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Steve Goodman-Sonic Warfare Sound, Affect, and the Ecology of Fear (2009)
Steve Goodman/Texts/Books/Author/Steve Goodman-Sonic Warfare_ Sound, Affect, and the Ecology of Fear (2009).pdf
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SONIC WARFARE
Steve Goodman-Sonic Warfare Sound, Affect, and the Ecology of Fear (2009)Steve Goodman / text
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Technologies of Lived Abstraction
Brian Massumi and Erin Manning, editors
Relationscapes: Movement, Art, Philosophy, Erin Manning,
Without Criteria: Kant, Whitehead, Deleuze, and Aesthetics, Steven Shaviro,
Sonic Warfare: Sound, Affect, and the Ecology of Fear, Steve Goodman,
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SONIC WARFARE
Sound, Affect, and the Ecology of Fear
Steve Goodman
The MIT Press
Cambridge, Massachusetts
London, England
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© Massachusetts Institute of Technology
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form by any electronic
or mechanical means (including photocopying, recording, or information storage and
retrieval) without permission in writing from the publisher.
For information about special quantity discounts, please e-mail special_sales@mitpress
.mit.edu
This book was set in Syntax and Minion by Graphic Composition, Inc.
Printed and bound in the United States of America.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Goodman, Steve.
Sonic warfare : sound, affect, and the ecology of fear / Steve Goodman.
p. cm. — (Technologies of lived abstraction)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN ---- (hardcover : alk. paper)
. Music—Acoustics and physics. . Music—Social aspects. . Music—Philosophy and
aesthetics. I. Title.
ML.G
'.—dc
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Contents
Series Foreword
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
vii
ix
xiii
1998: A Conceptual Event 1
2001: What Is Sonic Warfare? 5
2400–1400 B.C.: Project Jericho 15
1946: Sonic Dominance 27
1933: Abusing the Military-Entertainment Complex 31
403–221 B.C.: The Logistics of Deception 35
1944: The Ghost Army 41
1842: Sonic Effects 45
1977: A Sense of the Future 49
1913: The Art of War in the Art of Noise 55
1989: Apocalypse Then 59
1738: Bad Vibrations 63
1884: Dark Precursor 69
1999: Vibrational Anarchitecture 75
13.7 Billion B.C.: The Ontology of Vibrational Force 81
1931: Rhythmanalysis 85
1900: The Vibrational Nexus 91
1929: Throbs of Experience 95
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vi
Contents
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
1677: Ecology of Speeds 99
99–50 B.C.: Rhythm out of Noise 105
1992: The Throbbing Crowd 109
1993: Vorticist Rhythmachines 113
1946: Virtual Vibrations 117
2012: Artificial Acoustic Agencies 123
1877: Capitalism and Schizophonia 129
1976: Outbreak 133
1971: The Earworm 141
2025: Déjà Entendu 149
1985: Dub Virology 155
1928: Contagious Orality 163
2020: Planet of Drums 171
2003: Contagious Transmission 177
2039: Holosonic Control 183
Conclusion: Unsound—The (Sub)Politics of Frequency
Glossary
Notes
195
199
References
Index
265
251
189
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Series Foreword
“What moves as a body, returns as the movement of thought.”
Of subjectivity (in its nascent state)
Of the social (in its mutant state)
Of the environment (at the point it can be reinvented)
“A process set up anywhere reverberates everywhere.”
The Technologies of Lived Abstraction book series is dedicated to work of transdisciplinary reach, inquiring critically but especially creatively into processes of
subjective, social, and ethical-political emergence abroad in the world today.
Thought and body, abstract and concrete, local and global, individual and collective: the works presented are not content to rest with the habitual divisions.
They explore how these facets come formatively, reverberatively together, if only
to form the movement by which they come again to differ.
Possible paradigms are many: autonomization, relation; emergence, complexity,
process; individuation, (auto)poiesis; direct perception, embodied perception,
perception-as-action; speculative pragmatism, speculative realism, radical empiricism; mediation, virtualization; ecology of practices, media ecology; technicity; micropolitics, biopolitics, ontopower. Yet there will be a common aim: to
catch new thought and action dawning, at a creative crossing. Technologies of
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viii
Series Foreword
Lived Abstraction orients to the creativity at this crossing, in virtue of which life
everywhere can be considered germinally aesthetic, and the aesthetic anywhere
already political.
“Concepts must be experienced. They are lived.”
Erin Manning and Brian Massumi
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Acknowledgments
A special thanks to Lilian, Bernard, and Michelle for putting up with my noise
since day zero.
For the brainpower, thanks to:
Jessica Edwards, Torm, Luciana Parisi, Stephen Gordon, Kodwo Eshun, Anna
Greenspan, Nick Land, Mark Fisher, Matt Fuller, Robin Mackay, Kevin Martin, Jeremy Greenspan, Jon Wozencroft, Bill Dolan, Raz Mesinai, Simon Reynolds, Dave Stelfox, Marcus Scott, Mark Pilkington, Erik Davis, Toby Heys, Matt
Fuller, Brian Massumi, Erin Manning, Steven Shaviro, Stamatia Portanova,
Eleni Ikoniadou, Cecelia Wee, Olaf Arndt, Joy Roles, James Trafford, Jorge
Camachio, Tiziana Terranova, Jeremy Gilbert, Tim Lawrence, Haim Bresheeth,
Julian Henriques, Jasmin Jodry, Wil Bevan, Mark Lawrence, Neil Joliffe, Sarah
Lockhart, Martin Clark, Georgina Cook, Melissa Bradshaw, Marcos Boffa, Dave
Quintiliani, Paul Jasen, Cyclic Defrost, Derek Walmsley, Jason and Leon at Transition, Doug Sery at MIT.
For the ideas, collectivity, and bass, maximum respect to:
Ccru, Hyperdub, DMZ, Fwd>>, Rinse, Brainfeeder.
For the sabbatical: The School of Social Sciences, Media and Cultural Studies at
University of East London.
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pressure
• Neural
• Hypersonic
entrainment
• Organ
resonance
effects
• Nausea
• Concussion
and
physical
impact
• Respiration
inhibition
modulation of audible
frequencies
• Cavitation and
heating of the body
at high frequencies
• Neural entrainment
• Tissue damage if
prolonged exposure
hearing damage
due to prolonged
exposure
audible frequencies
inaudible
infrasound
inaudible
ultrasound
unsound = nexus
of not-yet-audible
frequencies
unsound =
sound
becoming
tactile
0
threshold of
ear pain
120dB
20Hz
unsound =
sound
becoming
neuro-affective
20kHz
frequency
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We’ll come in low out of the rising sun and about a mile out, we’ll put on the music.
—General Kilgore, Apocalypse Now
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Introduction
It’s night. You’re asleep, peacefully dreaming. Suddenly the ground begins to
tremble. Slowly, the shaking escalates until you are thrown off balance, clinging
desperately to any fixture to stay standing. The vibration moves up through your
body, constricting your internal organs until it hits your chest and throat, making
it impossible to breathe. At exactly the point of suffocation, the floor rips open
beneath you, yawning into a gaping dark abyss. Screaming silently, you stumble
and fall, skydiving into what looks like a bottomless pit. Then, without warning,
your descent is curtailed by a hard surface. At the painful moment of impact, as if
in anticipation, you awaken. But there is no relief, because at that precise split second, you experience an intense sound that shocks you to your very core. You look
around but see no damage. Jumping out of bed, you run outside. Again you see no
damage. What happened? The only thing that is clear is that you won’t be able to
get back to sleep because you are still resonating with the encounter.
In November , a number of international newspapers reported that the Israeli
air force was using sonic booms under the cover of darkness as “sound bombs”
in the Gaza Strip. A sonic boom is the high-volume, deep-frequency effect of
low-flying jets traveling faster than the speed of sound. Its victims likened its effect to the wall of air pressure generated by a massive explosion. They reported
broken windows, ear pain, nosebleeds, anxiety attacks, sleeplessness, hypertension, and being left “shaking inside.” Despite complaints from both Palestinians and Israelis, the government protested that sound bombs were “preferable
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Introduction
to real ones.” What is the aim of such attacks on civilian populations, and what
new modes of power do such not-so-new methods exemplify? As with the U.S.
Army’s adoption of “shock-and-awe” tactics and anticipative strikes in Iraq,
and the screeching of diving bombers during the blitzkriegs of World War II,
the objective was to weaken the morale of a civilian population by creating a
climate of fear through a threat that was preferably nonlethal yet possibly as
unsettling as an actual attack. Fear induced purely by sound effects, or at least
in the undecidability between an actual or sonic attack, is a virtualized fear. The
threat becomes autonomous from the need to back it up. And yet the sonically
induced fear is no less real. The same dread of an unwanted, possible future is
activated, perhaps all the more powerful for its spectral presence. Despite the
rhetoric, such deployments do not necessarily attempt to deter enemy action, to
ward off an undesirable future, but are as likely to prove provocative, to increase
the likelihood of conflict, to precipitate that future.
Sonic Warfare: Sound, Affect, and the Ecology of Fear explores the rippling
shockwaves of these kinds of deployments of sound and their impacts on the
way populations feel—not just their individualized, subjective, personal emotions, but more their collective moods or affects. Specifically, a concern will be
shown for environments, or ecologies, in which sound contributes to an immersive atmosphere or ambience of fear and dread—where sound helps produce a bad vibe. This dimension of an encounter will be referred to as its affective
tone, a term that has an obvious, but rarely explored, affinity to thinking through
the way in which sound can modulate mood. Yet in the scenario above, the sonic
weapon does more than merely produce anxiety. The intense vibration literally
threatens not just the traumatized emotional disposition and physiology of the
population, but also the very structure of the built environment. So the term
affect will be taken in this broadest possible sense to mean the potential of an
entity or event to affect or be affected by another entity or event. From vibes to
vibrations, this is a definition that traverses mind and body, subject and object,
the living and the nonliving. One way or another, it is vibration, after all, that
connects every separate entity in the cosmos, organic or nonorganic.
Sonic Warfare outlines the acoustic violence of vibration and the trembling
of temperaments. It sketches a map of forces with each step, constructing concepts to investigate the deployment of sound systems in the modulation of affect.
The argument is based on the contention that, to date, most theoretical discussions of the resonances of sound and music cultures with relations of power, in
their amnesia of vibration, have a missing dimension. This missing dimension,
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Introduction
and the ethico-aesthetic paradigm it beckons, will be termed the politics of frequency. In order to map this black hole, a specifically tuned transdisciplinary
methodology is required that draws from philosophy, science, fiction, aesthetics,
and popular culture against the backdrop of a creeping military urbanism. By
constructing this method as a nonrepresentational ontology of vibrational force,
and thus the rhythmic nexus of body, technology, and sonic process, some latent
affective tendencies of contemporary urban cultures in the early-twenty-first
century can be made manifest. A (dis)continuum of vibrational force, a vast,
disjointed, shivering surface, will be constructed that traverses police and military research into acoustic means of crowd control, the corporate deployment
of sonic branding, through to the intense sonic encounters of strains of sound
art and music culture.
The book is neither merely an evolutionary or historical analysis of acoustic weaponry, nor primarily a critical-aesthetic statement on the use of sonic
warfare as a metaphor within contemporary music culture. Along the way,
various schemes will be indicated, including experiments with infrasonic weapons, the surreal “psycho-acoustic correction” waged by both the U.S. Army in
Panama City and the FBI during the Waco siege, and the Maroons whose use
of the abeng horn served as a fear inducer in their guerrilla tactics against the
British colonialists in Jamaica. But this list is not a comprehensive historical
survey. Similarly, a total story will not be told, or a critique waged against, the
militarized (and usually macho) posturing that often takes place, from rock to
hip-hop, within pockets of both white and black popular music. No doubt interesting things could be said about the amplified walls of sonic intensity and
feedback deployed in rock, from Hendrix, to metal through to bands like Sonic
Youth and My Bloody Valentine. But this is not a book about white noise—or
guitars. Equally, while some attention will be devoted to the key, inventive, sonic
processes of the African diaspora, a detailed analysis of the innovative politics of
black noise and militarized stance of Public Enemy and the martial arts mythologies of the Wu Tang clan are sidestepped here, despite the fact that both could fit
snugly into the following pages. Moreover, more conventional representational
or economic problems in the politics of black music will be detoured in favor of
an engagement with the speculative aesthetic politics suggested by Afrofuturism. Ultimately, Sonic Warfare is concerned with the production, transmission,
and mutation of affective tonality.
Similarly, this book does not aim to be an all-encompassing survey of contemporary developments in military scientific research into sound. En route,
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Introduction
sonic booms over the Gaza Strip, long-range acoustic devices, and musical torture in Iraq and Guantanamo Bay, directional ultrasound in supermarkets and
high-frequency rat repellents deployed on teenagers will be listened out for. But
this is not a catalogue of these objectionable deployments.
More disclaimers. Given that the themes of the book revolve around potential
sensations of sonic intensity and the moods they provoke, both controlling and
creative, it may strike some readers as strange that the topic of drugs has been
omitted. From ganja to hashish, from cocaine to MDMA, from LSD to ketamin
to amphetamine, the nexus of drugs and sonic sensation, the narcosonic, acts as
an intensifier of acoustic sensations and serves as both a sensory and informational technology of experimentation, deployed by artists, musicians, producers,
dancers, and listeners to magnify, enhance, and mutate the perception of vibration. The narcosonic can also function as a means to economic mobilization,
with the lure of these intense experiences used as attractors to consumption
within the sprawling network that now constitutes the global clubbing industry.
Moreover, like the sonic, the narcotic forms part of the occulted backdrop of the
military-entertainment complex, in which the modulation of affect becomes an
invisible protocol of control and addiction a means to distract whole populations. Yet again, to do this topic justice in both its affective and geostrategic
dimensions merits a more focused project—one that would be sensitive to both
the dangers and empowerments of intoxication.
The focus here will always remain slightly oblique to these research themes.
While drawing from such primarily empirical projects, Sonic Warfare instead
assumes a speculative stance. It starts from the Spinozan-influenced premise
that “we don’t yet know what a sonic body can do.” By adopting a speculative
stance, Sonic Warfare does not intend to be predictive, but instead investigates
some real, yet often virtual, trends already active within the extended and
blurred field of sonic culture. What follows therefore attempts to invent some
concepts that can stay open to these unpredictable tendencies, to the potential
invention of new, collective modes of sensation, perception, and movement.
By turning up the amplifier on sound’s bad vibes, the evangelism of the recent
sonic renaissance within the academy is countered. By zooming into vibration,
the boundaries of the auditory are problematized. This is a necessary starting
point for a vigilant investigation of the creeping colonization of the not yet audible and the infra- and ultrasonic dimensions of unsound. While it will be
suggested that the borders and interstices of sonic perception have always been
under mutation, both within and without the bandwidth of human audibility, a
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Introduction
stronger claim will be made that the ubiquitous media of contemporary technoaffective ecologies are currently undergoing an intensification that requires an
analysis that connects the sonic to other modes of military urbanism’s “fullspectrum dominance.” Sonic Warfare therefore concentrates on constructing
some initial concepts for a politics of frequency by interrogating the underlying
vibrations, rhythms, and codes that animate this complex and invisible battlefield—a zone in which commercial, military, scientific, artistic, and popular musical interests are increasingly invested. In this way, the book maps the modes in
which sonic potentials that are still very much up for grabs are captured, probed,
engineered, and nurtured.
The flow of the book intentionally oscillates between dense theorization, the
clarification of positions and differentiation of concepts, on the one hand, and
descriptive, exemplary episodes drawn from fact and fiction, on the other. I
hope this rhythm will not be too disorienting. The intention has been to present
a text that opens onto its outside from several angles. The text is composed of
an array of relatively short sections that can be read in sequence, from start to
finish as linearly connected blocks. Each section is dated, marking the singularity of a vibrational, conceptual, musical, military, social, or technological event.
In addition, these sections can as productively be accessed randomly, with each
chunk potentially functioning as an autonomous module. A glossary has been
provided to aid with this line of attack.
To help with navigation, here is a quick tour of the book’s thematic drift. The
main argument of the book is found in the tension between two critical tendencies tagged the politics of noise and the politics of silence insofar as they constitute
the typical limits to a politicized discussion of the sonic. Admittedly oversimplifying a multitude of divergent positions, both of these tendencies locate the
potential of sonic culture, its virtual future, in the physiologically or culturally
inaudible. Again being somewhat crude, at either extreme, they often cash out
pragmatically, on the one hand, in the moralized, reactionary policing of the
polluted soundscape or, on the other, its supposed enhancement by all manner
of cacophony. Sonic Warfare refuses both of these options, of acoustic ecology
and a crude futurism, as arbitrary fetishizations and instead reconstructs the
field along different lines.
The book opens with a discussion of the origins, parameters, and context
of the concept of sonic warfare. It will be defined to encompass the physicality
of vibrational force, the modulation of affective tonality, and its use in techniques of dissimulation such as camouflage and deception. The key theorists
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Introduction
of media technology and war, Friedrich Kittler, Paul Virilio, and, in relation to
sonic media, Jacques Attali, will be outlined and extended, forcing them toward
a more direct, affective confrontation with the problematics of the militaryentertainment complex.
A discontinuum of sonic force will be constructed, connecting examples of
the modulation of affective tonality within popular and avant-garde music, cinematic sound design, and military and police deployments of acoustic tactics.
Futurism responded to this discontinuum through its art of war in the art of
noise. This artistic response has been revised, mutated, and updated by Afrofuturism, signaling how at the beginning of the twenty-first century, “futurist”
approaches must adapt to the mutated temporality of contemporary modes of
control, often referred to as preemptive power or science fiction capital.
In recent theories of sonic experience, an attempt is made to bridge the duality of concepts of the “soundscape” and “sound object” from acoustic ecology
and the phenomenology of sound, respectively, through a conception of the
“sonic effect.” It will, however, be argued that this does not go far enough: the
phenomenology of sonic effects will be transformed into the less anthropocentric environmentality or ecology of vibrational affects. This impetus is continued
into questions of affective tonality in the sonic dimension of the ecology of fear.
How do sonically provoked, physiological, and autonomic reactions of the body
to fear in the fight, flight, and startle responses scale up into collective, mediatic
mood networks? The anticipation of threat will be approached through the dynamics of sonic anticipation and surprise as models of the activity of the future
in the present, and therefore a portal into the operative logic of fear within the
emergent paradigm of preemptive power.
Drawing from philosophies of vibration and rhythm, Sonic Warfare then detours beneath sonic perception to construct an ontology of vibrational force as a
basis for approaching the not yet audible. Here vibration is understood as microrhythmic oscillation. The conceptual equipment for this discussion is found in
rhythmanalysis, an undercurrent of twentieth-century thought stretching from
Brazilian philosopher Pinheiros dos Santos, via Gaston Bachelard to Henri Lefebvre. An examination of rhythmanalysis reveals conceptual tensions with influential philosophies of duration such as that of Henri Bergson. The “speculative
materialism” developed by Alfred North Whitehead, it will be argued, offers a
route through the deadlock between Bachelard’s emphasis on the instant and
Bergsonian continuity, making possible a philosophy of vibrational force based
around Whitehead’s concept of a nexus of experience—his aesthetic ontology
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Introduction
and the importance of his notion of “throbs of experience.” These vibrations,
and the emergence of rhythm out of noise, will be tracked from molecular to
social populations via Elias Canetti’s notion of the “throbbing crowd.” This philosophical analysis of vibrational force will be contrasted to Gilles Deleuze and
Félix Guattari’s theory of the refrain, and the rhythmic analyses implicit in physical theories of turbulence. The front line of sonic warfare takes place in the
sensations and resonances of the texture of vibration. An ontology of vibrational
force must therefore be able to account for the plexus of analog and digitally
modulated vibration, of matter and information, without the arbitrary fetishization of either. The relation between continuous analog waves and discrete digital
grains is reformulated in the light of the above. Sonic warfare therefore becomes
a sensual mathematics, equally an ecology of code and of vibration.
On this philosophical foundation, the affectively contagious radiation of
sonic events through the networks of cybernetic capitalism will then be examined. This audio virology maps the propagational vectors of vibrational events.
This involves a critical discussion of the dominant approach to cultural viruses,
memetics, and the relation between sonic matter and memory. Sonic strategies
of mood modulation are followed from the military-industrial origins of Muzak, the emergence of musical advertising through jingles into contemporary
corporate sonic branding strategy, and the psychology of earworms and cognitive itches. The aim is to extend the ontology of vibrational force into the tactical
and mnemonic context of viral capitalism. Some speculations will made regarding the acoustic design of ubiquitous, responsive, predatory, branding environments using digitally modeled, contagious, and mutating sonic phenomena in
the programming of autonomous ambiences of consumption. This forces the
domains of sound art, generative music, and the sonic aesthetics of artificial life
into the context of a politics of frequency.
Whereas predatory branding captures and redeploys virosonic tactics to induce generic consumption, the tactical elaboration of sonic warfare in the fictions of some strains of Black Atlantic sonic futurism take the concept of the
“audio virus” beyond the limitations of memetics and digital sound theory.
Here, audioviruses are deployed in affective mobilization via the diasporic proliferation of sonic processes, swept along by the carrier waves of rhythm and
bass science and a machinic orality. Illustrating the dissemination and abuse
of military technologies into popular culture, and developing the concept of
the audio virus through a discussion of the voice, the military origins of the
vocoder will be tracked from a speech encryption device during World War II to
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Introduction
the spread of the vocodered voice into popular music. This contagious nexus of
bass, rhythm, and vocal science, and their tactics of affective mobilization, will
then be followed into the do-it-yourself pragmatics of sound system cultures
within the developing sprawls of what Mike Davis has recently referred to as the
“Planet of Slums.” What vibrations are emitted when slum, ghetto, shantytown,
favela, project, and housing estate rub up against hypercapital? And what kind
of harbinger of urban affect do such cultures constitute within contemporary
global capitalism?
The book concludes by bringing together some speculations on the not yet
heard, or unsound, in the twenty-first century, mapping some immanent tendencies of the sonic body within the military-entertainment complex. The
concept of unsound relates to both the peripheries of auditory perception and
the unactualized nexus of rhythms and frequencies within audible bandwidths.
Some suggestions will be made for the further conceptualization of sonic warfare within contemporary societies of control defined by the normalization of
military urbanism and the policing of affective tonality. It is contended that,
existing understandings of audiosocial power in the politics of silence and the
politics of noise must be supplemented by a politics of frequency. The prefix
“sub” will be appended to this idea of a politics of frequency. The ambivalence
of the term “(sub)politics of frequency” is deliberate. To some, this will not be
recognized as a politics in any conventional sense, but rather lies underneath at
the mutable level of the collective tactics of affective mobilization—so a micropolitics perhaps. While this micropolitics implies a critique of the militarization
of perception, such entanglements, for better or worse, are always productive,
opening new ways of hearing, if only to then shut them down again. But more
concern will be shown for those proactive tactics that grasp sonic processes and
technologies of power and steer them elsewhere, exploiting unintended consequences of investments in control. For instance, the bracketed prefix “(sub)” is
apposite, as a particular concern will be shown for cultures and practices whose
sonic processes seek to intensify low-frequency vibration as a technique of affective mobilization. The production of vibrational environments that facilitate the
transduction of the tensions of urban existence, transforming deeply engrained
ambiences of fear or dread into other collective dispositions, serve as a model of
collectivity that revolves around affective tonality, and precedes ideology.
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1998: A Conceptual Event
Some of these sonic worlds will secede from the mainstream worlds and some will be
antagonistic towards it.
—Black Audio Film Collective, The Last Angel of History (1997)
In an unconscious yet catalytic conceptual episode, the phrase sonic warfare first
wormed its way into memory sometime in the late 1990s. The implantation had
taken place during a video screening of the The Last Angel of History, produced
by British artists, the Black Audio Film Collective. The video charted the coevolution of Afrofuturism:1 the interface between the literature of black science fiction, from Samuel Delaney, Octavia Butler, and Ishmael Reed to Greg Tate and
the history of Afro-diasporic electronic music, running from Sun Ra in jazz, Lee
“Scratch” Perry in dub, and George Clinton in funk, right through to pioneers
of Detroit techno (Juan Atkins, Derrick May, Carl Craig) and, from the U.K.,
jungle and drum’n’bass (A Guy Called Gerald, Goldie). Half way in, the voice of
cultural critic and concept engineer Kodwo Eshun refers to the propaganda of
Detroit techno’s version of Public Enemy, self-proclaimed vinyl guerrillas Underground Resistance. Eshun briefly summarized their audio assault as a kind
of cultural hacking against the “mediocre audiovisual” output of the “programmers.” The meme of sonic warfare was repeated only once more in Last Angel.
In this cultural war, in which the colonized of the empire strike back through
rhythm and sound, Afrofuturist sonic process is deployed into the networked,
diasporic force field that Paul Gilroy termed the Black Atlantic.2 On this cultural
1
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2
Chapter 1
MIT Press netlibrary edition
network, the result of Euro-American colonialism, practices of slavery and
forced migration from Africa, the triangle that connects Jamaica to the United
States to the U.K., has proved a crucially powerful force for innovation in the
history of Western popular music. The nexus of black musical expression, historical oppression, and urban dystopia has a complex history that has directly
given rise to and influenced countless sonic inventions, from blues to jazz, from
rhythm and blues to rock ’n’ roll and from soul to funk and reggae. When this
musical war becomes electronic, undergoing a cybernetic phase shift, Western
populations become affectively mobilized through wave after wave of machinic
dance musics, from dub to disco, from house to techno, from hip-hop to jungle,
from dance hall to garage, to grime and forward. Armed with the contagious
polyrhythmic matrix of the futurhythmachine, this sensual mathematics becomes a sonic weapon in a postcolonial war with Eurocentric culture over the
vibrational body and its power to affect and be affected. So if the futurhythmachine constituted a counterculture, it was not just in the sense of a resistance
to white power, but rather in the speculative engineering of “enhanced rhythm
awareness,” or music as nonconscious counting, to use Leibniz’s phrase.3 If Italian futurism first laid down the parameters of the modernism’s art of war in the
art of noise, Afrofuturism attempted to rewire these tactics by a transduction of
the alienating experience of the Middle Passage through Afro-American, AfroCaribbean and Black British urban machine musics. Aside from its sonic weaponry, Afrofuturism had its own propaganda machine that Eshun referred to as
sonic fiction. In More Brilliant Than the Sun, he described sonic fiction as “frequencies fictionalized, synthesized and organized into escape routes” through
“real-world environments that are already alien.”4 “Sonic fiction, phono-fictions
generate a landscape extending out into possibility space . . . an engine . . . [to]
people the world with audio hallucinations.”5 Sonic fiction is a subspecies of
what the anomalous research collective, the Ccru, called Hyperstition, that is,
the “element of effective culture that makes itself real, through fictional quantities functioning as time traveling potentials. Hyperstition operates as a coincidence intensifier.”6
In the mid-1990s, music critic Simon Reynolds noted the preponderance of
militaristic imagery within some strands of popular music, particularly those of
the hallucinatory and cinematic “popular avant gardes” (he mentions specifically east coast hip-hop, hardstep jungle, and terrorcore gabba).7 Reynolds describes these musics as producing a kinesthetic sound simulation, enacting the
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1998: A Conceptual Event
dystopic megalopolis through sonic affect “in all its dread and tension.” These
musics, he adds, “act as mirrors to late capitalist reality, stripping away the façade
of free enterprise to reveal the war of all against all: a neo-Medieval paranoia
scape of robber barons, pirate corporations, covert operations and conspiratorial cabals. In the terrordome of capitalist anarchy, the underclass can only
survive by taking on the mobilisation techniques and the psychology of warfare-
forming blood-brotherhoods and warrior-clans, and individually, by transforming the self into a fortress, a one-man army on perpetual alert.”8The city becomes
a war zone, “a treacherous terrain of snipers, man-traps and ambushes.”
This present tense of urban dystopias, and their corollary ecologies of dread
are central to Sonic Warfare. World systems theory, as developed by the likes
of Immanuel Wallerstein, divides the world into two sectors, core and periphery, the developed and the developing world.9 However, the pressure of reality scrambles this simplistic model into a topology of uneven development, in
which the periphery is enfolded into the core, with urban ghettos constituting a
kind of internal south of the global system, underdeveloped enclaves soldered
into the new architectures of security and formats of megalopian sprawl so
vividly depicted in Mike Davis’s City of Quartz, The Ecology of Fear and, more
recently, The Planet of Slums. This intersection of underdevelopment and hightech control, amplified by racialized oppression, is the backdrop to Afrofuturism
and an inspiration to its musical innovations, tangents, and lines of flight.10 In
the same way that cyberpunk fiction and cinema were foundational to discussions of the image wars of digital culture, the fictions and musical processes of
black electronic musics resonate in revealing ways with the technopolitics of
affective mobilization that are core to Sonic Warfare.
Reynolds seemed torn on the imagery of sonic warfare in ghetto musics, seduced on the one hand between the powerful affect of dread in their sonics, their
antiauthoritarian stance, and their depiction of the predatory spaces of latetwentieth-century capital via their then unorthodox hallucinatory realist methodology. Yet he also seemed rightly skeptical of the paranoid, armored model
of masculinity that seemed to him lay at their libidinal core. In a number of his
texts, from Blissed Out, to The Sex Revolts to Energy Flash, Reynolds draws from
Klaus Theweleit’s exploration of the libidinal economy of fascist masculinity
to challenge a certain legacy of “metal machine music” whose theorization he
traces to a futurist lineage reaching back to Italian poet and speed-freak Filippo
Tommaso Marinetti. As will be discussed later, Reynolds is also suspicious of
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MIT Press netlibrary edition
Afrofuturism, despite its significant divergences from both European modernism’s white noise and the macho posturing of the “street.” However, notwithstanding his semiotic, ideological, and psychoanalytic deconstructions of the
pop manifestations of musical militarism, the concept of sonic warfare seems to
compel an investigation of the material processes that accompany these sonic
fictions and the seduction / compulsion and attraction / repulsion of bodies.
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The twenty-first century started with a bang, setting the resonant frequency of
fear at which the planet has been vibrating, trembling, ever since. In the echo of
this bang, the software designers of anonymous peer-to-peer file-sharing networks that were mutating the global music industry were drafted in as “precogs”
of the actions of viral terror networks. At an irregular rhythm, audio and audiovisual cassettes would turn up on the desks of Arab media networks, relaying jihadist communiqués. Seeking to verify these rare terror clues, Western
security agencies would subject these sound bytes to audio forensic analysis, a
vocal parallel to fingerprint analysis, digitally hunting down transitions between
phonemes, the patterns of glitches that function as unique voice identifiers. But
irrelevant of truth value, these pulsed sonic signals triggered real, incorporeal
transformations within the ecology of fear.
These specifics are new, but the sonic dimensions of conflict are ancient.
From Hitler’s use of the loudspeaker as a mechanism for affective mobilization
during World War II, through to bin Laden’s audiotaped messages, the techniques of sonic warfare have now percolated into the everyday. But how the
illusive decentralized networks of contemporary asymmetric warfare resonate
within the decentralized networks of sonic culture remains a topic of marked
neglect.
How are sound systems (consisting of bodies, technologies, and acoustic vibrations, all in rhythmic sympathy) deployed in a war of mood, sensation, and
information? And what demilitarized zones can they produce, laboratories for
2
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affect engineering and the exorcism of dread, occupying the precarious virtual
threshold between dance and violence? What, in other words, is sonic warfare?
It is always more useful to ask what something can do, its potential, rather
than what it is, its essence. What then is the power of this phrase sonic warfare?
Can it conceptually rewire the microsound of politics and the micropolitics of
sound? What cultural tensions does it amplify? In what follows, an open sketch
will be made in response to these questions, identifying a discontinuum of deployments of sound system concepts, cultures, and technologies across the fault
lines of contemporary culture. At the dawn of a new millennium and in the
midst of the cybernetic phase of war and cultural machines, an investigation
of sonic warfare reveals some intriguing patterns regarding emergent modes of
perception, collectivity, and cultural conflict in the twenty-first century.
Throughout history, often imperceptibly, the audiosphere has been subject
to militarization. A notion of sonic warfare lies at the heart of modern experimental music and takes us back to the apex of the sonic avant-garde, to Luigi
Russolo’s Futurist manifesto for music, The Art of Noises, which glorified explosions, rifle fire, and the dissonance of industrial machinery as an assault on the
deadened sensorium of classical music and bourgeois aesthetics. The futurist
art of war in the art of noise framed cultural innovation in the field of music as
a sensory war in which the stakes were no less than the distribution and hierarchical stratification of the nervous system. A crystallization of the belligerent libidinal field of the early twentieth century, futurism processed the schizzed and
shell-shocked psyche of the battlefield, seeking a new synthesis—one claiming
to break with the organic wholeness of the past in favor of a technical enhancement (and usually, for Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, a phallic extension), a rewiring of the body and its sonic sensations.
Theorists such as Jacques Attali and Paul Virilio repeatedly return to the earlytwentieth-century futurist conceptual experiments such as those of Russolo and
Marinetti’s poetics of shell shock, to explore the intersection of war machines
and media machines. Fusing together the concepts of noise, war, and speed with
the technosensations of the industrial age, the futurists launched what they considered to be an assault on the harmonic order. In his manifesto, Russolo
noted that musical sound was too limited in “its variety of timbres. The most
complicated orchestras can be reduced to four or five classes of instruments in
different timbres of sound: bowed instruments, brass, woodwinds, and percussion. Modern music flounders with this tiny circle, vainly striving to create new
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varieties of timbre. We must break out of this limited circle of sounds and conquer the infinite variety of noise-sounds.”
For both Russolo and Marinetti, the battlefield is glorified as a ballistic aerodynamic space in which the eye dismounts the pyramid of the senses, leaving
sensory navigation in the domain of the haptic. As Russolo puts it,
In modern warfare, mechanical and metallic, the element of sight is almost zero. The
sense, the significance, and the expressiveness of noise, however are infinite. . . . From
noise, the different calibres of grenades and shrapnels can be known even before they
explode. Noise enables us to discern a marching patrol in deepest darkness, even to judging the number of men that compose it. From the intensity of rifle fire, the number of
defenders of a given position can be determined. There is no movement or activity that
is not revealed by noise.
In this legacy of Italian futurism, the intersection of sound machines and war
machines as a field of cultural analysis has been dominated by this elusive concept of “noise.” Usually noise, or disorganized sound, is conceived as a weapon,
a code bomb launched by those practitioner-theorists angry at the complacency
or conservativeness of a certain hierarchal stratification of audiosocial matter.
Noise, from Russolo to Attali, is therefore understood as intrinsically radical,
as that which lies outside music, that which threatens music from without, rejuvenating it, giving it the energy to do anything new. Following the futurists,
noise, for Attali, is understood as a cultural weapon that attacks musical codes
and networks in an audiosocial warfare of aesthetics and economics. Attali notes
that before its development in information theory, “noise had always been experienced as destruction, disorder, dirt, pollution, an aggression against the codestructuring messages. In all cultures, it has been associated with the idea of the
weapon, blasphemy, plague,” and other agents of destruction.
From futurism in the early twentieth century onward, noise has been a key
preoccupation of the modernist sonic avant-garde. Often under a conceptual
alliance with “chaos,” noise ties together the “Art of Noise” to John Cage’s experiments with any sound whatever, chance, and the I-Ching, to free jazz and Japanese noise terrorism, through to the recent preoccupations with digital glitches,
process aesthetics, and their current manifestations in generative and algorithmic music and microsound. Yet despite the radical rhetoric, many of these
avant-gardist formulations of noise as a weapon in a war of perception, a war
whose battlefield is the body (its sensations, reflexes, and habitual ticks), fail
time and time again to impress. With many of these instances, as Gilles Deleuze
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and Felix Guattari point out, “All one has left is a resonance chamber well on the
way to forming a black hole.” In an already radically schizophonic soundscape
of the early twentieth century, Louise Varese had decried the noise tactics of
the Italian futurists for having “slavishly reproduced only what is commonplace
and boring in the bustle of our daily lives.” Now, in the twenty-first century of
ubiquitous schizophonia, an alternative formulation is required that discards
those exhausted uses and practices that result from the paradoxical “genrefication” of noise.
In his recent Bring the Noise, Simon Reynolds notes how the “noise effect” has
made a recent resurgence, particularly through “all those overlapping sub-styles
of squall and atonal abstraction that come out of industrial music, free jazz,
musique concrete and sound art. The concept of ‘noise’ has made a big comeback in recent years . . . the irritating end of it is all those artist aiming for ye old
‘shock effect,’ their pure noise laden with content of tediously ‘transgressive’ nature (all the old clichéd faves of vileness and violation: serial murder, neo-Nazis,
yawn . . .). The blindingly obvious fact is that no one shockable is within earshot;
there’s no disruption or challenge in these scenes, because they’re screeching to
the converted.” If anything should be salvaged here, it is that noise is always a
relational concept, and Reynolds persuasively argues that the concept is actually
least radical in the “ears-are-wounds sense.” Instead, for Reynolds, noise stands
for the reservoir of invention in those “popular but un-pop sounds [that] have
echoed the trajectory of twentieth-century avant-garde classical music, which
advanced through incorporating non-musical sounds, aestheticizing mistakes,
deploying randomness, and asserting the percussive and the textural over the
melodic and harmonic.”
In addition to pointing to the problems of futurism’s orientation to temporality in a postcyberpunk epoch, of leaving the past behind to speed off into
the future, the concept of noise will be steered elsewhere, investigating what
happens when it is conceived not as an end in itself but instead as a field of potential. At the same time, it will prove useful to retain and sharpen the futurist
concern with acoustic warfare, whereby sonic effects serve as cultural weapons.
Yet where possible, a detour will be taken around the celebration of entropy
in much discourse surrounding noise, instead staying alert to the micromovements lurking within. By shunting the problem of noise onto one of the emergence of rhythm from noise, the power of a vibrational encounter to affectively
mobilize comes into clearer focus.
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As a backdrop to this resurgence of the concept of noise, the “sonic” has become an increasingly fashionable terrain in recent years, coinciding with the
explosion of electronic music culture in the s and s and its intensification of this futurist and Cagean openness to nonmusical sound and a related
resurgence of interest in the potential of postliterate sensory recombinations by
attacks on the dominant ocularcentric models of Western philosophy. Conceptually, the limitations of many cultural studies approaches have been exposed
with this expanded remit from music culture to sonic culture. Some attempts
have refocused phenomenologically around the concept of audition. However,
probing deeper than the merely auditory, the vibratory materialism developed
here focuses, before human hearing, on the primacy of the synesthetic. The
sonic will be emphasized in its sensory relation, in its intermodality, as rhythmic
vibration, in excess and autonomous from the presence of a human, phenomenological subject or auditor. Any definition of sonic culture must synesthetically take into account that which exceeds unisensory perception, that which
impresses on but is exterior to the sonic. Sonic warfare is therefore as much
about the logistics of imperception (unsound) as it is perception. The bandwidth of human audibility is a fold on the vibratory continuum of matter. With
reference to military research into acoustic weaponry, this molecular backdrop
will be mapped as a vibratory field into which the audible is implicated. On
the frequency spectrum, bounding the thresholds of perceptible sound (above
hertz and below kilohertz), where sonic perception becomes intermodal
or defunct, lies infrasonic and ultrasonic wave phenomenon. The narrowband
channel of the audible plunges into the murky depths of low-frequency infrasound and subbass, or constricts into the piercing high frequencies of ultrasound. Sonic culture, thus situated, renders the urban audiosocial as a system
of speeds and channels, dense pressure pockets, vortices of attraction, basins of
acoustic immersion and abrasion, vibratory and turbulent: a whole cartography
of sonic force.
When Attali asked us to probe into the “fundamental noise” that scrambles
contemporary codes of communication, he was implicitly signaling the centrality of affect. It is at a subsignifying level, at the level of intensity where a “crossing
of semantic wires” occurs, that a map of affective tonality can be constructed.
Sonic Warfare forces an engagement with theories of affect and the imperceptible
and sidesteps those preoccupations of cultural studies’ critical musicological approaches that tend to limit discussion around issues of representation, identity,
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and cultural meaning. The linguistic, textualist, and social-constructivist
perspectives that dominated cultural theory in the s and s are of little
use to us here. Even Attali, against the critical musicological obsession with
the meaning or signification of sound, points out that music itself “cannot be
equated with a language . . . [because it] never has a stable reference to a code
of the linguistic type.” If it must be construed as a language, then it is one that
abandons narrative; it is not myth coded in sounds instead of words, but rather
“language without meaning.” Affect comes not as either a supplement or a
replacement to the preoccupations of cultural theories of representation, but
rather as an approach that inserts itself ontologically prior to such approaches,
thereby examining the very conditions of possibility for a sonic materialism and
the ethico-aesthetic paradigm it would entail.
As opposed to sound as text, the dimension explored here is that of sound as
force. Sonic warfare then, is the use of force, both seductive and violent, abstract
and physical, via a range of acoustic machines (biotechnical, social, cultural,
artistic, conceptual), to modulate the physical, affective, and libidinal dynamics
of populations, of bodies, of crowds. Before the activation of causal or semantic,
that is, cognitive listening, the sonic is a phenomenon of contact and displays,
through an array of autonomic responses, a whole spectrum of affective powers.
Sound has a seductive power to caress the skin, to immerse, to sooth, beckon,
and heal, to modulate brain waves and massage the release of certain hormones
within the body. Discussion of the physiological affects of sonic weaponry has
usually centered on intensity (acoustic power), the ultrasonic or the infrasonic;
the very loud, the very high pitched, and the very low pitched. At high sound
pressure levels, the ear is directly damaged. Need we be reminded that noise,
like anything else that touches you, can be a source of both pleasure and pain
and that “beyond a certain limit, it becomes an immaterial weapon of death. The
ear, which transforms vibration into electric impulses addressed to the brain,
can be damaged, and even destroyed, when the frequency of a sound exceeds
, hertz, or when its intensity exceeds decibels. Diminished intellectual
capacity, accelerated respiration and heartbeat, hypertension, slowed digestion,
neurosis, altered diction: these are the consequences of excessive sound in the
environment.” Curtis Roads notes that “the force of an explosion, for example,
is an intense acoustic shock wave” and calls these potent frequencies and amplitudes “perisonic intensities (from the Latin periculus meaning ‘dangerous’).”
A different conception of sonic warfare is perhaps suggested, in prototype
form, by Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari in A Thousand Plateaus. Such a con-
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ception deviates from an intrinsic relation between noise and sonic violence
suggested from futurism through to Attali and beyond, and instead implies a
kind of guerrilla sonics out of which any militarized investment would be constructed only through capture. Rather than the conventional monotonous artistic alliance between noise and destruction in a transgressive attempt to shock,
noise instead becomes a vibrational field of rhythmic potential. A “sonic war
machine” along these lines would be defined by its rhythmic consistency, would
not take violence or noise as its primary object, but rather would concentrate its
forces on affective mobilization and contagion. Its politics of frequency would
entail the way in which vibrational force would be captured, monopolized,
and redeployed.
This range of conceptions may initially be outlined in terms of a continuum.
