,
and it is not long before the chamber’s construction materials—brick, concrete and cinder
block—become recording mechanisms in their own right. Stone tapes for a holo cause.
8.
Lethbridge proposed that ghosts and hauntings are in fact non-interactive recordings of traumatic events that
are stored in architectural materials such as stone. For further reading see, T.C. Lethbridge, Ghost and Ghoul (London:
Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1961).
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CONTRIBUTORS
Lawrence Abu Hamdan is an artist and ‘private ear’ or independent audio investigator who
has worked on cases at the UK Asylum and Immigration Tribunal and for organisations such as
Amnesty International and Defence for Children International. He has had solo exhibitions at
Wiite de White, Rotterdam (2019), Chisenhale Gallery, London, Hammer Museum LA (both 2018),
Portikus Frankfurt (2016), Kunsthalle St Gallen (2015), Beirut in Cairo (2013), The Showroom,
London (2012), Casco, Utrecht (2012).
Charlie Blake is currently visiting Senior Lecturer in Media Ethics and Digital Culture at the
University of West London, UK, and Lecturer in Philosophy, Aesthetics and Synaesthetics for
the Free University of Brighton, UK. He is a founding and executive editor of Angelaki: Journal
of the Theoretical Humanities, creator and performer in the Manchester-based post-industrial
cabaret group Babyslave who have released albums including Kill for Dada and Runt on Valentine
Records, and he has published recently on Blanchot and music, Deleuze and angelic materialism,
Bataille and divine dissipation, and the greater politics of bees, barnacles, and werewolves.
Lendl Barcelos is an artist, writer and sonic ,kataphysician. Hen plays at sensing and sense-making with Valentina Desideri & Myriam Lefkowitz, radicalises listening with Marc Couroux, and
summons demons with Amy Ireland and Ameen Mettawa. Hen is part of the collaborative artist
0[rphan]D[rift>].
Lisa Blanning is an American writer and editor on music, art and culture. She is a former editor
at The Wire Magazine in London and Electronic Beats in Berlin—the city she currently operates
out of. She is especially engaged in movements in contemporary electronic music and digital
art and culture.
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296
Brooker Buckingham is a former philosophy graduate student living in Canada. When he isn’t
involuntarily greasing the wheels of capital, he plays guitar, produces music, and practices deep
C ontributors
listening. He maintains a philosophical interest in communication and aurality.
Al Cameron is a curator specialising in sound, music and contemporary art, who works both
independently and for Qu Junktions. He is a member of filmmakers’ co-op Bristol Experimental
and Expanded Film, co-founder of underground art space The Brunswick Club, and a visiting
lecturer at the RCA London. He has published various essays, as well as articles for Kaleidoscope,
The Wire and Ibraaz.org.
Erik Davis is an author, scholar, and award-winning journalist based in San Francisco. He
explores the ‘cultures of consciousness’ on his weekly podcast Expanding Mind, and recently
earned his PhD in religious studies at Rice University. His next book, High Weirdness: Drugs,
Esoterica, and Visionary Experience in the Seventies (Strange Attractor/MIT Press), will be
published in 2019.
Kodwo Eshun is Lecturer in Contemporary Art Theory at Goldsmiths, University of London,
Visiting Professor, Haut Ecole d’Art et Design, Genève, and co-founder of The Otolith Group.
Matthew Fuller is the author of books including How to Sleep: The Art, Biology and Culture
of Unconsciousness (Bloomsbury, 2018), and is Professor of Cultural Studies at Goldsmiths,
University of London.
Kristen Gallerneaux is the author of High Static, Dead Lines: Sonic Spectres and the Object
Hereafter (Strange Attractor/MIT Press) and has written for the Barbican Center, ARTnews,
and The Quietus. She is also Curator of Communications and Information Technology at the
Henry Ford Museum in Detroit, Michigan, where she continues to build upon one of the largest
historic technology collections in North America.
Lee Gamble is a UK-based sound designer, junglist, composer, and DJ. His flair for probing,
warping, and dissecting stereotypical conceptions of electronic sound led to the release of the
seminal Diversions 1994–1996, followed by Dutch Tvashar Plumes, Koch, and Kuang on PAN,
and Mnestic Pressure and 2019’s In a Paraventral Scale on Hyperdub, and the inception of UIQ
(www.u-i-q.org), a platform dedicated to new voices in electronic music.