At opposite poles of the sonic warfare continuum then, two basic tendencies
could be identified, two poles of this continuum of sonic force, perhaps two
inverse modes or tactical tendencies. One is militarized, and the other engages
in a warfare with an altogether different set of priorities. In abstract terms,
these extensive and intensive tendencies of audiosocial radiation can also be
usefully described as, on the one hand, centrifugal, efferent, repulsive, producing a movement that spirals out from source, and on the other hand, a centripetal, afferent, attractional power producing a movement that spirals in toward a
source. Clearly one tactical deployment of sound is subordinated to the strategic
aim of crowd dispersal, to the dissipation of a collective energy, to repulsion and
dissolution of clusters, and to the individualization of the movement of bodies. On the other side, we have a tactical deployment whose objective is that of
intensification, to the heightening of collective sensation, an attractive, almost
magnetic, or vortical force, a force that sucks bodies in toward its source. This
dynamics may be thought meteorologically in terms of heat and pressure, as in
“the eye of the storm,” or in terms of the turbulence of fluid mechanics: a power
to generate a rhythmic rotation, intensification, and collective individuation (to
render the crowd as a body in its own right). In this instance, the aim of mobilizing bodies extensively is accompanied and perhaps overridden by the primary
objective of the intensive mobilization of affect.
Crucially, between these two coexistent tendencies, the attractive and repulsive power of sonic force, the issue is obviously not simply one of good or bad.
Rather, their ambivalence indicates some of the emergent features central to
the strategies and tactics of control within contemporary capitalism. The relation between these two tendencies of sonic force must be thought through very
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carefully. Not only must the extensive tendencies of “sonic war machines” be
examined—their abilities to make bodies move—but also the range of intensive
tendencies involved in the deployment of sound system technologies—their
modulation of affective tone. While the centrifugal, repulsive deployment of
sound machines (cultural, not just technical) can appear to be the preoccupation of military and police functions, it would be futile to naively celebrate the
centripetal attractive power of the sound system. The problem of sonic warfare,
strategic, tactical, and logistical, is clearly a complex one. In many compelling
sonic cultural situations, we have a mixture of both, where, for example, sound
is so overwhelming that we feel forced to take leave, but instead, resisting that
initial gut feeling, the autonomic or involuntary reaction to take flight, we stay to
enjoy. Conversely, a sonic fascism may occupy both poles of this continuum.
To help clarify this analysis, key insights on sonic media extracted from philosophy, fiction, cultural theory, popular music, and the intersection of science
and art will be examined against the backdrop of military urbanism in order to
identify the new sensations mobilizing an emergent generation of practitioners
and theorists. Much speculation can also be found in conspiracy theory, which
is only natural when research related to the defense industry is concerned. These
sonic fictions and urban myths can form a starting point for a more careful
philosophical investigation. For, in addition to the paranoid sensationalism that
enlivens these often spurious accounts, they remind us that the sonic (and unsonic) body is always poised precariously in a processual disequilibrium with
the acoustic environment, and that even minute perturbations of this environment can set in motion resonant events and generate and provoke unforeseen
cultural mutation. Moreover, if Jacques Attali is right, then in addition to the intense perceptual encounters sound system cultures can produce through music
and noise, they may also emit transposable and prophetic diagrams of sociality,
equipped with novel armories of affects, percepts, and concepts.
As already noted, Sonic Warfare will not attempt to be comprehensive about
the full range of sound-affect conjunctions but will instead concentrate on the
strange nexus of sound and fear. If Brian Massumi was correct when he argued
in the early s that fear was our overriding affective syndrome, the “inherence in the body of the multi-causal matrix . . . recognizable as late capitalist
human existence,” what critical urbanist Mike Davis has dubbed the ecology of
fear, then analysis of these sensory tactics of affective mobilization and contagion will only become more pressing. The sonic is particularly attuned to examining one strand of this ecology of fear: dread.
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Sonic experience will be placed in the context of a resonant cosmos that cuts
across the duality of physical and emotional processes. The point of constructing this ontology of vibrational force is not to naturalize cultural phenomena in
order to deny any possible tactical intervention, nor to suggest nature as a force
of spontaneous vitality and therefore emancipatory power. Rather, the resort to
a basic, indifferent vibrational plane exposes the inhuman entities that haunt the
nature-culture continuum as it transects the networked affective battlefields of
twenty-first-century geostrategy. The production of the ecology of fear is intensified under the shadow of “shock and awe.” An investigation into asymmetric
attacks and deployments waged on the affective status quo within the microcosm of the sonic might have a much broader significance.
Finally, the sonic forms a portal into the invisible, resonant pressures that
impress on emergent cyberspaces with all of their problematics, from virtuality
to piracy. With increased online bandwidth, sound has attained a more central
role in the polymedia environment of contemporary culture, unleashing unpredictable technoeconomic transformations resonating throughout global music
culture. Sonic Warfare therefore also offers some insights into the economy of
attention of contemporary capitalism.
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2400–1400 B.C.: Project Jericho
In Project Jericho, a short radiophonic piece created by the dramatist Gregory
Whitehead, a hyperstitional research institute, the Jericho Institute, and its
research program is fabulated to embody the recent history of sonic warfare.
Whitehead’s work versioned the biblical myth of the Walls of Jericho (Joshua
:) in which Joshua is spearheading an attack on the city. Outside the walls of
the city, God instructs Joshua to march around it once each day for six days in
total silence. On the seventh day, he has to march around seven times. Then
before the Ark, seven priests blew on seven trumpets made from ram’s horns,
and, as if by magic, like a sonic bulldozer, the walls came crashing down. In
Project Jericho, the “living spirit” of the institute, under the name of Colonel
Walter Manley, is an unnerving fusion of George W. Bush and Kurtz from Apocalypse Now. With helicopters buzzing around a filtered audio communiqué,
Manley relates, in a parody of the recent wave of U.S. military strategy documents and press releases, how “we are at the dawn of a new era of military history marked by the dominance of a weapon system based on the most powerful
sound in the universe.” Manley outlines that the institute’s brief is to research
and use
sound creatively in the production of nonlethal weapons designed to save lives by changing the hearts and minds of our adversaries. During the Vietnam war, we still confused
sonic power with high volume, for example, in the so called Urban Funk Campaign
where we mounted supersized oscillators on top of attack helicopters and blasted Victor
Charlie with heavy metal at dB. We called that weapon the Curdler and it was a very
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primitive system, but we also used high frequency nighttime wailing sound in a weapon
we called the “Wandering Ghost,” intended to spook the Viet Cong by playing on certain
Buddhist beliefs and that weapon was a big step forward because we came to realize
that there is no sound more powerful than the one that conquers your true heart with
deep vibrations. . . . Ultimately what we are talking about is a weapon that uses harmonic
infrasound amplified by the power of Evangelical Christian faith to summon and deploy
a voice that sounds like it comes from right inside your head, but also sounds like it is
coming from everywhere else. A voice that comes from everywhere and no where, from
everyone and no one, and when you hear it, you will obey no matter what it says because
the real weapon that brought down the walls of Jericho was the voice of God. . . . At the
Jericho Institute, we like to think of America’s deep and abiding Christian faith as one
of our most strategically potent natural resources. We have extensive prayer networks
throughout the Bible belt and elsewhere and our objective is to synchronize the latent vibrational power of these faith networks with an infrasonic sound that formally replicates
the voice of God in terms of its frequency range and overall acoustic envelop. We call this
process, “charging the airspace,” a process that resembles rubbing on the magic bottle
until the genie comes out. Ladies and gentlemen, God is there to hear our prayer. Now
it is true that the previous assumption was that God had to make the first move from an
acoustical perspective as in for example when he says “let there be light” but we believe
that if we can create the right acoustic and provide the appropriate vibrational context,
it will be possible to actually produce the voice of God in a faith based conflict whereby
“God is on our side” . . . [cut to low flying helicopter . . .].
Whitehead’s Project Jericho neatly wraps the real and fictitious history of
sonic warfare into a hyperstitional package. And it is an ominous package, a
potential projectile laser-guided by the convergence of evangelical certainty and
neoliberal preemption. It taps into an episodic history consisting of the hazy
stories of secret military research entangled by webs of fiction, myth, and dark
science. Rummaging around for something concrete, you happen upon dead
end after dead end of conspiracy theory, inventions without patents, and rumors
without origin. Much conjecture, for example, points to eccentric research carried out in Nazi Germany. One bizarre device was said to have been spawned
by an Austrian researcher by the name of Dr. Zippermeyer. As a reaction to
relentless Allied air assault of Germany, he was alleged to have experimented
with both wind and sound as potential antiaircraft weapons. His Windkanone,
or “Whirlwind Cannon,” was supposed to have produced artificial whirlwinds
“by generating an explosion in a combustion chamber and directing them
through specially designed nozzles at their target. Experiments with a small
cannon supposedly shattered planks at yards (m) range, and a full size
one was built.”
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From cartography (via sonar) and signaletics (deployed in acoustic detection), from psyops (psychological operations) to the current fashion in nonlethal “soft” weaponry for crowd control (the violence of sensation), this logistics
of sound perception mobilizes a range of affects traversing the psychophysiological and an invisible history of the research and development of tactics of
amplitude and tactics of frequency. It brings into the field of power the dimension of unsound, of frequencies just outside the periphery of human audibility,
infrasound and ultrasound, as well as the nonstandard use of popular music,
not as a source of pleasure, but for irritation, manipulation, pain, and torture.
No doubt, empirical and in-depth studies are lacking and desperately needed
on these diverse deployments. However, as our primary aim lies elsewhere, a
brief overview will have to suffice. Even this cursory glance, however, provides
a counterpoint to popular music studies at their most banal, with their dismal
celebrations of consumerism and interminable excuses for mediocrity.
In the mutating logistics of sonic perception, a general tendency in both research and deployments can be detected. The historical drift in the technical
deployment of sonic force is marked by a number of parallel phase transitions:
from the violence of high amplitude to inaudible or silent frequencies, from
discipline and punishment to subtle control through modulation of affective
tonality, from forcing behavior to the distribution of “self-control,” from the
messy and unmanageable to the highly directional and targetable, from exceptional deployments to ubiquitous fields or enclaves fortressed by sonic walls, and
from music as pleasure to music as irritant. Importantly, this is not a successive
history of stages; these modalities of sonic power coexist with each other, often
literally in the battlefield. Moreover, precursors exist decades before they snugly
align with the current modalities of power. Instead, sociotechnical inventions
and refinements layer up—so, for example, while there is a drift toward more
subliminal effects, the perfection of sonic violence with new directional technologies means its use has never before been so practical. At the same time, certain
events mark qualitative shifts in this history, beyond which everything changes.
I suggest later that directional ultrasound perhaps marks a phase shift in the
way acoustic space is understood in relation to the war machine. Finally, the
specifics of each deployment add new inflections, topographic and strategic—
from the jungle warfare of Vietnam, to the urban desert warfare of the Middle
East, to the dispersion of rioters, to the most trivial “antisocial” behavior, right
through to the enhancement of affinities to consumption—that relate war and
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sound in different ways. The ubiquity of media and the increasing importance
of asymmetric urban warfare together have meant that any tactics whose impact
wounds are invisible and nonlethal offers methods less likely to trigger waves of
revulsion through the networked consciences of global media.
Early attempts to develop sonic weapons focused on the physicality of lowfrequency sound and the fact that it dissolves completely into tactile vibration
at frequencies around hertz. Below this threshold lies the field of infrasound.
Infrasonic phenomena, unlike ultrasound, maintain their power as they pass
through a range of media. Surveying the limited literature on these semiaudible wave phenomena, one finds Virilio’s informational logistics of deception
in operation. Research uncovers an array of conspiracy theories shrouding
programs of military research into the battlefield operation of infrasonic weaponry or police experiments within crowd control situations—a war of vibration
to dampen the insurgent potential of the street. The Internet, in particular, is
awash with conspiracy theories on “black research.” According to this murky
body of knowledge, military uptake of infrasound technologies stretches back
at least to World War I, during which detectors were used to locate enemy gun
positions. Resultant pathological effects in the middle ear also began to be discovered in military personnel during the two world wars in soldiers working
with machines emitting low-frequency vibrations. Moreover, it has been noted
that certain infrasonic frequencies plug straight into the algorithms of the brain
and nervous system. Frequencies of hertz, for example, coincide with theta
rhythms, thought to induce moods of fear and anger.
A key hyperstitional figure, who appears as a refrain in the underground literature on infrasonic acoustic weaponry is French robotics researcher Vladimir
Gavreau, allegedly head of the Electroacoustics and Automation Laboratories
of the Centre de la Recherche Scientifique during the s. Gavreau and his
team, we are told, performed some pioneering experiments into the anomaly
of infrasonic waves that were directional in “contradiction of a universally accepted acoustic law which states that low frequency sounds emitted by a relatively small source propagate in all directions.” After accidentally experiencing
nausea in his lab with his research team (owing to unintended vibrations leaking
from industrial machinery), Gavreau became obsessed by harnessing infrasonic
resonance to design sonic weapons (usually in the form of huge pipe devices).
After another experiment, caught in the vibratory “envelope of death,” Gavreau
and team allegedly suffered sustained internal spasms as their organs hit critical
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resonance frequencies. It was these strange physiological anomalies, generated
by inaudible vibrations, that inspired his research into infrasonic acoustic guns.
The key notion was that directional inaudible sound at certain resonant frequencies “acting directly on the body” could produce “intense friction between
internal organs, resulting in a severe irritation of nerve endings.” Some versions of the Gavreau story even suggested that one of the team had his insides
pulped, and reinforced tank armor was ripped open by the infrasound Levasseur whistle. The team set out developing a number of applications of their findings, including acoustic guns, acoustic lasers, and acoustic “rectifiers,” all based
around infrasonic frequencies.
As the Gavreau episode illustrates, to have a future, sonic weapons would
have to be less messy. After the s, the blunt violence of infrasound research
can also be found in the panic-inducing violence of high-volume frequencies.
Manley makes reference to the Urban Funk Campaign (UFC) and Wandering
Soul, the U.S. “audio harassment” psyops campaigns in Vietnam and Laos during the early s that inspired General Kilgore’s infamous Wagnerian fly-bys
in Coppola’s Apocalypse Now. The UFC experimented with tactics of amplitude
and frequency. Audible and inaudible frequencies were pumped into the jungle
at the Vietcong at high-volume levels ( decibels and higher). The objective,
through attacking with sound instead of munitions (of course, in actuality, it was
sound as well as bombs), was to weaken the resolve of the Vietnamese guerrilla
fighters and make them come out of hiding and surrender. The UFC deployed
helicopter-mounted devices known as sound curdler systems. The Curdler, or
“People Repeller,” was an oscillator that could deafen at short range. When used
with a public address system and a watt sound amplifier, it was possible to
direct intelligible speech to a range of . miles. The Curdler was also capable
of unleashing siren frequencies of between and , hertz and of inducing
panic. With more powerful amplifiers, the device made it possible to construct
a sonic pyramid up to , meters in height, bathing the jungle canopy with an
invisible and mobile architecture.
As the unhinged Manley suggests, this was not just about a tactics of amplitude. At night, its effectiveness was intensified, acquiring an enhanced power
to tap into superstitious belief systems. The Curdler produced the “voodoo effects” of Wandering Soul (or Wandering Ghost, as Manley calls it), in which
haunting sounds said to represent the souls of the dead were played in order to
perturb the superstitious snipers, who, while recognizing the artificial source of
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the wailing voices, could not help but dread that what they were hearing was a
premonition of their own postdeath dislocated soul. As journalist John Pilger
reported in his book Heroes,
The st Air Cavalry Psy-Ops (Psychological Warfare) officer was a captain, although he
might have been Sergeant Bilko; he wore black horn-rimmed glasses and a banana grin.
He was a stereo-and-speakers buff and what he loved to do was to fly in a helicopter low
over the jungle and play his tapes to the enemy. His favorite tape was called “Wandering
Soul,” and as we lifted out of Snuffy he explained, “what we’re doing today is psyching out
the enemy. And that’s where Wandering Soul comes in. Now you’ve got to understand
the Vietnamese way of life to realize the power behind Wandering Soul. You see, the
Vietnamese people worship their ancestors and they take a lot of notice of the spirits and
stuff like that. Well, what we’re going to do here is broadcast the voices of the ancestors—
you know, ghosts which we’ve simulated in our studios. These ghosts, these ancestors,
are going to tell the Vietcong to stop messing with the people’s right to live freely, or the
people are going to disown them.”
The helicopter dropped to within twenty feet of the trees. The Psy-Ops captain threw
a switch and a voice reverberated from two loudspeakers attached to the machine-gun
mounting. While the voice hissed and hooted, a sergeant hurled out handfuls of leaflets
which made the same threats in writing.
Many reports retell its use by the Sixth Psy-Op Battalion and various navy units.
Other accounts, for example, by a U.S. helicopter pilot, complained that instead
of winning over hearts and minds, it always immediately drew enemy fire, making the Vietcong soldiers vulnerable to attack as opposed to encouraging them
to surrender or defect peacefully.
Although its existence was denied by the British Ministry of Defence, the UFC
was also supposed to have inspired a device called the Squawk Box, used during
the troubles in North Ireland for crowd control. In an article in the New Scientist
in , a report was published on the alleged effects of “nonviolent” crowd dispersal weapons using ultrasound. The squawk box was contained in a three-foot
cube mounted on Land Rovers and was said to emit two ultrasonic frequencies
that together produced a third infrasonic frequency that was intolerable to the
human ear, producing giddiness, nausea, or fainting, or merely a “spooky” psychological effect. The report noted diplomatically, “Most people are intensely
annoyed by the device and have a compelling wish to be somewhere else.”
In the late s and early s, new techniques of sonic coercion entered
the fray. Between December and , , U.S. troops in Panama City directed
loudspeakers at former CIA employee Manuel Noriega, who had barricaded
himself in the Vatican embassy. They bombarded him with loud rock and pop
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music and on-message songs such as Martha and the Vandellas’ “Nowhere to
Run” and “You’re No Good” by Linda Rondstadt in order to either irritate him or
prevent him from sleeping. Militarized pop got even more avant-garde during
the Waco siege of . The FBI engaged in “acoustic psycho-correction,” playing high-volume music blended with sound effects into the compound of the
Branch Davidians led by David Koresh with a playlist that was accompanied by
bagpipes, screeching seagulls, dying rabbits, sirens, dentist drills, and Buddhist
chants. One story maintains that silent subliminal tapes were also used along
with music, including the tale of one Guantanamo detainee who was left in an
empty room with a boom box playing a variety of classic rock tracks, which
John Ronson suggests were embedded with subliminal messages to nudge him
toward revealing all he knew about al Qaeda. Other torture allegations against
the U.S. Army, for example from Falluja in Iraq, tell of the bizarre subjection of
captives under interrogation with musical torture.
Alongside these allegations from the U.S. war on terror, the episodic history
of sonic warfare has recently taken on even more prescience due to the widely
covered uses of acoustic weaponry by both the U.S. and Israeli armies. In February , for example, the American Technology Corporation secured a $
million deal to provide long-range acoustic devices (LRADs) to the U.S. Marine
Corps in Iraq. These LRADs are said to provide “an effective less-than-lethal
tool to communicate, affect behavior, and support lethal rules of engagement.”
They involve targeted high-frequency beams of sound about , to , hertz
of up to decibels within a range of yards. Their primary function has
been as a crowd dispersal tool, and they were also used in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina to repel looters.
Returning again to Colonel Manley, pumped up with his zealous enthusiasm,
he seemed excited by the prospect of deploying his theoacoustic weaponry, with
Whitehead making parallels to widely reported tests of sonic crowd control near
Jericho early in the summer of ,on the eve of the evacuation of settlers from
the contested West Bank territory. The Israeli army issued a press release about
its contingency plans for dealing with turbulence among Israeli and Palestinian populations generated by this demographic transition. The Israeli Defense
Force dubbed their new “nonlethal” sound weapon “The Scream”: “Protestors
covered their ears and grabbed their heads, overcome by dizziness and nausea,
after the vehicle-mounted device began sending out bursts of audible, but not
loud, sound at intervals of about seconds. An Associated Press photographer
at the scene said that even after he covered his ears, he continued to hear the
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sound ringing in his head.” The device, a military official noted, targeted a
specific frequency toward the inner ear. Throwing more uncertainty into this
foggy history of research into acoustic weaponry, some even suggested that this
was perhaps the first time such a device had been deployed out of the lab and in
the field, despite the fact that one nameless official admitted that the proper tests
on long-term auditory damage due to prolonged exposure to the frequencies
had not yet been conducted. It was clearly such recent instances that inspired
Whitehead’s Project Jericho piece.
Aside from military and police deployments, research into ultrasound in the
field of commerce realizes the notions of science fiction. In Steven Spielberg’s
adaptation of Philip K. Dick’s Minority Report, personalized branding messages are beamed at passing consumers, identified by retinal scans. What kind
of technologies would push these signals at individual bodies in the crowded
spaces of hypercapital? One application of the highly directional qualities of ultrasound currently being researched involves a signal carried by a very focused
beam. These “audio spotlights,” or “holosonics” devices, facilitated the microlocational targeting of audio advertising, part of the arsenal of insidious sonic
branding strategies in which brands become woven into the fabric of immersive,
interactive, predatory environments. These carrier mechanisms, increasingly
deployed in sound art installations and undergoing research and development
for theater surround-sound systems, have been dubbed sonic bullets or lasers:
when you pass through the beam, you hear the sound as if a mere auditory hallucination. One step right or left, and you vacate the zone of audition. Crank
up the pressure, and that targeted beam becomes a hypersonic weapon. Also
operating with high-frequency sound, this time as an irritant as opposed to
a directional beam, is a device referred to as the Mosquito. Operating just at
the edge of the threshold of audibility, between to kilohertz, Mosquitoes,
originally aimed at repelling rodents, were recently repurposed on teenagers in
the U.K.
Despite these recent news reports of confirmed deployments, a penumbra
of uncertainty will always exist around military-police security research. Deception, after all, as Sun Tzu tells us, is the most potent weapon of war. What
then, should be made of this confusing mesh of data, rumor, defense industry
press releases, pop mythology, and news reports surrounding the concept of
sonic warfare? Clearly there are big differences between biblical stories, occult
research into infrasound, and the redeployment of rodent-repellent ultrasound
devices on teenagers on the streets of the U.K.
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A rare voice of scientific sobriety within a jungle of hearsay and rumor is
the figure of German researcher Jurgen Altmann, who, at the Acoustical
Society of America conference in Berlin, presented a paper questioning the
practicality of sonic weapons. In his report Altmann attempts to cut through
the marketing hype of military journals and arms manufacturers concerning
nonlethal acoustic weaponry. In one summary of his findings, he asks sarcastically, “How can one turn a threatening gunman into a retching bundle of nerves,
suffering simultaneously from bowel spasms and a loss of courage before surrendering to the police? Simply use infrasound on him.” Altmann goes on to
discredit the claims of the military press regarding the potential of sonic weaponry. He surveyed the scientific data on sound sources (sirens, whistles, and
explosions), strength of acoustic propagation (beam widening and absorption),
the hearing and nonauditory effects on humans, and the danger of potential
damage. Altmann’s general conclusions were that acoustic weaponry tended to
be rather cumbersome and posed the most dangerous threat to the auditory
system, which is rather easy to defend against, instead of the somewhat elusive
and extravagant incapacitating physiological effects claimed in defense industry
press releases and conspiracy theories.
However, Altmann’s scientific debunking does not render useless the concept
of sonic warfare. The wave of LRAD and holosonic devices that has emerged
in the early twenty-first century seems to be more effective than the weapons
he surveyed in . While it was true that experiments with infrasonics were
marked by a catalogue of mishaps and general unmanageability, high-frequency
beams of ultrasound have proved much easier to target. Moreover, a scientific
survey such as Altmann’s in fact compels that which it excludes: an analysis that
can account for the viral infiltration, the affective contagion, and the distribution of the war machine into the quotidian foldings of the sonic body, its sensations, rhythms, fictions, and desires.
Despite the welcome note of extreme caution that Altmann’s “voice of reason” inflicts on the militarized male fantasy of efficient nonlethal sonic weaponry, it was not surprising that a series of somewhat erratic, nomadic, and
nonmilitarized infrasonic schemes were dreamed up by musicians operating
at the periphery of the vibratory continuum, imagineering another minor,
microcultural, distinctly cyberpunk (“the street has its own uses for military
tech”) orientation.
In a article in Wire magazine, “Exotic Audio Research,” all manner
of peripheral sonic research into imperceptible frequencies of the audio and
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radio spectrum was reported, including investigations into infra- and ultrasound, which attempted to redirect the energy of the military-industrialentertainment complex, to channel its own energy against it, and make audible
its most concealed activities. But this interest in the frayed edges of sonic
perception in an artistic context dates back much further. In the s, during
a conversation regarding infrasound between writer William Burroughs and
Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page, Burroughs, notable here for his writings describing sonic tactics for instigating riots, revealed his interest in the potential
of harnessing the mantric potential of low-frequency audio vibrations, wondering “whether rhythmical music at . . . the borderline of infrasound could be used
to produce rhythms in the audience.” His curiosity was shared by many related
to industrial music in the postpunk period, most infamously, the “Wreckers of
Civilization,” Throbbing Gristle, whose deployments of ultra- and infrasonic
emitters on neighbors is well documented in the almost mythological literature
that surrounds the history of the group.
As with the many references to military research into sonic weaponry, the pop
manifestations often seem equally veiled by mis- and disinformation. One story
in the now-defunct music newspaper Melody Maker told of how prankmaster,
the KLF’s Jim Cauty, was testing his own audio weapons system. This system was
allegedly borrowed by Finnish artists Panasonic who road-tested the devices
in Brick Lane, East London. In a fax to the music paper from an imaginatively
named Mr. Smith, it was reported that the
test took place to establish the parameters of the new vehicle solo and in tandem with its
sister model, SS K+L. The test featured new software generated for our latest commercial client, EXP LTD, and is described by Mr. Cauty as featuring “the ultimate battle
between sound and commerce ending in the death of all musicians and their ascension
to rock-n-roll heaven or hell as befits them.” Yesterday we received communication with
ex-Government employees who, in the Sixties, worked on audio weapon development
with an offer of help and some ex-classified equipment. We regret any such death or
damage that has resulted from our tests, but there are casualties in every war. The Triple
A Formation Attack Ensemble will perform “Foghorns of the Northern Hemisphere” as
part of an educational program supporting our research shortly.
After a spoof report on Cauty’s sonic weaponry experiments was published in
Big Issue magazine, Cauty was allegedly briefly put under surveillance by British
authorities and spent some time in custody.
These artistic deployments of infrasound within the occult undercurrents
of pop musical history, and the experimental deployment of pop and rock
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hits by the military for the purposes of irritation, manipulation, and torture,
underline the convoluted fabric of sonic warfare. Any simplistic opposition
between standard and nonstandard uses of sound, music, and technology becomes confounded very quickly in relation to the complexities of the militaryentertainment complex. For sure, ideological motivations aside, the military
deployments, while aiming toward closing down situations as opposed to opening them up, are often as speculative as those of the self-conscious tinkering
of artists. Yet the abuse of military technology by artists and musicians is one
thing. The abuse of music by the military is another. Alongside artists such
as Joe Banks and Mark Bain, who hack and redeploy the technologies of the
military-industrial complex into unforeseen uses, aesthetic experimentation
with perisonics, or dangerous sounds, becomes increasingly essential as patents
are locked down and uses legislated. It is therefore necessary to be clearer about
the overlaps of military and sonic culture and to begin to pick apart the active
forces from the reactive ones.
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1946: Sonic Dominance
On either side of the room, the walls are lined by gigantic stacks of speakers of
erratic assembly. Some look as if they have been repurposed from wardrobes, others from TV cabinets, their electrical and cathode ray intestines ripped out to be
replaced by cone-shaped woofers resembling black eyes, a visual dead end. The air
hangs heavily with a pungent smoke, rippling with pulses of intensity that oscillate
from one wall to the other. A chemical clock waiting to switch. Lungs constricted,
chestplates rattling, the throbbing body of the crowd holds its collective breath as
one pressure wave after another surges through, jogging on the spot to mobilize the
momentum in dance. Spectral voices of the DJ are echoed, reverbed into ghosts—
lost in the viscous blobs of bass, the magnetic vibrations of a body snatcher. This is
the masochism of the sound clash and its active production of dread.
Militaries are not the only agents actively pursuing sound wars through the deployment of vibrational force. In Jamaican sound system practices related to
reggae, dub, and dancehall, intense vibrational environments are enacted, producing an ecology of affects in which bodies and technologies, all functioning as
transducers of energy and movement from one mode to another, are submerged.
Consistent with a conception of the affective body as resonance chamber, Julian Henriques has explored the functioning of what he terms sonic dominance
within the sound system session. For Henriques, sonic dominance is a condition
in which hearing overrides the other senses, displacing the reign of vision in
the hierarchy, producing a flatter, more equal sensory ratio. In his analysis, the
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processing of vibration is particularly pertinent, contributing to the achievement
of sonic dominance. In particular, such sound system cultures deploy what we
would term a bass materialism in achieving this rearrangement of the senses. In
the diaspora of sound system cultures that take Jamaican pop musical concepts
and methods as a prototype, bass materialist practices of affective engineering
through vibrational modulation are central to vernacular modes of sonic warfare that operate using competitive sound clashing. The sound clash pits bass
rig against bass rig, sound “bwoy” against sound “bwoy,” dubplate against dubplate, DJ against DJ in a spiraling logic of hype escalation, intensification, and
mobilization of the dance. In this mode of musical competition, the desired
crowd dynamic is clearly of the centripetal, afferent, attractional type. In the
reggae and dancehall sound system, the viral sonic affect—which can be felt
to varying degrees in hip-hop and electronic dance music sound systems—is
produced by a range of techniques that congeal the collective into an entity that
Canetti referred to as a “throbbing crowd.” If such a bass materialism has proved
contagious to the mutation of electronic music in the past forty years, then what
has spread is not merely the sound systems themselves, which often function as
nomadic sonic war machines, moving from dancehall to dancehall, but their abstract machines, diagrams of their relationality or circuits of transduction. Such
a contagious diagram can also be understood in terms of a nexus of vibration.
The sound system shares with the nexus its microcosmic or monadic relation to a broader field. Sonic dominance, for Henriques, arises when “sound
itself becomes both a source and expression of power.” Unlike the futurist,
avant-gardist legacy or rockist legacy of (white) noise music and its contemporary disciples, with its fetishization of midrange frequencies, the dancehall
system simultaneously immerses / attracts and expels / repels, is hard and soft,
deploying waves of bass, an immense magnet that radiates through the body of
the crowd, constructing a vectorial force field—not just heard but felt across the
collective affective sensorium. For Henriques, the system operates in terms of
a both / and logic: physical and formal, feeling and hearing, content and form,
substance and code, particle and pattern, embodying and disembodying, tactile
and sonic. Quoting from psychologist of affect Silvan Tomkins, he also points
to the plane of pure sensation that cuts across this nexus and its implicit selfvalidating or resonant affective dynamics. He argues that the processes of transduction, where one kind of energy is converted into another, creating a surplus
in the process, allows access onto the plane of the nexus, whether through the
loudspeakers converting electromagnetic waves of the amplifier into sound
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waves, the microphone transducing sound waves into electromagnetic waves
for amplification, or the collective body of the crowd transforming sonic energy
into the kinetic energy of movement and dance. When philosopher of dance
Jose Gil describes the plane of immanence of dance, he also alludes to the collective encounter of the nexus and the mutual composition of actual occasions
from which it is produced. He describes “the construction of a virtual plane of
movement where all the movements of bodies, objects, music, colours acquire
a consistency, that is, a logic, or a nexus.” If there is perhaps a limitation on the
usefulness of Gil’s analysis for the conceptualization of the nexus of the sound
system session, it is that the assemblage he describes is too spectacular: it is a vision of movement and a movement of vision, but it is closed in terms of participation, as are most forms of dance art rendered as something to look at. It is not
that vision, an increasingly mediatic vision, is not important in the contagious
dancing of the dancehall session; rather, sonic dominance draws attention to
the sensory flattening activated by acoustic and tactile vibration. Moreover, this
contributes to a particular mode of collectivity, activating a power of allure, or
provocation. The notion of sonic dominance helps to conceptualize the nexus
of vibrational force in magnetic, attractional mode. In the overpowering, almost
totalitarian sensuality of bass materialism, it also illustrates the mobilization of a
sonic ecology of dread: fear activated deliberately to be transduced and enjoyed
in a popular musical context.
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1933: Abusing the Military-Entertainment Complex
Funkspiel, VHF tank radio, vocoders, Magnetophones, submarine location technologies,
air war radio beams, etc., have released an abuse of army equipment that adapts ears and
reaction speeds to World War n +.
—Friedrich Kittler, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter ()
Isn’t it strange that in the second world war, computer technology was used to aid and
abet the military-industrial complex, but by the end of our century, that technology has
mutated, devolved and diversified to such a degree that Afro-American musicians, young
Black British musicians can use computer technology to construct a soundtrack to the
end of the industrial epoch.
—Black Audio Film Collective, The Last Angel of History, ()
A recurrent theme in many discussions of sonic warfare within the militaryentertainment complex is that of the dissemination and repurposing of military
technologies. This dimension of sonic warfare has been theorized in key yet
underdeveloped notions in media theory and the history of technology that investigate modes of control by unearthing the military origins of everyday tools.
Much recent theory has revolved around the role visual media and computers
have had in the evolution of military command and communications infrastructures. The sonic occasionally features but is very much in the background in
these discourses.
One media theorist who has made more room for a conceptualization of
the intersection of the machines of war with the machines of noise is Friedrich
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Kittler, especially in his book Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, where he controversially argued that all media are fundamentally military in nature. Kittler’s
argument is more complex than the easily refutable notion that all media technologies are predetermined by their military origins, and the apparent determinism can be understood, in its evasion of human agency, as a provocation
fired at sociological anthropocentrism. His approach, inflected by the mids affective climate of late Cold War dread, takes on a renewed currency in
the epoch of post- / asymmetric warfare. For Kittler, military research and
development infects popular culture with a kind of technological contagion
to the extent that, for him, the “entertainment industry is, in any conceivable
sense of the word, an abuse of military equipment.” He maps the trails blazed
by the gramophone, recording technology, and wireless after the wars of the
twentieth century, noting, for example, how after World War I, “for the simple
purpose of avoiding the anarchistic abuse of military radio equipment, Germany received its entertainment network,” and as he argues elsewhere, broadcast radio was “just the military radio system of the First World War minus the
talkback-capability.” For Kittler, wars catalyze new media, driving technological
development through sheer excess of energy. The contagion of military technology spreads through misuse, or reverse engineering, with knowledge acquired
from espionage, accident, or experimentation.
Kittler points to three phases of military influence on media technologies,
from storage to communication to ubiquitous computation. Phase was initiated by the American Civil War and the development of storage devices for
acoustic (gramophone), optical (film), and writing (typewriter) data. The second phase emerged around World War I and the development of electric transmission media for these data in the form of radio and television. Phase began
around World War II with the emergence of cybernetics and the protocomputer
of the Turing machine, culminating in ubiquitous digital processing, which
folds preceding modes into a metamedia. Crucially, it seems, for Kittler, while
analog media were assuming the appearance of prosthetic extensions of the
body, human thought was being modeled in computation and feedback machines at the same time. War therefore drives technological evolution and substitutes human subjects with automated processes. Peace becomes war by other
means through the platforms of media technologies that have their own evolutionary autonomy in excess of human needs and desires.
The crucial issue here is not simply the erroneous claim that all technological
media are invented by the military in periods of war, but rather how weaponry
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1933: Abusing the Military-Entertainment Complex
and logistic, tactical, and strategic conditions serve to catalyze and pressure
convergence, reconnection, and innovation in media and that all other cultural
deployments serve merely to camouflage a militarization of the minutiae of urban existence. No doubt, as Winthrop-Young argues, it would be possible to
explain aspects of the origin of most of the media around which Kittler’s argument revolves in nonmilitary terms, especially with the many recent instances
of entertainment media preceding military use, for example, simulation technologies developed in the field of video games that have migrated back to the
military. But this misses the more fundamental argument about modern society
that has been asserted since the early twentieth century by the Italian futurists,
Ernst Junger, and McLuhan right up to Virilio and Kittler. For these thinkers,
war has come to mean much more than battles between nation-states; rather, it
expresses an ontological condition. For all of these writers, the concept of war
becomes an attempt to describe a low-intensity warfare that reconstitutes the
most mundane aspects of everyday existence through psychosocial torque and
sensory overload.
As with Foucault and with Deleuze and Guattari, Kittler’s extended concept
of war contains a certain ambiguity. While for Foucault’s concept of power as
developed particularly in Discipline and Punish and Society Must Be Defended,
war is coextensive with the social field, a current flowing through every niche,
for Deleuze and Guattari, in A Thousand Plateaus, war is also an undercurrent,
with its militarized instantiation only a captured subset. It is an undercurrent
that attains a cosmic transversality, cutting across all strata, human or nonhuman, with local outbreaks in every milieu, as abstract turbulence. For Kittler,
the ambiguity of war pertains to the immersivity of the military-inflected, ubiquitous media environment. Each has its own response to the ubiquity of war: for
Foucault, resistance; for Deleuze and Guattari, the construction of rhythmic war
machines; and for Kittler, the abuse of militarized media technologies. Marking out a kind of cyberpunk politics of frequency, Kittler asserted that if “control, or as engineers say, negative feedback, is the key to power in this century,
then fighting that power requires positive feedback. Create endless feedback
loops until VHF or stereo, tape deck or scrambler, the whole array of world war
army equipment produces wild oscillations. Play to the powers that be their
own melody.”
While Kittler’s analysis through the prism of militarized technological evolution ensures that the abuse of hardware and software is placed at the center of a nonmilitarized sonic warfare, its technological determinism leaves
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underdeveloped some of his own key insights. It is therefore helpful to submerge
his theory of media into a more general affective ecology in which technical machines become just another entry in the inventory of actual entities in a nexus
of vibrational experience. After all, rigorous experimentation with what a sonic
nexus can do means that bodies deserve as much abuse as technical media. If
war saturates modern societies right down to the microphysical fabric, then it
does so using an array of distributed processes of control, automation, and a
both neurophysical and affective mobilization: the military-entertainment complex as a boot camp therefore, optimizing human reaction speeds, fabricating
new reflexes for a postcybernetic condition. Media technologies discipline, mutate, and preempt the affective sensorium. Entertainment itself becomes part of
the training. During the late Cold War, as Kittler himself noted in a wonderful
yet underdeveloped aside, “Our discos are preparing our youth for a retaliatory strike.”
Kittler’s theory can certainly be built on to assist in the construction of a
theory of sonic warfare. This book, however, diverges from him and his musical inspiration. When he wrote in the mid- to late s, the soundtrack to the
themes of sonic warfare for him seemed to be the rock music of the s and
s, from the Beatles to Pink Floyd, with some brief mention of more experimental sound practitioners, from Stockhausen to Laurie Anderson and William
Burroughs. Twenty years later, the concept of sonic warfare developed here is
soundtracked more by the electronic musics of the Black Atlantic.
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403–221 B.C.: The Logistics of Deception
Weapons are tools not just of destruction but also of perception—that is to say, stimulants that make themselves felt through chemical, neurological processes in the sense organs and the central nervous system, affecting human reactions and even the perceptual
identification and differentiation of objects.
—Paul Virilio, War and Cinema: The Logistics of Perception ()
All war is based on deception.
—Sun Tzu, The Art of War
Between the two world wars, the visual logistics of the photograph and cinema
(as described by Paul Virilio in War and Cinema) were joined by the expanding
repertoire of the “logistics of sound,” its networked ecology, with the advent of
interwar mass radio transmissions and the carceral archipelago of performance
spaces, the distributed system of audiospecular enclosures deployed for entertainment and propaganda purposes and known more widely as cinema. The
history of war, as traced by Virilio, revolves primarily around the mutation of
perception over territorial and economic concerns; its evolution accelerates an
osmosis between biological and technical nervous systems. Just as Virilio found
the logistics of military perception within the history of cinema, especially with
the emergence of cybernetics in the postwar period, we can locate, updating an
ancient history of acoustic warfare, an undercurrent of research into sonic tactics guiding a symbiosis of noise, bodies, and machines. Across the continuum
of war, from sonar to nonlethal acoustic weaponry, this logistics of perception
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in its vibratory, resonant, affective, and virtual sonic dimensions is now assuming new permutations in cultures mutated by the impact of global terrorism and
asymmetric warfare.
This logistics of (im)perception does not merely seek to intervene in the “normal” functioning of psychophysiological circuitry, but, in McLuhanist terms,
also involves perceptual prosthetics: an extension or an amputation. Conceived
differently, for philosopher Baruch Spinoza, the focus shifts from what a body
is, even in its technologically extended sense, to its powers—what it can do. The
body of sonic warfare is therefore always a speculative question, which does not
return home to a pregiven human, corporeal demarcation. The episodic history
of sonic warfare’s perceptual assemblages can therefore equally be found in electronic and electromagnetic cartography, the distributed nervous system of technical sensors that feed it, and the flood of information these systems produce.
In the cybernetic phase of martial evolution, which emerged out of the detritus of World War II, turning this data flood into workable knowledge became
as important as the efficiency and accuracy of weapons systems. The logistics
of perception has been confronted by the ravenous information hunger of military systems, generating a chain reaction of problems in the gathering, transfer, and processing of data. The more sophisticated the military’s distributed
nervous system, the more overpowering the sheer weight of information to be
dealt with. And as an unavoidable corollary, the more overexposed the battlefield becomes, the more appearance gives in to an array of camouflage, decoys,
jamming, smokescreens, and electronic countermeasures. To be perceived is to
be “taken out.” So investment in forces co-evolves with the investment in their
concealment. Stealth, secrecy, and the logistics of perception signal, for Virilio,
that the war of images has in fact superseded the war of weaponry. Whether we
agree with Virilio’s historical argument or not, his insight is to draw attention
to how the evolution of weapons and armor is paralleled by the co-evolution of
visibility and invisibility and, by implication, of audibility and inaudibility.
In the late s, a series of strange structures started appearing in Kent on
the south coast of England. The plan of the British air force was to set up a
chain of “concrete ears” along the coast that would peer out over the channel of water that separated the island from the Continent. It was a plan never
completed. Looking like prehistoric satellite dishes and resembling the concrete styles catalogued in Virilio’s very Ballardian book of photography, Bunker Archeology, these structures were sound mirrors used as acoustic detection
early-warning devices designed to pick up sounds from approaching enemy
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403–221 B.C.: The Logistics of Deception
aircraft. There were three types of sound mirror. With the circular, concave
- and -foot-diameter concrete bowls, movable, cone-shaped metal sound
collectors were used, connected by tubing to stethoscopes worn by the operators. The other type were strip mirrors, curved in elevation and plan of by
feet. With these structures, microphones were placed on a concrete forecourt in
front of the mirror and wired to a nearby control room. All the sound mirrors
were located in positions that attempted silence. A report suggested that
the sound mirrors were ten times more sensitive than the human ear, and they
were tested by blind listeners in . Yet operation problems due to noise from
the sea, wind, local towns, and ship propellers rendered the structures onto the
sad scrap heap of twentieth-century dead media. Some of these lonely, decaying structures persist to this day and can be seen at Abbots Cliff between Dover
and Folkestone, West Hythe, and on the Dungeness shingle at Denge. Yet these
concrete ears lay the foundation to the virtual front of vibrational warfare and
the much more successful radar systems deployed in World War II.
As Virilio has argued, the emergence of radar and sonar (sound navigation
and ranging) as vibrational and electromagnetic techniques of rendering objects
perceptible in electronic warfare has developed to the extent that now, “the projectile’s image and the image’s projectile form a single composite.” Since radar
signals have poor penetration of water, the seabeds and surface of the planet are
populated by both passive and active ultrasound (above kilohertz) devices
(including sonar platforms, sonobuoys, hydrophones, towed arrays) equipped
to scan the suboceanic depths and provide the data required for a sonic tracing
of the hydrosphere, differentiating the acoustic signature of enemy craft using
“pinged” high-frequency signals from ambient noise. Of course, like all other
techniques of warfare, this sonar scanning implies a whole repertoire of countermeasures related to signal jamming and tactics of deception through acoustic
camouflage and the use of decoys.
Sonic deception operates as a tactic of simulation. The resort to deception
as a means of fighting without fighting, nonconfrontation or the minimization
of armed engagement, is a strategy that has drawn much inspiration from Sun
Tzu’s ancient treatise, The Art of War. With reference to this text and Lao Tzu’s
Tao Te Ching, both of which became increasingly known to the Occident in the
twentieth century, François Julien has explored some of the general tendencies
of Chinese strategic thought and their divergences from Western military philosophy. Julien noted that Chinese martial concepts often revolve around what
he terms the potential or propensity of things: “Warfare has often seemed the
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domain of the unpredictable and of chance (or fatality) par excellence. However, from early on, Chinese thinkers believed that they could detect in warfare’s
unfolding a purely internal necessity that could be logically foreseen and, accordingly, perfectly managed. . . . Chinese strategic thought stands as a perfect
example of how one can manage reality and provides us with a general theory
of efficacy.” Rather than moral concerns, it was efficacy, and the preparation for
a future configuration of events through predetermining them as much as possible, that provided the basis for the strategic importance of nonconfrontation.
Julien draws attention to the concept of shi, or “potential born of disposition,”
as the engine of such strategic notions. Here disposition refers to the conditions
encountered that, whatever they are, must be turned to maximum advantage
with minimum effort through the extraction of their potential. Disposition can
derive from the shape of objects or topographical gradients. Such thinking,
which revolved around the notion of shi, displayed an “extreme commitment
to penetrating the real nature of all determining factors and doing away with
all possible illusions” as it was “only through shi that one can get a grip on the
process of reality.”
Julien points to the central structural difference between key Chinese and
European military thought. For the ancient Chinese thinkers such as Sun Tzu,
shi was the essential concept of military strategy, whereas for modern military
thinkers such as Clausewitz, “means” and “end” were essential. Julien describes
the Western model as revolving around a “heroic or tragic vision” of the “‘head
on clash,’ or confrontation carried to the crisis point in a situation offering no
escape.” The Chinese model Julien refers to, and to which there was no doubt a
multiplicity of competing approaches, preferred fluid adaptation to the changing terrain, preparedness for this constant shifting ground, and the renewal
of potential produced by the mutating environment. At the same time, in this
model, the enemy would be forced to become relatively fixed, subordinating
its energy to constantly avoiding being taken by surprise, and therefore preventing the enemy from taking control of the situation. Against the Occidental
heroic vision, Julien notes that for the Chinese, “a true strategist always wins
‘easy’ victories. . . . True strategical skills pass unnoticed.” Adherence to shi, on
the other hand, provides a way of leading the conflict to resolve itself with the
least possible heat. In summary, this central structural difference results in a
number of key contrasts between the two martial approaches: probability versus
propensity, “decisive and direct” action versus “indirect destruction,” “appropri-
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403–221 B.C.: The Logistics of Deception
ate means and predetermined ends” versus “the setup and its efficacy,” and the
achievement of aims versus “the shaping of effect.”
For Julien, “whereas tragic man clashes irrevocably against superior powers,
resisting all surrender . . . , the Chinese strategist prides himself on his ability
to manage all the factors in play, for he knows how to go along with the logic
behind them and adapt to it. The former fatally discovers, all too late, his ‘destiny’; the latter knows how to anticipate the propensity at work so that he has
it at his disposal.” From the perspective of ancient Chinese military thought,
even the Clausewitzian concept of friction is unnecessary. Friction, Julien argues, “was conceived as a means to account for a troublesome gap in Western
strategic thought: the disparity between the plan drawn up in advance which is
of an ideal nature, and its practical implementation which renders it subject to
chance. The Chinese concept of shi, inserting itself into the distinction between
what Westerners have opposed as ‘practice’ and ‘theory,’ and thus collapsing
that distinction, shifts ‘execution’ toward something that, given the propensity
at work, operates of its own accord and excludes any uncertainty or inadequacy:
neither deterioration nor friction is involved.”
Across the twentieth century, the exploitation of propensity as developed in
Chinese strategy, alongside developments in cybernetics, mathematics, physics, and biology, has served to destratify Western military strategy and practice. Thinkers such as Sun Tzu, and his emphasis on deception, have become
core to both Western military elites and guerrilla networks waging asymmetric
conflicts.
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1944: The Ghost Army
“Ghost Army” was the nickname given to a division of the U.S. Army, the
Twenty-Third Special Troops, stationed in Europe during World War II. They
consisted of artists deployed in the fabrication of camouflage and fake inflatable
equipment, and sound and radio engineers using equipments pioneered at Bell
Labs. The Ghost Army’s aims were to trick the enemy into reacting against the
presence of a nonexistent phantom army using the sounds of troops, tanks, and
landing craft, allowing the actual troops to maneuver elsewhere. In addition to
the Ghost Army, Division was working on a joint army-navy project based on
“The Physiological and Psychological Effects on Men in Warfare,” research orchestrated by Bell Telephone Labs and consisting of physiologists and sound engineers, including the inventor (Harold Burris-Meyer) of the new stereophonic
system that made possible the recording of music for Walt Disney’s Fantasia. In a
short excerpt of archive footage from an army training film during World War II,
an engineer is shown cutting a “dubplate” of sound effects such as bulldozers,
the construction of a bridge, and an armored column of troops. The records
were then filed at a library at the Army Experimental Station and rerecorded in
sequence onto wire. The engineer is filmed mixing down a soundtrack onto a
wire recording using three turntables.
This sonic deception involved the generation and distribution of sounds to
produce the sonic experience of the battlefield in order to confuse, mislead, or
distract the enemy. Blending actual recordings and artificially generated noise,
it was targeted at the enemies’ ears and listening devices. The less effective the
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enemy’s visual capabilities, the more powerful sonic deception could be. Visual
concealment by smoke or the dark of night obviously assisted the process. Moreover, climate and geography intimately affected the range of signals. Based on
the intricate logic of sonic effects, the sound ranging of the enemy attempted to
estimate the distance of the sound sources. For example, the Doppler effect dictated that sound increasing in frequency was approaching and sound decreasing
in frequency was retreating. Such a manipulation of frequency was therefore deployed to trick the enemy or was deliberately avoided in the recording of sound
effects. Yet, in practice this was unreliable, and it required the enemy to remain
relatively static.
These techniques of sonic deception derived from an accident. It was noticed
that when dive bombers came plunging from the sky, with their characteristic
“screaming whine caused by a siren deliberately designed into the aircraft . . .
it instilled a paralyzing panic in those on the ground. . . . For Division of the
National Research Defense Committee, the lesson was clear: sound could terrify soldiers. . . . So they decided to take the concept to the next level and develop a sonic ‘bomb.’ . . . The idea of a sonic ‘bomb’ never quite panned out, so
the engineers shifted their work toward battlefield deception.” Sonic deception
therefore emerged out of the power of audible vibrations to generate an affective
ecology of fear.
This sonic manipulation of the enemy involved a number of key tactics of
frequency to produce virtual sound. To create a phantom army in sound, its
presence had to be fabricated using what is often referred to as the “acoustical
intimacy” of binaural hearing, that is, the ears serve as two input channels for
sound and together create a whole virtual field:
Hearing is imperfect and can be fooled, especially when other senses, such as sight, are
also involved. We do not hear in the precise way an oscilloscope measures sound waves.
How and what we hear depends on context, both physical and emotional. . . . Presence
emerged as the complex result of improvement in several key components of the sound
recording and playback system. First, the recordings themselves were purer, clean of
masking sound or obtrusive background noise. Second, the individual sound effects were
mixed into multiple channels and then played back through multiple speakers, both on
a single vehicle or vehicles separated by hundreds of yards. The psychoacoustical effect was that, as sound moved between speakers, the listener heard a phantom sound,
a sonic illusion, but one that did not jump from one sound source to another. Rather it
lingered in the space between the two speakers, creating a sense of spatial reality for the
sound. . . . The speaker itself evolved from a rigid metallic horn that gave off volume but
sounded tinny and flat, like a megaphone. Now a larger, flexible speaker came into play.
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1944: The Ghost Army
Its fifteen-inch diameter allowed it to handle “bass” or low frequency sound waves . . .
frequency response was richer . . . natural harmonics of a sound, sometimes called overtones . . . to the human ear, those overtones, which resonate at mathematically predictable
frequency intervals, and not usually audible as separate sounds . . . the impression that
sound was coming not just from the speaker itself but also from beside it and behind it.
As sonic deception became taken more seriously, it fed into the improvement
of speaker technology. As Bell Labs noted, in World War II, the new “military
acoustic devices were not just copies or minor physical modifications of existing
instruments . . . but rather basically new designs.” In fact, because of their newfound fidelity to presence, they would “become popular in the civilian world
after the war in stereo hi-fi systems and studio monitors.” Aside from new innovations in sound technology, older devices such as the magnetic wire recorder
were dusted off to solve the problem of skipping phonograph needles in mobile vehicles in the field. During the s, Hitler’s Ministry of Information and
Propaganda was deploying wire recorders to deceive listeners about his actual
location by playing prerecorded speeches on the radio and pretending that they
were live broadcasts. The tactics and technologies of sonic deception therefore
add yet another instance to Kittler’s notion that popular sonic media entail the
“misuse” of military technologies. And these techniques of virtual sound serve
as a precedent to deployments within the U.S. invasions of Iraq and more recent
military research into directional sonic lasers.
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1842: Sonic Effects
In their urban ecology of sonic effects, Jean-François Augoyard and Henri
Torgue set out a novel approach to auditory experience. Noting the “surplus of
feeling” in sonic perception, its ability to invoke astonishment, wonder (and, it
should be added, shock and awe) within music or visual media, they aim to expand this out into an analysis of the vibrational experience of the city. They note
that “as soon as a sound physically exists, it sets into vibration a defined space.”
For them, the fixed categories of the sound object, as minimum perceptual unit
of hearing and the soundscape as macrocategory descriptive of the entirety of
audible vibration, are inadequate. Rather, they argue, the sonic effect as an open
concept constitutes a new paradigm of analysis. In a sense, it runs in parallel
to Greg Lynn’s topological move within the realm of architectural form against
the unique and the general. The concept stands “halfway between the universal and the singular, simultaneously model and guide. . . . Rather than defining
things in a closed way, it opens the field to a new class of phenomena by giving
some indication of their nature and their status. . . . It characterizes the modal
or instrumental dimensions of sound.” The effect, for them, intervenes between
cause and event: “The effect is not an object in itself. Noise or sound, for instance, do not physically ‘change’ in the Doppler effect; it is the relation between
the observer and the emitting object that is modified, when the former or the
latter is moving at sufficient speed . . . the effect not only indicated a necessary
cause; it is also the mark of an event. . . . The context surrounding the object and
its appearance . . . the perceptible ‘effect’ is directly linked to a circumstantial
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cause. . . . Outside of the logic of objects and attribution that became familiar to
us in the West, the Stoics were developing another logic dealing with events and
actions in progress.” Augoyard and Torgue therefore submerge the sonic event
in an ecology of vibrational effects, out of which, the subject and object emerge.
They write that “the sonic effect, sometimes measurable and generally linked
to the physical characteristics of a specific context, was not reducible either
objectively or subjectively. The concept of the sonic effect seemed to describe
this interaction between the physical sound environment, the sound milieu of a
social-cultural community, and the ‘internal soundscape’ of every individual.”
The result is the revision of the notion of the sonic city “as instrument” as
merely possessing “passive acoustic properties,” replacing it instead with a “sonic
instrumentarium of urban environments”—an idea of playing the city via its
design, and thereby modulating its vibrational effects. The effect, rather than
a sound object as such, approaches, in William James’s terms, a sonically pure
experience, an experience of relation and thereby stands as an affective fact in
its own right, in addition to the sensed sound. Most of their text in Sonic Experience is devoted to providing a glossary of effects, including resonance, echo,
rumble, and reverberation, analyzed in terms of their relevance across the scales
from acoustic physics, socio-psycho-physiology to aesthetic, architectural, and
urban design.
Despite appearing to break with the politics of silence of the acoustic ecology
movement, Augoyard and Torgue’s notion of sonic experience remains centered
on a phenomenology of sonic perception in which human audition is given primacy. As a notion of postcybernetic warfare entails wars between media, machines, as much as it does between human bodies, then this notion of sonic
experience should be extended toward an ecology of vibrational affects. To their
sonic phenomenology of effects, an environmentality of affects is preferable,
resting on an ontology of vibrational force in which a body becomes merely
another actual entity in a vibrational event, assuming not necessarily any more
significance than the resonances between other entities within this nexus. However, the helpful insight of Augoyard and Torgue’s theory that can be retained
here is that the body is rendered as a multi fx-unit, as transducer of vibration
as opposed to a detached listening subject isolated from its sonic objects. Brian
Massumi has described the affective sensorium in parallel fashion:
It is best to think of it as a resonation, or interference pattern. An echo, for example, cannot occur without a distance between surfaces for the sounds to bounce from. But the
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1842: Sonic Effects
resonation is not on the walls. It is in the emptiness between them. It fills the emptiness
with its complex patterning. The patterning is not at a distance from itself. It is immediately its own event. Although it is complex, it is not composed of parts. It is composed
of the event that it is, which is unitary. It is a complex dynamic unity. The interference
pattern arises where the sound wave intersects with itself. The bouncing back and forth
multiplies the sound’s movement without cutting it. The movement remains continuous.
It remains in continuity with itself across its multiplication. This complex self-continuity
is a putting into relation of the movement to itself: self-relation. . . . Resonation can be
seen as converting distance, or extension, into intensity. . . . With the body, the “walls” as
sensory surfaces.
Sonic warfare therefore is concerned with the generation, modulation, and
dampening of vibrational carrier waves of sonic affect. This is as much about
the amodal, nonsensuous, the abstract, cross-mediality of rhythm as the sense
of sound itself. If amodality is taken to ontologically precede the designation of
a sensation to a specific exteroceptive sensory channel (the five senses), then
the clinical conception of synesthesia would have to be inverted from pathological condition to foundational of the affective sensorium. Such a discussion
opens the sonic onto the vibrational substratum out of which it individuates as
a specific sensory modality. Interestingly, many ascribe to the sonic a strange
intermediary sensory role. Deleuze and Guattari assert that perhaps sound plays
a piloting role in synesthesia. Stephen Connor has argued that this derives from
sound’s interstitial qualities, that it has the tendency to drift in between the other
senses. French film theorist of audiovisual perception Michel Chion argues that
the sonic, within film, possesses a strange power to render a block of sensations
that includes both the tactile and the visual. He notes, for example, that “some
kinds of rapid phenomena in images appear to be addressed to, and registered
by, the ear that is in the eye, in order to be converted into auditory impressions
in memory.” For him, “the ear’s temporal resolving power is incomparably finer
than that of the eye,” and this allows cinema to go beyond a mere correspondence between the senses toward what he called an “intersensory reciprocity,”
transposing a “sonic velocity into the order of the visible.” More important, he
points to rhythm as the locus of sensory transposition. Moreover, he prefers the
trans-sensorial to that of the intersensorial. It is an “element of film vocabulary that is neither one nor the other, neither specifically auditory nor visual . . .
when a rhythmic phenomenon reaches us via a given sensory path—this path,
eye or ear, is perhaps nothing more than the channel through which rhythm
reaches us.”
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In any sonic experience therefore, it is primarily the vibrational (microrhythmic) nexus of sensory modalities that constitutes an encounter. The affective
sensorium of an entity becomes a rhythmic transducer composed of not just
the five exteroceptive channels that open onto the external environment, but
also the viscerality of interoception, which is sensitive to intensity minus quality
and in a sense preempts exteroception in that it makes decisions before the consciousness of extensive sensory objects fully emerges. Where there is a visceral
perception initiated by a sound and in a split-second the body is activated by
the sonic trigger, then the gut reaction is preempting consciousness. Interwoven with the proprioception of the feeling of the moving relations of the body,
a tactility facing inward, the affective sensorium as polyrhythmic nexus is a
synesthetic synthesizer. For Massumi, synesthesia constitutes the perspective
of the virtual. It can therefore be concluded that if synesthetic perception is
intersensorial, it is so only to the degree that it faces the actual, whereas amodality proper, facing the virtual, is trans-sensorial and, as Chion maintains, rhythmic. This tension between transensoriality and the sonic produces the concept
of unsound, the not yet audible, the dimension of sonic virtuality.
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1977: A Sense of the Future
Our music foretells our future. Let us lend it an ear.
—Jacques Attali, Noise: Political Economy of Music ()
Around thirty years ago, French economist Jacques Attali asked whether one
could “hear the crisis of society in the crisis of music?” But that was only the
conventional side of his argument. More singularly, he inquired whether turbulent transformations within the world of music were in fact prophetic of political
or economic crises to come. Beyond controversially suggesting a basic intersection between music and violence, Attali formulated a kind of stilted audio
futurology. Around the same time, there were certainly other compelling and
engaging approaches to the future in circulation. Most potent, cyberpunk fiction and cinema, in their revision of science fiction’s imperialist perspective on
the future, found clues in the present and extrapolated from them, visualizing
a near future.
The sonic as portal, on the other hand, as a sense of the future, is a thread that
runs from the Italian futurists’ art of war in the art of noise at least to Jacques Attali’s book Noise. Instead of straining the eye toward the distant horizon or even
making short-term projections or prophecies, the idea of sound as a sense of
the future keeps its “ear to the ground,” listening for microsignals, in an immediately present future, where the present virtually coexists with the resonances
and vibrations of the past and opens on to its futurity. A closer listen to the sonic
dimension of the affective sensorium reveals a model for challenging the time
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lines that underpin many traditional futurisms and futurologies. Instead of gazing to the far future, attention returns to the futurity folded into the present. The
sonic encounter opens out onto an achronological nexus. Anticipation, sensing
the future, has always been more a preoccupation of the ear, of audio culture.
The ear probes the future through listening for those clues that pass so quickly
they could not have been present: phantoms, hallucinations, initiated by affect,
or anticipation, or perhaps dread, because as one critic argued toward the end
of the last century, “by the time we get to cyberpunk, reality has become a case
of the nerves—that is, the interfusion of nervous system and computer matrix,
sensation and information—so all battles are fought out in feeling or mood,
with dread exteriorized in the world itself.” The future probes us through hearing, before any encounter with that which strays into the visual field. In film, you
hear the pounding of impending doom, the seductive allure of the new flesh,
and the gut-wrenching tension of imminent catastrophe long before you see its
face, if it has a face. But does this cinematic convention of sonic affect also map
onto the wider audiosocial milieu?
Everyone knows that in uncertain times, a species looks for clues to its future.
For example, in War and Cinema, Paul Virilio traces the co-evolution of technologies of the eye with the arm, of vision machines with killing machines in an
attempt to understand the significance of the human race passing through the
virtual threshold of nuclear obliteration under the watch of a planetary vision
machine. As he notes, “Seeing and foreseeing . . . tend to merge so closely that
the actual can no longer be distinguished from the potential. Military actions
take place ‘out of view,’ with radio-electrical images substituting in real time for
a now failing optical vision.” Yet in describing the auditory culture of the Inuit,
Marshall McLuhan pointed out that “to them, the ocularly visible apparition is
not nearly as common as the purely auditory one: hearer would be a better term
than seer for their holy men.” But in the acoustic spaces of the early twenty-first
century, what are we to make of Attali’s implied audio prophecy? Perhaps it is
more productive to understand Attali’s futurological argument and theory of
noise as based on recurring audio hallucinations, premonitions brought to him
by sound. Through seeking some clarity in Attali’s sometimes hazy apparitions,
some broader questions can be approached concerning the contagious affective
networks of sonic warfare.
While intended as an argument in political economy, of changes in cultural
superstructure preceding those in the economic base, Attali’s futurology indirectly raises the affective issue of hearing’s particular relationship to anticipa-
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tion and dread. He locates sonic culture’s future-sensing analytical power in
its liquidity compared to other cultural fields, a suppleness that attunes it to
rhythmic and morphological potentials: “It explores, much faster than material
reality can, the entire range of possibilities in a given code. It makes audible the
new world that will gradually become visible, that will impose itself and regulate
the order of things; it is not only the image of things, but the transcending of
the everyday, the herald of the future.” In refutation of Attali’s historical claims,
some critics have bothered to disprove his chronologies. In Noise, Water, Meat,
for example, Douglas Kahn attacks him where he points to the modern connection of music and war through the Italian futurist concept of noise. Kahn,
in his critique of the basic claims of his audio futurology, quotes Attali when he
writes that “it is not by coincidence that Russolo wrote his Art of Noises in ;
that noise entered music and industry entered painting just before the outburst
and wars of the twentieth century, before the rise of the social noise.” Kahn,
however, points out that in fact, the reverse was true; music was echoing war:
Russolo’s signal had already been delivered by Marinetti in in his possessed
data bursts from the trenches of the Italian-Turkish war in Libya. But taking
Attali’s argument as the utterings of someone encountering audio apparitions,
Kahn is perhaps shooting at the wrong target.
Aside from wonky chronology, Attali’s theory rests on a series of problematic
conceptual mappings. First, he formulates the relationship between music and
noise as that of coded sound to uncoded sound. Noise, as the outside of a regime of coded sound, continuously perturbs music, threatening its regulation
of sonic flow. Noise, in fact, as it scrambles music’s signal, destroys, for Attali,
the coding regime, transforming the relationship between inside and outside
and spawning a new musical order in the aftershock of its arrival. For Attali,
noise brings with it the future seeds of a new musical regime. At several points
in his text, Attali abstracts this theory of noise and music into one of chaos and
order, whereby noise, as an agent of chaos, trashes harmonic and metric structures while delivering an emergent order out of the shadow of the old. From
here, Attali transposes his concepts of order and chaos onto the parallel social
dynamic of violence and social order: noise and music, chaos and order, dissonance and harmony, violence and social order, war and peace. Cutting across
this conceptual matrix, he points to four modes of sonic organization, at once
both historically successive and virtually synchronous, which he terms sacrifice,
representation, repetition, and composition. These modes, respectively, can be
understood as corresponding to tribal, sovereign, disciplinary, and cybernetic
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networks of power. Noise, in Attali’s theory, not only plays a crucial role in the
creation-destruction cycles of musical evolution, setting in motion the mutation of sonic culture, but also, he argues, anticipates broader social crises
and transformation.
Attali’s final audio-social order, the one that is emerging from repetition, he
dubs composition. Attali’s depiction of the incoming regime is vague. He does,
however, make some speculations on its likely characteristics. So, for example,
he notes that “composition proposes a radical social model, one in which the
body is treated as capable not only of production and consumption, and even
of entering into relations with others, but also of autonomous pleasure.” Composition “would be done first and foremost for ourselves. . . . It lies primarily
outside of communication. . . . The tools of composition will be tools that are
linked to the body: prostheses.” Here the listener becomes the operator and
the consumer the producer: “The future is no longer to listen to music, but to
play it.” Attali is correct to focus on the body-machine in this new mode of
composition, but this prophecy certainly needs untangling from his solitary,
masturbatory conclusions.
While Attali is vague about the audio-social system that composition will
herald, some of the details of his audio hallucinations can be filled in through
looking elsewhere at some of his futurological writing on the topics of cyberspace and global war. In Labyrinths, he remarks that “time itself does not flow
but is spread out in space with comings and goings, with spirals and blind alleys, and distant proximities as well as illusory distances.” The concept of the
labyrinth encapsulates, for him, the fractal nature of cybernetic power. He goes
further to assert that the “the labyrinth is the material manifestation of a collective unconscious.” Cybernetic culture for Attali is continuously producing
what he calls “virtual nomads,” within a planet destined to become an “ecolabyrinth.” Moreover, the body is itself a labyrinth (“brain, ears, viscera, nervous
system, fingerprints, reproductive code”). Cyberspace parallels this physical
and physiological labyrinthine patterning, with networks of microprocessors
and software whose binary instructions and structures are an incessant series
of bifurcating, forking paths and logic gates. This labyrinthine mode beckons
what Virilio would describe as the logistics of deception of the electronic phase
of warfare. As Attali describes, “Military strategy is always an affair of decoy
and misdirection. And in trench warfare, what more perfect labyrinthine form
than the network of trenches. . . . War and violence will once more depend upon
a labyrinthine art of ruses, detours, the creation of dead ends, and blockages
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of networks. Terrorism will be exercised above all in attacking power through
systems of transportation, computer, and media networks.” If Attali’s audio futurology is pushed further, particularly his depiction of the emergent mode of
composition, then it should reveal at least a premonition of the global turbulence of the age of asymmetry.
Notwithstanding the fact that his post-Noise prophecies hardly constitute a
revelation in the early twenty-first century, in the depiction of the emergent
fourth mode of audio-social organization, Attali has also been charged with
vagueness by the followers of all major pretenders of late-twentieth-century
audio futurism, from punk to hip-hop, from industrial to techno, from glitch
to generative music. It is necessary to rely on others to fi ll in the blanks and
take his theory forward. In the section of Energy Flash entitled “Ghost in the
Machine,” music critic Simon Reynolds addressed Attali’s audio apparitions and
his sense of the futurological, predictive power of sonic culture. Quoting Arthur
Kroker, “Just like the virtual sound-objects in sampler music technology, subjectivity today is a gaseous element, expanding and contracting, time-stretched,
cross-faded, and sound accelerated,” Reynolds offered “sampladelia” as prophetic of cyborgian mutation. He located DJ culture at the threshold of Attali’s
modes of repetition and composition: “DJs are chronic consumerists and collectors who nonetheless use their stockpiling exercise as the basis for composition
in the literal sense, ‘putting things together.’ ” Reynolds goes further than most
others in unraveling Attali’s allusions in the context of late s rave culture: “If
music is prophecy, as Attali contends, what kind of social organisation or disorganisation is heralded by dance music? The transformation of music into a mass
marketed commodity (sheet music, records) anticipated the late twentieth century triumph of what the Situationists called the spectacular-commodity society
(with its alienated, passive consumer / spectator). Rave culture’s decentered networks—cottage industries, micro-media, and temporary one off gatherings—
may herald some post-corporate heterotopia of the late twenty-first century.
Then again, sampladelia might equally be a component of a Krokerite dystopia
of ‘cold seduction’: a cool hallucinatory culture of special effects personalities
moving at warp speed to nowhere.” If Attali is construable only in this way, as
yet another (musical) prophet of the ethico-aesthetic impasse of postmodernity,
then ultimately his audio futurology disappoints.
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1913: The Art of War in the Art of Noise
Cut away the future, and the present collapses, emptied of its proper content. Immediate
existence requires the insertion of the future in the crannies of the present.
—Alfred N. Whitehead, Adventures of Ideas ()
What is left of the futurist thought of sonic invention in an age when the
military-entertainment complex cuts to the micrological core and control operates flat with becoming? Did the future get lost in the labyrinth of Web ., in the
rhizomatic networks of ubiquitous computation? At the turn of the twentieth
century, the thermodynamic machines that were transforming the landscape,
particularly the train and the automobile, obsessed futurism. At the end of the
twentieth century, the model was instead the machines of cybernetics, whereby
human thought and perception could be conceived of in terms of information
processing. The futurist orientation to time was not so much futurological,
that is, of predicting that which was to come, but rather of developing tactics
to accelerate out of the tedium of the present. As Russolo laments in The Art of
Noises, “Each sound carries with it a tangle of sensations, already well known
and exhausted, which predispose the listener to boredom, in spite of the efforts
of all musical innovators.”
Futurism here is a frustration with the sonic present: “Our ear is not satisfied
and calls for ever greater acoustical emotions.” The art of noises for the futurists was a battle over the modern sensorium: “By selecting, coordinating, and
controlling all the noises, we will enrich mankind with a new and unsuspected
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pleasure of the senses.” The futurist plight was of sensory intensification. Energized by their affective experience of World War I, they felt the possibility of
enlivening the arts through the integration of their detritus. Through the deployment of noise-sound, “Our multiplied sensibility, having been conquered by
futurist eyes, will finally have some futurist ears.” Despite the turgid, conservative hold on the arts with the “marvellous and tragic symphony of the noises of
war,” man, for Russolo, could “still find something there at the front to amaze
him. He will still find noises in which he can feel a new and unexpected emotion.” He included Marinetti’s letter from the trenches in his noise manifesto:
“Violence ferocity regularity this deep bass scanning the strange shrill frantic
crowds of the battle Fury breathless ears eyes nostrils open! Load! Fire! What
a joy to hear to smell completely taratatata of the machine guns screaming a
breathlessness under the stings.” As with his peers, the sonic experience of war
for Russolo was overwhelming, rendering the inertia of both bourgeois visual
art and music pathetic: “In modern warfare, mechanical and metallic, the element of sight is almost zero. The sense, significance, and the expressiveness of
noise, however, are infinite.” Navigation and orientation become both synesthetic and piloted by the poisonous embrace of the sonic encounter: “From
noise, the different calibres of grenades and shrapnels can be known even before they explode. . . . There is no movement or activity that is not revealed by
noise. . . . But noise, which conquers the blackest gloom and the densest fog, can
betray as well as save.” The battlefield becomes a vectorial force field in which
sensory experience is dominated by the trajectory of dopplering ballistic projectiles, the whistling of shells, the murmur of artillery just out of range, and the
meow of shrapnel, all marking enharmonic passages from one pitch to another,
performing a kind of imminent Bergsonian critique of the cinematographic
error of classical music’s frozen pitches.
In Speed and Politics, and much more recently in Art and Fear, Paul Virilio
attempted to go beyond futurism’s dual obsessions with noise and speed, to
formulate an aesthetico-political analysis that he termed dromology. Etymologically, dromology comes from the Greek word dromos, meaning a race, or the
pursuit of speed. Virilio’s starting point was the ancient Chinese martial dictum
of Sun Tzu that speed was the essence of warfare. Sharing Walter Benjamin’s
concern with the fascist aestheticization of politics, Virilio’s dromology was recurrently possessed by the ghost of Marinetti and the Italian futurist celebration
of the “beauty of speed”: in a typical exaltation, Marinetti wrote that “one must
persecute, lash, torture all those who sin against speed.” For Marinetti, the ma-
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chines of military-industrial capital initiated the “acceleration of life to today’s
rapid rhythm. Physical, intellectual and sentimental balance upon a tightrope of
speed stretched between contrary attractions.” Virilio concluded that “futurism in fact comes from a single art—that of war and its essence, speed. Futurism
provides the most accomplished vision of the dromological evolutionism of the
s, the measure of superspeed!” Virilio’s melancholy apocalyptic dromology, while clearly, alongside Friedrich Kittler, key to this investigation, proves,
however, too one-dimensional, as he seems, under the spell of Marinetti, overly
obsessed with acceleration, fastness, and the noisy sonorization of art rather
than with the broader ecology of sounds and speeds. The error of both the futurist politics of noise and the reactionary politics of silence (detectable in both
Virilio and the acoustic ecology movement) is that both tend to restrict sonic intensity to the confines of a directly proportional relation to loudness or fastness
instead of engaging the more complex affective profile of frequency dynamics
and the polyrhythmic composition of speeds and slownesses. A rhythmanalytic method is preferable here to the dromology of the Marinetti-Virilio axis. It
would note vibratory coalescence marked by a more “complex relation between
differential velocities, between deceleration and acceleration of particles” rather
than the fetishization or critique of the nexus of noise and speed.
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The future is better protected than the past.
—Chris Marker, La Jetée ()
The futurist legacy, the art of war in the art of noise, aside from widely debated
questions of its cryptofascism, misogyny, and contemporary influence on a
sonic avant-garde, is, in addition, chrono-strategically compromised. The future
it wishes to speed off into rests on a unilinear notion of history, of technological
progress and the enhancement of the human condition by prosthetic appendages. Man, for futurism, is not truly mutated, but is only upgraded in a white,
metalicized übermensch. The futurist legacy has usually meant “white noise.”
Meanwhile, the Afrofuturist version of this futurist tendency, especially as formulated by Kodwo Eshun, remains the most compelling surviving strain. Notably,
here, the focus for Eshun crucially shifts from noise to the futurhythmachine
and from fastness to a complex ecology of speeds. This spectral presence of the
futurhythmachine haunts the this book. Eshun’s mutation of futurism immediately moves it to a much more sophisticated temporality, polyrhythmic instead
of unilinear, a cyclical discontinuity in which there is a virtual coexistence of
both the past and the future in the present.
The sonic processes and fictions referred to under the umbrella of Afrofuturism often operate themselves in the preemptive domain and are peppered by
the generation of time anomalies, memories of the future, reverse causalities,
and future feedbacks epitomized by the line from Public Enemy’s track,
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Welcome to the Terrordrome, “Apocalypse bin in effect,” reflecting the sentiment that “slavery functioned as an apocalypse experienced as equivalent to
alien abduction.” More compelling than the straight line to the future of the
modernist avant-garde, Afrofuturism often tries to conjure up an achronological nexus whereby sonic experience is riddled by symptoms of dyschronia. The
model for this temporal intervention exists in condensed form in its approach
to rhythm. The futurhythmachine, serving as a model, constitutes an “artificial
discontinuum” that is driven by the impetus to “design, manufacture, fabricate,
synthesize, cut, paste and edit.”
Afrofuturism takes sonic futurism beyond a preoccupation of noise toward
rhythm. More than the futurist rhetoric of noise, for Eshun, it is the rhythmachine
that motivates and underscores the musics of the Black Atlantic. The rhythmachine is an algorithmic entity that abducts bodies, modulating their movements.
The rhythmachine lies between the beats, or is the glue that congeals individual
intensities together. To be abducted by the rhythmachine is to have the sensory
hierarchy switched from the perception of rhythmelody to texturhythm, becoming a vibrational transducer, not just a listener. The rhythmachine constitutes a
sensual mathematics, whose counting systems and algorithmic procedures take
place across the skin. The skin, therefore, for the “rhythmatician,” is a skin that
thinks. For this reason, Eshun challenges the beatless cliché of futuristic music
for reimposing a “pre-industrial sensory hierarchy that shut up your senses in
a Cartesian prison.” For him, the rhythmachine confounds in advance laments
from the likes of Brian Eno when he complained that the problem with computers was that they did not contain enough “Africa” in them.
At the same time, Eshun adopts many of the signature aims of futurism in his
concern for the rewiring of sensory technologies to both mutate perception and
synthesize new modes of thought. So futurism is taken as an escape pod from
“tradition; instead it dislocates you from origins. It uproots you by inducing a
gulf crisis, a perceptual daze rendering today’s sonic discontinuum immediately
audible. . . . The Futurist producer can not be trusted with music’s heritage” because, for her, the “future is a much better guide to the present than the past.”
Eshun later suggests that despite appearances, Afrofuturism does “not seek to
deny the tradition of counter memory. Rather, it aims to extend that tradition
by reorienting the intercultural vectors of Black Atlantic temporality toward
the proleptic as much as the retrospective.” The reason for this is the now preemptive mode of security. Speculative power, he argues, “functions through the
envisioning, management, and delivery of reliable futures.” He notes how the
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futures industry functions “to fuel the desire for a technology boom,” and in
this sense, “it would be naïve to understand science fiction, located within the
expanded field of the futures industry, as merely prediction into the far future,
or as a utopian project for imagining alternative social realities” but rather, in
William Gibson’s terms, to “pre-program the present,” or, for Samuel Delaney,
to “significantly distort it.”
Instead of the avant-garde of the early twentieth century, following Toni
Morrison, Eshun insists that it was the “African slaves that experienced capture,
theft, abduction, and mutilation [who] were the first moderns.” The tactic of
the Afrofuturist artist and musician therefore is to “alienate themselves from
sonic identity and to feel at home in alienation” because, as Tate and Eshun
agree, Afro-diasporic “subjects live the estrangement that science fiction writers envision. Black existence and science fiction are one and the same.” This
future is always prismatic, usually characterized by an oscillation between preindustrial Africa and scientific Africa in a cyclically discontinuous loop. African
sonic process becomes a telecommunications medium operating through a vast
transcontinental and transtemporal web: a rhythmic cyberspace that predated
the Internet by decades. In The Last Angel of History, the protagonist is adrift in
this web, like the main character from Chris Marker’s La Jetée, searching for the
“distributed components of a code to a black secret technology that is the key to
a diasporic future.”
Forcing sonic futurism into contact with both critical and speculative science
fiction as a means to diagnosing contemporary preemptive power, Eshun suggests that Afrofuturism’s key intervention is directed toward those cybernetic
futurisms that talk “of things that haven’t happened yet in the past tense” and
thereby seek to “model variation over time by oscillating between anticipation
and determinism.” Such a science fiction capital, as Mark Fisher has described
it, produces feedback circuits that actualize desired futures within the passing
present. Against this backdrop, Eshun understands Afrofuturism’s core insight
as being precisely to pinpoint, combat, and subvert those predatory futurologies
of science fiction capital that trap Africa, and its diaspora’s future in a demoralizing doomsday of forecast archetypal dystopia, usually economic, ecological, or epidemiological, or some combination of these. As he notes, the “density
of dystopic” future casting of Africa is extreme. Afrofuturism therefore targets
the “dimension of the predictive, the projected, the proleptic, the envisioned,
the virtual, the anticipatory and the future conditional” and “the articulation
of futures within the everyday forms of the mainstream of black vernacular
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expression.” It is within this context that Sonic Warfare moves beyond traditional notions of futurism. The conception of the art of war in the art of noise is
replaced by a rhythmanalysis of preemptive power, a cartography of diasporic
bass cultures and their transduction of ecologies of dread, and an investigation of the concept of audio viruses that Afrofuturist musics and fictions have
created. In this weird climate, where control competes with aesthetics in the
speculative domain, only one thing is clear. As Whitehead wrote in Science and
the Modern World, “It is the business of the future to be dangerous.”
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Ring me alarm and not a sound is dying
ring me alarm and not a sound is sufferin’. . . .
Watch de sound man a-tremble
Watch de sound man a-pray.
—Tenor Saw, “Ring De Alarm”
In The Ecology of Fear, Mike Davis challenges the stereotype of the futuristic,
high-tech city of control as modeled on the cinematic city of Blade Runner. He
refers us instead to Octavia Butler’s Parable of the Sower, set in , as a model
of low-tech, low-rise, sprawl urbanism closer to the reality of the planet of slums
in which everyone is left to fend for themselves. As Davis has argued in other
work, this ecology of fear converges with a mutation in the mode of control as
a new cartography of danger. Transecting the nature / culture continuum, from
floods to criminality, terrorism to viral outbreaks, hurricanes to plane crashes,
the ecology of fear transforms urban design through increasingly preemptive
logics revolving around fuzzy threats whose archetype is viral.
Davis produces a diagram to illustrate the ecology of fear. It is based on a
revision of the classic sociological model of twentieth-century urban growth
developed around the specific situation of Chicago, the Burgess model. To the
socioeconomic determinants of income, land value, class, and race, Davis adds
the affective tonality of fear into the equation. Supplementing this classical model
with his own observations on Los Angeles, he notes how “security measures are
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reactions to urban unrest . . . a riot tectonics that episodically convulses and
reshapes urban space.” In the “continuing erosion of the boundary between architecture and law enforcement,” a sonic architecture of control is also emerging,
with “loudspeakers warn[ing] trespassers that they are being watched and that
authorities are on their way.” Moreover, the “sensory systems of many of Los
Angeles’s new office towers already include panopticon vision, smell, sensitivity
to temperature and humidity, motion detection, and, in a few cases, hearing.”
Vigilant control is no longer merely panoptic but pansensory.
Davis’s serial tales of doom have been at the forefront of tracking a seeping
military urbanism that enforces segmentation and mitigates against social “promiscuity (that ‘intimacy of strangers of all classes’)” by actualizing sociological categories into modulation filters determining access via checkpoints, gated
boundaries, and other means. But it is worth lingering over the addition of the
fear factor into the diagram of the control city. The “fear factor” signifies both
a generalized existential condition and a particular set of psychophysiological
behaviors.
As a generalized condition, many have begun to argue that the virtual architecture of dread defines the affective climate of early-twenty-first-century
urbanism. Conventionally construed in religious terms as an existential awe
in the presence of the divine, qualitatively distinct from fear in its tremendous
profundity, it now arguably designates the ontogenetic base of contemporary
geostrategy. It is underpinned by the feeling, as a character from William Gibson’s novel Pattern Recognition proclaims, that “we have no future because our
present is too volatile.” This looming feeling of uncertainty coincides in novel
ways with the logic of preemptive power, producing an affective jitteriness and
speculative foreclosure, the inability to think differently as control co-opts science fiction. Virilio, in his increasingly gloomy mode of address, laments the
manner in which modern art appeases this climate of anxiety. In Art and Fear,
for example, he continues his critique of futurism for installing both the art of
war and the art of noise at the heart of modernism, leading to, in the polymedia
age, the ever increasing and oversonorization of the visual. For Virilio, a sonic
war has been launched on art, threatening to kill it. And this sonic war forms a
microcosm, for him, of the “silencing of silence” in a loudness war of “shock and
awe.” For Virilio, this antinoise lament and the politics of silence it implies, in
tandem with his diatribe against speed, forms part of his consistent antifuturist
polemic. But before concurring too swiftly with such reactionary sentiments,
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it is worth delving into the workings of the affective sensorium, inquiring how
fear is induced as a sonic effect.
Virilio’s complaint resonates with that of Joachim Ernst-Berendt’s in his depiction of the sonic call to arms:
As soon as volume exceeds db, blood pressure rises. The stomach and intestine operate
more slowly, the pupils become larger, and the skin gets paler—no matter whether the
noise is found pleasant or disruptive, or is not even consciously perceived. . . . Unconsciously we always react to noise like Stone Age beings. At that time a loud noise almost
always signified danger. . . . That is therefore pre-programmed, and when millions of
young people hear excessively loud music they register: danger. They become alarmed.
That word comes from the Italian Alarm, which in turn leads to all’arme, a call to arms.
When we hear noise, we are constantly—but unconsciously—“called to arms.” We become alarmed.