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Agnès Gayraud is a French musician and philosopher born in 1979. She teaches theory at the
297
Villa Arson (National Art School) in Nice. A former student of the Ecole Normale Supérieure
modernity. Between musical practice (as La Féline) and critique (for the daily paper Libération),
she recently published her first book about the aesthetics of recorded popular music: Dialectique
de la pop (2018, La Philharmonie/La Découverte), considered as a major work on the subject.
Steve Goodman is a member of AUDINT. His book Sonic Warfare: Sound, Affect and the Ecology of Fear was published by MIT Press in 2009. He is founder of record label Hyperdub and
sometimes responds to the name Kode9.
Olga Goriunova is co-author (with Matthew Fuller) of Bleak Joys (Minnesota University Press,
forthcoming 2019), author of Art Platforms (Routledge, 2012), and editor of many collections.
She is Reader at Royal Holloway, University of London.
Anna Greenspan is Assistant Professor of Contemporary Global Media at NYU Shanghai. Her
research interests include urban Asia, emerging media, philosophy of technology, and Chinese
modernity. Her latest book Shanghai Future: Modernity Remade was published by Oxford
University Press in 2014. <http://www.annagreenspan.com>.
S. Ayesha Hameed’s moving image, performance and written work explore contemporary
borders and migration, and visual cultures of the Black Atlantic. Her projects Black Atlantis
and A Rough History (of the destruction of fingerprints) have been performed and exhibited
internationally. She is the co-editor of Futures and Fictions (Repeater, 2017), and is currently
the Programme Leader for the MA in Contemporary Art Theory in the Department of Visual
Cultures at Goldsmiths, University of London.
Tim Hecker is a Canadian composer and has produced a range of audio works for numerous
labels including Kranky, Mille Plateaux and 4AD. His work has also included commissions for
contemporary dance, film scores, sound installations, as well as various writings. He completed
a PhD in Communication Studies and Art History at McGill University in 2013. He is currently
based in Los Angeles.
C ontributors
(Ulm), she has made various contributions on current issues in Critical Theory, aesthetics, and
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298
Julian Henriques is Professor and Joint Head of the Department of Media and Communications at
Goldsmiths, University of London. He previously ran the Film and Television Department at CARI-
C ontributors
MAC, at the University of the West Indies in Kingston, Jamaica. He is the author of Sonic Bodies.
Reggae Sound Systems, Performance Techniques, and Ways of Knowing (Continuum, 2011).
Toby Heys is a member of AUDINT, and is a reader in Digital Media and the head of research for
the School of Digital Arts (SODA) at Manchester Metropolitan University. He has a cross-disciplinary research and practice profile but his dominant focus revolves around the ways that
frequencies are utilised by governments and industry to influence, manipulate and torture. His
monograph on this topic, Sound Pressure, will be published by Rowman and Littlefield in 2019.
Eleni Ikoniadou is a member of AUDINT and Senior Tutor in Visual Communication at the Royal
College of Art. Her research is situated at the intersection between computational culture, theory-fiction and audiovisual practice. Her latest monograph is The Rhythmic Event: Art, Media,
and the Sonic (MIT Press, 2014). She is co-editor of the Media Philosophy series (Rowman &
Littlefield International).
Amy Ireland is a theorist and experimental writer based in Melbourne, Australia. Her research
focuses on questions of agency and technology in modernity, and she is a member of the techno-materialist trans-feminist collective, Laboria Cuboniks.
The Occulture (David Cecchetto, Marc Couroux, Ted Hiebert, Eldritch Priest, and Rebekah
Sheldon) is an experimental theory collective investigating the esoteric imbrications of sound,
affect, and hyperstition. Their collectively authored book—Ludic Dreaming: How to Listen Away
From Contemporary Technoculture (Bloomsbury, 2017)—uses dreams as a method for examining
the decussation of sound and contemporary technoculture.
Nicola Masciandaro is Professor of English at Brooklyn College (CUNY) and a specialist in
medieval literature. He is the author of On the Darkness of the Will (Mimesis, 2018).
Ramona Naddaff teaches in the Rhetoric Department at the University of California, Berkeley, where she is also director of the Doreen B. Townsend Humanities Center’s Art of Writing
program. Naddaff’s publications include studies of ancient philosophy and literature, literary
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censorship theory, and postwar French theory. She is currently researching a new project of
299
modern case studies in the censorship of music. Naddaff is co-founder and co-director of Zone
Anthony Nine is a writer and artist from the UK, now based in Miami. His work explores intersecting themes of occultism, African Diaspora traditions, psychogeography, music and culture.