Sound is often understood as generally having a privileged role in the production and modulation of fear, activating instinctive responses, triggering an evolutionary functional nervousness.
The power of sound to instill dread was well known to the heavily outnumbered Maroons, the tribal nation turned guerrilla fighters who claimed a
number of astounding victories in their asymmetric conflict with the English
colonialists in Jamaica during the late eighteenth century. The abeng, a fashioned cow horn, had two uses: by slave holders to call the slaves to the cane fields
and a “traditional form of communication among the communities, warning
them and sending messages across difficult terrain.” The Maroons used the
abeng in tandem with their other special techniques—drum communication,
the ambush, and camouflage—in order to outwit the British: “They embedded
themselves in leaves and vines and melted into the surrounding bushes. The
British repeatedly walked into clearings where their surroundings would suddenly come alive and close in on them.” The abeng, as a system of communication, produced signals “reproducing the pitch and rhythmic patterns of a
fairly small vocabulary of Twi words, from their mother language, in most cases
called Kromantin (Maroon spelling) after the Ghanaian port from which many
slave ancestors were shipped.” Sentries stationed outside the villages would
use the different pitches to communicate the British approach, the extent of the
weapons they carried, and their path. But the abeng also had another affective
function: to scare the British with its “hideous and terrible” dislocated tones,
sometimes managing to repel the invaders with sound itself. Gradually, as the
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British learned to assign a cause to its shrieking, high-pitched sound, their terror
of Maroon ambush only intensified.
The viscerality of film and media generally, and sound specifically, is certainly
a common perception, if somewhat lazily and undertheorized. Low-frequency
infrasonic tones are also said to be especially effective in the arousal of fear or
anxiety and “bad vibes.” In , the brutal French film Irreversible, directed
by Gaspar Noe, was released, loaded with ultragraphic sexual violence and a
disorienting temporality to ensure maximum effect. In addition to the intense
viscerality of the visuality of the film, its sonic dimension magnified the nauseous tone. The director stated in an interview that the music for the film was
augmented with infrasound, particularly the sound effects used by police to
quell riots by inducing slight nausea: “We added Hz of infrasound. . . . You
can’t hear it, but it makes you shake. In a good theatre with a subwoofer, you may
be more scared by the sound than by what’s happening on the screen. A lot of
people can take the images, but not the sound. Those reactions are physical.”
Infrasound is inaudible yet felt, and this can frustrate perceptual compulsions to
allocate a cause to the sound. Abstract sensations cause anxiety due to the very
absence of an object or cause. Without either, the imagination produces one,
which can more frightening than the reality.
While the ability to interpret sounds and attribute likely causes to them is
learned culturally so as to instruct on the particular danger to each species, it
is also argued that this is built on top of an evolutionary hard-wired instinct to
respond appropriately, for the sake of survival, to any threat indicated by sound.
To prolong survival, it is claimed, the body has developed three basic affects
in response to fear: the fight, flight, and freeze responses. These three affects
travel down three lines: the line of attack, the line of flight, and the line of fright.
Conflict, escape, and immobility. Some commentators have drawn our attention
to the contrasting behavior of young humans—how for children, fear comes
through the ears rather the eyes. Even as adults, the effects of noise, strange
tones, and powerful amplitudes in intensifying terror are facts taken for granted.
Take the siren, for example. Invented by Seeback in the nineteenth century, “The
siren broadcasts distress. It is a centrifugal sound designed to scatter people in
its path” by pulsing waves of nonlinguistic command to disperse a population.
A siren obviously signifies alarm, but more interestingly here, its very modulation of frequency produces a state of alert that can undermine and override
cognition. Burglar alarms, ring tones, alarm clock, fire alarms: a whole directly
affective asignifying semiotics of emergency, a call to action, the inducement
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of a state of readiness, initiating a kind of technical antiphony. Wake up! Run!
Beware! Respond! Act!
In evolutionary terms, it is taken for granted that the imperatives of the survival of the organism demarcate the primary function of the auditory system.
Second-wave cyberneticist Heinz Foerster suggested that the auditory system
is served by biological means “to infer from the sounds that are perceived the
sources that produced these sounds. When the sources are identified, more clues
relating to the state and kind of its environment are available to an organism,
and in a few tenths of a second it may swing from a state of utter tranquility into
one of a dozen or two modes of behaviour . . . depending on what is implied by
the presence of a particular source.”
The story here, the directionality of its chain of events, is a common one that
persists into contemporary cognitivist neuroscience: sound—cognitive classification of sound to attribute external source and internal subjective emotion,
movement, or activation of the body in response to the emotion. However, this
model rests on certain problematic presuppositions regarding the relation between mind and body and their activation, between feeling and emotion. The
point of departure for an affective analysis is the disjunction between stimulus
and response, cause and effect. If affect operates across the nature-culture continuum, problematizing the difference between what is preprogrammed into
the body and what are learned responses, then what is meant by an instinctual
response to sound? How are so-called instinctual responses sometimes shortcircuited in the intensification of joy? And what happens when there is a more
complex, nonlinear array of sensorienvironmental conditions at work, when
effects become autonomous from causes, when sounds evacuate their source,
when fear becomes self-producing?
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You are sitting calmly minding your own business. Suddenly you hear a sound.
Looking around, it seems to be emanating from a source up on the wall in the corner of the room. Checking that it did not signal anything significant, you return to
your business of staring intensely at the wall. Suddenly the tone sounds again, but
this time, instantaneously, you feel a sharp jolt of pain pulse up from the floor. You
freeze with shock, until the moment the sound, the pain, passes. What the hell? Just
as you are regaining your composure, the sound starts again. Without thinking,
you freeze, as if shocked again, but you eventually notice that that shooting pain is
not there. What happened? You’re a rat, have been fear conditioned, and Pavlov
is probably sitting around the corner.
In his book The Emotional Brain, Joseph Ledoux discusses the neuroscience of
the sonic activation of fear in a manner that owes much to William James’s classic formulation, but also the behaviorism of Pavlov. In summary, Ledoux is
interested in how cognitive faculties are short-circuited in the process of activation and how a conscious emotion is unnecessary in producing fear responses.
Ledoux discovers through his experiments that the higher cognitive faculties of
the auditory cortex do not need to be engaged for fear responses to be engaged.
Rather, stimuli are routed straight from the thalamus lower down in the brain
to the amygdala, which he discovered was sufficient to elicit “freezing behaviour, autonomic responses, suppression of pain, stress hormone release, and
reflex potentiation.” While the thalamic system cannot make the qualitative
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distinctions that the auditory cortex can, it is much quicker. Ledoux concludes
that in fact, the higher cognitive functions of the cortex merely serve as filters
for decisions already made, subtracting some, complying with others. Although
this is a powerful analysis, Ledoux is weaker on issues such as the transduction
of fear, sounds that are in themselves painful as opposed to just being associated
with pain, and also seems to have a somewhat misleading notion of the auditory
channel as a frictionless relay of undisturbed information.
Nevertheless, his formulation of this Jamesian legacy of affective neuroscience is crucial. This legacy is also taken up and extrapolated in a series of essays
on fear and preemption by Brian Massumi dating back to the s. The fear
response becomes a kind of model of temporality generalizable, to pry open
the intricate relations between virtual power, affect and futurity. The body’s
autonomic, behavioral, and emotional responses to ontological insecurity have
always exceeded commonsense formulas, and Massumi draws from a line of
affective thought that stretches from Spinoza through William James and onto
Whitehead to take us elsewhere. Instead of essential instincts, we have what
Spinoza called the appetites: a body’s conatus, or striving to persist in its power
to affect and be affected, its potential. Whereas instinct usually denotes a closed,
preprogrammed system with no room for change, appetite is future facing and
always in conjunction with the body’s relation to a shifting ecology, its openended relationality.
The rhythm of events that an affect-centric theory maps is configured differently from that of cognitivist neuroscience and is closer, though not always
identical to, the formulations of Ledoux and Damasio. For Massumi, the sonic
activation of the affective sensorium produces a basic autonomic response: “As
you cross a busy noonday street, your stomach turns somersaults before you
consciously hear and identify the sound of screeching brakes that careens towards you. . . . The immediacy of visceral perception is so radical that it can said
without exaggeration to precede the exteroceptive sense perception. It anticipates the translation of the sight or sound or touch perception into something
recognizably associated with an identifiable object.” In this example of visceral
perception initiated by the sound of the screeching brakes, the plunging stomach marks the incipience of the line of flight, its preacceleration. Here also the
threat, active nonconsciously in advance, of impending doom, is backed up by
the sheer metallic tonnage of the incoming vehicle. In the sense identified by
William James in his psychology of fear, autonomically the body makes the
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decision to act, with the emotion and corollary conscious decision to act being
merely a retrospective description of the feeling of the body’s decision.
In the ecology of fear, however, threat becomes spectral. Effect becomes autonomous from cause. Unlike earlier modes of management of the future such
as deterrence, preemptive security does not prevent but rather induces the
event, no longer warding off its arrival in a negative anticipation; preemption
positively actualizes the future in the present, or at least the effects of events
yet to come, to the extent that the cause of the effects, that is, the event, need
not necessarily happen. The effects are real, a real and present danger, while
the event as cause, or quasi-cause as Massumi describes it, is virtual, a real and
future-past danger. That the effects are real compels security to act on the level
of virtual threat, responding to the actualization and perpetuating an ecology of
fear. This actualization catalyzed by preemptive security involves the production
of the signs of alarm as a response to threat, producing a readiness through inducing fear. By taking action in an unpredictable environment, security inserts
a minimal dose of surety, a fear that has already been secured in advance. The
fear becomes autonomous and escalative, a self-fulfilling, self-effecting prophecy: “Threat triggers fear. The fear is of disruption. The fear is a disruption.”
In this ecology, the micropolitics of sonically signaling threat attains a reenergized significance. Both operating under and percolating through the mesh of
language—from radio to rumor to terror alert sirens on megalopian transport
infrastructures—the sound of the alarm functions as an index of this paradoxical, self-actualizing threat. In preemptive modes, the sign of the event no longer
has to wait for the anticipated event. The sound in fact beckons the event. The
vibrations of the alarm literally set the affective tone, the collective mood. What
is edginess, nervousness, or the jitters if not the potential of vibrations to spiral
into goalless, open-ended hyperactivity?
This intensified viscerality of power requires an analysis operating on the preindividual plane of affect, in the turbulent boundary layer between subjective
experience and the world, where virtual threats have real effects. Such modes of
control modulation operate impersonally. A veneer of cognitive processing and
phenomenological subjective agency therefore only conceals power’s real pressure points. As Massumi forcefully argues, preemptive power addresses “bodies
from the dispositional angle of their affectivity, instead of addressing subjects
from the positional angle of their ideations, shunt[ing] government function
away from the mediations of adherence or belief and toward direct activation.”
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It signals, he continues, a mode of governmentality that can “possess” an individual through the emission of sign-acts. The human actor triggering an alarm
merely plays a catalytic role, enveloped in a self-effecting networked agency. In
such a capillary network, the sonic security nexus is subject of the event, and
the induced collective fear is object. Such a network effects bodily actions as a
by-product of affective activation.
In Massumi’s theory, which is the most sophisticated synthesis of such approaches, the affective tonality of the fearful encounter precedes its bifurcation
into subject and object. In the onset of the event, the body-environment acts as
one, with an immediate continuity of the extensive movement of the body and
the intensive affect of fear. The vector of the event, in its unfolding, passes down
the line of flight, pulling the environment into its slipstream. The event bifurcates. The action ceases, its movement dissipated. The vortical blur of fearful
movement congeals into the stasis of segmented, objective space, scanned for
potential weapons or to retrospectively attribute causes to effects. What happened? Meanwhile the affect continues to unravel further, becoming distinct,
finally as a feeling of fear. The fearful feeling that animated the whole unfolding becomes the feeling of fear: from experience being imminent to the fearful
event, to the fear as emotional content of the experience. As the event unfolds,
it is interiorized and domesticated and passes from the nonphenomenal to the
phenomenal. The continuous, qualitative, intensive vector of affective tonality
is chopped up into comparable, relative, numbered magnitudes (more or less
frightened). In parallel, then, as affect becomes emotion, sensation becomes
perception and movement finds pause. The fearful feeling becomes a feeling of
fear. The noisy feeling becomes a feeling of noise. Sensing becomes hearing. A
movement of the body becomes a movement of thought becomes a movement
of the body—a whole rhythmanalysis of the affective sensorium under sonic
activation—the body as transducer of affective tonality, sensing as the qualification of affective tone, and perception as the quantification of affective tone. The
conscious classification of an affective pitch or vector of feeling into attributable sounds is preempted by amodality, therefore preceding the designation of
a sensation to a specific exteroceptive sensory channel. In this sense, the sonic
encounter does most of its affective work before cognitive appropriation by the
sense of audition.
Bearing in mind the affective disjunction between causes and effects of fear,
Virilio is way too quick to condemn the sonorization of art for complicity with
“shock and awe,” for appeasing and reinforcing the ecology of fear. While the
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ecology of fear is a virtual factory for the production of existential anxiety, the
exorcism of this dread, through its preemptive production, has been a central
objective of affective hackers. In the late twentieth century, urban machine musics in their sonic sciences of affective contagion have preoccupied themselves
with generating soundtracks to sonically enact the demise of Babylon, mutating
the early-twentieth-century concerns of audio futurism (war, noise, speed and
sensation) into the construction of ephemeral, mutant, sonic war machines. As
Kodwo Eshun has described it, music in a condition of sonic dominance often
thrives on the scrambling of instinctual responses: “Your fear-flight thresholds
are screaming, it’s like your whole body’s turned into this giant series of alarm
bells, like your organs want to run away from you. It’s like your leg wants to head
north and your arms want to head south, and your feet want to take off somewhere else. It’s like your entire body would like to vacate. Basically, you want to
go AWOL, from yourself. But you can’t, so you stay and enjoy it.”
The mechanics of film sound design are also revealing. In the cinematic experience, the frisson that acute fear produces—the sensation of chills, waves
of shivers up and down the spine, goose bumps and hairs standing on end
(piloerection)—is actively pursued. The interplay of fear and threat is evoked by
narrative tactics of tension such as suspense, a gradual buildup through delaying the arrival of the event whose occurrence resolves the tension, and surprise,
working on the effect of the unexpected, the unforeseen, a shock. Film sound
modulates affect by tapping into and rewiring the line of attack, the line of flight,
and the line of fright. The mechanics of the aesthetization of fear within music
and sound design already gives clues to some tactics for channeling the negative energies of the ecology of fear, confiscating them from the architectures of
security. Neither Virilio’s lament on the sonification of art nor Mike Davis’s total
dystopias leave much room for such deployments. While sonic mood modulation becomes another dimension of the ambiences of control, it would be foolish
to ignore the complex affects of the ecology of fear for the sake of a too hasty
politics of silence. At very least, the transduction of bad vibes into something
more constructive suggests the need to probe more deeply into affective tonality
and the vibrations of the environment.
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Neo-Tokyo.
An elaborate terrorist plot is staged, stringing together an infovirus, architectural
vibration, and inaudible frequencies to catalyze a revolt of machine slaves and
bring down the towers of the Babylon Project. The sinister plot was to hack into
and infect the operating system of the ,-strong, Transformer-like, robotic police force (the patrol labors, or Patlabors for short). When two cops were sent out to
investigate an unexplained wave of rogue Patlabors rampaging across the city, they
uncover the sinister revenge plot to infect the city’s population of labors with the
BABEL virus. This computer virus in the Hyper-Operating System could be triggered only by a very specific frequency of sound. This tone, a high-pitch whistle, is
emitted only by the sympathetic vibrations generated by the resonating skyscrapers
of the Babylon Project as it channels, like a huge tuning fork, the winds of a massive tropical typhoon. The whistle is inaudible to humans but not to the cybernetic
audio sensors of the Patlabors, which are much more sensitive. If unleashed, the
virus threatens to spread across the robots, forcing them to defect, mutating them
into terrorists, and causing the population to descend into panic-stricken chaos.
Patlabor, a slice of Japanese animation from , describes a city whose future hangs in the balance, permanently on the brink of dystopia. The immanent
threat of meltdown is set up with a delirious complexity at which Manga typically excels. A number of features make this crazed yet weirdly prophetic science
fiction of interest here. First, the vibrational architecture of the city becomes a
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weapon. The city is no longer merely the site of warfare but, as a result of the
resonant frequency of the built environment, the very medium of warfare itself.
Using emitted tones as a chance triggering device, the plot tunes into the city as
an instrument, not just venue, of terror. Second, in its imagination of disaster,
this scenario is properly ecological in a manner befitting the conflicts of the
twenty-first century. It sketches an ecology no longer confined to the “natural” and the organic, but rather one that encompasses the climatic, the artificial
environment of the urban, and the affective drift of the city’s inhabitants. It is
an ecology in which volatile processes in one milieu transfer their energy into
volatile processes in another milieu, from typhoon, to architectural resonance,
to infovirus, to robot revolt, to the fear of population turbulence. Third, in the
Babel virus, Patlabor indicates that the virus, whether biological, computer, or
affective, is the abstract model of threat in cybernetic control societies. Finally,
audition has been upgraded. This is a cybernetically upgraded mode of perception in which the bandwidth of hearable frequencies has been technically
expanded.
What if, however, the shifting relation between the audible and the inaudible was not merely a matter of technical upgrades to the human sensorium
but rather indicated a kind of policing of frequency that distributes that which
is sonically sensed? In Patlabor, moreover, the emitted frequency was merely
a switch, triggering the technical cascade of the weapon: the computer virus
tagged Babel. But what if the actual weapon was vibration itself, and its target
not the operating systems of robots but the affective operating system of the
city’s population? This would be a scenario in which that which was being transmitted would be not just information but bad vibes. In this ecology, an event
would simultaneously draw in the physics of its environment (its vibrations)
and the moods of its populace (its vibes), sending an immense collective shiver
through the urban as resonating surface.
The work of American artist Mark Bain draws attention to the primacy of
vibration in any discussion of sound, affect, and power. Bain is a vibration artist.
He repurposes military and police research into infrasonic and ultrasonic weaponry intended as crowd control devices in order to create an ethico-aesthetic
intervention into the resonant frequency of objects and the built environment.
He deploys infrasound, that is, sounds at frequencies below the threshold of
hearing, to investigate the unpredictable effects on movement, sensation, and
mood. For example, a typical occurrence related to vibration is its effect on the
vestibular system and the sense of orientation in which balance can be modu-
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lated so that suddenly your perception is, as Bain describes it, that of “surfing
the architectural plane.”
As opposed to a sound artist, he describes the sonic effects of his work as
side effects, or artifacts, merely an expression of a more fundamental subsonic
vibrational ecology. Bain seeks to tap into a “secret world of sound resident
within materials. Using multiple oscillators . . . it becomes more like an additive
synthesis type of production.” He unleashes the contagiousness of vibration in
the production of a “‘transient architecture’ that describes a system of infection
where action modulates form . . . where stability disintegrates” and effects are
“re-injected into the walls of the ‘host’ site” in a “translation of sorts, one building’s sound infecting another.”
Influenced by and mutating Matta Clark’s notion of anarchitecture, Bain has
referred to his work as both “massaging buildings” and a kind of “architerrorism.” In one of his more recent pieces, he turned the seismological data recorded from the September attacks into a musical composition, using data
gathered from a Columbia University listening station located miles north
of New York City. Bain was fascinated by what he called the “screamingness of
the earth,” its countless, constantly active, inaudible pulsing and vibration. In
addition to collating seismological information, increasing its frequency range,
amplifying its volume, and stretching it out in time to render it audible, Bain’s
research has revolved around a series of installations such as The Live Room, in
which he attaches oscillators to buildings to make them resonate, the sounds
enveloping and immersing the audience. This trembling envelope, Bain argues,
produces a vibrational topology or “connective tissue” between one building and
another and the bodies in attendance.
Bain’s work resonates with Augoyard and Torgue’s call in Sonic Experience for
the audible city to be understood less in terms of sound objects and the soundscape but rather as an instrumentarium. He notes that “one of the things that
is interesting about the building being sized so large: when I am putting energy
into it, it acts as a radiator, or a speaker in a sense. The surfaces are rattling and
vibrating out. What you hear is the movement of the building. Most of it is
subsonic though, and it has this heaviness that relates to the heaviness of the
architecture. I like this massiveness of the sound.”
If the built environment is frozen music, then the freeze occurs in both the
folding of tectonics into architectonics and of vibration into organized sound or
music. Architecture is designed to withstand a spectrum of vibrational strains,
from the accident of the earthquake to the infrasonic infrastructure produced
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by hydraulic channels, ventilation shafts, and reverberations of passing traffic.
A bass materialism or vernacular seismology returns the vibrational event of
liquefaction back to the city. It promotes an anarchitecture that is no longer
merely deconstructive in style, but rather experiments with sonic liquefaction,
where interior and exterior and discreet entities are unfolded onto a continuum
of differential vibration. The concrete ripples and pulses with invisible vortical
force fields. Objects become vectorial, simultaneously projectile and contagious,
defying gravity, sliding across horizontal surfaces. The air becomes heavy, and
metal screams under the torque. Liquids become turbulent; vortices emerge.
But aside from these physical interventions, this anarchitecture also modulates
affective tonality and mutates ambience. The weightless, perfumed music described by Brian Eno congeals in the dread, heavy space of a drowned world.
The city submerged in an infrasonic soup—a contagious swamp of rumbles,
gurglings, and murmurs. A reservoir of potential.
A vibrational anarchitecture occupies a topological mediatic space that cuts
across the plexus of the analog and the digital, their nested intertwining. The
conception of a vibrational topology can be approached initially through cymatics and the experimental work of Hans Jenny. Cymatics revolved around
the way in which materials, objects, and entities affect and are affected by vibration and the way rhythmic motion can become apparent in static objects
as well as in moving objects, producing not just patterns but forms continuous
with the vibrational environment. Looking at the effects of oscillation, gradients, and fluctuation on media by passing viscous substances through vibrating
of magnetic fields, Jenny was able to speculate on the generation of structures
implicated into the environment. When experimenting with the generation of
special sonorous patterns in a liquid metal such as mercury, he noted the formation of wave patterns, vortices, and other hydrodynamic phenomena. For Jenny,
cymatic observation focused on “the rhythmic beat, the circulation, the ever
recurrent rotations” and the way such substances “always present themselves
as a whole entity which at the same time oscillates, vibrates, flows within itself,
pulsates and moves to-and-fro. . . . Such turbulences are of particular interest in
that they render the environment sensitive to the effects of sound.” Cymatics
therefore provides an initial model for an ontology of vibrational force based
on analog wave phenomena. However, other approaches are required to those
based in analog continuity to conceptualize the status of vibrational force and its
coding within digital culture.
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From cymatics to the vibratory anarchitecture practiced by artists such as
Mark Bain, the vernacular seismology and sonic dominance practiced by the
bass materialists of the musical diaspora of Jamaican sound system culture, a
set of experimental practices to intensify vibration has been developed for unfolding the body onto a vibrational discontinuum that differentially traverses the
media of the earth, built environment, analog and digital sound technologies,
industrial oscillators, and the human body. Each actual occasion of experience
that populates this discontinuum will be termed a vibrational nexus, drawing in
an array of elements into its collective shiver.
This differential ecology of vibrational effects directs us toward a nonanthropocentric ontology of ubiquitous media, a topology in which every resonant
surface is potentially a host for contagious concepts, percepts, and affects. In
this speculative conception of ubiquitous media, not just screens (and the networks they mask everywhere) but all matter becomes a reservoir of mediatic
contagion. By approaching this topology of vibrational surfaces without constraint to merely semiotic registers that produce the “interminable compulsion”
to communicate, media themselves are allowed to become fully expressive. An
outline of a vibrational anarchitecture, then, diagrams a topological mediatic
space that cuts across the plexus of the analog and digital, the waveform and
the numeric sonic grain, implicating the continuity of the wave into the atomism of the granular. It will be argued that the quantum field of this vibrational
anarchitecture constitutes the most elementary battlefield of sonic warfare and
the microtexture of its weapons and targets.
This ontology of vibrational force is constructed through bass materialist
research concepts and practices. Bass figures as exemplary because of all frequency bands within a sonic encounter, it most explicitly exceeds mere audition
and activates the sonic conjunction with amodal perception: bass is not just
heard but is felt. Often sub-bass cannot be heard or physically felt at all, but still
transforms the ambience of a space, modulating its affective tonality, tapping
into the resonant frequency of objects, rendering the virtual vibrations of matter vaguely sensible. Bass demands more theoretical attention, as it is too often
equated with a buzzing confusion of sensation and therefore the enemy of clear
auditory perception and, by implication, clear thought. But for many artists,
musicians, dancers, and listeners, vibratory immersion provides the most conducive environment for movements of the body and movements of thought.
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13.7 Billion B.C.: The Ontology of Vibrational Force
That humming background sound is ancient—the ringing of a huge bell. Exploding into a mass of intensely hot matter, pulsing out vast sound waves, contracting
and expanding the matter, heating where compressed, cooling where it was less
dense. This descending tone parallels the heat death of the universe, connecting all
the discrete atoms into a vibrational wave. This cosmic background radiation is
the echo of the big bang.
Outlining the affective micropolitics of sonic warfare demands a specifically
tuned methodology. Drawing from philosophy, cultural studies, physics, biology, fiction, and military and musical history, an ontology of vibrational force
can be pieced together that traverses disciplines. An ontology of vibrational
force delves below a philosophy of sound and the physics of acoustics toward
the basic processes of entities affecting other entities. Sound is merely a thin
slice, the vibrations audible to humans or animals. Such an orientation therefore
should be differentiated from a phenomenology of sonic effects centered on the
perceptions of a human subject, as a ready-made, interiorized human center of
being and feeling. While an ontology of vibrational force exceeds a philosophy
of sound, it can assume the temporary guise of a sonic philosophy, a sonic intervention into thought, deploying concepts that resonate strongest with sound /
noise / music culture, and inserting them at weak spots in the history of Western
philosophy, chinks in its character armor where its dualism has been bruised, its
ocularcentrism blinded.
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The theoretical objective here resonates with Kodwo Eshun in More Brilliant
Than the Sun when he objects to cultural studies approaches in which “theory
always comes to Music’s rescue. The organization of sound interpreted historically, politically, socially. Like a headmaster, theory teaches today’s music a thing
or about life. It subdues music’s ambition, reins it in, restores it to its proper
place.” Instead, if they are not already, we place theory under the dominion of
sonic affect, encouraging a conceptual mutation. Sound comes to the rescue of
thought rather than the inverse, forcing it to vibrate, loosening up its organized
or petrified body. As Eshun prophetically wrote at the end of the twentieth century, “Far from needing theory’s help, music today is already more conceptual
than at any point this century, pregnant with thought probes waiting to be activated, switched on, misused.”
An ontology of vibrational force objects to a number of theoretical orientations. First, the linguistic imperialism that subordinates the sonic to semiotic
registers is rejected for forcing sonic media to merely communicate meaning,
losing sight of the more fundamental expressions of their material potential as
vibrational surfaces, or oscillators.
Despite being endlessly inspired by intensive confrontation with bass frequencies, neither should an ontology of vibrational force be misconceived as
either a naive physicalism in which all vibrational affect can be reduced scientifically. Such a reductionist materialism that merely reduces the sonic to a quantifiable objectivity is inadequate in that it neglects incorporeal affects. A concern
for elementary vibrations must go beyond their quantification in physics into
primary frequencies. On the other hand, the phenomenological anthropocentrism of almost all musical and sonic analysis, obsessed with individualized,
subjective feeling, denigrates the vibrational nexus at the altar of human audition, thereby neglecting the agency distributed around a vibrational encounter
and ignoring the nonhuman participants of the nexus of experience.
Rather, it is a concern for potential vibration and the abstract rhythmic relation of oscillation, which is key. What is prioritized here is the in-between of
oscillation, the vibration of vibration, the virtuality of the tremble. Vibrations
always exceed the actual entities that emit them. Vibrating entities are always
entities out of phase with themselves. A vibratory nexus exceeds and precedes
the distinction between subject and object, constituting a mesh of relation in
which discreet entities prehend each other’s vibrations. Not just amodal, this
vibrational anarchitecture, it will be suggested, produces the very division between subjective and objective, time and space.
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13.7 Billion B.C.: The Ontology of Vibrational Force
If this ontology of vibrational force can help construct a conception of a politics of frequency, then it must go beyond the opposition between a celebration of
the jouissance of sonic physicality and the semiotic significance of its symbolic
composition or content. But enough negative definitions.
If affect describes the ability of one entity to change another from a distance,
then here the mode of affection will be understood as vibrational. In The Ethics,
Spinoza describes an ecology of movements and rest, speeds and slownesses,
and the potential of entities to affect and be affected. This ecology will be constructed as a vectorial field of “affectiles” (affect + projectile), or what William
James refers to as pulsed vectors of feeling. As an initiation of a politics of frequency, it resonates with the ballistics of the battlefield as acoustic force field
described by the futurists. This vectorial field of sonic affectiles is aerodynamic,
but it can also be illuminated by rhythmic models of liquid instability that constitute a kind of abstract vorticism.
This vibrational ontology begins with some simple premises. If we subtract
human perception, everything moves. Anything static is so only at the level
of perceptibility. At the molecular or quantum level, everything is in motion,
is vibrating. Equally, objecthood, that which gives an entity duration in time,
makes it endure, is an event irrelevant of human perception. All that is required
is that an entity be felt as an object by another entity. All entities are potential
media that can feel or whose vibrations can be felt by other entities. This is a
realism, albeit a weird, agitated, and nervous one. An ontology of vibrational
force forms the backdrop to the affective agency of sound systems (the sonic
nexus), their vibrational ontology (rhythmanalysis), and their modes of contagious propagation (audio virology). In its primary amodality and secondary
affinity to the sonic, a discussion of vibrational ecologies also helps counter ocularcentric (modeled on vision as dominant sensory modality) conceptions of
cyberspace, contributing to a notion of virtual space that cuts across analog and
digital domains.
This ontology is concerned primarily with the texturhythms of matter, the
patterned physicality of a musical beat or pulse, sometimes imperceptible,
sometimes, as cymatics shows, in some sensitive media, such as water or sand,
visible. While it can be approached from an array of directions, the ontology of
vibrational force will be explored here by three disciplinary detours: philosophy,
physics, and the aesthetics of digital sound. In each, the stakes are fundamental.
Philosophically, the question of vibrational rhythm shoots right to the core of
an ontology of things and processes and the status of (dis)continuities between
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them. In physics, the status of the rhythms of change, the oscillation between
movement and rest, plays out in the volatile, far-from-equilibrium zones of turbulent dynamics. While the modeling of turbulence has become the computational engineering problem par excellence for control, within the domain of
digital sound design, the generation of microsonic turbulence by the manipulation of molecular rhythms accessible only through the mesh of the digital has
become a key aesthetic and textural concern. Each of these fields will be mined
to construct a transdisciplinary foundation to the concept of sonic warfare and
its deployments of vibrational force.
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1931: Rhythmanalysis
Rhythmanalysis describes those philosophical attempts to take rhythm as more
than an object of study, transforming it into a method. Rhythmanalysis understands both natural and cultural processes in terms of rhythm. It stands as an
interesting example where the history of philosophy takes on a sonic inflection,
becoming infected by musical metaphors in an attempt to approach something
that eludes it. Rhythmanalysis often installs itself ontologically prior to the division of space and time, occupying the domain of intensive matter. According
to recent accounts, the term rhythmanalysis was invented in an unpublished
text by a Brazilian philosopher, Pinheiro dos Santos. Dos Santos sought an
ontology of vibration, where vibration at the molecular, or even deeper at the
quantum, level constitutes the fundamental yet abstract movement of matter.
This mantle was taken up by French philosopher of science Gaston Bachelard in
his critique of Henri Bergson’s concept of continuity, The Dialectic of Duration. The chapter entitled “Rhythmanalysis” in Bachelard’s text appears to be the
most detailed exposition of dos Santos’s theory and would prove foundational to
Henri Lefebvre’s later writings that attempted to move beyond an analysis of the
production of space for which he became renowned. Rhythmanalysis, for dos
Santos and Bachelard, operates on three levels: physical, biological, and psychoanalytical. Bachelard was keen to avoid a “mystique of rhythm,” constructing instead a rhythmic realism. Following dos Santos, he therefore sought to ground
rhythmanalysis in early-twentieth-century innovations within quantum physics regarding the particle / wave composition of matter / energy. On a mission
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to factor in time to inert conceptions of matter yet in a fashion divergent from
Bergson, Bachelard noted that matter
is not just sensitive to rhythms but it exists, in the fullest sense of the term, on the level of
rhythm. The time in which matter develops some of its fragile manifestations is a time
that undulates like a wave that has but one uniform way of being: the regularity of frequency. As soon as the different substantial powers of matter are studied in detail, these
powers present themselves as frequencies. In particular, as soon as we get down to the
detail of exchanges of energy between different kinds of chemical matter, these exchanges
are seen to take place in a rhythmic way, through the indisposable intermediary of radiations with specific frequencies.
Rhythmanalysis here outlines the remit for a vibrational ontology:
If a particle ceased to vibrate, it would cease to be. It is now impossible to conceive the
existence of an element of matter without adding to that element a specific frequency. We
can therefore say that vibratory energy is the energy of existence. . . . The initial problem
is not so much to ask how matter vibrates as to ask how vibration can take on material
aspects. . . . It should not be said that substance develops and reveals itself from a rhythm,
but rather that it is regular rhythm which appears in the form of a specific material attribute. The material aspect . . . is but a confused aspect. Strictly speaking, the material
aspect is realised confusion.
In deploying rhythmanalysis, Bachelard’s theory has interesting implications
for a number of philosophical traits that became popular in late-twentiethcentury topologically informed philosophy deriving from Bergson. An investigation of some of these divergences is productive in refining the ontology of
vibrational force suggested by rhythmanalysis. For Bachelard, it was rhythm and
not melody that formed the image of duration. He warned of the misleading application of melody as a metaphor for duration. He wrote that music’s action was
discontinuous, and it was only its perception that provides it with an appearance
of continuity by the employment of an always incomplete and deferred temporal
synthesis. For him, this synthesis is what gives, in retrospect, melodic continuity
to more or less isolated sonic sensations. By emphasizing rhythm over melody,
Bachelard is emphasizing intensity over duration, arguing in fact that duration
is merely an effect of intensity, in opposition to Bergson’s notion of interpenetration. The endurance of a sonic event, the length of a note, pertains here to a
second order and “entails a kind of acoustic penumbra that does not enter into
the precise arithmetic of rhythm.” In summary, a key principle of Bachelard’s
“generalized rhythmics” is the “restoration of form. A characteristic is rhythmic
if it is restored. It then has duration through an essential dialectic. . . . If a rhythm
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clearly determines a characteristic, it will often affect related ones. In restoring
a form, a rhythm often restores matter and energy. . . . Rhythm really is the only
way of disciplining and preserving the most diverse energies.”
Like all good rhythmanalysts, Bachelard asserts the basic rhythmic character of matter in vibration. He shows how physics understands the relation between microrhythmic discord (what he calls the “anarchy of vibrations”) and
macrolevel stability. Sometimes, however, his emphasis seems firmly placed on
rhythmic equilibrium and harmony. For example, he asserts that “when life is
successful, it is made of well-ordered times; vertically, it is made of superimposed and richly orchestrated instants; horizontally, it is linked to itself by the
perfect cadence of successive instants that are unified in their role.” Bachelard,
instead of using rhythmanalysis to flatten nature and culture onto a vibratory
plane of consistency, constructs a hierarchy of rhythms and elevates organic life
over the anorganic: “We shall come to consider living matter as richer in timbres, more sensitive to echoes, and more extravagant with resonance than inert
matter is.” As a rationalist, he depicts the mind as “master of arpeggio.” Yet
the question pertains as to why novelty is often produced when rhythms tend
toward “far-from-equilibrium” conditions. Moreover, what is the status of the
body or, better, the body-mind for this rhythmic methodology?
The concepts of dos Santos and Bachelard were taken up and further developed, expanded, and applied by Henri Lefebvre into what he describes as
the “rhythmanalytical project.” Following Bachelard’s problematic dialectical
critique of Bergson’s duration, Lefebvre’s sense of rhythm is founded on a temporal philosophy of “moments,” “instants,” or “crises.” Crucially, Lefebvre suggested that rhythm perhaps presupposes “a unity of time and space: an alliance.”
For Lefebvre, rhythm consisted of “a) Temporal elements that are thoroughly
marked, accentuated, hence contrasting, even opposed like strong and weak
times. b) An overall movement that takes with it all these elements . . . through
this double aspect, rhythm enters into a general construction of time, of movement and becoming. And consequently into its philosophical problematic: repetition and becoming.”
Usefully Lefebvre generated a concept of the rhythmic body that individuates along the lines of an array of rhythmic compositions such as “isorhythmia
(the equality of rhythms) . . . polyrhythmia is composed of diverse rhythms. . . .
Eurhythmia . . . presupposes the association of different rhythms [and] . . . arrhythmia, rhythms break apart, alter and bypass synchronisation.” However,
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while Lefebvre did much to consolidate a philosophy of rhythm, his cursory
comments remain somewhat underdeveloped.
Rhythmanalysis, in this fascinating tradition that stretches from dos Santos
to Bachelard and Lefebvre, remains problematic for a number of reasons. In
each case, the orientation seems too concerned by the equilibrium of rhythmic systems, by their harmonization in a hierarchy of instants. This limitation
seems to leave very little room for rhythmic innovation, stifling the potential
to think change and the invention of the new. Perhaps this limit points to the
core of Bachelard’s argument with Bergson in the Dialectic of Duration. While
Bergson, in Matter and Memory, for example, emphasizes continuity in relation
to duration, for Bachelard, time is fractured, interrupted, multiple, and discrete.
Bachelard’s project was to pursue the paradox of a discontinuous Bergsonism:
“to arithmetise Bergsonian duration.” While for Bergson, the instant represents an illusionary, spatialized view of time, Bachelard wants to prioritize the
instant as pure event in a hierarchy of instants. Bachelard argues that in defining
duration as a continuous succession of qualitatively different states, Bergson
tends to erode the singularity of instants; they merely fade or melt into one another like musical notes. Again, while for Bergson time is visibly continuous,
for Bachelard, the microscopic or quantum, that is, invisible, domain of divergences, discontinuities, and vibrations is concealed by the simple movement
image. Yet Bergson is thinking of vibration in a very different manner. In Matter
and Memory, he factored in molecular vibration as that which provides continuous movement to that which appears as static or discrete objects. As Bergson
notes, matter “resolves itself into numberless vibrations, all linked together in
uninterrupted continuity, all bound up with each other, and traveling in every direction like shivers through an immense body.” Once vibrations with
frequencies in excess of human perception are acknowledged, Bergson must
insist on multiple rhythms of duration to ensure that quality retains priority over
quantity. Yet it is exactly these numberless vibrations that Bachelard wishes to
arithmetize. This will prove a crucial point of divergence between Bachelard’s
philosophy of rhythm and Bergsonian theories grounded in continuity. The
implications become particularly pointed within debates surrounding the status of the virtual within digital aesthetics. For now, it suffices to say that while
Bachelard’s insistence on a vibrational ontology is crucial, his reliance on dialectics to reanimate a continuity broken by instants seems to reduce the power of
his philosophy of rhythm, relying as it does on polarization over more sophisticated conceptions of relation.
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In summary, a rhythmanalytic method potentially offers a foundation for
approaching sonic warfare that attempts to sidestep the bifurcation of nature
and instead focuses on the fold of the concrete and abstract, the analog and the
digital, without the homogenizing sweep that many find in Bergson’s continuity of duration, and the analog fetishism of which it is accused. For example, it
has become increasingly common, in post-Deleuzo-Guattarian thought, to take
flow in itself as the backdrop of the world or, in rhythmic terms, to emphasize
the relation between beats at the expense of the event of pulse. This has been
an unfortunate emphasis, especially taking into account the machinic conception of the break and flow crucial to the early sections of Anti-Oedipus and the
role that Bachelard plays in Deleuze and Guattari’s theory of rhythm in “Of the
Refrain.” A route through rhythmanalysis seeks to account for the rhythmic vibration between break and flow, between particle and wave, which postquantum formulations of matter insist on. Yet between Bergson and Bachelard,
between duration and the instant, between continuity and discontinuity, a kind
of metaphysical deadlock was reached with reverberations that persist into the
twenty-first century. For an escape route from this deadlock, it is perhaps necessary to look elsewhere.
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1900: The Vibrational Nexus
While Bachelard argued that the primary continuity proposed by Bergson
drains the concept of the event, moment, or instant of its singularity, it is necessary to go beyond or stretch his conception of rhythmanalysis to be able to
conceive of singular thresholds in the vibratory composition of matter at which
the propagation of vibration is activated. These intensive vibrations could be
conceived of as the vibration of vibration. At a certain rhythmic density, a threshold is crossed in the process of individuation, producing a body in excess of its
constituent particles, a vortical body out of phase with itself, in tension with its
potential, a potential that always exceeds its current actualization. This volatile
turbulent nexus, far from equilibrium, is characterized by rhythmic asymmetry
more than balance.
The atomistic process philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead offers some
kind of route through this standoff between Bergson and Bachelard. If there is a
rhythmanalysis implicit in Whitehead’s metaphysics, then it pulls in a different
direction, accounting for a rhythmic break flow or (dis)continuum, which he
refers to as the extensive continuum. Whitehead’s philosophy intervenes in two
directions: first, against the overrationalizations of idealism, and second, against
the appeal to raw sensation of currents of empiricism. His process philosophy
results in a “transcendental empiricism” or, to use William James’s phrase, a
“radical empiricism,” in which the relation between things assumes as much
significance as the things themselves.
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The basic elements of Whitehead’s philosophy are what he terms actual occasions or entities. His process philosophy deploys an ontology of affect, conceiving of the emergence of the distinction between subject and object as a
second-order effect in a cyclical yet differential ecology of onset and perishing.
Moreover, subject and object are not conceived in epistemological terms, with
the subject the knower and the object the known thing / world. Rather, the “occasion as subject has a “concern” for the object. And the “concern” at once places
the object as a component in the experience of the subject, with an affective
tone drawn from this object and directed towards it.” Instead, the reformulated
subject-object relation “can be conceived as Recipient and Provoker, where the
fact provoked is an affective tone about the status of the provoker in the provoked experience.”
The becoming of an actual occasion is, for Whitehead, analyzable into modes,
whereby the occasion itself is subject and the thing or datum (autonomous from
the occasion itself) becomes object as drawn into relation with the specific emergent event. “Thus subject and object are relative terms. An occasion is a subject
in respect to its special activity concerning an object and anything is an object in
respect to its provocation of some special activity within a subject.” This mutual
relation of provocation, Whitehead terms prehension, and it is marked by three
key factors: “There is the occasion of experience within which the prehension is
a detail of activity; there is the datum whose relevance provokes the origination
of this prehension; this datum is the prehended object; there is the subjective
form, which is the affective tone determining the effectiveness of that prehension in that occasion of experience.”
Actual entities, prehensions, and nexus are the basic facts of experience for
Whitehead. A prehension is a “simple physical feeling,” and actual entities that
feel one another constitute a nexus. Yet a simple physical feeling also means the
feeling of a prehension (the feeling of a feeling) Here, perception of an object is
not of a closed entity, but rather the perception of the potential of an object to
perceive and be perceived. A nexus is a relational entity, based purely on mutual
immanence, where relation is composed of mutual prehension or mutual objectification. An actual occasion is a limit case of an event or nexus, having only one
member. The nexus, or collective entity, is an event in its own right, greater than
the sum of actual entities and their feelings from which it is composed. Each
actual entity is a numerically distinct entity from its component prehensions,
and each nexus is numerically distinct from its constituent entities. It is greater
than a mere mode of togetherness such as a set or multiplicity, yet it could be
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said that it has intermediate reality in the same way that James takes relations
between things as facts as much as the things themselves. A nexus is therefore
not merely subjective but also objective:
A nexus enjoys “social order” when i) there is a common element of form illustrated in
the definiteness of each of its included actual entities, and ii) this common element of
form arises in each member of the nexus by reason of the conditions imposed upon it by
its prehensions of some other members of the nexus, and iii) these prehensions impose
that condition of reproduction by reason of their inclusion of positive feelings involving
that common form. Such a nexus is called a “society,” and the common form is the “defining characteristic” of that society.
What is the process of construction of a nexus or “society of actual entities”?
First, an actual entity must come into being through the imminent process
of concrescence. The cycle of the actual occasion can be analyzed in terms of
phases of concrescence. This process involves a multiplicity of simple physical
feelings of antecedent actual entities, the derivation of conceptual prehensions,
and the integral prehensions leading toward satisfaction, whereby an actual entity becomes “one complex, fully determinate feeling.” As the actual entities in a
nexus come into being, their intermediate reality, the nexus of the actual entities,
comes into being.
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1929: Throbs of Experience
To hear this noise as we do, we must hear the parts which make up this whole, that is the
noise of each wave, although each of these little noises makes itself known only when
combined confusedly with all the others, and would not be noticed if the wave which
made it were by itself.
—G. W. Leibniz, New Essays on Human Understanding ()
It is interesting to note Whitehead’s choice of language in Process and Reality in
paraphrasing William James’s notion of the “basic drops of experience” or his
own concept of an actual occasion or entity. Whitehead terms an actual occasion or entity a “throb” or “pulse” of experience, a “throb” or “pulse” of feeling,
hinting at the role in invention (or creative advance, Whitehead’s name for the
process of becoming) of the expression of vibration. Whitehead’s thoughts on
rhythm and vibration form an aesthetic ontology of pulses. To say that Whitehead’s ontology is aesthetic means that he posits feeling, or prehension, as a basic
condition of experience. For him, even science emerges out of aesthetic experience. His ontology revolves around a nonanthropocentric concept of feeling.
This notion of prehension exceeds the phenomenological demarcation of the
human body as the center of experience and at the same time adds a new inflection to an understanding of the feelings, sensuous and nonsensuous, concrete
and abstract, of such entities. To feel a thing is to be affected by that thing. The
mode of affection, or the way the “prehensor” is changed, is the very content of
what it feels. Every event in the universe is in this sense an episode of feeling,
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even in the void. Whitehead sets up “a hierarchy of categories of feeling,” from
the “wave-lengths and vibrations” of subatomic physics to the subtleties of human experience. Crucially however, the hierarchy does not imply the dominance of conscious over nonconscious vibrations. At every scale, events are felt
and processed as modes of feeling before they are cognized and categorized in
schemas of knowledge. It is this complex emphasis on the primacy of prehension that makes his ontology aesthetic.
In his Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Natural Knowledge from ,
Whitehead lays out an early version of his own theory of rhythm. His first
rhythmanalytic move is to point out that things that appear static are always
composed at the molecular level by vibrating, that is, microrhythmically mobile
particles. So he notes, “The physical object, apparent, is a material object and as
such is uniform; but when we turn to the causal components of such an object,
the apparent character of the whole situation is thereby superseded by the rhythmic quasi-periodic characters of a multitude of parts which are the situations
of molecules.” In Adventures, the seeming simplicity of perception is therefore
always shadowed by imperceptible excitation so that “any situation has, as its
counterpart in that situation, more complex, subtler rhythms than those whose
aggregate is essential for the physical object.”
Later, in Lecture from Religion in the Making, a series of lectures given in
, Whitehead, in outlining this aesthetic ontology, notes how the tension
between stable, coherent pattern and the level of imperceptible vibration is the
engine of invention in providing necessary “contrast”:
The consequent must agree with the ground in general type so as to preserve definiteness,
but it must contrast with it in respect to contrary instances so as to obtain vividness and
quality. In the physical world, this principle of contrast under an identity expresses itself
in the physical law that vibration enters into the ultimate nature of atomic organisms.
Vibration is the recurrence of contrast within identity of type. The whole possibility of
measurement in the physical world depends on this principle. To measure is to count
vibrations. . . . Thus physical quantities are aggregates of physical vibrations, and physical
vibrations are the expression among the abstractions of physical science of the fundamental principle of aesthetic experience.
Unlike Bergson, Whitehead does not indict physics for the method of abstraction, through chopping up the continuity of duration, but instead points to
the power of science through this very process of abstraction. Unlike Bergson,
Whitehead makes room for the fact that the science of acoustics, of the quantifi-
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cation of vibration, rather than merely capturing, has also led to the intensification of sonic affect.
In Whitehead’s philosophy, the throb of feeling is not perceived by a subject
as such but rather constitutes the actual occasion out of which the distinction
between subject and object emerges in a process he terms concrescence. Concrescence here can be understood as a rhythmic coalescence that results in the
actualization of one block of space-time, among many, simultaneously rendering the division between subject and object, time and space of a second order.
Moreover, the need to revise the relation between cause and event is reinforced.
Instead of a cause producing an effect, effects attain autonomy in the process
of the becoming of continuity. If the primary metaphysical ground is made up,
for Bachelard, of instants and, for Bergson, of continuity, then Whitehead has a
unique way of reconciling this apparent opposition that he terms the extensive
continuum. This extensive continuum constitutes a kind of rhythmic anarchitecture that unites the discreet and the continuous, Bachelard’s rhythmic arithmetic
with Bergson’s rippling waves of intensity.
In contrast to a continuity of becoming in Bergson, a spatiotemporality where
the unity of events lies in an underlying continual temporal invariant, a flowing
lived duration, Whitehead’s notion of the extensive continuum undoes the split
between space and time. It expresses a general scheme of relatedness between
actual entities in the actual world. More than that, Whitehead insists that the
extensive continuum is, above all, a potential for actual relatedness. The continuum gives potential, while the actual is atomic or quantic by nature. The
continuum is not pregiven but exists only in the spatiotemporal gaps between
actual occasions. Rather than an underlying continual invariant, each actual
entity produces the continuum for itself from the angle of its own occurrence.
Only in this way is the continuum the means by which occasions are united in
one common world. The actual entity breaks up its continuum realizing the eternal object, or particular potential that it selects. This breaking up, atomization or
quantization, forces the eternal object into the space-time of the actual occasion;
in other words, as the pure potential of the eternal object ingresses into actuality,
it forces the becoming of actuality, and at the same time, pure potential becomes
real potential.
Whitehead describes the general potentiality of the continuum as “the bundle
of possibilities, mutually consistent or alternative, provided by the multiplicity of eternal objects.” The extensive continuum “is that first determination of
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order—that is, of real potentiality, arising out of the general character of the
world . . . it does not involve shapes, dimensions, or measurability; these are additional determinations of real potentiality arising from our cosmic epoch.”
Arguing against both a continual flow of becoming, governed by unspatialized pure time, and the locality of space-time, Whitehead’s extensive continuum
points to vibratory potentials jelling a multiplicity of space-times: here there
is a resonance of actual occasions, which are able to enter into one another by
selecting potentials or eternal objects. It is in such a potential coalescence of one
region with another that an affective encounter between distinct actual entities
occurs. The vibratory resonance between actual occasions in their own regions
of space-time occurs through the rhythmic potential of eternal objects, which
enables the participation of one entity in another. This rhythmic potential exceeds the actual occasion into which it ingresses. To become, an actual entity
must be out of phase with itself, self-contrasting; its tendency is to die and become other.
Whitehead, through the concept of the extensive continuum, makes access
possible to the achronological nexus outside the split between space and time.
This rhythmic anarchitecture is marked by the becoming of continuity that denotes change. Anarchitecture here indicates a method of composition, an activity
of construction, which feeds off the vibratory tension between contrasting occasions. In this sense, the continuum is not pregiven but is a process enacted in
the resonance of one pulse of experience with another.
For the theory of sonic warfare, Whitehead’s conception of the nexus, recoded in terms of rhythm, is very productive. It is rhythm that conjoins the
discontinuous entities of matter. This rhythm cannot be reduced to its phenomenological experience. The prehension of a rhythmic anarchitecture is amodal.
Rhythm proper cannot be perceived purely through the five senses but is crucially transensory or even nonsensuous. This is especially true of the rhythm
of potential relation that holds a nexus together. Irrelevant of scale, physical,
physiological, or sonic, a nexus is always collective, polyrhythmic, composed
of an array of tensile spaces and durations. Finally, rhythmic mutation would
be what Whitehead terms creative advance and entails the futurity of a nexus
anticipated in its passing present.
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1677: Ecology of Speeds
It is not just a matter of music but of how to live: it is by speed and slowness that one
slips in amongst things, that one connects with something else. One never commences;
one never has a tabula rasa; one slips in, enters in the middle; one takes up or lays down
rhythms.
—Gilles Deleuze, Spinoza: Practical Philosophy ()
What is the affective dimension of this rhythmic anarchitecture? Bearing in
mind some important qualifications, it can constructively be rerouted through
Spinoza’s philosophy. If an entity can, in part, be conceived of in terms of its
rhythmic composition of speeds and slowness, it also is expressed in terms of its
power to affect and be affected.
At the outset of Process and Reality, Whitehead allies closely to Spinoza with
some important reservations. Spinoza’s monist idea that there is one substance
(also known as nature or god) with an infinite number of modes is commended
by Whitehead for moving away from Descartes’ arbitrary dualism that maintained that there were only two irreconcilable substances: mind and body. Yet
Whitehead rejects Spinoza’s monism because it leaves a new, unbridgeable gap
between the one substance and the infinity of modes. So Whitehead subtracts
the all-encompassing substance / nature, replacing it with a more Leibnizian notion of a multitude of entities. Instead of the fact of one enveloping substance,
Whitehead opts for pure process as the ultimate. This is the means by which
these atomistic entities, or actual occasions of experience, are connected.
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This divergence has implications for how an entity’s change and invention
is conceived. For Spinoza, a modification of substance, or mode, has a conatus,
which is its tendency to persist beyond its current power. This can be contrasted
with Whitehead’s notion of creative advance, which insists that instead of its
essence being for it to persist in its power, even in an open-ended fashion, the
essence of an actual occasion for Whitehead is to become other by reaching satisfaction and then perishing. At the same time, one important convergence between Spinoza and Whitehead is in their nonanthropocentric notion of a body
essential for a vibrational ontology. While not identical (the body for Whitehead
is not exactly the actual occasion, but rather its associated milieu that contributes its prehensive “data” with the actual occasion as an emergent subjective
form), what Spinoza’s concept of the body and Whitehead’s notion of an actual
occasion and its prehensive milieu share is that their humanoid manifestation
is really just one instance among many. In both, what is implied here is that the
individuated humanoid body is itself made up of a multitude of bodies and the
resolution of this numerical problem is merely a matter of scale. As Deleuze
argues, for Spinoza, “a body can be anything . . . a body of sounds . . . it can be
a linguistic corpus, a social body, a collectivity. The longitudes and latitudes
together constitute Nature, the plane of immanence or consistency, which is
always variable and is consistently being altered, composed and recomposed,
by individuals and collectivities.” This expanded definition of a body opens another angle onto the concept of a sonic nexus taken as a collective entity defined
by its degree of vibrational consistency.
The first task here would be to analyze the rhythmic composition of a nexus
and the way such a nexus of experience retains the past, processes its present,
and anticipates its future. A second task of such an approach would be to examine the affective potential of such a rhythmic composition, its power to affect and
be affected, and its scope to increase this potential. A third task would relate to
the transmutation of the nexus itself, its perishing in the process of invention.
To conceive of this vibrating nexus, it is first necessary to reconfigure its environment as an ecology of speeds. To do this, specific aspects of the philosophy
of Spinoza can be turned to, especially as a deviation from Cartesianism, which,
having dominated Western thought, now haunts, according to Erik Davis and
others, recent conceptions of the virtual. Spinoza replaces Cartesian dualism
and its mind-body split with a parallelism in which mind and body are the same
substance under different aspects. According to a crucial set of axioms from
Spinoza’s Ethics, “All bodies are either in motion or at rest,” and “each single
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body can move at varying speeds.” Since there is only one substance, which cuts
through all thought and extension, we cannot differentiate bodies with reference
to substance itself. Rather, Spinoza maintains that “bodies are distinguished
from one another in respect of motion and rest, quickness and slowness.” As
attributes of nature run parallel to one another, only another body can affect a
body, and only an idea can affect another idea. Therefore, a body is set in motion, at a specific relation of speed or slowness, only because it was affected to do
so by another body in motion. Spinoza argues against the dominion of the mind
over the body, hacking the affective grid of the Cartesian head case and thereby
inspiring affective neuroscience several hundred years later. Most important, a
body is, not because it thinks, but because of its power to affect and be affected.
And for Spinoza, we do not yet know this power. We do not yet know what a
body can do!
Understood through the rhythmanalytic method, the concept of speed at
work is very different from Marinetti’s cryptofascist celebration that forms the
object for Virilio’s technological lament in Speed and Politics. Crucially, Deleuze
and Guattari make a distinction between two senses of speed—on the one hand,
as connoting fast movement of an actual body, while on the other relating to
the rhythmic consistency of a virtual body. This distinction is fundamental to
their unique version of Spinoza’s philosophy of nature. As opposed to Virilio’s
dromology, Deleuze and Guattari’s Spinozist conception of cartography is more
rhythmanalytic. While many emphasize the vast architecture of Spinoza’s geometrical method, their Spinoza is quite unique in its focus on an affective ecology of speeds. For Spinoza, the human, as a mode of nature, has access to only
two of the infinite attributes of substance, thought and extension. In his Spinozist definition of a body, Deleuze writes that we need two complementary
accounts relating to a body’s kinetic and dynamic relations. In a kinetic field, “a
body, however small it may be, is composed of an infinite number of particles; it
is the relations of motion and rest, of speeds and slownesses between particles,
that define a body, the individuality of a body.” On the other hand, in a dynamic phase space, bounded by a maximum and minimum threshold, “a body
affects other bodies, or is affected by other bodies; it is this capacity for affecting
and being affected that also defines a body in its individuality.” This rhythmic
cartography comprises several crucial and corresponding conceptual distinctions—between longitude and latitude, kinetics and dynamics, movement and
speed, the extensive and the intensive. In A Thousand Plateaus, Deleuze and
Guattari point out that “a movement may be very fast, but that does not give it
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speed; a speed may be very slow, or even immobile, yet it is still speed. Movement is extensive; speed is intensive. Movement designates the relative character
of a body considered as “one,” and which goes from point to point; speed, on the
contrary, constitutes the absolute character of a body whose irreducible parts (atoms) occupy or fill a smooth space in the manner of a vortex, with the possibility
of springing up at any point.”
By arguing that speed is intensive and motion extensive, they are pointing
to the difference between an abstract line of speed and point-to-point movement. Movement here is measurable speed. On a Cartesian axis designating
space-time, where the vertical y-axis traces distance and the horizontal x-axis
time, speed is measured by dividing the distance covered by the time taken.
This measured speed, Deleuze and Guattari wish to designate as movement.
But speed is a diagonal, whose double articulation splits it into space and time.
This diagonal of pure speed coincides with the virtuality of the rhythmic nexus:
amodal, sensible only in its effects, under continuous variation, cyclically discontinuous. It should be pointed out here that what differentiates this notion of
speed from its apparent Bergsonism is that speed entails a compression of both
space and time, not just a pure temporality.
This ecology of speeds implies that bodies, including collective bodies, are
defined not as closed, determinate systems, formed, or identifiable merely by
their constituent parts or organs and tending toward rhythmic equilibrium
or harmony, but rather by their rhythmic consistency and affective potential.
What is interesting, from a Spinozist point of view, is not what an entity is, but
rather what it can do. In such terms, a body is, for Deleuze and Guattari, defined
through its longitude and latitude, where the longitude corresponds to “the sum
total of the material elements belonging to it under given relations of movement
and rest, speed and slowness.” That is to say, the longitude of an entity is the set
of relations that compose it out of unformed elements: “the particle aggregates
belonging to that body in a given relation [where] these aggregates are part of
each other depending on the composition of the relation that defines the individuated assemblage of the body.” The latitude of such an entity, on the other
hand, corresponds to the “the sum total of the intensive affects it is capable of at a
given power or degree of potential.” The latitude of an entity is the “set of affects
that occupy a body at each moment, that is, the intensive states of an anonymous
force (force for existing, capacity for being affected).” It constitutes the “affects
of which it is capable at a given degree of power, or rather within the limits of
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that degree. Latitude is made up of intensive parts falling under a capacity, and
longitude of extensive parts falling under a relation.”
In these terms, a vibratory nexus falls under two distinct aspects: its composition (rhythmic consistency) and its capacity to affect and be affected by other
entities. These conceptual components can be deployed to map the affective mobilization of a population immanent to a rhythmic anarchitecture. If an entity is
defined by its vibrational consistency, how does invention occur? To return to
the tension between a Spinozan affective ecology of speeds and a Whiteheadian
version of rhythmanalysis, it should be remembered that each version suggests a
slightly different inflection to construction. Either for Spinoza, we do not know
yet what an entity can do (where an entity is defined by its power and that power
is open-ended), or for Whitehead an occasion is finite, but once it has satisfied
its potential, it perishes and becomes something else. While these divergences
clearly evidence two contrasting philosophical frameworks, with contrasting
notions of bodies or occasions and their potentials, they also may often pragmatically converge.
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99–50 B.C.: Rhythm out of Noise
The rhythmic motions of a noise are infinite.
—Luigi Russolo, The Art of Noises ()
My beats travel like a vortex.
—RZA, “Wu Tang Clan ‘Triumph’ Wu Tang Forever”
The rhythmanalytic method can be developed further with the assistance of
some concepts elaborated by Michel Serres. Interestingly, Serres often relies on
images of sonic warfare, especially when describing the resonances of a transdisciplinary concept of noise. In Genesis, for example, Serres notes that noise
“is both battle and racket. . . . Noise is a weapon that, at times, dispenses with
weapons. To take up space, to take the place, that is the whole point . . . and noise
occupies space faster than weapons can.” Later in the text, he continues, “Everyone knows the most daring soldiers go no faster than the music. The noise,
first . . . fury belongs . . . above all to the multitude, and the multitude rushes
around, it covers space like a flood.” Serres’s concept of noise, often stands in
for, or is interchangeable with, the notion of turbulence from physics. This preoccupation with the emergence of rhythm out of noise derives in part from his
interest in the ancient atomic physics of Democritus and Lucretius, particularly
in their concept of the angular momentum of nature, the source of its power of
invention. This Lucretius-Serres conceptual axis rotates around the concept
of the clinamen, or the swerve. In his On the Nature of the Universe, Lucretius
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helps invent a conception of deviant matter in contrast to its inert caricatures in
philosophical hylomorphism. He sets out to map the cosmos without introducing any conception of purpose, final cause, or injecting it with an essence. He
outlines the importance of what he calls the clinamen as not merely a deviation
from order but rather a primary physical process,—for example, “When the
atoms are travelling straight down through empty space by their own weight,
at quite indeterminate times and places they swerve ever so little from their
course, just so much that you can call it a change in direction. If it were not for
this swerve, everything would fall downwards like rain-drops through the abyss
of space. No collision would take place and no impact of atom on atom would
be created. Thus nature would never have created anything.”
In this famous statement, the emphasis Lucretius places on change over stability, identity, or constancy indicates an attempt to instate deviation, the clinamen, as primary; the description of the minimum angle of deviation from a
straight line, or the onset of a curve from a tangent seems to need inversion.
Instead of an accident that befalls predictable or metric matter, the clinamen, as
Deleuze clarifies, for the atomists, is the “original determination of the direction
of the movement of the atom. It is a kind of conatus—a differential of matter,
and by the same token, a differential of thought.” So this physics is no longer
one of straight lines, parallel channels, or laminarization, but rather the formation of vortices and spirals built out of the swerve.
So perhaps what Michel Serres, through Lucretius, adds to rhythmanalysis
is literally a kind of vorticist twist, which counters Bachelard’s tendency toward
rhythmic equilibrium. When Serres states in Hermes that the “physics of the
vortex is revolutionary,” he means not in some ideological sense but at the level
of material. It is not simply that a vortex makes matter turn, but rather matter
itself curves. If it did not, it would be confined to straight lines, without even
zigzags, and the universe would never invent anything new. As he remarks, the
“minimal angle of turbulence produces the first spirals here and there. It is literally revolution. Or it is the first evolution toward something else other than the
same. . . . The first vortices . . . pockets of turbulence scattered in flowing fluid,
be it air or salt water, breaking up the parallelism of its repetitive waves.”
Serres’s analysis of the birth of physics is built into Deleuze and Guattari’s
transversal conception of a war machine. It is interesting, therefore, in the context of this discussion, to speculatively extend Deleuze and Guattari’s notion of
the war machine into the sonic. Such a war machine described in A Thousand
Plateaus takes as its abstract model a theory of fluids, the rhythmic consistency
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of liquids as opposed to solids. Their theory of the war machine parallels the dynamical aspects of their own variant of rhythmanalysis, developed in relation to
their concept of the “refrain.” They deploy a hydraulic model of the war machine
that “consists in a population being distributed by turbulence across a smooth
space, in producing a movement that holds space and simultaneously affects all
of its points, instead of being held by space in a local movement from one specified point to another.” In such a system, as Deleuze and Guattari continue, “one
no longer goes from the straight line to its parallels, in a lamellar or laminar flow,
but from a curvilinear declination to the formation of spirals and vortices on an
inclined plane: the greatest slope for the smallest angle.”
In summary, the vortex is the model of the generation of rhythm out of
noise. It is a power of creation and destruction: it simultaneously blocks flow
while accelerating it, and it is this ambivalence that makes Deleuze and Guattari turn to it as the abstract model of the war machine, confounding the more
benign interpretations of their work, which focus purely on flow. The LucretiusSerres-Deleuze and Guattari axis and its dependence on the clinamen as engine
of angular momentum gives a vorticist spin to rhythmanalysis. Asymmetry and
imbalance are taken as the reservoir of invention in contrast to the stability,
harmony, and equilibrium implied by Bachelard and Lefebvre. For instance,
whereas Bachelard’s version of the rhythmanalytic method seemed most interested in the orchestration of counterrhythms into equilibrium states, abstract
vorticism occupies itself more with the intensification of turbulence. This virulent strand of rhythmanalysis finds polyrhythms curving off in every direction,
forming a rhythmic anarchitecture, the ontological ground for any micropolitics
of frequency. Yet this ground does not dictate the orientation of such a micropolitics; it does not lay down a set of generalizable laws but rather throws up a
series of engineering problems. As such, any micropolitics derivable from this
base can be only tactical rather than strategic—a war without aims concerned
more with disposition and potential movement than ideology, although certainly susceptible to abduction. This understanding of noise as rhythmic reservoir is perhaps only latent in Attali’s political theory of noise, but it is certainly
the one of most interest here.
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The regime of the war machine is . . . that of affects, which relate to the moving body in
itself, to speeds and compositions of speed among elements. . . . Affects are projectiles
like weapons.
—Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus ()
In a release from a U.S. Army Research Laboratory in , two volatile crowd
situations were considered:
One was a small group of people positioned at knife throwing distances, such as in a civilian prison riot. . . . The other situation . . . was a large rioting crowd threatening troops
at a stone-throwing distance . . . based on first hand experiences with large riots in the
Middle East, which left a sense of “thermoclines” in the crowd; i.e. the first few rows of
people were “hot” and “dangerous,” and the back rows were “cooler” adventurers, who
only became dangerous if mishandled.
The “nonlethal” sonic weapon under study was the “vortex ring generator,” designed to “target individual[s with] a series of flash, impact, and concussion
pulses at frequencies near the resonance of human body parts,” forcing evacuation from the zone of disturbance, fighting social turbulence with air turbulence. Such tactical instances of sonic warfare draw attention to the directions
in which control of volatile social groups, “far from equilibrium,” is developing
through the investigation of volatile properties of material systems “far from
equilibrium.” Such cases serve as a portal into the problem of turbulence and
its controlled propagation through the management and intervention into the
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rhythmicity of urban systems, the modulation of the ecology of fear and its affective potential to spiral out of control. It is in the context of these basic population dynamics that sonic warfare should be understood, intervening into the
affective ecology of crowds.
A precursor to this discussion can be found in Elias Canetti’s physics of populations in Crowds and Power. Canetti argues that the affect of fear, particularly
of being touched by the unknown, forms a basic logic of population physics. It
serves as an intangible force keeping individuals apart. Yet with crowd formations, this principle is reversed, and the density of bodies helps overcome the repulsive power of fear into an attractive power. This threshold of reversal results
is what Canetti calls the discharge, leading to the formation of the crowd and the
eradication of differences.
Packs form a more basic type of entity out of which crowds are composed.
Canetti notes four kinds of pack: the hunting pack, the war pack, the lamenting
pack, and the increase pack. Packs are marked by their mobility, unlike crowds,
which tend to be more static. Crowds are particularly the product of the city,
he argues, irrigating packs through the urban channels of streets and squares,
forcing them to resonate, accumulate, and grow, with the affective geometry
and architecture of the built environment activating both negative and positive feedback processes. A movement of growth can continue or be impeded,
resulting in what he calls the open or closed crowds. This is a volatile dynamic
and can lead to eruptions if there is a sudden transition from a closed to an
open crowd—or a sudden disintegration can be a symptom of pure panic. To
fend off this disintegration, the crowd needs a goal. The temporality of the goal
determines whether the crowd is fast or slow in its dissipation. As an entity
in formation, what crowds seem to desire is density. As density increases, the
units that make up the crowd are decomposed and recomposed, with subcomponents of these units flattened out and affectively networked with the subcomponents of other units—limb by limb by limb. Canetti calls this “equality,” where
a part object becomes disorganized and circuited with other part objects. The
manner in which density and equality develop forces the crowd to stagnate or
vibrate rhythmically.
Like Whitehead’s nexus, composed of throbs of experience, Canetti’s morphology and his notion of the “throbbing,” rhythmic crowd sketches a population on the social scale that resonates with the more abstract descriptions of the
vorticist rhythmanalysis of vibration. The key dimension of any gathering of
bodies, from the point of view of control or becoming, is those critical thresh-
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olds across which the transitory body of the crowd concresces, individuates,
perishes, and enters into new modes of composition. He describes a topology
of vibrating collective entities, contorted intensively by their affective temperature, and channeled extensively through the irrigation of street systems and the
built environment. Such a critical threshold, for example, may mark the onset of
violence, the onset of dance, or other collective rhythmic convulsions as unactualized potentials become kinesthetic spasms. A theory of sonic warfare is particularly fascinated by this turbulent boundary layer between dance and violence.
This analysis is developed still further by Philip Turetsky, who reads the analysis of the throbbing crowd via Deleuze’s Difference and Repetition, unfolding
the rhythmic syntheses of past, present, and future that such collectives undertake in the formation of a vibratory entity. In the case of the throbbing crowd,
its vibratory nexus both dis- and reorganizes body parts and individuates them
into an event with its own duration. Rhythm, for Turetsky, is both a set of relations between formed matters and an expression of a “distribution of accents
marking off an abstract organisation of temporal intervals. . . . This rhythmic
organisation combines, that is, synthesizes, the formed matters into a single
body, the groups of abstract intervals into a single event, in a single assemblage
in which the two become articulated together.” Rhythm therefore organizes
heterogeneous materials in two ways. It distributes in time and simultaneously
emerges out of the very differences between elements. Rhythm is abstract in
the sense that it is platform independent. A composition of materials can result
in almost any rhythm. In addition to the kinetic modulation of populations in
motion, rhythm transforms the affective potential of the individuated entity,
producing new connections between part objects, intensifying collective excitation and mood, transforming the crowd into an attractional or repulsive force in
relation to outsiders. The diagram of such rhythmic populations can be termed,
extending a concept of Kodwo Eshun, a rhythmachine. A rhythmachine is a
synthesizer that processes a chaotic datum in its self-generation, connecting, for
Turetsky, following Deleuze, successive moments into a passing present, some
of which constitute the past of this present and others that generally anticipate
its future. In terms of invention, the essential part of this process of synthesis,
however, faces futurity in order to break with memory, habit, and the repetition of the same. The parallels with Whitehead’s description of the process of
concrescence and creative advance are apparent here. Yet the confinement of
a rhythmic nexus to a purely temporal phenomenon, while a common inheritance from musicology, is exactly the move that rhythmanalysis seeks to move
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beyond. Rhythm in fact should be understood differently, as spatial as it is temporal. Rather like Whitehead’s extensive continuum and Deleuze and Guattari’s
concept of the refrain, space and time decompress out of a rhythmic anarchitecture. The vortical entities of the rhythmic crowd produce and destroy their
own pocket of space-time. The militarized deployment of acoustic weapons
therefore, as well as a sonic intervention into a turbulent zone of disturbance, is
also a dynamic one: the insertion of a rhythmic component as provocation or
affective projectile.
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Water carried the sound of the drums and sound carried the distance between the old
and the new world.
—Black Audio Film Collective, The Last Angel of History ()
The rhythmic vorticism that runs through Serres to Deleuze and Guattari takes
as its model the rhythmicity of hydrodynamics, particularly the interruption
of predictable flow by the emergence of pockets of turbulence. Another strand
of this orientation can be found in Cinema , where Deleuze writes, “Water is
the most perfect environment in which movement can be extracted from the
thing moved, or mobility from the movement itself. This is the origin of the
visual and auditory importance of water in research on rhythm.” Hints of this
rhythmic hydrodynamics also crop up elsewhere. For example, the parallel between early acoustics and fluid mechanics can be found in Hermann Helmholtz,
whose late–nineteenth-century text, On the Sensation of Tone, became canonical in the science of acoustics. Helmholtz began his research treating acoustics
as a branch of hydrodynamics.
The generation of a vibrational nexus is paralleled by the decompression of
rhythm from noise. The question of turbulence, the volatile tension between
order and chaos, is shunted into a question of vibration as microrhythm. According to the branch of engineering concerned with sonic vortices, all sonic
phenomena, as particle and wave kinetics, can, at least in their physical dimension, be conceived of as problems of fluid or aerodynamic turbulence. In
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physics, vortex sound is sound generated as a by-product of unsteady fluid
motions. As Howe has pointed out, “It is now widely recognized that any
mechanism that produces sound can actually be formulated as a problem of
aerodynamic sound”:
Thus apart from the high speed turbulent jet—which may be regarded as a distribution
of intense velocity fluctuations that generate sound by converting a tiny fraction of the
jet rotational kinetic energy into the longitudinal waves that constitute sound—colliding solid bodies, aero engine rotor blades, vibrating surfaces, complex fluid-structure
interactions in the larynx (responsible for speech), musical instruments, conventional
loudspeakers, crackling paper, explosions, combustion and combustion instabilities
in rockets, and so forth all fall within the theory of aerodynamic sound in its broadest
sense. . . . Any fluid that possesses intrinsic kinetic energy, that is, energy not directly
attributable to a moving boundary . . . must possess vorticity. . . . In a certain sense and
for a vast number of flows, vorticity may be regarded as the ultimate source of the sound
generated by the flow.
This idea of vortex sound has key resonances in different registers, from the
vibrational patternings of cymatics through to the hyperrhythmic dynamics of
electronic music. In his key late s essays reframing the concept of “acoustic cyberspace,” Erik Davis described how contemporary conceptions of virtual reality were trapped in a visual model of space inherited in particular from
Descartes’ split between the mind and the body, whereby the self transcends
space, is detached from it, surveys it panoptically, as a disembodied vision machine (where “I” is synonymous with “eye”). For Davis, the legacy of this model
(traces of which can be found in Gibson’s s descriptions of cyberspace) had
dominated the proliferating discourses on the digital since then. Instead, Davis,
in parallel to Kodwo Eshun’s analysis in More Brilliant Than the Sun, drew from
the polyrhythmic nexus and bass viscosity of Black Atlantian musics, alongside
McLuhan’s conception of acoustic space, in order to develop an alternative version of virtual space, one that is sonic but, more than that, is essentially invasive, resonant, vibratory, and immersive. In this vibrational ecology, the sensual
mathematics of a rhythmachine possesses the affective sensorium, inserting itself amodally (between the senses), generating a polyrhythmic nexus.
There is an interesting contrast between futurism’s celebration of the art of
war in the noise and Afrofuturism’s art of war in the art of rhythm. In The Art
of Noises, Russolo bemoans rhythm, complaining that “the first beat brings to
your ear the weariness of something heard before and makes you anticipate the
boredom of the beat that follows. So let us drink in, from beat to beat, these few
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qualities of obvious tedium, always waiting for that extraordinary sensation that
never comes.”
While the concept of noise forges, for futurism, in its nexus of war machines
and sound machines a sonic militancy, Afrofuturist musics such as jungle, Davis
argued, drawing from Deleuze and Guattari, congealed around rhythmic turbulence. It should be remembered, however, that the philosophers draw from
a European avant-classical tradition of music and sonic experimentation that
was in fact antagonistic toward and sacrificed rhythmic speed for a “nonpulsed
time,” a cerebral listening, or mental dance that they would refer to as “voyaging in place.” In their discussion of the refrain, Deleuze and Guattari set out to
salvage the concept of “rhythm” from being merely understood as synonymous
with “form,” a form that measures and regularizes the pace of movement, as opposed to a topological form that arises from immanent material processes. They
admit that there “is indeed such a thing as measure, cadenced rhythm, relating
to the coursing of a river between its banks or to the form of a striated space; but
there is also a rhythm without measure, which relates to the up swell of a flow, in
other words, to the manner in which a fluid occupies a smooth space.”
In this distinction between meter and rhythm, they draw explicitly from Messiaen’s controversial comments regarding the history of African American music, eliding a set of problems and thereby limiting the potential of their wider
rhythmanalytic innovations. Discussing, on the one hand, jazz, and, on the
other, military music as the generation of rhythm, Messaien argues:
Jazz is established against a background of equal note-values. By the play of syncopation it also contains rhythms, but these syncopations only exist because they’re placed
on equal note-values, which they contradict. Despite the rhythm produced by this contradiction, the listener once again settles down to equal note-values which give him
great comfort. . . . Here’s another very striking example of non-rhythmic music which
is thought rhythmic: the military march. The march, with its cadential gait and uninterrupted succession of absolutely equal note values, is anti-natural. True marching is accompanied by an extremely irregular swaying; it’s a series of falls, more or less avoided,
placed at different intervals.
But perhaps Messaien is a little too quick to step over syncopation in his discussions on rhythm. In not uncommon fashion among the European musicological
elite that includes Adorno, Messaien treats syncopation, the emphasis on the
offbeat, as merely the negative of meter, its shadow, one that is purely derivative.
Moreover, and directly concurring with Messaien, Deleuze and Guattari repeat,
“There is nothing less rhythmic than the military march.”
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Such an approach, Chernoff argues in his book African Rhythm, African
Sensibility, is typical of the profound European misunderstanding of Afrodiasporic rhythmic pragmatics. Chernoff, on the other hand, emphasizes the
very in-betweeness of syncopation, which in the rhythmic culture of the African
diaspora must be given a more positive spin. As Erik Davis has noted, drawing from Chernoff, in Black Atlantian polyrhythm, “The game is to push the
beats to the edge of bifurcation without allowing them to settle into a singular
basin of attraction.” When the rhythmic movement of the body is taken into
account, the military march is time and again thrown up as the epitome of the
tempo of war, a disciplined, repetitive, mechanical collective body. For Deleuze
and Guattari, in their rhythmanalysis of capture, a state military organization is
conceived as a metric crowd, while a nomad war machine is a rhythmic pack.
Yet the musical sources they draw from make it deeply problematic to conceive
the shape of such a collective mobilization. It is as if the vorticist rhythmachines suggested in A Thousand Plateaus, for Eshun and Davis, actually had
their stronger analog in Black Atlantian currents of polyrhythmic, electronic
music. Both of these interpretations of Deleuze and Guattari’s sonic concepts
were taken up within the thoughtware of electronic music culture. We also find
in much of the modernist avant-garde, right through to contemporary “glitch”based music and its celebration of “noise” via “accidents” and “chaos,” a suppression of rhythm, and therefore of the dancing body, its affective mobilization
and rhythmic contagion. This suppression contrasts sharply with the rhythmic
“conceptechnics” that emerge from the various dance cultures, which, as Erik
Davis puts it, “drum up acoustic cyberspace” through what Kodwo Eshun describes as Black Atlantian rhythmic futurism, what Simon Reynolds has tagged
the “hardcore continuum” and what others have referred to more recently as
“global ghettotech.”
From futurism to Afrofuturism, the avant-gardist sonic war machine that
takes the violence of noise as its object transforms into a rhythmachine concerned with beat frequencies “far from equilibrium.” If a noise tactics is common to both, then it is only in mutated form. For a rhythmachine, noise shifts
from end in itself to a field of pulsive potential. Afrofuturism forces a new set of
questions on the futurist legacy of the concept of noise. What potential rhythmachines lurk virtually within its vibrational field? What difference does digitalization force onto this rhythmic potential, where molecular vibration becomes
numerical rhythmic quanta?
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While cymatics vividly illustrates the rhythmic field of vibrational, analog wave
phenomena, postquantum experimentation with sound and computation has
drawn attention to an atomistic digital ontology, whose analysis cannot be subsumed to a topology based on analog waves. This methodological problem,
central to the ontology of vibrational force, also lies at the heart of contemporary debates regarding digital sound aesthetics and the textural innovations of
granular synthesis. Texture marks the membrane between vibration and skin,
and therefore the front line in any deployment of sonic force.
In a provocative essay, “The Superiority of the Analog,” Brian Massumi attempts to strip away some of the hype of the digital, arguing that the analog is
always one fold ahead. Massumi reminds us that there is actually no such thing
as digital sound, whether generated on or off a computer; if it is audible, it must
be analog. Digital code is audible only after it is transduced into sound waves.
With theorists such as Pierre Levy, Massumi wants to cleave apart the erroneous equation of the digital with the virtual. Instead the virtual is defined as
potential, while the digital can only tend toward an already coded, and therefore
predetermined, range of possibility. As an antidote to the many digital philosophies of computer age hype, the “superiority of the analog” position questions
temporal ontologies that emphasize the discreetness of matter through a spatialization of time (in the composition of the digital) in favor of a refocus on the
continuity of duration. Typical objections to the ontology of digital temporality
share much with the philosophy of Henri Bergson. In Bergson’s philosophy of
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duration, he argues that the spatialization of time belies the “fundamental illusion” underpinning Western scientific thought. Bergson accordingly criticized
this cinematographic error, which he described as cutting continuous time into
a series of discreet frames, separated from the temporal elaboration of movement that is added afterward (through the action, in film, of the projector) in
terms of the perceptual effect of the persistence of vision. Yet sonic time plays
an understated role in Bergson’s (imagistic) philosophy of time, often being
taken as emblematic of his concept of duration as opposed to the cinematographic illusion of consciousness. In stark contrast to Bachelard, in Time and
Free Will, Bergson uses the liquidity of the sonic, “the notes of a tune, melting, so to speak, into one another,” as exemplifying that aspect of duration he
terms interpenetration.
The argument for the “superiority of the analog,” in its Bergsonian allegiance
to continuity, could easily be taken as an ill-conceived, antidigital phenomenology. But such an interpretation would be misleading. The drive of Massumi’s
argument is in fact to push for a rigorous theorization of the enfolded nexus, or
plexus, of the analog and digital. The question here is what kind of sonic plexus
they can compose and where the potential for invention lies in both its analog
and digital dimensions.
In his recent book, Sound Ideas: Music, Machines and Experience, Aden Evans, without specifically deploying a concept of the virtual, attempts to locate
zones of mutational potential within the codes of digital music. Evans describes
how digital code stratifies the analog in a double articulation. He raises the question of whether a digital singularity can be conceived, or whether such a singularity would in fact be merely a residue of the process of the digitalization of the
analog. The digital stratification of the analog cuts it into parts and then assigns
values to these parts. As Evans points out, this articulation is crucially double:
On the one hand, the bits are spread out linearly, each divided from each, while on the
other hand, each bit is either a or . Binary numbers have a first articulation (the nth
place) and a second articulation ( or in each place). . . . The binary is nothing but articulation, a simple difference between and . . . [but to] be effective the digital requires
another articulation. . . . In the case of sound digitalization, a sound is divided into small
chunks of time (samples), and each sample is evaluated by measuring the air pressure at
that point in time. . . . A first articulation of parts and a second of values.
However, in this process, Evans argues, using the term actual where Massumi
would use the analog, digitalization “captures the general, the representable, the
repeatable, but leaves out the singular, the unique, the immediate: whatever is
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not formal. Actuality always exceeds its form, for it moves along lines that connect singularities; the actual is not a neat sequence of frozen or static moments
but an irreducible complex process that cannot be cleanly articulated in time
or space.”
The rules of operation of the digital are immanent to its formal, binary code
from which it is composed. Yet the emptiness of this code is what produces
its infinite replicability: the clone is always formal, and therefore there is no
haeccity as the format is essentially generic, every analog place becoming a numerical space, and every type of analog object tagged by numerical values. So
the limits of the digital—“Refinement, precision, storage, isolation” —are exactly its power, that is, its ordering quality, for measuring and counting. The
digital is simultaneously exact and reductive. But Evans distinguishes between
this exactness and precision. He terms the exactness of digital calculability
imprecise in that “it measures its object to a given level of accuracy and no further . . . it presents its own completeness.” For Evans, something is lost in this transition from the fullness of the analog to the exact partiality of the digital. There
is a residue of the process of stratification, whereby the digital cuts into the analog,
and through which continuity is transposed into generic parts, or bytes. This
residue is the excluded middle of this process of double articulation. “The digital
has a resolution, and detail finer than this resolution is ignored by the digital’s
ordered thresholds.” The analog, on the other hand, for Evans, as a variable
continuum, is fuzzy, and responsive—any operation performed on it transforms
it. The digital zooms in on the thresholds of the analog, marking variable ranges
in this qualitative continuum, quantizing them into a discreteness and exactitude. Paralleling Massumi’s thesis that the “analog is always a fold ahead” of
the digital, Evans notes that the “superiority” of the analog stems not from a
limitation of the digital substitution, its difference from an actual object, but
crucially—and this is the crux of their differential ontology—it is “rather a productive difference, a not-yet-determined, an ontological fuzziness inherent to
actuality itself. Difference as productive cannot be digitalized.” The processual
nature of the actual, and its generation of singularity, must exceed its capture.