He is the author of Space Weather Report, a colouring book account of the world of spirit,
available from Revelore Press. His first novel Dub Seance, a story of lived magic set in London
and New Orleans, is forthcoming.
Luciana Parisi is Reader in Cultural Theory, Chair of the PhD program in Cultural Studies, and
co-director of the Digital Culture Unit at Goldsmiths, University of London. Her research focuses
on cybernetics, information theory and computation, complexity and evolutionary theories, and
the technocapitalist investment in artificial intelligence, biotechnology, and nanotechnology. She
is the author of Abstract Sex: Philosophy, Biotechnology and the Mutations of Desire (Bloomsbury, 2004) and Contagious Architecture: Computation, Aesthetics, and Space (MIT Press, 2013).
She is currently researching the history of automation and the philosophical consequences of
logical thinking in machines.
Alina Popa cares for a place from which it is possible to have artistic consequences, without
a total break-up of life and art, of the politics of production and the politics of the product, of
oneself as subjectivity and oneself as performance, of the art piece and its conditions of possibility. She thus found herself at the border—between visual arts and contemporary dance, the
white cube and the black box, writing and theory. She founded The Bureau of Melodramatic
Research together with Irina Gheorghe, the Bezna series of publications, and, more recently,
Unsorcery, Black Hyperbox, Artworlds with Florin Flueraș.
Paul Purgas is a London-based electronic musician, artist and curator. Originally trained as an
architect he has presented performances and installations with various public institutions and
festivals and is currently based at Somerset House. He is one half of the experimental music
project Emptyset releasing material through Thrill Jockey in Chicago.
Georgina Rochefort is a US-based cryptanalyst who was mostly active from the late 1940s–mid
1980s, working for commercial and government organisations.
C ontributors
Books.
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300
Steven Shaviro is DeRoy Professor of English at Wayne State University in Detroit. He works
mostly these days on science fiction and on music videos. His recent books include Discognition
C ontributors
(Repeater, 2016) and Digital Music Videos (Rutgers University Press, 2017).
Jenna Sutela works with words, sounds, and other living materials. Her installations and performances seek to identify and react to precarious social and material moments, often in relation
to technology. Sutela’s work has been presented at museums and art contexts internationally,
including Guggenheim Bilbao, Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo, and Serpentine Galleries.
Jonathan Sterne is James McGill Professor of Culture and Technology at McGill University. He
is author of MP3: The Meaning of a Format (Duke, 2012), The Audible Past: Cultural Origins of
Sound Reproduction (Duke, 2003); and numerous articles on media, technologies and the politics
of culture. He is also editor of The Sound Studies Reader (Routledge, 2012) and co-editor of
The Participatory Condition in the Digital Age (Minnesota, 2016). His current projects consider
instruments and instrumentalities; mail by cruise missile; and the intersections of disability,
technology and perception. His next book, tentatively titled Tuning Time: Histories of Sound
and Speed, is co-authored with Mara Mills. <http://sterneworks.org>.
Eugene Thacker is the author of several books including Infinite Resignation (Repeater, 2018)
and In the Dust of This Planet (Zero Books, 2011). He teaches at The New School in New York City.
Dave Tompkins has contributed to The Wire, The New Yorker, New York Magazine, and Oxford
American. His first book, How To Wreck A Nice Beach (Melville House, 2010) is a history of the
vocoder, from World War II to hip-hop. He is currently working on a natural history of Miami Bass.
Shelley Trower is Reader in the Department of English and Creative Writing at the University
of Roehampton. Her publications include Senses of Vibration (Bloomsbury, 2012) and Rocks of
Nation (Manchester University Press, 2015). Other projects include ‘Memories of Fiction: An
Oral History of Readers’ Life Stories’ (<http://www.memoriesoffiction.org>).