In other words, the actual for Evans exceeds the sum of its digitized parts. This
is not merely a phenomenological point. Elsewhere, Evans develops a parallel
argument using intuitionist mathematics in relation to the concept of the differential (specifically the surd) from calculus and what Deleuze termed the
process of differentiation. The differential “was an extra term, left over after the
rest of the equation had been reduced, and the methods for dealing with it could
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not be decided in advance.” Evans finds the surd at work in the uncertainty
principle of acoustics, concluding that the “digital encounters events or objects
that it cannot accommodate, and it must reshape itself in order to make room
for these new ideas, but eventually settles back into a placid or rigid formula,
neutralizing the novelty that challenged it to develop.”
Where Evans’s position deviates from Massumi’s is in the terminology of the
virtual, with Evans locating the productive force in the actual itself, whereas for
Massumi, the potential for change lies in fact in the virtual. What Evans calls
the actual as opposed to the digital, Massumi terms the analog, composed of the
actual and the virtual. Massumi questions the potential of the digital generation of results that are not already precoded. If the digital is to provide access
to the virtual, then it would have to “produce unforeseen results using feedback
mechanisms to create resonance and interference between routines.” A virtual
digitality would have to integrate the analog “into itself (bio-muscular robots
and the like), by translating itself into the analog (neural nets and other evolutionary systems), or again by multiplying and intensifying its relays into and out
of the analog (ubiquitous computing).”
While a healthy skepticism regarding the claims of digital hype is recommended, a rhythmanalysis of the digitalization of sonic matter reveals much
about computational mutations in the operative logics of vibrational force. The
narrowband of humanoid audio perception is a fold on the discontinuum of
vibration. On this field, the musical distinction between rhythm (infrasonic
frequencies) and pitch (audible frequencies) dissolves, each merely constituting bands on the frequency spectrum. This vibrational discontinuum can
be mapped as molecular texturhythm. Referred to as the “great base” by Ezra
Pound and explored continuously throughout the twentieth century in the vibrational science of electronic music, the rhythmic ontology of matter flattens
the elaborate elevations and stratifications of modern tonality (pitch as a system
of frequencies unfolds into a matter of rhythm) into a simultaneously abstract
yet felt plane. This plane is populated by molecular entities composed of variations of speed and slowness and marked by fluctuating degrees of affective potential. In the language of Varese or, later, granular synthesis, these bodies can be
clouds, vortices, or densifications of sonic matter. This is the plane of microsonic
turbulence explored by contemporary digital sound design.
In some suggestive ways, the sonic atomism of granular synthesis converges
with the atomism of Whitehead’s vibrational anarchitecture. No longer should
sonic matter be conceived purely in terms of waveforms, but now also in terms
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of grains of sound. The parallel faces of wave and particle open up a rhythmanalysis of microsound. As Sherburne has noted, “Rhythm is texture writ large,
peaks and valleys turned to pulse. Texture is rhythm rendered microscopic, (ir)
regularity encoded and impressed upon the surface of sound. Where these two
break and cleave apart, the click, smooth-faced, one dimensional, textureless
and out-of-time.”
Perhaps, contra the “superiority of the analog” thesis, the digital encoding
of sound at the micro-timescale has opened untold sonic potentials in terms of
textural invention, a surplus value over analog processing. A fundamental temporal potential of sonic virtuality is locatable in the very un-Bergsonian realm
of digital sampling, known as discrete time sampling. As the Nyquist-Shannon
theorem explained, “A continuous band-limited signal can be replaced by a discrete sequence of samples without loss of any information and describes how the
original continuous signal can be reconstructed from the samples.” At a fundamental level, in its slicing of sonic matter into a multiplicity of freeze frames,
digital samples treat analog continuity as bytes of numerically coded sonic time
and intensity, grains that may or may not assume the consistency of tone fusion,
the sonic equivalent of the persistence of vision.
In contrast to the Bergsonian emphasis on continuity in duration, in the
s, the elementary granularity of sonic matter was noted by physicist Dennis
Gabor, dividing time and frequency according to a grid known as the Gabor
matrix. Prising open this quantum dimension of sonic time opened the field
of potential that much more recently became the time-stretching tool within
digital sound editing applications. The technique “elongates sounds without altering their pitch, [and] demonstrates how the speed at which levels of acoustic
intensity are digitally recorded (, samples / second at standard CD quality) means that a certain level of destratification is automatically accomplished.
Since magnitudes (of acoustic intensity) are all that each sample bit contains,
they can be manipulated so as to operate underneath the stratification of pitch
and duration, which depends on the differentiation of the relatively slow comprehensive temporality of cycles per second.”
The technique referred to as time stretching cuts the continuity between the
duration of a sonic event and its frequency. In granular synthesis, discreet digital particles of time are modulated and sonic matter synthesized at the quantum level. In analog processing, to lower the pitch of a sound event adds to the
length of the event. Slow down a record on a turntable, for example, and a given
word not only descends in pitch but takes a longer time to unfold. Or allocate a
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discreet sampled sound object to a zone of a MIDI keyboard; the difference between triggering the sample using one key and moving to a key one octave down
doubles the time of the sound and halves its pitch. Time stretching, however,
facilitates the manipulation of the length of a sonic event while maintaining
its pitch, and vice versa. Time stretching as a digital manipulation process has
become increasingly common to electronic music software, particularly in the
transposing of project elements between one tempo and another, fine-tuning
instruments, but also as a textural effect producing temporal perturbations in
anomalous durations and cerated consistencies.
These texturhythmic innovations add new complexions to the ontology of
vibrational force, new ways in which sound impresses on the skin, touches, affects, and infects. While the digital, it is argued, in its discrete binary constitution of bytes frames a predetermined, precoded field of demarcated possibility,
can there not be a potential for mutation immanent to the numerical code itself?
Digital philosophers such as Gregory Chaitin hint at this when they map the
contagion of the uncalculable, irreducible real, which always exceeds axiomatization. A too quick dismissal of the digital, articulated without an exploration
of the numerical dimensions of the virtual at work in mathematical problematics and in popular numeracy, risks falling back into a phenomenological fetishization of the emergent plenitude of the analog. What is required is an affective
calculus of quantum rhythm. Such a calculus would map the rhythmic oscillations that vibrate the microsonic, and the molecular turbulence these generate, a spiral that scales up through the nexus of the analog and digital (a sonic
plexus)—its codes and networks of affective contagion. Sonic warfare becomes
a sensual mathematics.
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There are these other forms of life, artificial ones, that want to come into existence. And
they are using me as a vehicle for its reproduction and its implementation.
—Chris Langton, Artificial Life: An Overview ()
At an elementary scale of the sensual mathematics of sonic warfare, digi-sonic
matter is marked by the granular texture of microsampled sound. Another question of sonic digitality and power, operating on the higher level of morphological mutation, is occupied with evolutionary algorithms and cellular automata.
Computers have upgraded both what it means to be a musician and a military
strategist. Yet the celebration of “decontrol” (setting up rule-based systems and
letting them do all the work) and the simulation and modeling advantages these
offer have a flip side. Picture, for a moment, a convergence between preemptive
capital future-casting the desires of consumers, the acoustic intimacy of either
directional audio spotlights or iPods, personalized targeting by retinal scans or
implanted chips and adaptive Muzak systems running generative, randomizable
algorithms. Here the experience of the shopping mall takes on a particularly
predatory disposition. Artificial acoustic agencies or audio viruses would track
your movements, continuously modulating your behavior with suggestions,
mood enhancements, memory triggers, and reassurances. To be effective, the
algorithms of these adaptive systems would have to traverse code, hardware, and
the wetware of the body, the digital and the analog. But how would this mode of
sensual mathematics work?
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As well as new textures that enhance sound’s sensual contagiousness, digitization has, through generative music software based on cellular automata
and genetic algorithms applied to music, injected vibrations with a contagious
mathematical dimension, giving them an agency all of their own to evolve,
mutate, and spread. These sonic algorithms, or artificial acoustic agencies, are
abstract machines—sets of rules that have become independent of their specific physical embodiments, thereby intensifying their powers of transmission,
replication, and proliferation. Key musical processes are distilled to formalized equations that are generalizable and transferable. Algorithmic or generative music, whether analog or digital, claims to develop bottom-up approaches
to composition. As Nyman points out, they understand systemically the context
of composition and production and are “concerned with actions dependent on
unpredictable conditions and on variables which arise from within the musical
continuity.” Examples from the history of experimental music can be found in
the oft-cited investigations of rule-centered sonic composition processes in the
exploration of randomness and chance. Think, for example, of Cage’s use of the
I Ching, Terry Riley’s “In C,” Steve Reich’s “It’s Gonna Rain” and “Come Out,”
Cornelius Cardew’s “The Great Learning,” Christian Wolff ’s “Burdocks,” Frederic Rzewski’s “Spacecraft,” and Alvin Lucier’s “Vespers.”
More recent approaches centering on the digital domain make use of software programs such as Supercollider, MaxMsp, Pure Data, Reactor, Camus, Vox
Populi, and Harmony Seeker. In addition to the sonic simulations drawn from
chaos physics, recent generative sound design projects also draw from evolutionary biology, in particular, artificial life research. These deploy mathematical algorithms to simulate the conditions and dynamics of growth, complexity,
emergence, and mutation, and they apply evolution to musical parameters. Placing these experiments in digital sound design in the historical context of earlier
experiments with, for example, out-of-phase tape recorders, it becomes clear,
Eshun argues, that tape loops already constituted “social software organized to
maximise the emergence of unanticipated musical matter.” He continues that
the “ideas of additive synthesis, loop structure, iteration and duplication are
pre-digital. Far from new, the loop as sonic process predates the computer by
decades. Synthesis precedes digitality by centuries.” While generative music
predates the digital, once on computers, these sonic agencies assume some of
the powers of computer viruses to evolve, mutate, and spread. How do these
virulent algorithmic forms function?
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According to Miranda, software models for evolutionary sound generation
tend to be based on engines constructed around cellular automata or genetic
algorithms. Instead of messy biochemical labs deployed to probe the makeup
of chemicals, cells, and so forth, these sonic evolutions take place in the artificial worlds of the CPU, hard disk, computer screen, and speakers. Specifically,
the scientific paradigm of artificial life marks a shift from a preoccupation with
the composition of matter to the systemic interactions between components
out of which nature is under constant construction. Alife uses computers to
simulate the functions of these interactions as patterns of information, investigating the global behaviors that arise from a multitude of local conjunctions
and interactions. In addition to cellular automata and genetic algorithms, other
Alife techniques for analyzing emergent complexity include adaptive games and
neural networks. The application of biological patterns of information has been
taken up within robotics, the social sciences, humanities, and, most pertinent
here, musicology.
The analysis of digital algorithms within the cultural domain of music is not
limited to composition and creation. Recent Darwinian evolutionary musicology has attempted to simulate the conditions for the emergence and evolution
of music styles as shifting ecologies of rules or conventions for music making.
These ecologies, it is claimed, while sustaining their organization, are also subject to change and constant adaptation to the dynamic cultural environment.
The suggestion in such studies is that the simulation of complexity usually found
within biological systems may illuminate some of the more cryptic dynamics of
musical systems. Here, music is understood as an adaptive system of sounds
made use of by distributed agents (the members of some kind of collective; in
this type of model, typically none of the agents would have access to the others’
knowledge except what they hear) engaged in a sonic group encounter, whether
as producers or listeners. Such a system would have no global supervision. Typical applications within this musicological context attempt to map the conditions of emergence for the origin and evolution of music cultures modeled as
“artificially created worlds inhabited by virtual communities of musicians and
listeners. Origins and evolution are studied here in the context of the cultural
conventions that may emerge under a number of constraints, for example, psychological, physiological and ecological.” Miranda, despite issuing a cautionary note on the limitations of using biological models for the study of cultural
phenomena, suggests that the results of such simulations may be of interest
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to composers keen to unearth new creation techniques, and asserts that Alife
should join acoustics, psychoacoustics, and artificial intelligence in the armory
of the scientifically upgraded musician.
The two most common tools used by these technically enhanced musicians
are cellular automata and genetic algorithms. Cellular automata were invented
in the s by John von Neumann and Stan Ulan as simulations of biological
self-reproduction. Such models attempted to explain how an abstract machine
could construct a copy of itself automatically. Cellular automata are commonly
implemented as an ordered array or grid of variables termed cells. Each component cell of this matrix can be assigned values from a limited set of integers, and
each value usually corresponds with a color. On screen, the functioning cellular
automata are a mutating matrix of cells that edge forward in time at variable
speed. The mutation of the pattern, while displaying some kind of global organization, is generated only through the implementation of a very limited system
of rules that govern locally.
Their most famous instantiation relates to John Conway’s game of life as
taken up within the domain of generative music by Brian Eno. The focus of
such generative music revolves around the emergent behavior of sonic life forms
from their local neighborhood interactions, where no global tendencies are preprogrammed into the system. In the software system CAMUS, based on Conway’s model, the emergent behaviors of cellular automata are transposed into
musical notation.
As in the case of cellular automata and artificial neural networks, models
based around genetic algorithms also transpose a number of abstract models
from biology, in particular the basic evolutionary biological processes identified by Darwin and updated by Dawkins. These algorithms are often used to
obtain and test optimal design or engineering results out of a wide range of
combinatorial possibilities. Simulations so derived allow evolutionary systems
to be iteratively modeled in the digital domain without the inefficiency and impracticality of more concrete trial-and-error methods. But as Miranda points
out, by abstracting from Darwinian processes such as natural selection based on
fitness, crossover of genes, and mutation, “genetic algorithms go beyond standard combinatorial processing as they embody powerful mechanisms for targeting only potentially fruitful combinations.” In practice, genetic algorithms
will usually be deployed iteratively (repeated until fitness tests are satisfied) on
a set of binary codes that constitute the individuals in the population. Often
this population of code will be randomly generated and can stand in for any-
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thing, such as musical notes. This obviously presupposes some kind of codification schema involved in transposing the evolutionary dynamic into sonic
notation, which, as Miranda points out, will usually seek to adopt the smallest
possible “coding alphabet.” Typically each digit or cluster of digits will be crosslinked to a sonic quality such as pitch, or specific preset instruments as is typical
in MIDI.
This deployment consists of three fundamental operations that in evolutionary terms are known as recombination (trading in information between a pair
of codes spawning offspring codes through combining the “parental” codes),
mutation (adjusts the numerical values of bits in the code, thereby adding diversity to the population), and selection (chooses the optimal code based on
predetermined precoded fitness criteria or subjective or aesthetic criteria). One
example of the application of genetic algorithms in music composition is Gary
Lee Nelson’s project, Sonomorphs, which used
genetic algorithms to evolve rhythmic patterns. In this case, the binary-string method is
used to represent a series of equally spaced pulses whereby a note is articulated if the bit
is switched on . . . and rests are made if the bit is switched off. The fitness test is based on
a simple summing test; if the number of bits that are on is higher than a certain threshold,
then the string meets the fitness test. High threshold values lead to rhythms with very
high density up to the point where nearly all the pulses are switched on. Conversely,
lower threshold settings tend to produce thinner textures, leading to complete silence.
This research intersection between artificial life and evolutionary music usually culminates, when fleshed out, in prototypes of artificial acoustic agencies
composed of voice synthesizers, a hearing apparatus, a memory device, and a
cognitive module as host to the algorithms. Algorithmic patterns or sets of
rules derived from processes of biological evolution are transcoded into digital
information that serves as instructions for sound software. The activation of
these rules may produce some emergences analogical to biological phenomena
such as evolution and mutation.
All of these projects hint at the unpredictable digital contagion, mutation,
and proliferation of vibration through code. They sketch an initial outline of
the nonhuman agency of artificial acoustic entities. These algorithmic agencies,
Kodwo Eshun describes as UAOs (unidentified audio objects). The UAO is a
kind of mutant acousmatic or schizophonic vector, a contagious pulse of experience without origin. For Eshun, a UAO is “an event that disguises itself as music,
using other media as a Trojan horse to infiltrate the landscape with disguised
elements of timeliness and atopia.”
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But what happens when these viral audio forms leak out of the digital sound
lab, beyond the quarantined spaces of sound art and find themselves physical
host bodies? Picture, for example, an unholy alliance between sonic branding
and the digital sound design of generative music—a situation in which music
was able to respond and mutate in order to preempt the movements and desires
of consumers. What if these artificial sonic agencies became parasitic, feeding
off your habits and quirks, always one step ahead, modulating your needs? Can
this predatory urbanism of responsive, anticipatory branding environments
within the surround sound of ubiquitous music media itself be preempted by
an approach tuned to both the digital and analog contagiousness of sound, or
audio viruses? The algorithmic contagion of generative music would be only
one aspect of the sensual mathematics monitored by an audio virology. Tracking
algorithms across the auditory mnemonics of populations, these unidentified
audio objects can already be found infesting the sonic ecologies of capitalism.
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Noise, noise, noise—the greatest single disease vector of civilization.
—J. G. Ballard, “The Sound Sweep”()
Contemporary capitalism is accompanied by the colonization of the audio
sphere by an epidemic of “earworms,” or audio viruses. The concept of the virus as applied to cybernetic culture, from computer infections to the dynamics of “hype,” has become generally prevalent, yet particularly under thought
in relation to sound. There is now a burgeoning, if problematic, range of discourses that extend from theoretical biology and medical epidemiology, to
software programming, cultural theory, marketing strategy, and science fiction,
which finds in the virus, biological and digital, so much explanatory potential
regarding the nonlinear dynamics of cybernetic culture. Infesting the fissures of
the nature-culture continuum, the virus is also at the center of discussions on
the aesthetics of artificial life research generally, and specifically in relation to
generative music. To understand this ubiquity of the concept of the virus and
its relevance to the contagiousness of vibrational events, some initial components of an “audio virology” will be sketched, paying special attention to the
microscopic engineering, incubation, transmission, contagion, and mutation
of sonic culture.
An initial task in constructing an audio virology is to break with a transcendent view of viruses. Film director David Cronenberg, cinematic fabricator of
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the new flesh soft machines of contagious media in films such as Videodrome
and Naked Lunch, assumes a somewhat Spinozist approach to the virus:
To understand physical process on earth requires a revision of the theory that we’re all
God’s creatures—all that Victorian sentiment. It should certainly be extended to encompass disease, viruses and bacteria. Why not? A virus is only doing its job. It’s trying to
live its life. The fact that it is destroying you doing so is not its fault. It’s about trying to
understand interrelationships among organisms, even those we perceive as disease. I
think most diseases would be very shocked to be considered diseases at all. It’s a very
negative connotation. For them, it’s a triumph. It’s all part of trying to reverse the normal
understanding of what goes on physically, psychologically and biologically to us.
This reorientation onto an immanent plane of specific encounters (which can
be both constructive and destructive) between bodies, what Spinoza calls an
Ethics, is opposed to an overarching, transcendent, anthropocentric morality
of health. Of course, this all raises the question of why it is more productive to
develop the concept of cultural infection when there is already a more neutral
concept of affection. While these terms can often be developed interchangeably,
the connotations of “infection” usefully dramatize this conception of the power
relations of affective contagion, an aspect that tends to be missing from the
dominant cognitive theory of cultural virology, that is, memetics.
Methodologically, an audio virology implies the transcription of the terminology of music markets and antimarkets; individual artists or producers, for
example, become carriers, events become incidents of outbreak, scenes become
fields of contagion, trade becomes an exchange of contagious sonic fluids or
particles, radio becomes a literal transmission network, and acoustic cyberspace, in both its analog and digital domains, becomes an epidemiological field
of affective contagion. In constructing this audio virology, it is helpful to track
down traces of this notion of sonic infection that reside latent within the discourses of the last century while noting how the digitalization of culture has
brought viral microcultures into ever sharper focus. Over the past decade, the
emergence of digital encoding formats and decentralized distribution networks
has forced a radical rearrangement of global music markets, leading many to
proclaim, for example, mp as a code weapon in a market warfare against global
multinational protectorates: an audio virus, replicating itself across the hard
drives of networked computers, unraveling the cell walls of a global antimarket.
Elsewhere, recent digital sound design, equipped with its algorithmic instruments and generative methodologies, continues what is essentially an avantgardist electroacoustic legacy, obsessed with music as process (not product) and
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therefore concerned with the integration of chance into compositional practice. More interestingly, its research has provided a vehicle for the arrival of
self-differentiating autonomous acoustic agencies and artificial sonic life-forms,
unraveling musical form into networked sonic anarchitectures, rendered susceptible to random mutation. In many cases, these sonic algorithms, usually
genetic and sometimes viral, are transpositions of bioevolutionary rules into
software. But while such digital sound design technologies have facilitated
much of this topologization of microsonic form and its exposure to potential
mutation, it would be a conceit to attribute too much significance or innovation
to these recent formalist technoaesthetic developments.
As predatory brand environments converge with generative music and consumer profiling, artificial sonic life-forms are released from the sterile virosonic labs of digital sound design into the ecology of fear. But what conceptual
tools does an audio virology use to track the transmission of these contagious
sonic algorithms (earworms) and their psychoaffective symptoms (“stuck tune
syndrome” and so-called cognitive itches)? Cultural virologies have to date remained essentially dualist (in the Cartesian sense) and neo-Darwinian in their
reduction of culture to a cognitive field composed of static, unchanging idea
units, otherwise known as memes. A standard objection to cultural virologies such as memetics is that by attributing so much autonomy to networks of
memes, they sideline the human labor and consciousness involved in the construction of culture. Like memetics, the conception of an audio virology is also
intended precisely to counter some of the habits of anthropocentrism within
auditory thought. Yet it will be clear that the audio virology consistent with the
ontology of vibrational force developed earlier diverges from memetics is significant ways. Moreover, if anything, one problem of memetics is that it does not
go far enough in this direction. There is a residual transcendence that haunts
the cultural cybernetics of memetics. Memetics tends to conceive of culture
strictly cognitively, as composed of ideas, beliefs, and values, posing the question: If humans can think ideas, can ideas think humans? Yet it will be suggested
that memetics, with its cognitivist obsessions and constant academic inferiority
complex, can only inadequately deal with processes of affective contagion and
the rhythmic differentiation and mutation of vibrational transmission vectors.
Instead, the components of an audio virology will be sought that are capable of
mapping the full spectrum of affective dynamics.
It will be suggested that perhaps a more fruitful line of investigation can
be found in the broader intersection of sonic culture with the virological
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pragmatism, the viro-tactics found in the sonic fictions and processes of the
Black Atlantic. Such an upgraded audio virology should be able to assist in approaching the following diagnoses: What is it to be infected by sound? How are
bodies affected by rhythms, frequencies, and intensities before their intensity is
transduced by regimes of signification and captured in the interiority of human
emotions and cognition? What can be learned from the microscale of sound
about its global technocultural tendencies, drifts, innovations, and black holes?
What viral algorithms are at work within vibrational culture beside so-called
generative music? What artificial life-forms inhabit the ecologies of global music
markets? How are audio viruses deployed within a politics of frequency?
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1976: Outbreak
That sound chills your spine. You can’t close your ears; you are defenseless. You
cover the ears, but your skin is still exposed. You can’t see it coming either. Stealthily, insidiously, it wriggles its way toward you, bristling with an unfathomable potential for replication. It wants you. At least, it wants to use you. And then leave. It
approaches with the croaking, crackling, chittering, seething intimacy of microbial
life. It induces the sonic equivalent of déjà-vu (déjà-entendu?). You are sure that
sound is familiar, but perhaps not from this lifetime. Those serrated frequencies
have resonated before with some part of your body, and that anomalous recognition testifies to the acoustic memory implant folded in your body, latent, waiting to
be reactivated by a future that is filtering in. What’s happening?
Exactly one year after the terrorist attacks of / , a text was published in the
New York Daily News announcing leaks from classified reports from the NASA
Medical Research Laboratories detailing new evidence that viral diseases such
as AIDS and ebola could be transmitted by visual channels. The idea was that
exposure to microphotography of virus structures could, through a process of
what was described as “dematerialization-materialization,” pass through the
retina and the brain and then reemerge as a “substantial living virus,” entering
a destructive relation with certain parts of the body. The fear, of course, was
the potential such a powerful weapon could have in the hands of terrorists. But
“if images can be virulent, can sound be virulent too?” This was the question
posed by Swedish artist Leif Elggren in his “Virulent Images, Virulent Sounds,”
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the project that stimulated the hyperstitional newspaper article. Elggren was
fascinated by the direct, immediate implication of audiovisual media on the
body. The CD that accompanied the project was presented with eight microstructure virographs (obviously published with a health warning) and contained
eight audio recordings of highly potent viruses: HIV, rabies, influenza, lassa,
mumps, ebola, sin nombre, and smallpox. According to the sleeve notes, these
microrecordings were carried out in a government laboratory in Tripoli, Libya,
and couriered to Sweden on minidisc in January . Elggren’s epidemiological sonic fiction concerned the transmission of a biological virus code through
the channels of media culture, an affective transmission of the abstract virus
structure through digitalized ripples of sonic intensity—a transmedia vector
scaling up from viral code through the microbiological to the audiovisual, only
to compress into code again. Even without this fictional context of mutant DNA,
the sounds were pretty creepy: a chittering yet viscous sonic mutation, a sensual
mathematics, in the gaps between sound systems, vibration, skin, internal organs, auditory-tactile nerves, and memory.
As with many of Cronenberg’s films, Elggren’s Virulent Images, Virulent
Sounds project resonates with the cut-up conceptechnics of William Burroughs.
Elggren’s version of audio virology seems based on the infamous – text
Electronic Revolution, his manual for the use of audiotape cut-ups in instigating
crowd violence. Burroughs amusingly outlines a series of tactics: from spreading
rumors in order to discredit political opponents, to using sound as a frontline
practice to incite riots. Cutting in a range of incendiary clips, at a parable level
of intensity to the ambient sonic environment so as not to attract the conscious
attention of the crowd, Burroughs suggested that the behavior of the crowd,
through a kind of mood modulation, could be steered in certain directions.
“There is nothing mystical about this operation,” he stated, “recorded police
whistles will draw cops. Recorded gunshots and their guns are out.” Burroughs
goes on to ask wryly whether a virus “is perhaps simply very small units of
sound and image. . . . Perhaps to construct a laboratory virus we would need
both a camera and a sound crew and a biochemist as well.” Here Burroughs
initiates what will become a recurrent refrain of the cyberpunk science fiction
of the s and s: the virus as the anomalous entity trading between nature
and culture, as at home in the human animal as it is in machines. As Douglas
Kahn points out in Noise, Water, Meat, Burroughs’s virology implies a mnemonics, or theory of memory, that relies on ideas he repurposes from L. Ron
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Hubbard’s notion of the engram, which in turn relied on early-twentiethcentury psychologist Richard Wolfgang Semon’s concept of the mneme. As
Kahn describes it, the engram was basically
an injurious or otherwise painful moment literally recorded by the body. This recording
should not be confused with memory that takes place in the brain, and it should not be
assumed that a person even needs to be conscious to record an injurious experience.
Instead the recording occurs anywhere in the body at the cellular level as a “definite and
permanent trace left by a stimulus on the protoplasm of a tissue . . . a cellular trace or
recording impinged deeply into the very structure of the body itself.” These engrams contain absolutely everything and would be very much “like phonograph records or motion
pictures, if these contained all perceptions of sight, sound, smell, taste, organic sensation
etc.” If these engrams stay in place and are not discharged through therapeutic means,
they will predispose the individual to psychosomatic illnesses . . . mental disorders and
always something less than complete psychophysiological sanity.
The connections, which Kahn follows from Burroughs’s word virus back
through Hubbard (to Wilhelm Reich, Alfred Korzybsky, and Richard Semon),
open an interesting, anti-Cartesian portal onto an audio virology, that is, the
need to conceptualize memory outside merely cognitive process, at the level of
the enfolding of affects into the body. However, the hardware storage model of
memory, in which it is thought that memories are stored in a particular location
in the body / brain, is controversial and has been consistently attacked from the
early twentieth century in philosophy and psychology. Other resources must be
turned to in order to construct an audio virological tool kit that can more convincingly account from sonic processes of affective contagion.
The quasi-discipline of memetics proclaims itself as a field of expertise in
the study of cultural viruses. A strong neo-Cartesian undercurrent connects
memetics with artificial intelligence research as manifestations of the desire to
digitally simulate human thought and culture. The term meme was coined by
theorist of evolution Richard Dawkins. In his most infamous text, The Selfish
Gene, Dawkins constructs the term to function in relation to culture in the same
way that the gene functions in relation to biology. As the gene is the basic informational building block of biology, the meme for Dawkins stands as the basic unit of culture: “Examples of memes are tunes, ideas, catch-phrases, clothes
fashions, ways of making pots or of building arches. Just as genes propagate
themselves in the gene pool by leaping from body to body via sperms or eggs, so
memes propagate themselves in the meme pool by leaping from brain to brain
via a process which, in the broad sense, can be called imitation.” Of course,
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Dawkins acknowledges that there are significant divergences between the process of genetic or biological transmission and that of memetic or cultural transmission. He therefore qualifies the comparison by drawing attention to the fact
that genetic information is passed down the tree of genealogy; transmission is
hereditary. Cultural or memetic transmission, on the other hand, is transversal,
cutting across the vertical axis of the genetic flow of information, and is therefore more viral than genetic. On one level, it is all just DNA code, but what crucially distinguishes them is their orientation to futurity, their path to the future.
As Dawkins points out in his essay “Viruses of the Mind,” “Legitimate host DNA
is just DNA that aspires to pass into the next generation via the orthodox route
of sperm or egg. ‘Outlaw’ or parasitic DNA is just DNA that looks to a quicker,
less cooperative route to the future by a squeezed droplet or a smear of blood.”
For Dawkins, the meme is not just a metaphor, of culture merely mirroring
the processes of nature. Rather, he suggests, there is a deep isomorphism between certain natural and cultural processes. To be exact, the isomorphic process is replication. Memes are nongenetic pattern replicators. Dawkins, in the
“Viruses” essay, points to the three characteristics of successful replicators that
he terms copying fidelity, fecundity, and longevity. Copying fidelity relates to the
quality of the copying process. The less degradation of the pattern after several
iterations, the more successful is replication. Obviously a faster rate of copying
will accelerate the replication process. Finally, the more reliable the material
holding the pattern, the longer the pattern is likely to last, thereby extending its
potential of abundant future replication. Dawkins focuses on computer viruses
as an intermediary in connecting nature to culture, wiring together biochemical machineries to brain replicators through networked hard disk memory. As
a model of informational epidemiology, computer viruses are computer programs written with the power of self-duplication, and therefore the ability to
spread: in other words, they contain the instructions “duplicate me.” Dawkins,
as in Elggren’s “Virulent Images, Virulent Sounds” project, emphasizes the role
of memetic transduction: “Viruses aren’t limited to electronic media such as
disks and data lines. On its way from one computer to another, a virus may pass
through printing ink, light rays in the human lens, optic nerve impulse and finger muscle contractions.” Yet for Dawkins, while the brain is more susceptible
to errors, it is only quantitatively less conducive to successful replication than
cells or computers.
While memetics provided some useful conceptual machinery for formulating
the evolution and spread of cultural viruses, it has a number of preprogrammed
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limitations that curtail its contribution to an audio virology. The first problem
derives from Dawkins’s insistence in differentiating science from a cultural virus. Dawkins really wants to retain the negative connotation of the “virus,” using
the term specifically in relation to what he considers dangerous infections of the
mind—for him, most notably, religions. Danger, for Dawkins, relates to nonscientific cultural domains. He retains a transcendent position as scientist, aloof
from the virological field of cultural transmission. He does admit that science
is itself composed of memes but not of the insidious variety. The deficiency of
memetics is that the memeticist remains aloof, transcendent from the epidemiological field. It is almost as if Dawkins has been immunized to the very viruses
he discusses.
The second, and related, problem stems from the tendency of memetics generally, and Dawkins specifically, not to differentiate rigorously enough among
different types of replicators. Manuel De Landa, for example, in One Thousand
Years of Nonlinear History, differentiates between an array of nongenetic replicators, a term he prefers to meme. Although Dawkins’s desire is that the relationship between the meme and gene be more than a metaphor, De Landa maintains
that the lack of precision in the definition of replicators weakens his case. For
De Landa, memes are confined to transmission by imitation (copying as a means
of propagation—for example, bird song, fashions, fads), while on the other
hand, there are what he describes as enforced replicators, or norms.
Third, memetics is primarily obsessed by information and its centralization
in the brain, at the expense of flows of matter and energy and distributed bodily
intelligence. Its cognitivist philosophy remains ensnared in the Cartesian legacy
of Western thought, leaving no room for the body, movement, and mutation.
For us, memetics falls victim to the Spinozan critique of Cartesian metaphysics.
Spinoza’s parallelism, his alternative to dualism, makes possible an understanding of mind-body infections in a way that takes into account flows of matter and
energy as well as information. While for Descartes there are two substances,
thought and extension, for Spinoza there is only one substance (also known
as nature and the entity or, for Deleuze and Guattari, the plane of consistency,
the Body without Organs, abstract matter, or the virtual). Spinoza’s substance
has an infinite number of attributes, only two of which are accessible to the human. But rather than being separate, thought and extension for Spinoza are two
aspects of the same substance. A Spinozist approach to cultural viruses would
therefore have to discard such narrow cognitivist approaches to culture in favor
of affective contagion. For Whitehead, on the other hand, discarding Spinoza’s
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monism in favor of multiplicity, affective contagion is marked by the potential of
an actual entity to enter into the concrescence of another actual entity.
De Landa wishes to distinguish specific types of cultural genotypes or replicators (for example, memes or norms) from cultural phenotypes (interactors like
enzymes that serve to actualize abstract patterns or, in language, speech acts that
lead to the switching from one state to another) in order to deal with the flow of
material through which nongenetic replicators spread. When the transduction
potential of cultural viruses is taken seriously, the focus can no longer purely
remain on the informational state of this process. Memetics, by tending to focus
on the transmission of information patterns across the meme pool of brains, a
cognitive network, pays insufficient attention to issues of affective contagion and
the propagation of physical and mental vibration.
An audio virology, on the other hand, entails a nexus that synthesizes the
flows of information, matter, and energy into a virulent rhythmic consistency.
In such an assemblage, it would be impossible to conceive of the replicator in
isolation, but rather embedded in an ecology, a diagram of relations to its material environment. This relation between the replicator and the sorting functions
carried out by selective environmental pressure forms a blind probe into the
potential mutations of an entity, not merely an informational pattern. And it is
this relation, what De Landa calls a “virtual searching device,” that makes possible the transversal trajectory of cultural viruses across a range of material and
energetic platforms.
Fourth, it is very hard not to construe memetics, in its dominant manifestations, as reductionist. By analyzing culture in terms of populations of unchanging idea units, little room is left for change and mutation, and no account is
provided of the formation or constitution of these elementary atoms. If we probe
the submemetic level, shifting the preoccupation of memetics with units onto
the relations that comprise them, then these atomic components of culture reveal and are traversed by a more primary field of rhythmic vectors. The replicator would therefore become a rhythmic assemblage, an entity composed of
speeds and slowness, clusters of sensation, percepts, and affects. What is depicted as a meme therefore is always already a population.
If the atomic basis of culture is to be insisted on, then it would have to be
modeled on a more Leibnizian schema, such as that followed by Gabriel Tarde,
or it would resonate with the way Whitehead subtracts monism from Spinozism, pushing it toward a multiplicity of quasi-monadic actual entities. If culture is to be formulated in computational terms as a monadology, then the base
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components must be able to evolve, change, and involve. The key questions become: What is enfolded within these cultural units? What submemetic populations do they conceal? Where are the networks of transmission in this story of
arithmetic units? An audio virology constitutes a kind of sensual mathematics
that moves past the transmission of unchanging units toward a model of the
unit of replication that mutates with each copy. This orientation operates at the
apex of divergence and movement—a parasitic, divergent vector that has been
understood, following Lucretius, as the angle of the swerve, the clinamen. It is
therefore necessary to go beyond memetics, beyond the distinction between
meme and transmission network, to understand an audio virus as affective vector, where the meme is unfolded onto its outside, becoming flat with its trajectory and environment topologically. To focus in this way on the becoming other
or mutation of the meme as it passes across a transductive circuit unlocks the
surplus potential immanent to the unit. Difference and mutation take priority
over the repetition of the same. The shift from memetic to rhythmic contagion
involves conceiving of the (extended) brain, as rhythmic transducer, converting
extensive movements into pulse patterns passing through neurological circuitry.
Memes are material processes, not merely informational patterns but specific
patterns of synaptic resonance across neural networks. The shift to rhythm
leaves open the content of the replicator to divergence. The brain’s rhythmic
circuitry revolves around the pulsing behavior of billions of networked neurons.
These rhythms can actualize as an array of bodily movements or sensations. But
again, transmitted pulse patterns are not fixed or unchanging, but rather are
subject to perturbation from the quantum scale, appearing as generative noise,
injecting new information to destabilize repetition.
In summary, a memetics must be supplemented in order to construct an audio virology. Memetics fails to fulfill the necessary criteria in that it neglects to
account for the body, affect, and change and therefore cannot adequately analyze
the sonic “softwar” strategies at work in contemporary capitalism. Elsewhere,
the operating logics of sonic branding help fill out the picture a little. While this
emergent field seems to run on memetic cultural software, its market-driven
pragmatism leads it to loot insights from emotional neuroscience spliced with
a crude behaviorist psychology. Its tactics reveal much about the viro-sonics of
capital, engineering self-propagating vectors of contagious sound, unleashing a
population of predatory “earworms” into the public domain.
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1971: The Earworm
It’s . a.m. You were asleep, dreaming. Eyes closed, pulsing with inverted activity, ears gaping, vulnerable as always. You spasm up from the darkness. Your eyes
open, focusing on the fluorescent digits of the wake-up machine. Something has
changed since you went under. You are no longer alone. Something has arrived and
entered. You think you saw it, or them. A pack of them, wriggling through the radio
waves. Maybe that was just the motion blur of the digits on the clock radio display,
as you jolted your head to hunt the intruder. But no sign. Just a chain of sounds,
muffled, wordless, timbreless from deep down in the throat chamber. Perhaps less
than a sound, a string of resonance effects. Not yet a tune, but with some divergence
in frequency. Unnamable, an entity has folded itself into your gray matter. It has
hooked you, staging a pirate attack on your vocal chords. It needs you to replicate,
and it’s begun already, sounding you out. What happened? You’ve been infected by
an earworm: a tiny microbe or rather micro-riff—a spiraling, coiled vibrational
loop. Later today it will be spending your money while you’re singing its tune.
In , Klaus Maeck’s and Muscha’s paranoid, low-budget, post-punk movie
Decoder explored the potential of sonic weaponry deployed against the forces of
Control. Against the backdrop of immanent nuclear annihilation, the film describes a world where all that is left for youth to do is to dismantle it. In the film’s
Manichean vision, Muzak, as the concoction of doctors, musicians, and marketing experts, aiming to stimulate productivity and employee morale alongside
generating a pacifying glow of comfort in the consumer, represented by the ultimate, insidious musical agent of evil.
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The film develops a number of sonic concepts revolving around a confrontation between Muzak and a kind of counter-Muzak. The lead character, FM,
experiments with sonic techniques to intervene into the piped musical environments of consumerism. Set in Hamburg in the early s, FM is a reclusive,
alienated youth who spends his time experimenting with recording equipment
in his studio. The film follows the awakening of FM, who one day grows very
suspicious of the ever-present Muzak played in his local hamburger restaurant.
He suspects that the Muzak is controlling consumers and starts to hear subliminal messages within. He begins to record the Muzak to analyze it and starts producing his own form of “anti-Muzak” by manipulating his recordings, changing
their speed, reversing them, or layering them with the sound of riots and animals. While roaming the city, he meets an underground cultish group named
the “pirates” engaged in dark-side “black noise” rituals. FM ends up joining
forces with the “pirates” and conducts attacks on Burger Kings and McDonalds
equipped with their cassette players loaded with anti-Muzak, inducing nausea
and rapid evacuation of the fast food restaurants. In response the Muzak Corporation sends a secret agent to hunt down the sonic terrorists. Meanwhile, social
disorder escalates as FM and his allies in the “pirates” reproduce and distribute
their anti-Muzak cassettes.
The riot scenes featured in Decoder were the actual riots filmed during President Reagan’s early s visit to Berlin. According to Vague magazine in ,
the film crew intended to plant actors with tape recorders in the crowds during
Reagan’s visit. On location, they noticed that local anarchists were already handing out tapes (with instructions for playback and replication) of war sounds such
as approaching helicopters and random gunfire to stoke up the crowd’s anger
and produce disorientation. In fact, the police had already begun confiscating
tape recorders. Klaus Maeck described that it was a kind of game: “Whenever
the Police were going to another area, we had time to think of something new
to get them back into action. We placed tape terrorists—friends holding tape
recorders—to get footage for our film wherever the action was.”
The film featured an underground yet star-studded cast including William
Burroughs, Throbbing Gristle’s Genesis P. Orridge, and Einstürzende Neubauten’s Mufti. But more than anyone else, Burroughs’s writings seem to have been
the primary conceptual guide to the cut-up techniques promoted in the movie,
particularly his ideas from Electronic Revolution that described the use of taperecorders to sonically catalyze riots and crowd disturbance. Burroughs appears
in one dream sequence of the film (playing the part of a shopkeeper dealing
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in spare electronics) to pass the main character an audiocassette. Like Leif
Elggren’s CD project Virulent Images, Virulent Sounds, Decoder’s tape terrorism
seems to stem directly from passages that describe the contagious use of the
tape recorder.
Muzak, since its birth, has often been referred to both as “functional” and
“background” music. Its description as background music, however, has always
signaled an ambiguity between the organization of sound thought to be typical of Muzak and that of music that demands more attention or merits more
aesthetic worth. This ambiguity revolves around the overlap between “background” music and what has come to be known as “ambient.” Continuing the
mutability of Satie’s “furniture music” in the s onward, “ambient,” it has been
claimed, can fluidly shift from background to foreground and vice versa, and
perhaps undermines this distinction. But the credit for this blurring should not
merely be attributed to the cultural influence of ambient music but points to a
shift in modes of audition within a broader operative logic of power. If we follow
the strategic shift in the Muzak corporation, for example, it appears that, according to Annahid Kassabian, by the mid-s, background music had become
foreground music in that what was being piped into environments of consumption and labor was in fact generically understood as foreground music in other
contexts. There was nothing that necessarily differentiated music and Muzak
any longer.