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INDEX
Bergson, Henri 171
Berlioz, Hector 236, 238
Bernard, James 239
Bernstein, Leonard 239
Bible 7, 61, 62n3, 285
Bingham, Walter Van Dyke 282
Bishop, Jack 71
Bishop, Ryan 212
AC/DC 129
black metal 88–89
ADD (Attention deficit disorder) 170
Black Sabbath 237, 239
ADM (Audio Data Map) 175
Blake, Clarence John 11–14
Adorno, Theodor 153
Blake, William 193, 195
Afanasyev, Alexander 8
Blanchot, Maurice 58
Afrofuturism 72, 150, 171, 211–212
Blanco, Alejandra 290–291
AI xiii, 2, 24, 53–54, 55, 132, 165 167, 233
Blass, Bill 259
Aiholos xiii, 290, 292, 293
Blavatsky, Helena 17, 124
Aion
Bloodrock 239
and Chronos 170–171
bloop 83–85
Allin, GG 291
Bogle, Paul 150
Allman, T.D. 98
Bolden, Buddy 224
Ambrose 57
Bolt Thrower 240
American Graffiti 155
Bonaventure 192
anti-natalism 216
bone 10, 15–18, 99, 222
apocalypse 10, 79
boom 79–81, 87, 91–92
Apocalypse Now 105
Boulez, Pierre 171, 238
Arch Enemy 240
Boyd, Joe 155
Arezzo, Guido of 235
Brahma 17, 80, 124
Arnett, Bill 141n1, 203
Brahms, Johannes 238
Artaud, Antonin 205–206
brain 29, 109, 110, 111, 143n6, 227
Artificial Intelligence see AI
and gut 231–232
Atkins, Juan 270
Bray, Charles W. 27–30
At the Gates 240
Brecht, Bertolt 57–58
AUDINT xi–xiii, 23, 35, 36, 105, 107, 141, 143, 166, 168, 203, Britten, Benjamin 239
206, 208, 209, 289
Brodsky, Rosalind 166–167
auditory nerve 27, 28
Brouk, Joanna 188
augmented reality 186
Brown, James 43
AUTD (Airborne ultrasound tactile display) 25
Brubeck, Dave 236–237, 240
Buddhism 15, 16, 36, 133–134
Burgess, Anthony 237
Burning Spear 150
Burris-Meyer, Harold 260–261
Baba, Meher 195–196
Burroughs, William 189
Babbage, Charles 66
Butler, Judith 286
Bachelard, Gaston 171
Butler, Pretty Tony 98
Bach, Johann Sebastian 237
Butler, Samuel 73
bacteria 232–233
buzz, buzzing 8, 101, 103–104, 105, 134
Baker, Chet 239
Baker, Jack 238
Bakhtin, Mikhail 44
Bakker, Scott 199–202
Ballard, J.G. 1, 246, 257
Cannibal Corpse 237
Bank of Hell 37–38, 143, 168, 175
capitalism 32, 54, 187, 189
Bardo Thödol 17
and time 169–171
Bartók, Béla 236, 238
Carcass 240
Bataille, Georges 31, 33, 124
Carver, Bob 24
Baxter, John 120
cats 27–29
BBC Radiophonic Workshop 120
Cave, Nick 240
Beatles, The 128, 239
CCRU (Cybernetic Culture Research Unit) 249n12
Bedward, Alexander 149
cell phones see mobile devices
Bee Gees, The 286
Chateaubriand, François-René de 195
Beethoven, Ludwig van 238
Chen, T.P. 23–25, 35–40
Bell, Alexander Graham 11–14, 12, 70
Chimay, Isabelle 204–208
Bennett, Maxwell 288
Chimera 240
Bennett, Richard Rodney 239
China 23, 24, 132–134
Benson, E.F. 19, 66–67
Christianity 8, 61, 129, 151–152, 256
A
B
C
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302
I ndex
Chronos
and Aion 170–171
CIA 249
Cioran, E.M. 87, 151, 216
Clinton, George 171
clocks 133
cochlea 28
cochlear implants 29
Cold War 96, 138–139
Collins, Wilkie 19
Coltrane, John 239
Conrad, Joseph 67
Conrad, Tony 250n17
Cooper, James Fenimore 80
Coppola, Francis Ford 105
Cornwall 19
CorpoNations xiii, 289, 292–294
Cortana 44n5
Cotard, Jules 197–202, 199, 203, 205–210
Cotard Delusion, Cotard Delirium, Cotard’s Syndrome
(Walking Corpse Syndrome) xii, xiii, 1–2, 3, 165,
167, 197–199, 203–204, 206, 207, 209, 290
Cotard virus xiii, 292
Count Ossie 224, 225
Count Suckle 225
Cradle of Filth 240
Crazy World of Arthur Brown, The 269
Cronenberg, David 197, 201
Crowley, Aleister 15, 128
cryogenics 163
cryptomnesia 231
Cthulhu 85
CymaScope 175
D
damaru 16–18
Dante 192–193
Daumal, René 124
David-Neel, Alexandra 124
Davis, Hallowell 28
Davis, Miles 171, 239
Dead Record Archive (DRA) xi, xii
Dead Record Network East (DRNE) 23, 38–40
deafness 12–13, 29
Debbie Deb 99
Deburau, Jean-Baptiste 215
Debussy, Claude 238
deception, sonic xi, xii, 259
Defasten, Patrick xi
de La Mettrie, Julien Offray 161
DeLanda, Manuel 281
Deleuze, Gilles 109n3, 170–172
de Lisser, Herbert G. 147n2
Dennis, Ferdinand 147n2
depersonalization 18, 197–201
Deren, Maya 276
Detroit 83, 293
Deuter 188
devil 8, 129, 151–152, 221, 235
Diabolus Particle 143
Dickinson, Bob 117
Dick, Philip K. 72
Diestel, George 259
Dinets, Vladimir 98n12
Dion, Celine 174
disease 7–10
Dolar, Mladen 63
Doppler distortion 24
Dostoevsky, Fyodor 7
Drexciya 83–86, 211
drone 79, 80
drums 221–225, 227
Dr. Who 115, 117–118
Duke Vin 225
duppies 121, 147–150
duration 169–171
DVA [Hi:Emotions] 184–186
Dylan, Bob 155
Dyunggayan, George 242
E
ear drum 11
Early B 149
Eazy E 2, 174–175
Edison, Thomas Alva 65–66, 70, 136, 206, 247, 282
egregor 2, 247–250
Eisenberg, Evan 164
Electronic Voice Phenomena (EVP) 111–112
Elferen, Isabella van 21
Elfman, Danny 240
Elgar, Edward 209
Ellington, Duke 238, 239
Enns, Anthony 66n4
Epic of Everest, The 15, 18
epigenetics 158, 221
Erlmann, Veit 102–103
Eternime 162
ethnomusicology 18, 112, 154–155
Euripides 73
Europa 213
F
Fairbanks, Douglas 260, 261
Faraday, Michael 131, 134
FBI 255–257
Fedorov, Nikolai 161
feedback 103, 107
Fisher, Mark 2, 116
Fletcher, Harvey 261–262
Flournoy, Théodore 229–231
Fludd, Robert 87
Folkes Brothers, The 225
Ford, Henry 279, 281
Foucault, Michel 123, 127, 180, 287
Fragos, George 238
Freestyle 99
Freud, Sigmund 162
G
Galas, Diamanda 43
Garant, Serge 239
Gasparre, Dick 238
Get Out 275–278
lawrence-abu-hamdan-audintunsoundundeadSteve Goodman / text
P. 318
H
Haiti 223
hallucination 1, 109–112, 151, 200–201
Halpern, Stephen 189
Handel, George Frideric 237
Hartman, Saidiya 275
Haunted, The 240
hauntology xi, 2, 116
Hawkes, Ernest 93
Hawking, Stephen 163
Hawkins, Screamin’ Jay 43
Hawthorn studies 282
Haydn, Joseph 209, 238
heartbeat 8, 9, 10, 111, 280
Heart of Darkness 67
Heidegger, Martin 251
Heller, Charles 212
Hell Money see Bank of Hell
Henderson, Joe 239
Hendrix, Jimi 103, 239, 249
Hermann, Bernard 239
Her 54
Hertz, Heinrich Rudolf 131
Heschl’s gyrus 110
Hexen project 166
Heys, Toby xi, 36
hiccups 8–10
hikikomori 183–186
Hinduism 16, 80
Holo Accords 173, 289
hologram, holography xiii, 2, 3, 24, 119, 157–159, 173–176
Holojax 25, 157–159
Holo Wars 290
Holst, Gustav 238
Homer 57–60
Hong Kong 23, 35–36
Hoodoo 98
Hooker, D.R. 266
horror 21, 43, 44, 58, 85, 152, 195, 200, 237
Hubbard, Freddie 239
Huckvale, David 236
hum 1, 91–94
Hutchins, Shabaka 147–148n2