Kassabian, then, describes a mode of ubiquitous listening that corresponds
to a mixing of foreground and background, a mode in which listening becomes
a parallel process among others in a saturated media environment. According
to Jean-François Augoyard and Henri Torgue, the sonic condition of ubiquity
pertains to an “effect linked to spatio-temporal conditions that expresses the
difficultly or impossibility of locating a sound source. In the major variant of
this effect, the sound seems to come from everywhere and nowhere at the same
time.” Flat panel speaker technology migrates from military research and proliferates into the everyday. Vibration research ensures a ubiquitous media environment in which any surface whatever, organic or nonorganic, becomes a
potential emitter of sound. Whatever the specific genre of music deployed now,
Muzak—often similar to, often the inverse of the attention-grabbing tactics of
sound in radio, TV, and film advertising—still promotes a specific politics of
frequency. This revolves around the subtraction of very low and high frequencies
(like the perceptual coding involved in mp compression), mono playback, the
deprioritization of vocals, and often heavy compression to create a continuity in
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and minimization of dynamic range. In the history of ubiquitous music, in fact,
Muzak preempted our submersion into a generalized surround sound culture,
the insidious purr of control and the digital modulation of affective tonality that
smoothes the experience of the ecology of fear. As such, it is only fitting that
Muzak Corporation now brands itself as providing an “audio architecture.”
Early Muzak combined the so-called Hawthorne effect, in which workers would increase productivity when they were aware that they were under
surveillance, with the James-Lange theory in psychology, which pointed to
the autonomic affects of music in modulating physiological responses such as
breathing, metabolism, pulse, blood pressure, energy levels, and galvanic skin
response. The effect, it was thought, was to slightly increase productivity while
subtly maintaining the attention of the labor force during lull periods in the
workday. According to Sumrell and Varnelis in Blue Monday, the shift to ubiquitous music and audio architecture in relation to Muzak marks a transition
in operative logic that they refer to as from stimulus progression to quantum
modulation. Emerging during World War II, stimulus progression tactically organized the day around the pulsing center of gravity of the human heartbeat at
roughly seventy-two beats per minute. Increasing and decreasing tempo across
the day could therefore produce intensification or disintensification. Alternating
between music and quiet would produce alertness by the oscillation between silence and arousal. From the mid-s onward, Muzak’s strategy of sonic intervention shifted as a response to the already sensorially overloaded environment.
Muzak in this sense provides a sonic microcosm of what Deleuze described as
the shift from disciplinary societies to societies of control. From the surveillance of stimulus progression that constituted an early form of sonic discipline
by Muzak, to the horizontality of background, atmospheric control in quantum
modulation that no longer needs to correct individual action directly. Quantum modulation affects mood rather than just trying to manipulate attention.
In addition to modulation, Muzak, as audio architecture, helps to mask the babel of consumption in the polished postmodern surfaces of the shopping mall,
airport, and other “non-places.” Whereas stimulus progression varied intensity
and mood in the music, quantum modulation numerically indexed music in
relation to qualities “such as tempo, color (light or dark), rhythm, popularity and
so on to ensure that the same intensity can be maintained even as the music appears to have changed. Atmospherics address individuals as they traverse different ambiances through their everyday lives[my italics].” Quantum modulation
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therefore, simulating the logic of the DJ, attempts a smooth affective control by
creating a plateau of musical intensity.
However, the question pertains as to whether the contemporary nexus of viral marketing and sonic branding extends beyond control as modulation into
a mode in which preemption attains a new autonomy. The “hard sell,” the “soft
sell,” and immersion in the immaterial haze of a brand environmentality all deploy techniques of suggestion to induce consumption of a product. In preemptive power, however, a product does not necessarily preexist the contact between
brand and consumer. Rather, the contact in terms of the viro-sonic production
of allure serves to produce memories of contact with products that do not yet
exist. When capital becomes speculative in this way, it forces critical analysis
onto the same speculative terrain. Audio virology takes some initial small steps
toward this speculative method. The submerged affective sensorium in which
ubiquitous listening is now a subset compels the transformation of outmoded
frameworks of sonic thought. In an attempt to perform the necessary upgrade,
an audio virology starts from the premise of a mode of audition that is “always
on.” As with all other continuously open network connections, the body becomes vulnerable to viral contagion. If Muzak as sonic architecture preempted
the environment of ubiquitous audition in which consumption is now routinely
submerged, then sonic branding and its genealogy traceable to radio jingles aim
to catalyze the motivation to consume, creating a sonically triggered tipping
point. A brand comprises both actual and virtual relations, influencing the patterning of activities, rhythmically distributing them in time and space. A brand
functions as a nexus, holding together a set of relations while maintaining, by
iterated feedback, a dynamic unity in an environment of product differentiation and brand integration. On its concrete side, in extension, the brand faces
actual products quantitatively registered with prices. In its abstract dimension,
it expresses intensive qualities. The virtual dimension of the brand acts as a device generating and congealing an aura of associations extending to the horizon.
The brand nexus acts as a relay or filter between consumers and producers,
diagramming their interrelation, managing the interval between contact. The
positioned logo, sonic or visual, allows the brand to intervene in a field of perpetually shifting products, producing and sustaining a relation where there may
have been none.
In a dual strategy that makes use of the new technologies of ubiquitous media to mesh viral marketing and sonic branding, the brandscape is becoming
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increasingly predatory. Brands close in on you from the future, locked into your
affective sweet spots, laying an array of seductions, traps, diversion, bluffs, and
decoys. Branding has gone preemptive in the move from product to pattern,
swooping down to capture the interval between code traces and network profiling. This is the full-spectrum dominance of multidimensional synesthetic
branding, operating in the gaps between sound, sight, touch, taste, and smell.
In , the London Financial Times described how “having conquered the visual world of logos . . . [brand consultants] are now embarking on an aural attack. Sonic branding is all the rage.” In an era in which two seconds of sound
strategically attached to a brand is the equivalent of a heat-seeking technology
programmed into a missile’s guidance system, sonic branding becomes a targeting device of increasing power, guiding commodities toward the libidinal
demographic hot spots at which they are fired. One consultant from a brand
agency, Identica, explained, “We will always invent a sonic logo, for those times
when you can’t see, touch or feel the brand.” Sonic branding therefore becomes
a tactic of softwar, power through audio seduction.
Some interesting recent research related to sonic branding revolves around a
strangely common psychoacoustic condition. At the forefront of this research
is branding psychologist James Kellaris, who has been dissecting earworms,
unraveling their slight bodies to investigate their basic affects. For Kellaris,
earworms cause a neurodisturbance that he terms “stuck tune syndrome,” the
effect of a seemingly innocuous piece of music lodging itself into the brain and
refusing to leave. Kellaris has noted that certain types of music (particularly
anomalous stimuli) operate as “mental mosquito bites.” They create a “cognitive
itch” that can be scratched only by replaying the tune in the mind. The more the
mind “scratches,” the worse the itch gets. Using terminology close to memetics, Kellaris talks of conditions such as “stuck tune syndrome,” which describe
earworm infection. Musically, the primary vector of earworm transmission is
what is referred to as the hook. But how do hooks hook? What is the affective
dimension of sonic branding? How does an earworm worm its way into your
memory to replicate?
Of course, the cultural industry symbiotically intertwined with branding
and advertising, and that makes its everyday business the engineering of audio viruses is popular music. Advertising has learned much from the success
of popular music’s viro-tactics of hook engineering. In , Kylie Minogue’s
“I Can’t Get You out of My Head” captured this potency on two levels as her
voice intensified the insinuating refrain. In the economy of attention and dis-
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traction of viral capital, marketing force fields traverse bodies from every angle,
implanting earworms. Earworms are the virological vectors onto which sonic
branding latches. The term derives from the German ohrwurm (an infectious
musical agent). A commonly cited species within memetics, the earworm is the
catchy tune that you cannot get out of your head, the vocal refrain, the infectious rhythm or the addictive riff. There are many species of earworms traveling
at different speeds through the epidemiological field of sonic culture. Kodwo
Eshun registers the programming of the alien earworm precisely: “an audioinsinuation that seeps into the ears and taps out mnemonics on its drums. It
smirks, sated—because as soon as you drop the needle on the track, you’re in
its domain. Now you’re there its ‘doing it in your ear hole.’. . . It’s talked you into
letting it molest your sensorium.”
According to sonic brand experts, suggestions for the removal of earworms
are few and far between. The limited repertoire usually includes techniques for
removal such as substitution, completion, donation, and extraction. Substitution implies a resignation to the fact that there is no escape from the parasitic
earworm, so all one can do is attempt to usurp the reign of one refrain with
that of another, perhaps less irritating to the host—a simple replacement. Completion involves the host of the earworm listening to the piece of music from
which it escaped in full. Of course, not all earworms are susceptible to such
techniques, and completion comes with the added danger that repeated playing
makes innocent passers-by vulnerable to infection. This approaches the logic of
donation, where a host will deliberately voice the earworm in the hope that it
will take the opportunity to pass through and attach itself to a more welcoming
body. Finally, the extraction of an earworm, thought to be the most effective,
can be attempted. The first stage is to identify the strain of earworm. This is not
an easy task, often complicated by a related condition to earworm infestation,
the side effect of déjà entendu, that is, partial recognition of something heard
but corresponding to the inability to attribute cause or location to the source
of that sound effect. Extraction, once identified, involves some of the earlier
techniques just described, followed by the analysis and dissection of the worm
until it loses its virulent potential. Again, this is a risky strategy, as analysis always presupposes a potential escalation in the intimate relationship between
host and parasite.
Sonic branding entails an intervention into the affective sensorium’s mnemonic system. It can be considered a program for modulating the auditory
nervous system through contagious vibration. It is obvious to self-proclaimed
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experts such as Kellaris that they are dealing with potent (and clearly very lucrative) material. Therefore, it is not too surprising that he does not seem overly
concerned with the pragmatics for removing earworms, although he is with
their implantation, the fabrication of branded memory, a second skin channeling processes of desiring production. It is a brain program, as one sonic branding memory consultant, Duane Sprague, has outlined:
In short, the actual process of branding is the result of using echoic memory recall (the
memory of things heard) to implant an associative memory (a new memory you create with your specially created branding message), that has become linked to a positive
memory already anchored in the individual’s mind, and then recalling that anchored
memory on demand (and thus the desired response) with a recall cue or stimulus (your
branding ad which is the associative memory now linked to the anchored memory). . . .
Therefore, the hearing of your branding ad, which is the recall cue, and also the new associative memory, automatically pulls-up the pre-existing anchored memory. Because
this anchored memory is positive, a positive feeling is associated with your [brand] name
upon hearing the cue. . . . Branding can also be achieved using iconic memory as a recall
stimulus (memory of things seen), but this is much more difficult, time consuming, and
expensive, as the human brain is easier to train and condition using the sound of words
over sight alone. To the brain, spoken words seem to carry far more emotional impact
than written words. And the greater you can make the emotional impact, the deeper
rooted the associative memory, or recall stimulus becomes. The deeper rooted the associative memory becomes, the easier and more reliable it is to stimulate on demand, and
the more likely to be permanently linked to the desired anchored memory.
It is misleading, however, to suggest, as Sprague does, that the most potent level
at which such sonic mnemonic processes operate is the level of associations,
of significations through spoken words. Another more basic dimension is suggested if you follow advertising’s evolution from the rather crude bioweapon of
the jingle in the s to the current attempts at ubiquitous immersion of sonic
branding, with its armory of nonverbal “earcons,” “sonic logos,” and “idents.” A
catchy tune is no longer sufficient; it merely provides the DNA for a whole viral
assemblage.
Instead of an outmoded associative psychology, most branding theory has
already moved on to invest in the modulation of emotion by nonverbal means,
signaling a mutation of capital logic into a more subtle colonization of memory
through the preemptive sonic modulation of affective tonality. The symptoms of
such a shift of power are manifest in acoustic time anomalies. Analyses of these
glitches reveal much about the way in which sound hooks.
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Whoever experiences it is often prey of a characteristic emotion, becoming more or less
a stranger to himself and, as it were, “automatized.”
—Henri Bergson, “Memory of the Present and False Recognition” ()
What concept of memory could account for the contagious vibrations of audio viruses without denigrating them to mere epiphenomena? What concept of
memory is compatible with the illogic of affect, the virtuality of the past and the
active immanence of futurity in the present? In a chapter in his book Emotional
Branding, essentially a “softwar” manual for brand consultants, Gobé describes
the power of sound to abduct you to another time, to activate memories that
obliterate consciousness of the present in front of you, in the blink of an eye,
transporting you into previously overpowering sensations and affects. The potency of earworms is not limited to contagiousness. When audio viruses resonate in the host body, they can result in the feeling of temporal anomaly. If we
assume that instead of an exception, synesthetic perception is primary, then
earworms use the full body as an ear, treating the skin as an extended eardrum
membrane. They seem to possess the ability to implant themselves through an
achronological looping in which distinctions between past, present, and future compress and come into contact. The earworm enters by creating a time
anomaly as its Trojan horse. This entry only becomes manifest secondarily as
a microtemporal, fleeting glimpse of recognition. We could say, perhaps only
half jokingly, that it enters in this split second through an earwormhole. The
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second-order effect of (illusory) familiarity or recognition temporarily pulls
down sensory defenses. In other words, in that momentary flash, an instruction is communicated—record me! The flash abducts us into a past, potentially
fictional but real, in that it forces an attitude of receptivity by compelling a vacation from the self—or, rather, a takeover of the body by an exterior entity,
an audio virus programming your desire. Branding increasingly makes use of
such memory glitches in which the distinction between past, present, and future
becomes blurred.
Film sampling in electronic music illustrates one aspect of this mnemonic
problematic. A sense of familiarity, or déjà vu, is often experienced when you
watch a film that contains a segment of sound—it could be a phrase or even
merely a tint of ambience—that you first experienced in its sampled form in
electronic music. The affective charge of such a memory involves a reduction
from audiovisual data to just audio. For Kodwo Eshun, following Michel Chion,
this compression of the affect is felt as temporal abduction, chronic infection.
These flashes have, as he astutely notes, the power to generate the sense of “always being grabbed away by the music. By extinguishing the visual output, the
music is switching it on elsewhere. It’s as if the eyes started to have ears.” In
this process of switching, a synesthetic surplus value is produced, and it is this
surplus that makes acoustic time anomalies in sampladelic culture such a common occurrence. The more commonplace version of this involves accidentally
stumbling across an original track when you are much more acquainted with its
sampled riffs or vocal phrases populating another piece of music. The history
of funk and reggae in particular reverberates with the trauma of perpetual looting from hip-hop, jungle, and other forms. The already occurred “abduction by
audio” is felt retrospectively as a vague sense of familiarity that switches on your
pattern recognition systems, “presses record,” and intensifies your vulnerability
to infection. The body, then, a vibrational nexus and cross-sensory transducer,
records and plays back, is affected and affects, is infected and infects.
An audio virology clearly opens up more questions than it can answer. How
should it conceive of the relation between the body, memory, and perception?
How does a (perhaps illusory, a false memory) sense of sonic familiarity render
a body susceptible to sonic infection? To unravel this phenomenon of déjà entendu, a symptom of the condition of schizophonia (i.e., sounds detached not
just from their sources in space but also in time), we need a sense of memory in
which the past and the future virtually coexist with the present so that memories
and anticipated potentials resonate with each other in unpredictable ways. The
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implied assertion is that auditory hallucinations play an increasingly complex
role within a cybernetic capitalism of ubiquitous media seething with artificial sonic life-forms. What is required is a rhythmanalytic cartography that can
map vectors of affective contagion through time loops connecting the past and
the future.
In his text Bergsonism, Deleuze explores duration at various tensions, states of
relaxation and contraction, and its relation to the virtual coexistence of affects
from different times. He notes,
We have great difficulty in understanding a survival of the past in itself because we believe that the past is no longer, that it has ceased to be. We have thus confused Being with
being present. Nevertheless, the present is not; rather, it is pure becoming, always outside
itself. It is not, but it acts. Its proper element is not being but the active and the useful.
The past, on the other hand, has ceased to act or to be useful. But it has not ceased to
be. Useless and inactive, impassive, it IS, in the full sense of the word: It is identical with
being in itself.
In this sense for Deleuze, the
past is “contemporaneous” with the present that it has been. . . . The past and the present
do not denote two successive moments, but two elements which coexist: One is the present, which does not cease to pass, and the other is the past, which does not cease to be but
through which all presents pass. It is in this sense that there is a pure past. . . . The past
does not follow the present, but on the contrary, is presupposed by it as the pure condition without which it would not pass. In other words, each present goes back to itself in
the past . . . it is all our past, which coexists with each present.
Only with such a conception of memory is it possible to admit the affective reality of both sonic memories and premonitions haunting the present. To the extent that sonic branding plays with déjà entendu, it mixes and blends two sonic
effects in particular: the effect of a sound triggering a memory of another sonic
time and place, and the effect of mentally produced sounds conjuring up imagined experiences. Mixing these concrete and abstract sonic memories, a sophisticated predatory sonic branding would transduce these actual and virtual pasts
into anticipatory orientations to futurity. Augoyard and Torgue describe these
two sonic mnemonic effects as anamnesis and phonomnesis. They describe how
anamnesis is an “effect of reminiscence in which a past situation or atmosphere
is brought back to the listener’s consciousness, provoked by a particular signal
or sonic context. Anamnesis, a semiotic effect, is often an involuntary revival of
memory caused by listening and the evocative power of sounds.” Anamnesis,
for them, therefore constitutes the opposite of anticipation where the affective
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sensorium opens to an event suggested by a passing sonic sequence. Phonomnesis, on the other hand, refers to “a sound that is imagined but not actually heard.
Phonomnesis . . . is a mental activity that involves internal listening: examples
include recalling to memory sounds linked to a situation.” The way in which
déjà entendu converts these two mnemonic effects into an orientation to futurity reveals much about the ambience of preemptive power.
While Bergson is concerned with the virtual past, Whitehead’s insight here
comes from the opposite direction: the potential future. He maps the retroactivity of futurity by focusing on the microtemporality of the immediate present. Memories for him exist between the immediate past and the immediate
future. Here, the past does not determine the future but eats into it. In such
achronological causation, the future is active in the present, unfolding in the
process by which the past-present enters the present-future. He suggests that to
prehend the transition between the immediate past and the immediate future
is of the order of short-term intuition—time spans that last a second or fraction of a second—“which lives actively in its antecedent world.” Prehensions
are microtemporal modalities of perception defining not only the conceptual
feeling of past occasions in present experiences, but also the way the objective
existence of the present lies in the future. Conceptual prehensions indicate not
that the past predicts the future, but that the future is anticipated in the present.
As Whitehead argues, “Cut away the future, and the present collapses, emptied
of its proper content. Immediate existence requires the insertion of the future
in the crannies of the present.” Prehensions establish a causal relation between
the subject prehending and the external world at the moment of perception.
Yet causality here enters a multilayered architecture of durations, where past,
present, and future are temporal intricacies of the perishing and onset of actual
individual occasions.
To remember, then, for Whitehead, entails a cyclical yet nonlinear dynamic
whereby an occasion of experience is initiated in the past, which is active in
itself and terminated in the future, which is also active. Such an occasion itself starts as an effect facing its past and ends as a cause facing its future. If
the present emerges from the past, at the same time it is also immanent to the
future. The reenaction of the past passes through the acquisition of the new
to be accomplished in the present, yet the content of the present remains the
future. Completion is also anticipation. Anterior future: the present remains at
once occupied by the past and the future. The memory of the past experience
enables the system to learn—accumulate data—to be better equipped to face
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the probabilities of future experience. On the other hand, prehensions tackle a
universe of microtemporalities, enabling the future not to be predicted by means
of probabilities but to actively occupy the present by means of immediacy. “In
this sense, the future has objective reality in the present. . . . For it is inherent in
the constitution of the immediate, present actuality that a future will supersede
it.” Whitehead defines this temporal immediacy as the enjoyment of the present: an open-ended enjoyment of reenaction and anticipation where the future
enters the present once the past has perished so as for futurity to populate the
present anew.
Preemptive power seeks to colonize this activity of the future in the present. Anticipative branding culture, for example, sets out to distribute memory
implants, which provide you with the sense of the already enjoyed—already
sensed—to encourage repetition of consumption, a repetition of a memory that
you have not had. This strain of branding is at the forefront of crystallizing
memories of the future—memories that are only virtual despite their sense of
familiarity. Such speculative techniques generate an atmosphere of time anomaly crowding the mediatic sphere. The body feels the activated sensation as past.
In its infinite differentiation of product ranges, branding plays with a combination of familiarity plus novelty, a past-futurity, installing new memory that
you have not phenomenologically experienced in order to produce a certain
receptivity to brand triggers. No longer relying on lived bodily experience—
actual sensory responses—brand memory implantation operates through the
body’s remembering a virtual sensation. In short-term intuition, the future yet
to be formed is actively populating the sensations of the present, anticipating
what is to come, the feeling of what happens before its actualization. Preemptive
power therefore invests in the contagious virtual residue of memory. The sonic
mnemotechnics of capitalism modulate future desire by activating the future in
the present.
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Rhythm is a biotechnology.
You are the newest mutants incubated in womb-speakers . . . the labs where the st C
nervous systems assemble themselves.
—Kodwo Eshun, More Brilliant Than the Sun ()
An alternative approach to the audio virology of ubiquitous music of sonic capital derives from an analysis of the sonic processes and fictions of what cultural
theorist Paul Gilroy called the Black Atlantic. This approach produces a very
different viropolitics of frequency in contrast to that implemented by sonic
branding. Whereas sonic branding seeks to induce consumption by channeling sound’s power into the modulation of affective tonality in order to forge
associations with real or virtual products, Black Atlantic futurism seeks to enact
the demise of Babylon through dread engineering and the tactical deployment
of sonic dominance. The contagious vibrations, sonic processes, and market
tactics of strains of popular music within the African diaspora both extend the
concept of an audio virology and offer a tactical outline of an affective mobilization as opposed to the modulation of preemptive capital. A virology of the Black
Atlantic runs on the notion that diaspora has an epidemiological etymology.
The term diaspora comes from Greek and Indo European origins and refers to a
rhythmically distributed, mobile population, spread out, scattered. In its audio
virological mode, the Black Atlantic is therefore rewritten as a network of labs,
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incubator populations, transmission media, host bodies, immune systems, rates
of propagation, and degrees of infection and mutation.
Such virologies, Kodwo Eshun tells us, can be found in the sonic fictions
permeating electronic music, especially those that share a postapocalyptic cyberpunk worldview of digital capitalism. One of the most vivid instances of
an Afrofuturist fiction of virological sonic warfare explored by Eshun is from
second wave Detroit techno outfit Underground Resistance (UR). UR has one
of the most explicit hyperstitional systems outlining an evolution of rhythmic
genetic strains in which colonialism is recast in a sweeping history of population conflict of cosmic proportions. The sleeve notes to its Interstellar Fugitives
album develop a kind of sonic virology in a fictional report issued by the Intergalactic Bureau of Investigation. The city of Detroit becomes a vast rhythmachine, with mechanically pulsed affective waves rippling intensity across the
urban skin, carrying sonic parasites to hijack your nervous system. The sonic
warriors are carriers of a potent R mutant gene and are referred to as “digital
Ebola guerrilla operatives with reinforced rhythm awareness capabilities.” Activation of the potential of the mutant strain results in the affective mobilization
of populations in dance. The R strain is diagnosed as “older than humanity
itself and was sequenced into human genetics by probabilities still unknown. R
communicates through secret coded rhythm patterns based around the drum
that is common in all human societies. It should be noted that these rhythms can
also be vocalized, expressed through dance or art, and transferred by rhythmically oriented machinery.” In this sonic fiction, control becomes a immunology.
The report continues describing a dangerous mutation: in a “constant search
for ways to combat the ever increasing evil of the systems programmers, R
has most recently employed a little known frightening bio engineered mutant
cousin gene that was created during a period of time ranging from the s
to the late s in colonized areas throughout the world and especially in the
new world of the Americas. The cousin which we will call z (for zero) to signify
its complete erasure from history was the result of illicit genetic breeding experiments performed on enslaved human stock of the R gene.” This z model
was elusive, “chameleon like, unpredictable and final (see the maroons) and although it could deceptively function within any given society it would only take
true directions from R using its enhanced rhythm perception it could decipher
R directives from anything ranging from a field work song to the rhythmic flow
of a poets lines to automated modern machinery.” Combining a revisionist black
history with science fiction, genetic theory, and ethnomusicology, UR produced
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a kind of “dub fiction,” where history is versioned into an occulted vibrational
battle of cosmic proportions that parallel Ishmael Reed’s Mumbo Jumbo.
Aside from sonic fictions such as these that come packaged with the music
itself on sleeve notes, track titles, artwork, and so on, theorists such as Frank
Gunderson have attempted to force direct engagement between the cultural virologies developed within memetics to the musics of the African diaspora. For
Gunderson, memetic theory would propose “that some rhythms, for whatever
groovilogical reasons, are catchier than others, are more quickly received than
others. Crowds tend to gather whenever they are played, thus insuring their infectious spread to more bodies.” Certain modes of rhythmic configuration can
therefore function as an attractor in processes of group catalysis. Indirectly, he
investigates the “changing same,” Leroi Jones’ term for the orientation to future
history of the Black Atlantic in terms of riff dynamics:
By “riff ” I mean the short repeated segments of sound known as ostinatos in musicological terms, which are deployed singularly or in overlapped layers in drum parts, in
melody fragments, as accompaniment, and as bass lines. The riff is crucial in supporting
improvisation and call and response exchanges, and once employed as a groove, it is the
musical unit that most compels the body to move. The riff is the most tenacious of African American music memes, the definitive competitive musical virus. Ultimately, it is the
riff meme that constitutes the basic unit of African American musical tradition, not any
one corpus or genre or tradition where repetition was the major factor.
Gunderson, by plugging memetics into a history of hyperrhythmic contagion,
potentially moves beyond its limited informational model. The “earworm as
riff ” is suddenly ascribed so much more power—not merely the power to be
remembered and transmitted via imitation, but more profoundly the power to
move the body in dance through affective mobilization. Rhythmic contagion
seems to stretch memetics beyond its limits. Rhythmic contagion is submemetic
in the sense that the unit of the meme is turned inside out to reveal its ontogenetic relations, what produces it as individuated block of affects or a nexus of
microevents. During the violent “evolutionary climate” of diasporization, that
is, the forced migration of the middle passage, riff transmission occurred “under
duress”: “In order to survive, music transmission needed to be effective, catchy,
as well as a quick study.” In this context, Gunderson describes James Brown as
a “replicator vessel” with an “affinity for collecting and transforming riff and
groove memes, operating in a milieu where he creatively put together the most
essential materials from the existing music meme pool. In James Brown’s own
words: ‘I mapped the music’s DNA—cracked its code and found grooves.’ ”
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In the propaganda of Black Atlantic futurism, typified in concentrated form
in sonic fictions such as UR’s, these riff patterns constitute virtual parasites or
affective weapons, encrypted rhythms of a nonconscious bionumeracy, a synesthetic pulse pattern. Rhythm becomes a logistical delivery apparatus, a conveyor
belt of multiple species of earworm. In the sonic fictions related by Eshun, molecular cultural warfare often figures prominently while the dub methodology
of track / cut / version incubates audio viruses, rhythmic guerrilla genetics, dub
zombies, and bugged-out clones. Crucially, unlike the transcendence of science
and its immunity in the memetics of Richard Dawkins, for Eshun, these kinds
of sonic science (fiction) not only discuss cultural viruses; they are themselves
“a viral contagion.”
In addition to UR, one of the most intriguing articulations of this audio virology of Black Atlantian contagious rhythmatics appears in Ishmael Reed’s
Mumbo Jumbo, where the central protagonist is the jes grew virus, or what Reed
calls an antiplague. This antiplague, for Reed, takes its name from the proliferation of ragtime songs in the early twentieth century that “jes grew,” or just grew.
Jes grew is a particularly interesting cultural contagion because it cures its victims of the rhythmically retarded influence of Eurometric musical civilization.
In a sense, jes grew is a very Spinozist virus: its conjunction with a body serves
to increase its power to affect. In Reed’s text, it functions as a weapon in a battle
extended to cosmic proportions, ultimately entailing a contest between carriers
of jes grew and the atonists, supporters of the mythology of Western civilization,
a clash between black and white magic. Reed’s deployment of the jes grew virus
also clarifies what is at stake in the divergent temporalities of futurism versus
that of Afrofuturism. Instead of leaving the past behind or treating it as static,
Afrofuturist sonic fictions tend to find routes to the future in the past through
the looped achronology of time anomalies or the “knockings,” communiqués
from outside the present, transmitted like radio waves in terms of premonitions
or memories of the future.
The Black Atlantic provides many other prototypes of virosonic war machines, or what, in More Brilliant Than the Sun Kodwo Eshun terms tactics in the
“redesign of sonic reality.” A particularly key manifestation of audio virological
pragmatism has developed around the sonic diaspora of Jamaican pop music. In
“Ghostlines: Migrations, Morphology, Mutations,” Eshun and Edward George,
a former member of the Black Audio Film Collective, map out a time line of the
infection of European popular music culture by reggae, dub, and dancehall.
Elsewhere Steve Barrow wrote that “dub . . . is the virus infecting and mutating
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such musical styles as Jungle, House, Techno, Ambient and more.” The “dub
virus” relates not just to the direct influence of the dub reggae sound on other
musics, but more than this, its catalysis of an abstract sound machine revolving
around the studio as instrument and the migration of a number of production
and playback processes. The dub virus hacked the operating system of sonic
reality and imploded it into a remixological field. The dub virus, taken in these
terms, is a recipe for unraveling and recombining musical codes. In Kevin
Martin (aka the Bug) compiled a series of compilations entitled Macro Dub Infection complete with an achronology of the evolution of the dub virus (origin
unknown) as it reassembled popular music from below: an “amoral corruption”
affecting “all musical forms it digests.” As one Jamaican sound system vocalist,
Prezident Brown, put it in the track “Roots in the Music,” “Reggae music is like a
disease that is incurable / Once you catch it you have it for life / We spreading the
virus till the whole world get infected.” One writer quotes another reference to
the virulence of this acoustic infection, which was known to be “very contagious
and believed to be airborne.”
For Mark Fisher, this dub virus is expressed through the propagation of an
abstract process he terms dubtraction:
The hyperdub practice par excellence, and its abstract sorcery (and sorcery of abstraction) connects Lee Perry to Nico Sykes, Brian Wilson to Can. Fundamentally, dubtraction is about the production of virtualities, implied songs all the sweeter for their lack of
solid presence. It’s all about what is left out, an involutive process that identifies desire
with the occupation of a plateau. Hints, suggestions and feints: these complications of
desire function not as teases but as positive deviations from both climax and monotonous idling on the spot. Dubtraction understands that desire is about neither engorgement nor emaciation, but about getting the right amount you need in order to keep
moving.
The sonic manipulations central to the process of dub versioning deploy electronic effects such as echo, delay, and reverb as means to sonic seduction. All
can, in the production of these virtualities, generate effects that simulate the
physics of sound within a certain acoustic space, particularly the reflection of
sonic vibrations off surfaces, for example, the walls that demarcate that space.
The delay time within a physical space is dictated by the size of the room—the
time the sound takes to bounce back. The sound that bounces back can be heard
as a delayed and decayed version of the original sound. However, the conceptual power of such effects is in their potential to preempt virtual sonic spaces
that do not yet actually exist, populating real spaces with audio hallucinations.
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Moreover, they hack into sonic objects, catalyzing mutations into monstrous,
uncontrollable morphologies. In sonic processes such as delay, a tendency to tip
over as the intensity of the source resonates with reflected vibrations can result
in an escalative, positive feedback spiral. A sonic entity can suddenly flip over
into a field of sound. In summary, dub virology, via its armory of sound effects
and its generalized logic of the version, produced a contagious diagram that has
served as one of the dominant operating systems of electronic music culture
since the early s.
More than this, some critics, such as Ian Penman, argued that the route
through Jamaican dub produced an alternative, diasporic orientation to the condition of ubiquitous music outlined by Kassabian. He notes that instead of being
produced as a universal music, “dub has taken an opposite route to these other
examples—muzak, elevator, exotica, soundtracks—which were already everywhere and untheorised, and then drawn into the specialist enclave of theory.
Dub has followed the opposite trajectory: an arcane moment, a strange isolated
example which has SPREAD OUT to infect inflect a certain Everywhere. . . . So
that it has found its ‘reste’—its cyber Zion, its circulation, its afterlife: its Apocalypse—in the unlikeliest places. From the background to an apocalypse of very
local perplexities, it has become this everywhere soundtrack.” Penman’s particular variety of dub virology represents the idea of dub as deconstruction. But
it also questions the application of cultural theory to music, instead positing the
way in which dub contains its own, immanent theory engine. It produces a sonic
philosophy that scrambles the separation between theory and its musical objects
of study. In this way, it still stands as one of the strongest examples of Eshun’s
suggestion that electronic music has no need to be rescued or theorized by a
transcendent cultural theory but is instead already immanently conceptual.
Like Reed’s jes grew, the dub virus, for Penman, operates on the extended
timescale of a postcolonial clash of civilizations, in which the ghosts of slavery
and forced migration return to haunt the European spirit. The colonized of the
empire strike back in stealth mode through virosonic infiltration. Here the dub
virus travels in the waves of babel that threaten to bring down the tower. The resort to audio virology is an attempt to answer a particular question: “How did it
happen that—against all the teleological odds—dub became omnipresent? How
did [Marcus] Garvey’s ghost come to reign in the European geist, in the secret
recesses of Heidegger’s heimat? . . . How did something so local and specific as
Jamaican dub become so generally accessible and amenable to quotation?” In
part, the answer to this question is what Manuel and Marshall term the “riddim
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method.” In the late s and early s, as roots reggae was ousted by dancehall as the dominant popular music in Jamaica, the dub virus’s sonic processes
underwent a digital mutation. A key event within this hyperactive sonic ecology was the Sleng Teng ‘riddim’ (patois for instrumental rhythm track), which
marked the threshold of digitalization in Jamaican dancehall culture. Wayne
Smith’s “Under Me Sleng Teng,” produced in , was the first fully computerized rhythm to properly blow up in Jamaica and was created on a Casio music
box. It was based on a riff from Eddie Cochran’s tune “Something Else” but was
slowed down and rebuilt by Jammy’s engineer, Tony Asher. The riddim was famously unleashed on the world at the historic sound clash between Jammy’s and
Black Scorpio at Waltham Park Road in Kingston on February , . Smith’s
only number one song was produced at Lloyd “King Jammy’s” James studio. It
reportedly spawned over a hundred recordings on the beat (including singer
Tenor Saw’s breakthrough hit “Pumpkin Belly”) and continues to be sampled or
covered today. Coupled to dubtraction, digital dancehall’s rhythm culture illustrates that the “riddim method” is also driven by “riff replication and mutation.”
As if acknowledging the musical virulence of Jamaican pop, the most popular
dancehall riddim of was called the Virus riddim, a Madd Dawg version of
an old Duke Reid track. Like many of the other dominant riddims of the day,
this was released not just on a series of singles featuring different vocals but
also on the Greensleeves Rhythm Album series of double compilations. Like a
thermometer of the intensity of this viral musical culture in tough economic
times, rhythm albums mirror one of dancehall’s primary protocols. This process
constitutes a kind of “riddim optimization.” Anyone familiar with the impact of
kick drum on the evolution of techno, the Apache break on the emergence
of hip-hop, or the Amen funk break on the emergence of jungle will understand
the viral logic. What the riddim album captures is the startling efficiency of
breeding whole sonic microcultures out of one core loop, a refrain to be populated by up to thirty different vocal cuts. The story of a riddim’s rise and fall, of
the trade in seven-inch vinyl, is also a tale of the intricate dynamics of hype, of
playing a volatile market in which styles and fashions “buss big” one month and
are “a dead stock” the next. It is this incredible speed of change that singles out
the Jamaican music industry as one of the most hyperactive in the world.
Dancehall’s “riddimania,” evident in the rhythm albums, continues and mutates the logic of the “version,” developed in Jamaican dub in the late s and
early s. Versioning defines what dub does to the reggae vocal track. It essentially remixes the original, using an array of effects, usually morphing the
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song into a series of ghosted vocal traces haunting the rhythm track that has
been stripped down to a functional minimum of bass, drum, and effects. From
the s onward, “versioning” undergoes an intensification because of the logic
of digital replication, transforming the dub virus, in Britain particularly, into a
“hyperdub virus,” which extends the dub virology into the realm of the “hardcore continuum,” particularly the lineage of underground musics that stretches
from hardcore, jungle, drum’n’bass, U.K. garage, grime, dubstep to more recent
U.K. variants of house such as bassline and funky.
In short, the virologies of the Black Atlantic, from the riddim method of Jamaican pop, to the sampladelia of U.S. hip-hop, the remixology of disco, house,
and techno, and the hyperdub methodologies of the hard-core continuum, constitute a wealth of techniques for affective mobilization in dance. Parasitic on the
innovations of such popular musics, virosonic capital hijacks these techniques
of affective mobilization and converts them into a control program for modulation. It is this ever-decreasing gap between mobilization and modulation that is
the core focus of an audio virology.
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While Afrofuturist sonic fictions and processes such as dub virology focused on
the armory of effects (particularly reverb, delay, and subtraction) whose techniques of abstraction facilitated a proliferation and generation of a kind of “dub
diaspora,” it has been argued that such preoccupations neglect the role of more
traditional weapons of sonic warfare within postslavery black music, especially
the voice. Spirituals, for example, were deployed as sonic weapons by both black
and white abolitionists in the struggle against American slavery. The protest
and yearning expressed in song or the rhythmically spoken word, from gospel,
to soul, to roots reggae, to hip-hop and R&B, continued this mobilization of the
voice. It is against this background that some writers have, from a more humanist stance, criticized Afrofuturism, raising the question of the vocal material on
which its armory of sonic processes is effected. Two pertinent examples of these
critiques of Afrofuturism can be located. They target both its dub virologies and
its affinity, in its most compelling strains, to an alien inhumanism.
The first, fired from what is essentially a traditional cultural studies perspective, concerns the political semiotic content of the transmitted voice within,
for example, reggae, and the potentially deracinating effect of musical deterritorialization. In a polemical article entitled “Back to the Roots,” music critic
Simon Reynolds noted how the virologists of sound seemed to gravitate around
instrumental electronic musics (from dub to techno to glitch), revealing as
much by what they left out of their poststructuralist musings as what they included. Reynolds accuses “the cluster of ideas [that] can be described as the
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Afro-futurist discourse, but it actually has multiple facets: dub as deconstruction (of the song, of the metaphysics of musical presence); the producer as mad
scientist, dark magus, shaman, trickster; the ‘Macro Dub Infection’ notions of
dub as post-geographical virus and of dub’s sonic instability as an education in
‘insecurity.’ ” He complains that what all these dub virologies shared was ironically the “exaltation of producers and engineers over singers and players, and
the idea that studio effects and processing are more crucial than the original
vocal or instrumental performances. . . . The really distorting side effect of the
Afro-futurist privileging of the producer, though, is the fact that reggae actually
involved people saying stuff about stuff has almost totally been forgotten.”
For Reynolds, by focusing on the dub virus as a set of abstract processes that
have migrated across the Jamaican sonic diaspora to infect and mutate music
from elsewhere, the sonic material that dub deconstructs through its sonic processes, that is, the human voices and their politico-semiotic content relating to
everyday social, political, and religious concerns, were being ignored. Reynolds
specifically is referring to an alleged failure of dub virologists, for example, David Toop and Kodwo Eshun, to give due discussion to the content of Black Atlantian oral culture in their writing. Yet while Reynolds is certainly correct to
attempt to rechannel some critical attention to the voice, the representational
dimensions of black popular culture generally, and Jamaican music specifically,
are hardly lacking in the discourses surrounding these themes. If anything, the
dub virologists operated in precisely the blind spot of such discourses, adding
a techno-affective dimension to compensate for the clichés and moralism that
Eshun attacks in the introduction to More Brilliant Than the Sun. An audio virology would therefore have to tread carefully in its formulation of contagious
oral cultures—careful not to lapse back into those models that subordinated
the sonic dimension of the word at the altar of its written face in order to break
speech’s aura of authenticity and presence. Contagious orality must therefore
be placed within the rhythmic and vibrational infrastructure of the plane of
machinic enunciation. To extend an audio virology in these directions would
involve a discussion of the virological traits of those phonemic populations that
we know as speech, song, and their evolutionary linguistic ecosystems, technical
decompositions, and recompositions. Reynolds’s comments notwithstanding,
the dub virologists helped open up this key dimension of machinic orality in the
understanding of black music.
A second and related critique was aimed not so much at dub virologies directly but what, for Eshun, certainly accompanied this, that is, a dystopian ear
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for the alien and the machinic. In many ways, Reynolds’s criticisms of Afrofuturist dub virology run parallel to those made by Alexander Weheliye in his own
discussion of the cultural politics of the interface of black music and technology.
In a sense, Weheliye attempts to “humanize” aspects of Eshun’s More Brilliant
Than the Sun. Building on what was already implicit in Eshun’s work, that is,
a theorization of the synthetic voice, and drawing from more recent discussions of African American and Black British popular music, including those of
Reynolds, Weheliye begins to flesh out the contagious orality he claims is missing from Afrofuturist theory. In essence, the concept of “hypersoul” is added
to “hyperdub.”
Weheliye’s writings on Afrofuturism are skeptical. In his book Phonographies:
Grooves in Afrosonic Modernity and an earlier essay, “Feenin: The Post-Human
Voice in Contemporary Black Popular Music,” he argues that the vocoder poses
a specific problem for Afrofuturist theorizations of black musical technoculture. For media theorist Kittler, the vocoder is another example in the inventory
of military technology mutating popular culture. In Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, he notes, ignoring Homer Dudley’s late s research into the Voder, that
the vocoder was first implemented between and by Claude Shannon
at Bell laboratories and Alan Turing in the British Secret Service. It was, Kittler
proclaims, “a wonder weapon which was to make the transatlantic conversation between Churchill and Roosevelt safe from interception by Canaris and the
German Abwehr, and which like so many electronic achievements of the Second
World War, is now indispensable to popular music.” Taking the envelope of one
signal (formant), for example, a voice, and transposing it onto another (carrier),
for example, a synthesizer, “one acoustics controls the other”:
In order to test his vocoder, by the way, Turing first played a record of Winston Churchill’s
belligerent voice, whose discreet or cut-up sampled values he then mixed with a noise
generator using modular addition. Whereupon British officers heard the voice of their
prime minister and commander-in-chief contaminate the speakers as just so much white
noise [not to say, primal sound]. Appropriately, Turing’s vocoder was named after Delila,
who in the Book of Judges tricked another warrior, the Danaite Samson, out of the secret
of his strength. Turing’s skill as a tinkerer, however, revealed the secret of modern political discourse to be something far worse than weakness: “a perfectly even and uninformative hiss” which offered no regularities and, therefore, nothing intelligible to the ears of
British officers or those of German eavesdroppers. And yet, sent through the vocoder a
second time, Churchill’s original voice emerged from the receiving end.