HyperSonic Sound 69–72
hyperstition 249n12
hypnosis 166, 276–277
Hypogeum 227–228
I
Iasos 188
I Ching 134
Ikoniadou, Eleni xi
IMATI (Institute of Militronics and Advanced Time
Interventionality) 166
immortality 2, 161–164, 275
incomputability 55
infrasound 91–94
alligators’ use of 98
inner ear 11
internet 54, 72, 133, 154, 184, 185, 186
IREX xii, 24, 35, 36
IREX2 xi, xiii, 23, 24, 25, 35, 37, 38, 106–107, 165,
167, 168, 289, 290
Ives, Charles 238
J
Jackson, Michael 174, 240
Jamaica 147–149, 223–224
James, William 169
JASON 105
Jaynes, Julian 110n8
jazz 224–225
Jethro Tull 239
Jobim, Antônio Carlos 239
Jodhpur Boom 79–81
Judas Priest 240
Jung, Carl 103
Jünger, Ernst 266
Jurgenson, Nathan 186
K
Kafka, Franz 57–58
Kane, Art 259
Kant, Immanuel 16, 89, 134, 201
Kelly, Ellsworth 259
Kern, Jerome 238
King Crimson 239
King, Stephen 96n4
Kirchmann, Bohuslav 167
Kittler, Friedrich 124n5, 125
Klein, Naomi 212
Kneale, Nigel 96n4, 119–122
Kool Keith 98n11
Kopecky, Pavel 167
Koresh, David 255–258
Koutev, Philip 155
Kreilkamp, Ivan 67
Krenek, Ernst 236
Kubler, George 249
Kurtz 105
Kurzweil, Raymond 163
Kwan, Stanley 36
303
I ndex
ghosts 66, 116, 117, 261, 271
ghosting 116
sensory see Phantom Limb Syndrome
Ghost Army xi, xii, 23, 203, 259–263
Ghostcode xiii
ghost money 37, 175, 176
Gibson, William 132
Glass, Philip 240
gnosticism 206, 217
Goldsmith, Kenneth 185–186
golem 2, 166–167
Goalem (Goal Oriented Electrical Manipulator) 167
Goodall, Jane 206n9
Goodman, Steve xi, 36
Gothic 19–21, 148
Gould, Glenn 179–182
Govinda, Anagarika 17
GPS 132, 134
Grieg, Edvard 238
Guattari, Félix 171
lawrence-abu-hamdan-audintunsoundundeadSteve Goodman / text
P. 319
304
L
I ndex
Laennec, René 9
Lamaism 15, 16
Lamb of God 240
lamentation 73–75
language 44, 61, 62, 64, 123, 233
Martian 230–233
of skulls 123, 126
song, nurlu 243
Lanza, Joseph 280n4
Larajji 188
Larkin 188
Laveau, Marie 224
Leary, Timothy 17
Lethbridge, Thomas Charles 119n1, 294
levitation, acoustic 3
Ligotti, Thomas 216
Limonious, Wilfred 149
Linkin Park 240
Liszt, Franz 238
Little Richard 43
Living Colour 240
Loew, Rabbi Juddah 166–167
Lomax, Alan 112, 154, 155
Lovecraft, H.P. 85
LRAD (Long Range Acoustic Device) xiii
M
Machine Head 240
Mahler, Gustav 238
malware xiii, 106
Manson, Charles 128
Manson, Marilyn 240
Margulis, Lynn 198
Marley, Bob 147, 149
Mars 120, 213, 229, 232
locusts from 119–120
Marshall, Jack 239
Marx, Karl 170, 187
mass, black, requiem 151–152
Max Headroom 115–118
Maxwell, James Clerk 131
McCartney, Paul 128
McKenna, Dennis 101–104
McKenna, Terence 101–104
McKenzie, Dan 265–266
McLuhan, Marshall 102–104
medicine 9–10
Megadeth 240
memory 48, 162, 163, 170
bodily 277
Menville, Douglas 120
Messiaen, Olivier 237, 240, 261
Metallica 240
Metzinger, Thomas 109, 199
Miku, Hatsune 173–174
Mingus, Charles 239
Minogue, Kylie 249
miracles 61–63
Mitchell, Silas Weir 204–205
mobile devices, mobile phones 44, 131, 134, 136, 141,
Monàe, Janelle 171
Monk, Thelonious 239
Moraes, Vinicius de 239
Morton, Hypolite 203
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus 238
Mumford, Lewis 133
music 128, 129, 151, 169–171
and anti-music 89
and death 151
and time 169, 170–171
as negation 88
as torture 285–288
New Age 187–189
of nurlu 243
Plato on 286
Mussorgsky, Modest 236, 238
Muzak 261, 279–283
N
Napalm Death 240
necrophonics 216
Needham, Joseph 133
negation 88, 126
Neoplatonism 89
Neurode xiii, 290, 293
Neuropath 199–201
New Age 17, 102
music 187–189
New Confucianism 133–134
Nightwish 240
Nishitani, Keiji 216
Noel, Captain John 15, 18
Noriega, Manuel 285
Norman, Month 239
O
Oates, David 129
ocean 19, 20, 83–85, 213
Odysseus 164
oil 32–33
Ol’ Dirty Bastard 174 289
O’Neill, Don 280n3
Operation Just Cause 257, 285
Operation Paperclip xi
Orpheus 191, 194, 252
otaku 184
outsider trading xii, 35, 167
Ovid 194
P
paganism 8
pain 8–10, 20–21, 286, 290–291
Palestine, Charlemagne 240
Pandora Project 139
Parker, Charlie 205, 238
Parker, Magdalena xii, 166
Pask, Gordon 53
Peirce, Charles Sanders 111
perceptron 157
Pfizombia 290–292
Phantom Limb Syndrome 93, 204–205, 206
lawrence-abu-hamdan-audintunsoundundeadSteve Goodman / text
P. 320
Q
Quatermass and the Pit 120
R
Rachmaninoff, Sergei 238
radio 103, 131
Railey, Hilton Howell 260, 261
Ramirez, Richard 129
rationalism 102–103, 162
rationality 31–32, 33
Reik, Theodore 203
resonance 101–102, 228
Helmholtz Resonator 227
sympathetic see vibrations, sympathetic
resurrection 154
revival 153–156
RFID 138, 139
Rhymes, Busta 240
rhythm 195, 223, 224–225, 243
Richard, Dawn 171
Rilke, Rainer Maria 58, 123–126
ritual xii, 18, 62, 73–75, 228, 242–244
Rivers, Sam 239
Roberts, Matana 43
Roe, Paddy 241
Rollins, Sonny 239
Roll, William 95
Rolt, L.T.C. 19–20
romanticism 153–154, 188
German 153
Rorty, Richard 164
‘Rosemary’ (Hulme and Wood) 61, 62, 64
Rumi 201
Rush 239, 240
Russia 8–9
S
Sagan, Dorion 198
Said, Edward 212
Saint-Saëns, Camille 238
Satanism 128–129
Saydnaya (prison) 47–52
Schafer, R. Murray 70–71
Schifrin, Lalo 239
schizophony 70–71
schizophrenia 71
Schoenberg, Arnold 236, 238
Schopenhauer, Arthur 90, 252
Schreber, Daniel Paul 124
Schüller, Eduard xii, 203
Schumann, Robert 209
Schwarz, Jack 167
Sconce, Jeffrey 116
Scopolamine 291
Scott, Leon 11–12
Scream 43–45
Scriabin, Alexander 238
sea see ocean
Serres, Michel 248
Service, Robert 92
shaman 15, 241
shanzhai 24, 132
Shili, Xiong 133–134
Shinoda, Hiroyuki 24
shock waves 79, 267
Shostakovich, Dmitri 238
silence 47–52, 57–58
Silenus 216
Singer, Arthur 259
Sinkov, Abraham 208–209
Sirens 55, 57–59
Siri 44n5, 53, 54, 55
skull 15, 16, 69, 123–126
skyquake 80
slavery 84, 223–224, 275, 278
Slayer 237, 240
Slepian, Walter 141n1, 203–210
Smith, F.J. 235
Smith, Hélène 229–233
Smith, Susy 97–98
Snow, Michael 112
Solresol 209
sonification 24, 92, 124, 126, 135–136
sorrow 73–75
speaker 13, 69, 89, 141, 270, 272, 285, 290
Spector, Marshall xii
spectre 116, 117
speech 48–50, 53–54, 66
artificial 53–56
inner 70
recorded 66
speech recognition 44–45, 53, 261
unspeakable 130
Spillers, Hortense 278
spiritualism, spiritism 66, 116, 233
Sterns, Michael 188
305
I ndex
Philip, M NourbeSe 84–85
phonautograph 11–13
phonograph, phonography 2, 11–13, 65–66, 70, 126, 128,
164, 247
Picker, John 65
Pieslack, John 285
pineal eye (Bataille) 31, 124
Plank, Conny 121n8
Plato 285–286
Poe, Edgar Allan 110–111, 193–194
Polsen 176
Porta, Giambattista della 173
Powell, Bud 238
Presley, Elvis 2, 174
priming 111
Prince Buster 224–225
Prince Far I 150
prison 47–52
psychedelia, psychedelics 17, 101, 103, 248
psychoacoustics 29, 187
psychokinesis 95–99, 119
Psyops 260n3, 269–273
Puccini, Giacomo 238
Purgatory 191–195, 221
Pushkin, Alexander 7
Pygmalion 161
Pythia 61
lawrence-abu-hamdan-audintunsoundundeadSteve Goodman / text
P. 321
306
I ndex
stethoscope 9
Stimulus Progression 261, 280
Stoker, Bram 19–20
Stone Tape Theory 119–122, 294n9
Stravinsky, Igor 238
Strokes, The 240
studio 179–181
sublime 89
Sudre, Jean-François 209
sumud 212–213
Sun Ra 171, 211, 214
surveillance 44–45, 136, 212
sympathetic resonance see vibration, sympathetic
synaesthesia 211–214
T
Takimoto, Tatsuhiko 184
Tandy, Vic 92
Taylor, Frederick Winslow 279
telegraph 132
Telemann, Georg Philipp 235
telephone, telephony 2, 9, 13, 27–28, 67, 70, 277
television 115, 116, 119, 277, 278
Thacker, Eugene 252
Theremin, Léon 137–139
Thielmans, Toots 239
third ear xii, 35, 37, 143, 144, 206
Third Ear Assassins (THEARS) 23, 36, 37, 168 289,
289–290, 292–293
third eye 124
Tibet 15–18, 124
time 53, 132, 133, 134, 151, 169–171, 194
and capitalism 169–170
tinnitus 110, 143
Tippett, Michael 239
torture xiii, 47–52, 285–288
transduction 11, 75, 93, 99, 135–136
transhumanism 162
trauma 286–287
Traumberg, Hillel Fischer 167
Treister, Suzanne 166
tritone 235–240
Tunguska Event 92
Tupac, 2Pac 174, 289
Turing, Alan 53, 141n1
TwoRing turntable xii, 141
tympanum 11
U
Uematsu, Nobuo 240
ultrasound xiii, 3, 10, 24, 25, 69–72
Ulysses 55, 57–58
unsound xi, 1–3, 106–107
Upper Astral 188
Urban Funk Campaign 269
in Mou Zongsan 134
spiritual 66
sympathetic 20, 21, 101–102, 103, 227
vibratory unconscious 189
weaponisation of xi
Videodrome 72
Vietnam War xii, 269–273
vinyl 23–25, 31–33, 35, 39–40, 127, 147
Virgil 191
Virilio, Paul 272
virtual 116, 170
Viv (speech recognition platform) 53, 54, 55
Vodou, Vodun see Voodoo
voice 48–50, 65, 66, 70, 74–75, 85, 103, 128, 247
and water 85
artificial 53–56
hearing voices 71
Voodoo 223, 224–225, 247, 276
VR, virtual reality 1, 200–201
W
Waco siege 255–285, 269, 272
Waddell, Laurence Austine 15–16
Wagner, Richard 236, 238
Walking Corpse Syndrome see Cotard’s Delirium
Wandering Soul xii, 269–273
war 262, 265–266, 269, 271, 272
water 84–85
visceral hydraulics 9-10
weaponry, sonic 71, 105–107
Webern, Anton 238
Weir Mitchell, Silas 204–205
Weizman, Eyal 212
Welcome to the N.H.K. 184
Wever, Ernest Glen 27–30
whisper 48–50
Whitman, Walt 204n6
Williams, Pharrell 249n13
Windsor Hum 91–94
Wittgenstein, Ludwig 287
women 58–59, 73, 75
Wonder, Stevie 239
Wood, Frederic H. 61
writing 11–12, 53, 231
X
Xenakis, Iannis 216–217
xenoglossia 61
xenopoetics 243–244
xenosonics 2, 216
Y
Yao, Zhang 37–39
Z
V
~
Văn Phong, Nguyê n xii, xiii, 24, 35–40, 165–168, 209
Varèse, Edgard 238
vibration 131, 135
and mortality 3
Zamfe, Souzanna xi, 105
Zdrahal, Zdenek 167
Zongsan, Mou 134
Zug Island 91, 93