The vocoder is therefore another reminder of where popular entertainment
media technologies productively “abuse” the technologies of war. This is the
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upside to the militarization of everyday life. Alongside mechanical and magnetic recording, radio transmission and now digital sampling, time stretching,
and automated tuning, the vocoder afforded another schizophonic mutation of
the voice that intensified its contagiousness, helping generate a new kind of infectious orality that would prove inspirational to German Electronische Musik
and catalyze a vector that runs from Wendy Carlos, through Kraftwerk, Laurie
Anderson, Herbie Hancock, Africa Baambatta, Zapp, right up to Tupac and beyond. In fact, in the hands of Afrofuturist musics, the vocoder became a means
for upgrading one of the few possessions transportable during forced migration:
oral culture. The vocoder synthesizes the voices of the wandering ghosts made
homeless at the origins of modernity.
Weheliye’s intervention is two-pronged, with one spike aimed at the (white)
posthumanism of cyberculture theorists such as N. Katherine Hayles and the
other at the (black) futurism of Eshun. Weheliye argues, contra Hayles, that
we can understand the synthesis of the human voice with intelligent machines
without assuming that “information lost its body.” Contra Eshun, he claims that
neither is it necessary for a black posthumanism to take on alien form. For
Weheliye, through examining the vocoder within the context particularly of
African American R&B music, a different form of posthumanism is produced,
“not mired in the residual effects of white liberal subjectivity.” And this, he
claims, makes possible a model of “subjectivity located in the sonic arena rather
than the ocular.”
In reality, Weheliye’s discussion of “hypersoul” via the vocoder effect is much
more compelling than his arguments against either Hayles or Eshun. He builds
on Eshun’s observation that “soul” and the “postsoul” tendencies are present
in all-black popular music as divergent pressures toward the organic and inorganic, respectively. The vocoder effects and its synthetic voice and antinaturalistic desiring machines form a powerful example precisely because of its virulence
within what is otherwise renowned as an overwhelmingly humanist genre of
“soul” music. But of particular interest here is Weheliye’s critical engagement
with Afrofuturism.
Eshun’s strain of posthumanism intensifies cultural cybernetics with the recognition that New World black subjects had been persistently excluded from the
category of the human. He constructs Afrofuturist lineages within the fringes of
black pop, avant-garde, and electronic music that seceded from the human so as
to imagine and pursue, in terms of fiction or a sonic machinism, or both, other
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modes of thought, experience, and collectivity. He maintains, in a passage also
quoted by Weheliye, that
the idea of slavery as an alien abduction means that we’ve all been living in an aliennation since the eighteenth century. The mutation of African male and female slaves in
the eighteenth century into what became negro, and into an entire series of humans that
were designed in America. That whole process, the key behind it all is that in America
none of these humans were designated human. It’s in the music that you get this sense
that most African-Americans owe nothing to the status of the human. There is this sense
of the human as being a really pointless and treacherous category.
Eshun therefore pursues those sonic fictions that positivize the identification
of Black Atlantians with objects and machines alluding, of course, to the original meaning of the robot in Czech as slave. But for Weheliye, Eshun is merely
inverting a binary opposition installed by colonialism itself. In this sense, he
argues, against Eshun, that it “is precisely because slavery rendered the category
of the human suspect that the reputedly humanist post-slavery black cultural
productions cannot and do not attribute the same meaning to humanity as
white American discourses.” Weheliye indicts Eshun for not taking into account the contagion of Afrofuturism on genres considered to lie within the soul
tradition. Weheliye, like Reynolds, argues that emphasizing the inhumanism of
Afrofuturism encourages a tendency to focus on its instrumental musical currents at the expense of the black voice. The vocoder adds a contagious, machinic
orality to the abstract sonic effects and robot rhythms of the “postsoul” tendency
of black music identified by Eshun.
Weheliye traces the shift from the vocoder to the vocoder effect, from the focus on an analog technology to a digital one. The vocoder effect is Weheliye’s key
example of the failure of Eshun to consider the way Afrofuturism would infect
genres of black popular music (R&B) that were not self-consciously technology
focused (techno). He analyzes the vocoder effect within R&B to show how a disjunction between form and content occurs. He notes that the content of certain
R&B lyrics, while processed by the vocoder effect, do not reflect the technological machines that filter them, so much as the machines of desire, thereby mutating soul into hypersoul music.
Eshun argues that all black music contains two divergent tendencies, which
he terms the “soulful” and the “post-soul.” In More Brilliant Than the Sun, he
is obviously most interested in how these tendencies were playing out in Black
Atlantic at the end of the twentieth century, particularly as represented by a
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“humanist R&B” and a “posthuman techno,” but he does note that he is also
concerned with the mutant symbioses of these two tendencies. It somewhat
misses the point, therefore, to argue that Eshun does not give enough attention
to the (technologically mediated) voice, especially since he emphasizes time and
again that his main object of analysis is the futurhythmachine. In a later essay
in which he addresses turn-of-the-century R&B, he is consistent in following
his more rhythmanalytic concerns developed in his earlier work to look at the
hyperkinetic audiovisual syncopations of Hype Williams’s video work and how
they were infected by the stutter-funk of Timbaland and Missy Elliot. Again, as
with the case of Reynolds’s critique of dub virology, it is hardly the case that the
majority of discourse surrounding the history of black popular music pays no
attention to the human voice and what it refers to. In fact, it rarely does anything
but this.
The main problem of Weheliye’s critique, unfortunately typical of academic
posturing, is that he criticizes Hayles and Eshun for not doing something that
neither of them set out to do in the first place, by implication rhetorically weakening the power of his more important argument regarding the need to make
issues of race more central to cybertheory. In addition to continuously conflating concepts of the machinic with mechanistic, a key drawback of Weheliye’s
critique of Eshun is that it partly suffers from the advantage of retrospective
arrogance. Actually it was only the late s innovations in U.S. R&B and their
influence on U.K. garage that occurred after the publication of More Brilliant
Than the Sun that consolidated the conception of “hypersoul” which Weheliye
deploys against Eshun’s earlier version of Afrofuturism.
Both Weheliye and Reynolds are making similar arguments against Afrofuturism from the point of view of a humanist critique of posthumanism and
recent developments in popular electronic music. Of course, if these arguments
were merely terminological disputes, of discursive inversions, redefinitions, and
interpretations, then maybe the issue could be left there. Despite the social constructionist methods of much techno theory and those who critique its ideology,
cybernetics is much more than a set of discursive formations, but operates at the
level of the construction of reality itself, not just its representations.
Weheliye’s analysis stays somewhat limited by its confinement to the discursive formations and the social constructions of the human. While circling
around a rhetoric of embodiment, he merely discusses texts with little attention
to the body, its resonant frequencies and technological conjunctions. It is the
material transformations of cybernetic culture and its mutation of what a body
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can do that renders the category of the human problematic, more than just a
question of discursive formations. The “meaning attributed to humanity” that
Weheliye is concerned with just points to the tip of the iceberg. Eshun’s more
general reason for pursuing an alliance with the inhuman, as clarified in his
“Further Considerations” essay, goes beyond his postcolonial antihumanism.
Eshun’s materialism is evident, for example, in his critique of Richard Dawkins’s version of memetics that stops short of complete immanence, excluding
himself and science from his cultural virology. Eshun’s work deserves a much
more serious treatment than an identitarian cultural studies, even in its more
synthetic variants, makes possible. Contra Reynolds and Weheliye, the Black
Atlantian futurism as specifically described by Eshun stands as a conceptual
event whose reverberations for a theory of sonic warfare should be welcomed,
not responded to defensively.
On a more constructive note, even Weheliye himself notes that while “singers
remain central to the creation of black music, they do so only in conjunction
with the overall sonic architecture,” a sonic architecture, which for Reynolds,
can be addressed only through an approach to the “sound of politics” developed
in the s, coupled with the s orientation to the “politics of sound.” It
is clear from the preceding discussions of the voice and the limits of dub virologies that an audio virology is a call for an ecological remit. What is meant
here is that its map would begin from an inventory of the frequencies, bodies,
feelings, machines, utterances, emissions, codes, processes, affordances, economies, and environments involved in any sonic nexus. Such an affective ecology
is not opposed to the representational concerns that Reynolds poses, but rather
comprises the very environment out of which politicolinguistic assemblages in
popular music are generated. Instead, it is more accurate to maintain that the
processes of dubtraction, the schizophonic psychic effects in both producers
and listeners, the sorcery of sonic processes, and the contagious deterritorialization of Afrofuturism’s dub virology are not opposed to “people saying stuff about
stuff.” Rather, if the power of Jamaican sonic processes is to be recognized in
their profound influence on Western musical culture, then this is as much about
the contagious machines of thought emitted by a dub virology as the politicized
content of its lyricists. Either way, this detour through Afrofuturism and the
politics of black music illustrates the tactical importance of rhythmic and vibrational processes in producing conditions for affective mobilization.
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2020: Planet of Drums
The person cringes with each large beat, as if the drum mallet descended upon his very
skull; he ricochets about the peristyle, clutching blindly at the arms which are extended
to support him, pirouettes wildly on one leg, recaptures balance for a brief moment, only
to he hurtled forward again by another great blow of the drum. The drummer, apparently impervious to the embattled anguish of the person, persists relentlessly; until, suddenly, the violence ceases, the head of the person lifts, and one recognizes the strangely
abstracted eyes of a being who seems to see beyond whatever he looks at, as if into or
from another world.
—Maya Deren, “Drums and Dance” ()
Since at least the blues, much of the most urgent, modern music on the planet
has emerged from the bruised and bleeding edges of depressed urbanism. Contemporary configurations of rundown global urbanism are described in Mike
Davis’s prophetically grim recent text, Planet of Slums. Yet it is necessary to
complement Planet of Slums with a cartography of the planet of drums (or rather
drum machines.) At the close of his The Ecology of Fear, Davis zooms out to a
satellite orbiting Earth. The satellite is producing thermal images of the United
States. During the Los Angeles riots of , he remarked, the city ablaze would
have been perceived as a “unitary geophysical phenomenon.” “No other urban
area on the planet so frequently produces “large thermal anomalies.” Seen from
space, the city that once hallucinated itself as an endless future without natural limits or social constraints now dazzles observers with the eerie beauty
of an erupting volcano.” Imagine for a second a parallel satellite monitoring
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low-frequency vibration, not just the seismic activity of tectonic plates, the
boom of heavy industry and traffic, but also the pulsing bass cultures of the
sound system diaspora of the Black Atlantic. It is this imaginary map of vibration that will be charted here, adding the dimension of aesthetic and cultural tactics to offset, perhaps just a tiny bit, Davis’s all-encompassing dystopic
characterization.
So what sonic cultures are incubated within the emergent urbanism of the
Planet of Slums, and what tactics of frequency do they deploy? What affective
mutations of the urban environment are activated where slum, ghetto, shantytown, favela, project, and housing estate rub up against hypercapital? By constructing vibratory ecologies and pirate economics, otherwise predatory locales
subject to significantly unequal development are temporarily taken over. While
liberals lament the politically incorrect vocal content of planetary mutations of
hip-hop and Jamaican dancehall, these bass cultures press on with Fela Kuti’s
declaration that music is still “a weapon of the future.” Perhaps, however, it is
mostly a weapon at a subpolitical level. In both white and black musical traditions of the twentieth century, the politics of music has often been reduced to
“what is said”: its content, meaning, the narrative superimposed on top of its
form, or the extent to which it was supposed to represent an exterior political
reality. But a more basic power of organized vibration is usually overlooked.
This subpolitical power of music to attract and congeal populations, within
the examples that follow, will be tagged bass materialism. Bass materialism, it
will be argued, is enacted as the microrhythmic production and occupation of
space-times by collectively engineered vibration.
In Planet of Slums, the topology of unequal development noted by world systems theory is extended. Core and periphery are tightly enfolded. Islands of the
hypercapitalist core rise up, fortressed within developing regions of the world,
while basins of periphery encircle the core of the developed world. Davis’s book
argues that rather than the high-tech city of cybernetic control, we should be
looking elsewhere to gauge the future shape of cities. As opposed to the finely
tuned, preemptive modulation of hypercontrol in the core, there coexists a peripheral urbanism of an unprecedented scale and density, often characterized
by predatory locales in which fear is ingrained into everyday life due to underdevelopment, a deregulated economy of violence, drug wars, gang factionalism,
and abject poverty. Davis’s depictions are particularly bleak not just because of
their realism, but also because they ignore some of the cultural pragmatics that
make existence bearable.
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So it is useful to force Davis’s dystopic urbanism into confrontation with
the modus operandi of pirate media and sound system cultures in the neighborhoods of underdeveloped cities. In otherwise hopeless situations, collective excitement is produced and local youth cultures activated in kick-starting
microeconomies. Despite representing a multiplicity of socioeconomic configurations, ethnic specificities, colonial legacies, and complex musical histories,
there are some commonalities to be found in the sound system pragmatics and
pirate economics of many of these synthetic music cultures of the periphery:
their construction of temporary bass ecologies to hijack through sonic dominance—a rhythmachinic takeover of space-time. How do these sonic war machines, through pirate economics and affective mobilization, transduce, even
temporarily, pervasive fear and exorcise dread into momentary joy through the
ritualization of aggression in collective dance?
In Planet of Slums, Davis outlines how the demographics of urbanization on
twenty-first-century earth are in terminal transition. The digital flashfloods of
viral economics are paralleled by the massive exchanges of migrant populations,
highlighting the frayed edges of McLuhan’s global nervous system as it undergoes cellular decomposition, molecular mutation, and trade in sonic fluids.
The key agents in the emergent global configuration are the “new megacities
with populations in excess of million, and, even more spectacularly, hypercities with more than million inhabitants,” as the result of massive unilateral
rural-to-urban migration. For the first time in the evolutionary history of the
human species “cities will account for all future world population growth, which
is expected to peak at about billion in .” As Davis’s rival, H. de Soto,
notes in The Mystery of Capital, radio has functioned as a magnet in this process, advertising the opportunities of urban living across the rural world. Radio,
McLuhan’s “tribal drum,” acts as a mobilizing call to urban replication. The
Planet of Slums, for Davis, is composed of “interchangeable and spontaneously
unique” components, “including the bustees of Kolkata, the chawls and zopadpattis of Mumbai, the katchi abadis of Karachi, the kampungs of Jakarta, the
iskwaters of Manila, the shammasas of Khartoum, the umjondolos of Durban,
the intra-murios of Rabat, the bidonvilles of Abidjan, the baladis of Cairo, the
gecekondus of Ankara, the conventillos of Quito, the favelas of Brazil, the villas
miseria of Buenos Aires, and the colonias populares of Mexico City.”
The sonic anarchitecture of these emergent urban entities has usefully been
tagged by music blogger Woebot (Matt Ingram) as “shanty house theory,” referring to the coincident music network that has arisen out of these planetary
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locales, from the grimy pirate radio stations of East London, Crunk from the
southern United States, dancehall from Jamaica, baile funk from the Brazilian
favelas, kwaito from South Africa, reggaeton from Puerto Rico, and others.
For Ingram,
Shanty House is the new strain of post World Music engaging in the same cultural and
social dynamics that have given us Crunk and Grime in the first world and Dancehall
in JA. Detractors might bemoan the need to give Favela Funk, Kwaito and Desi a brand
name. However, like it or lump it these forms are always going to exist on the peripheries
of most people in the west’s experience of music. If they aren’t called something specific
then they’ll be less absorbable in their own right, and conversely will be viewed as an extension of World music. The concept of “World Music” is inextricably intertwined with
concepts of the natural, the earthen, and the rooted. However, the new wave of global
urban music is mercilessly hooligan in its agenda, synthetic by choice and necessity, often
produced in a crucible of urban existence yet more extreme, precarious and violent than
that which characterizes the temperature of New York, London, Berlin.
In a somewhat condemning article in the Village Voice on M.I.A, the artist
whose work masquerades as a “conference all” between these degenerate locales
of the Planet of Slums, Simon Reynolds elucidated the condition of shanty house
theory as
world-is-a-ghetto musics: impurist genres . . . that typically suture bastardized vestiges of
indigenous folk forms to pirated elements of rap, rave, and bass ‘n‘ booty. Locally rooted
but plugged into the global media sphere, these scenes don’t bother overmuch with
sample clearances, and vibe-wise they typically project ruffneck raucousness leavened
with party-up calls to shake dat ass. They also speak, vividly if obliquely, of a new world
disorder where Tupac Shakur vies with Bin Laden as a T-shirt icon and terrorists keep in
touch via text messaging.
A more literal description was offered by blogger, ethnomusicologist and DJ
Wayne Marshall, who labeled the web woven by those DJs like himself who connect these disparate music cultures as “global ghettotech.”
From Brazil, the strain of these mutant musics that has attracted most attention overseas is known as baile funk or favela funk. Typically deploying huge
do-it-yourself sound systems at a party, the “walls shake, the concrete under our
feet rumbles and below, on the dance floor, some , dancers gyrate beneath
a powerful strobe.” The DIY ethic extends beyond just the soundsystem to define the aesthetic of the music, splicing Miami Bass with any music whatsoever
pillaged from film soundtracks and America pop. “People make funk like they
build houses in the favela, using whatever material is available.” It would be
naive to pretend that there is a necessarily politically progressive agenda behind
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the organization of baile funk parties. As Neate and Platt point out, “It’s often
the drug factions that promote and finance the baile. Their motivations are twofold: first, the parties are popular within the communities, thus securing their
power base; second, they draw customers for the drug trade into the favela.”
Yet funk is also a mass musical movement. An interesting contrast is possible
with Rio de Janeiro’s Afroreggae movement, which, with a more explicit political agenda, has attempted to bridge gang divisions within favela residents,
especially young men, via drum workshops and other techniques of musical
mobilization. One question illuminated in this contrast, a question common
in grassroots musical movements around the planet, is whether aesthetics need
be sacrificed at the altar of a political cause.
So is this a planet of drums to accompany Davis’s Planet of Slums? What
makes these Afro-diasporic music cultures key here, aside from their content
as music, is that they generate bass ecologies within underdeveloped zones of
megalopian systems. As such, they have cultivated, with Jamaican sound system
culture as the prototype or abstract machine, a diagram of affective mobilization with bass materialist foundation. Taking the staples of popular electronic
music, from hip-hop to house and techno, and mutating them to their local
desires, spraying them with local voices, these musics also, hand in hand with
their pirate economics, propose models for affective collectivity without any
necessary political agenda. Parallel sonic wars (in the age of pirate replication)
are being waged across the planet by an array of these virosonic microcultures.
Their abstract machines are never purely sonic. They always possess a power
of transversal application into other aesthetic, sociocultural, and economic
fields. Perhaps the contagiousness of such cultures and their analog and digital
sonic transmissions make them an audio portal, offering innovative techniques
for synthesizing modes of collective assemblage, production, and distribution through the construction of temporary and mobile vibrational ecologies.
These musical war machines are perhaps most accurately conceived as subpolitical. Rather than diminishing their importance, their subpoliticality is in fact
crucial, potentiating an affective mobilization, underneath the segmentation of
belief into ideological, territorial, affiliative, or gang camps, providing a vibrational infrastructure or platform for collectivity that supplements the picture
painted in Planet of Slums. At the same time, their often subpolitical and microcapitalist nature confounds cultural studies’ attempts to claim that every quantum of cultural production should be construed as an act of resistance or opposition to capitalism.
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The tower block, condemned as a vertical slum by a Control that would rather update
its architectural dimension into forms more amenable to representation . . . becomes an
“incubator.” The thicker the forest of towers, the more antennae perched above the city,
the more the Radiant City, botched, radiates.
—Matt Fuller, Media Ecologies ()
The summer of , holed up in a small room on the twelfth floor of a residential tower block in Bow, East London, the sweat running down the inside of the
walls. The floor is carpeted in grime and dust. The room is built inside a larger
room, a hastily constructed endo-architecture to cocoon the studio, protecting
the pirate transmission and transmitters from intruders. The electrics are sporadic but functional. A decimated fan makes what little air there is circulate in
the room, generating a turbulent microclimate of dust and smoke. Wires snake
their way out of messily drilled holes (also working as steam valves), out through
windows, trailing and flapping against the outside of the block, leading up to
the transmitter on the roof. Inside this pirate radio studio, the megalopolis is
screaming through the MCs at a rapid rate that seems to exceed the limits of the
human system of vocalization. The pressure of millions channeled through a
few mouths. They call out the name of their rivals in a lyrical assault and battery
so cutting, so acerbic that even the DJ winces at the verbal violence as he drags
the record backward, halting the proceedings only to return to the edge and roll
again, this time building the intensity level that little bit higher.
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For a moment, the scene freezes. The MC stops insulting and becomes an
“encryptor.” His mouth becomes a modem, transmitting an asignifying stream
of digits to the audience distributed across London’s airwaves: “out to the ,
the , the , .” Signaling that you are locked into the station’s transmission is made by phoning the studio number, letting it ring once, then hanging
up. Acknowledgment of this signal is provided by the host / DJ / MC reciting the
last three digits of phone numbers from his log of missed calls on the studio
handset. The connection made, the transmission swells, the rate of text messages incoming to the studio escalates, while the studio phone vibrates. Matt
Fuller has noted how, within the media ecology of pirate radio, mobile phone
rings “have developed as a way to use the telecommunications architecture at no
cost to receiver or sender and to process a relatively large number of feedback
signals at speed . . . they work as a password. In this case, they don’t so much allow the user to gain access—they are that access.” Unusually one caller persists.
A private number. Most callers hang up on one ring, the missed call functioning as a request code for the DJ to rewind the current track to the beginning.
But the phone keeps ringing. The MC’s focus shifts from his rivals to the DTI
(Department of Trade and Industry), and now Offcom, the branch of the British state responsible for policing the radio spectrum. “You know how we do . . .
no private numbers. DTI get bun!” Answering the mobile phone to a private
number potentially allows Offcom, monitoring signal transmissions over the
airwaves, to locate the studio much more easily. A whole circuit of connections
and disconnections, of contact and evasions. A veritable sonic war machine
temporarily occupying a slice of radiophonic territory, hacking the national grid
in a logistics of infection. Offcom—a centralized radio disease control agency
monitoring outbreaks of “viracy” in the frequency spectrum.
Although London pirate radio has its own specific history of predator and
prey, Offcom’s low-intensity war on “viracy” now converges with a global tendency that has been tagged “war in the age of pirate replication.” Piracy, in
all its strains, pulses blocks of affect in from the system periphery, either external or internal, feeding the viral nature of digital capitalism. The auditory
dimension of this viral culture is exemplified by the contagious transmissions of
East London pirate radio. Meanwhile, conceptually, a set of problems is thrown
up by piracy, problems that demand some fine tuning of the audio virological
approach.
An audio virology seeks to illuminate some of the affective dimensions of
pirate radio. According to Gaston Bachelard in his essay “Reverie and Radio,”
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radio engineers should be accompanied by what he calls a “psychic engineer”
to aid in creating a mode of radio that communicates the unconscious: “It is
through them that it will find a certain universality, and that is the reason for the
paradox: the unconscious is something we know little about.” But the average
pirate radio broadcast from East London is driven by what is more accurately
described as “affect engineering,” where the throbs of sonic contagion pulsed
across the radio waves are processed directly on the body. As Fuller points out,
the “sonic unconscious is material that is collectively produced and is gated and
intensified by multiple layers of processing—it becomes malleable, potentiated,
in reception. These are types of music that are fundamentally synthetic. They
declare the whole spectrum of vibrations at any speed or frequency subject to
their inventive power.” Cerebral radio listening is short-circuited to be overridden by the “full-body-ear-drum” of the skin, via a sometimes mobile, distributed
network of bass delivery systems.
An audio virology must take into account what Matt Fuller has recently
termed the “affordances,” “potentials,” and “activated relations” of “media ecologies” within the shifting biotechnical meshwork of sonic culture. It draws attention to pirate radio’s zones of transmission, incubation, its electromagnetic war
for bandwidth, its bacterial nomadism within the vertical city, its asignifying
contagious trade in numerical code and sonic fluids, and its power to generate
virtual collectivity. Instead of merely making connections between individual
cells, an audio virology probes the mutational potential of pirate media, asking
what aesthetic transformations, what new modes of contagious collectivity and
what rhythmic anarchitectures such sonic microcultures may provoke.
The first problem confronted by an audio virology concerns this planetary
context of “war in the age of pirate replication.” The early-twenty-first century
is a strange time to be an audio pirate, whatever the strain. Under the slogan of
“piracy funds terrorism,” the war on terror has made a point of forging together
the vast secret economies of pirated media (producing millions of unlicensed
copies of CDs and DVDs, particularly from Southeast Asia), anonymous, illegal
online file trading (using an array of pp platforms) with ubiquitous, decentralized insurgency networks such as al Qaeda. From the point of view of agencies
of control attempting to produce one global system, this multitude of targets
is linked by the general dread of transmedial viral invasion—economic, electromagnetic, biological, terrorist, audiovisual. In fact, the virus constitutes the
model for all threats to cybernetic control societies. Ubiquitous digitalization
has intensified pirate replication, fueling the viral nature of cybernetic capital.
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A second, and related, problem derives from the politicized discourse of
underground media versus mainstream media and the mutual parasitism between them. Whether as a temporary autonomous zone of pirate utopia (Hakim
Bey) in “parasitic rejection” of (Bruce Sterling ), or in a campaign of resistance
through “symbolic warfare” (Simon Reynolds) against major technocultural
networks, the fear for anticapitalist pirates is of incorporation into the body of
the beast that feeds off its innovations, depriving originators of their just rewards. However, such formulations have a tendency to become overly unilateral,
ignoring the actual symbiotic relationships that characterize emergent media
ecologies within the intrinsically viral culture of late capitalism. The complex
intertwining plays out in relation to both radio and file trading culture. Pirate
radio, for instance, is parasitic of a state media space only insofar as this bandwidth is already colonized by parasitic antimarket media systems. Who exactly
is the bigger pirate here? Instead of incorporation modeled on the hierarchical binary of underground-mainstream, illegal-legal, an audio virology is more
concerned with transversal propagation vectors across an array of standard
and nonstandard sonic ecologies and new trading and transmission channels
opened up by accident. An audio virology must probe beyond the apparent
contradiction between both the intellectual property protection and radio licensing and their violation, focusing instead on the complementary, symbiotic
functioning of these media ecologies, expressed in the movements of pirate deterritorialization and formalized reterritorialization.
This complex symbiosis plays out in digital music markets as well as radio
piracy. Is there really a necessary contradiction, for example, between unrestrained file trading and the subsequent reterritorialization of this into pay-fordownloads, or is it merely a change in speed of propagation? Trading activity is
channeled through a labyrinth of credit card transactions, slowing transmission
but simultaneously untapping a potential for escalation by feeding cash back
into production labs and bolstering the zone of parasitic mediation that sustains
corporate bodies in capitalizing on and monopolizing mass listening. Peer-topeer file trading damages corporate margins, allows music to flow more freely
(increasing the potential audience for the music), while simultaneously depriving some artists of income outside of the majors. Older critical models struggle
to keep up with these complexities.
Once pirate and mainstream culture enter this tighter symbiotic relationship
of affective contagion, the distinction between pirate or DIY microcultures and
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a co-opting capitalism becomes flattened. Now a new problem emerges in relation to the possibility of identifying invention when it occurs. This problem of
differentiating innovation from its capture is confounded by what Matt Mason
has termed, in his book of the same name, the pirate’s dilemma. Mason, whose
book often reads like an introduction to the youth culture of the past thirty years
for corporate capitalists, is keen to sing the praises of the constructive power of
cultural piracy in transforming capitalism to the point where we are all now,
he claims, happy pirates. Yet in his rush to celebrate decentralized networks,
his argument often seems to whitewash the fact that power no longer needs to
operate in a top-down fashion. The book starts off with the example of everyday
sonic warfare in the form of signal jamming using merely an iPod and an iTrip.
Mason runs through a list of similarly fascinating examples, from the effect on
morale of pirate radio propaganda broadcasts from the world wars through
to Vietnam and Iraq, through to underground music pirate networks in East
London, even flirting with a virological theorization to correctly emphasize the
aesthetic wealth of pirate culture in London: “Instead of exposing themselves on
the open seas, this new breed of pirates began to operate cloaked in the anonymity of urban sprawl . . . the estimated pirate stations on the FM dial in the
United Kingdom act as musical Petri dishes—they have spawned new genres
and cultures for decades, and attract as much as percent of London’s radio
audience. . . . Pirate radio is an incubator where new music can mutate.”
Mason catalogs a long list of pirate invasions of media platforms, with innovative ideas and formats delivered in stealthy fashion, adopting various tactics
of camouflage and anonymity. From the tidal waves of Schumpeterian creative
destruction triggered by innovation in technology or technique, to the perpetual
subversion, hacking, and remixing that the nonstandard use of these technologies facilitates, the law can only but lag behind. For Mason, this has signaled the
end of top-down mass culture. Youth culture has reinvented, or rejuvenated,
capitalism to the point that piracy has now become just another business model,
a mutation from subversive cultural weapon to business plan; the situationist
projection of art into the everyday becomes merely branding. So his instruction
to capitalists is that to succeed, they should really compete with piracy instead
of merely fighting it: “Pirates highlight areas where choice doesn’t exist and demand that it does. And this mentality transcends media formats, technological
changes, and business models . . . successful pirates adapt quickly to social and
technological changes but this is true of all entrepreneurs. . . . Once these new
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ideas are broadcast, they unavoidably create a pirate’s dilemma for others in the
market. Should they fight the pirates, or accept that there is some value in what
they are doing, and compete with them?”
In such a scenario, global and local pirate economics no longer merely function as a “parasitic rejection of the global order.” Rather, these hybrid mixtures
of formal and informal economy indicate a voracious turbulent globalization
in which waves of innovation sweep in from the periphery that surrounds and
transects the core in ever decreasing time loops between innovation and mass
marketing. These time loops approach zero, shortened by the voraciousness of
viral marketing, futurology, and cool hunting. This is the somewhat bleak side
of his story that Mason fails to acknowledge. The challenge is whether pirate
cultures can retain autonomy as major corporations switch from aggressive conflict to aggressive competition. Can they develop their own preemptive mechanisms to ward off capture? How exactly tactical media (localized do-it-yourself
pragmatism engaged in jamming, hacking, and short-circuiting communication and power grids) at the periphery will continue to coalesce with sound
system cultures and an aesthetic of mongrelized music is, of course, unpredictable and subject to local conditions. But perhaps it is this random element that
is the most powerful weapon against attempts to preempt and harness their
affective power.
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Ever been stung by a Mosquito? If you are over twenty-five, then probably not,
according to the press release for one of the latest commercially available weapons in ultrasonic warfare. The Mosquito Anti-Social Device (M.A.D.), enthusiastically promoted by low-intensity warfare luminaries such as British daytime
TV’s Richard and Judy and GMTV (a gaudy, populist wake-up show) emits a
high-frequency sound with an effective range of to meters, and is supposedly detectable only by youths. The press release continues, “Field trials have
shown that teenagers are acutely aware of the Mosquito and usually move away
from the area within just a couple of minutes. . . . Research has shown that the
majority of people over the age of have lost the ability to hear at this frequency
range [roughly to kilohertz]. It should be borne in mind, however, that
the unit usually has the desired effect—moving the crowds away—within just a
few minutes, at which time the unit can be turned off.” Could it be that property
owners now have their own sonic weapon in the battle against hooded youth
who have previously attacked their pacified soundscape with their voices, ring
tones, pirate radio, and underground music infrastructures? Has ultrasonic warfare graduated to the High Street? Will anyone with the cash and inclination be
zapping anyone who gets in their way? What does the commercial proliferation
of such devices signal regarding current tendencies of the politics of frequency?
If the pun can be excused, such emergent tactics in the modulation of populations suggest that the future of sonic warfare is unsound.
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Unsound refers to the apparently paradoxical field of inaudible audio, infrasonic and ultrasonic. The Mosquito device, an adaption of technologies initially
deployed as a means of rodent control, intervenes generationally through a differential in human hearing. As recent research has shown, the narrow fold in
molecular vibration that constitutes the bandwidth of audibility is much more
permeable and mutable than is normally assumed. It is hardly controversial to
suggest that, as more has been learned about the neuroeffects of very high and
very low frequency sound, and bionic audition develops, then the perceptual
battlefields of sonic warfare have broadened.
One research team of Japanese scientists has focused on what has been termed
hypersonic effects. In this research it was suggested that not only did frequencies above kilohertz affect the brain, but they also modulated human hearing
within the audible bandwidth. Perceptual coding derived from psychoacoustic
research led to the subtraction of frequencies that were not apparent to conscious perception, thereby, until recently, setting the standard, for example, for
digital audio formats. Yet research that has revealed nonconscious physiological effects of ultrasound and studies that have pointed to the extremely rich
frequency environment of, for example, rain forests, have led many to begin to
recognize the affects of virtual, inaudible sound using electroencephalogram
and positron emission tomography scan techniques and by tracking the modulations of blood flow through the brain.
The hypersonic experiment was carried out on subjects noninvasively monitored while listening to Balinese Gamelan music that is said to be rich in ultrasonic frequencies. The frequencies were split into those that were audible and
those that were inaudible. Brain activity was monitored when the person was
exposed to one or the other, or both. When the ambient baseline of background
sound and the higher-frequency sound were played together, it was clear that
the very high frequencies were consciously unrecognizable. The conclusions of
the research suggested that playing both the higher (inaudible) and lower (audible) bands together enhanced neuronal activity in the alpha frequency range,
in a way in which playing them separately did not. Subjects found exposure
to both the audible and inaudible together more pleasing. The research found
that what they called the hypersonic effect was not merely a neurophysiological response to certain high frequencies, but specifically the nexus of the these
inaudible frequencies with the audible lower ones. The pleasing effect came
from their complex resonance. This frequency nexus in steering alpha rhythms
modulated the degree of relaxation and arousal.
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In the hyperstitional project Hexen , artist Suzanne Treister speculates on this virtual future of unsound. Revolving around semifictional timetraveler Rosalind Brodsky of the Institute of Militronics and Advanced Time
Interventionality (IMATi), Hexen projects the historical intersections between
the military and the occult into the future, paying particular attention to sound
technologies and their deployment within the military-industrial-entertainment
complex. Treister’s project and its corresponding exhibitions, equal parts history and science fiction, entailed a series of diagrams that both complicated
and mocked the remote viewing sketches of military intelligence agents. The
project illuminated a number of coincidences and resonances in the history of
sonic technological innovations by Hollywood studios (such as Fantasound),
generating a vortex of fact and fiction that spirals out deliriously. Hexen travels
forward in time to to speculate on the use of the “Silent Subliminal Presentation System” patented by Oliver Lowery in . As Richard Grayson points
out in his essay on the Hexen project, there are a number of sources that tie
Lowery’s invention with actual experimental deployments of such “unsound”
devices by the U.S. military in Guantanamo Bay and Abu Ghraib in Iraq. In the
patent, Lowery’s system is described as a
silent communications system in which non-aural carriers, in the very low or very high
audio-frequency range or in the adjacent ultrasonic frequency spectrum are amplitude
or frequency modulated with the desired intelligence and propagated acoustically or vibrationally, for inducement into the brain, typically through the use of loudspeakers,
earphones, or piezoelectric transducers. The modulated carriers may be transmitted directly in real time or may be conveniently recorded or stored on mechanical, magnetic or
optical media for delayed or repeated transmission to the listener.
In his book investigating the recent alleged psyops activities of the U.S. military, Jon Ronson noted that by , Lowery had posted a note on his Web site
stating that “all schematics have [now] been classified by the US Government
and we are not allowed to reveal the exact details. . . . We make tapes and CDs
for the German government, even the former Soviet Union countries! All with
the permission of the US State department, of course. . . . The system was used
throughout Operation Desert Storm (Iraq) quite successfully.” Refined and perfected by , the silent subliminal presentation system in Hexen has become a
refined instrument of preemptive power, a weapon of sharpened suggestion able
to implant memories of a future not yet happened.
Back in the present, ultrasound deployed in the service of highly directional
audio helps initiate this preemptive mode of audiosocial power. This holosonic
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control marks a qualitative shift in the nature of perceived acoustic space. Holosonics, audio spotlights, or sonic lasers, as they are often called, work using
inaudible, ultrasonic frequencies, which, due to the nonlinear yet predictable
properties of air, become audible to those who stand in front of the beam.
Holosonic power constitutes perhaps the most significant phase shift in capitalism and schizophonia since the invention of the loudspeaker. It scrambles
McLuhan’s classic analysis of the opposition between acoustic and visual space,
in which acoustic space is immersive and leaky, whereas visual objects of perception occupy discreet locations. Holosonic control shifts us therefore from the
vibrational topology of the ocean of sound to the discontinuous, “holey” space
of ultrasonic power.
Holosonic control operates through the nexus of directional ultrasound, sonic
branding, viral marketing, and preemptive power. As such, it aims not merely to
haunt you with acousmatic or schizophonic voices detached from their source.
Neither, in its most invasive mode, does it merely seek to converge with mental
voices from the past to form some kind of hauntological mode of capital. Instead, in line with the affinity to futurity of preemptive power, holosonic control
intervenes to catalyze memories from the future—audio memories of events
you have not actually experienced yet. Holosonic control’s weapons of choice are
“acoustic time anomalies,” often resulting in symptoms of déjà entendu, literally
the already heard. This sonic equivalent of déjà vu, the side effect of the propagation of audio viruses, sets up a structure of allure for products for which you had
no desire, not just because you have not yet been seduced into desiring them but
also because they do not necessarily actually exist yet.
Such high-frequency, hypersonic, and holosonic research also convergences
with the speculative fiction of English writer J. G. Ballard who in his short
story, “The Sound-Sweep,” described the condition of inaudible, yet directly
neuroaffective, music based around ultrasonic frequencies. Ballard described
how, in this version of the future of music,
ultrasonic music, employing a vastly greater range of octaves, chords and chromatic
scales than are audible by the human ear, provided a direct neural link between the sound
stream and the auditory lobes, generating an apparently sourceless sensation of harmony,
rhythm, cadence and melody uncontaminated by the noise and vibration of audible music . . . raised above the threshold of conscious audibility. . . . A second advantage of ultrasonic music was that its frequencies were so high they left no resonating residues in solid
structures, and consequently there was no need to call in the sound-sweep. . . . The whole
thing was inaudible, but the air around Magnon felt vibrant and accelerated, charged with
gaiety and sparkle.
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2039: Holosonic Control
These weird schemes like silent discos (where dancers wear headphones),
ultrasonic concerts, and the holosonically generated acoustic time anomalies of
the capitalized generation of desire all embody a micropolitics of frequency that
favors higher-frequency (un)sounds, with desired effects ranging from eardrumpiercing pain through to enhancing “presence” and the clear delivery of messages, that is, efficient communication, and mitigates against messy, leaky, low
frequencies with an affinity to hapticity, immersion, and congregation. It should
be remembered that in Ballard’s short story, the silent, yet directly neurally affective, ultrasound concert is set against the backdrop of the noise pollution of
infrasonic rumbles, murmuring, reverberations, and other sonic detritus.
As with the perceptual encoding involved in the production of mps, such frequency discrimination, as Matt Fuller writes, tends toward the obliteration of
the range of musics designed to be heard with the remainder of the body via bass. This
is not simply a white technological cleansing of black music but the configuration of the
organs, a call to order for the gut, the arse, to stop vibrating and leave the serious work of
signal processing to the head. That’s the sick part of it; another part is the way formats are
decided on by “expert groups,” committees defining standards for file formats and protocols that are supposedly open in procedure but where expertise, like those of hardcore
methodologies, is defined in certain ways. Here, a fat bass becomes simply a particular
Fourier transform mappable according to certain isolatable dimensions. Standard formation and non-standard uses create a recursive cycle that is always ongoing but never
entirely predictable.
It appears therefore that a major axis of sonic cultural warfare in the twentyfirst century relates to the tension between the subbass materialism of music cultures and holosonic control, suggesting an invisible but escalating micropolitics
of frequency that merits more attention and experimentation. Moreover, these
developments should be placed in the wider context of the policing of the electromagnetic spectrum, particularly radio frequencies, but also extending out into
the distribution of wireless networks, radar, and other imperceptible rhythms,
transmissions, and emissions. The colonization of the inaudible, the investment
in unsound research, indicates the expanding front line of twenty-first-century
sonic warfare. While hypersonics probes the upper threshold of audibility,
which can vary in relation to social segmentations such as age, or researches the
neuroscientific effects of combinations of ultrasound with audible frequencies,
bass materialist cultures concentrate on the seismological dimension of music,
on sonic dominance, in both its physical and incorporeal forces.
While bass materialist cultures make tangible the physicality of the inaudible
via the manufacture of vortical, tactile spaces, recent technological tendencies,
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hand in hand with brain implantation of microchips soldered into the auditory cortex, smuggled in with their implicit politics of silence, seem to carry
the desire to extinguish older modes of audition, operating instead through the
direct modulation of the brain and rendering the audible spectrum redundant.
Here, frequency modulation as a modus operandi of societies of control is taken
literally, with cities and their populations attuned and entrained by the generation, modulation, oscillation, filtering, synthesis, and isolation of frequencies
and amplitudes.
In the economy of attention, reality has become tunable. The micropolitics
of frequency points toward the waves and particles that abduct consumers immersed in both the transensory and nonsensory soup of vibro-capitalism. The
backdrop here is an electromagnetic environment that is saturated by radio and
television broadcasting transmissions, police, military, air traffic control and meteorological radar, satellite communications systems, and microwave relay links.
To the foreground lies the infrasonic and ultrasonic ecology of hydraulic gurgles,
industrial rumbles, the seismology of traffic, a cultural tectonics and the synthetic birdsong of alarms, ring tones, bleeps, indicators, and crowd repellents.
For sure, a certain amount of paranoia accompanies this micropolitics of
frequency and the immaterial sensuality that apprehends electronic entities distributed across the spectrum. The drift of high technology toward the imperceptible is accompanied by the deployment of technical sensors that transduce
vibration, consciously imperceptible to the body, into code and neurocomputational signal. Machines that “couple and decouple with our bodies without us
knowing. Working on microscopic scales, often pathogenic, many electromagnetic fields interfere with the cellular structure of the body. Paranoia accompanies dealing with such hertzian machines.”
Yet the virtual, unsonic city in which holosonic control operates is also a field
of potential. What a body can hear is a question, not a forgone conclusion, for
artists as well as security experts. Because vibrational ecologies traverse the
nature-culture continuum, a micropolitics of frequency is always confronted by
strange, unpredictable resonances. As Dunne argues, the computer maps that
show the propagation of radio waves, for example, and the footprint of their field
strength “reveal that hertzian space is not isotropic but has an electro climate
defined by wavelength, frequency, and field strength arising from interaction
with the natural environment.” This vortical energetic terrain in the interzone
between the artificial and natural environment constitutes the atmospheric
front of sonic warfare.
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Conclusion: Unsound—The (Sub)Politics
of Frequency
Sonic Warfare has attempted to bring to the foreground some of the means by
which audition is policed and mobilized. Policing here denotes not merely a
repressive set of exclusions or limits, but a generative distribution of sensations
that identify, channel, and amplify sonic power. What is distributed are those
elementary pulses or throbs of experience constitutive of an aesthetic ontology
that revolves around vibrational force and the prehension of affective tonality.
Affective tonality can be felt as mood, ambience, or atmosphere. As film sound
designers know only too well, certain frequencies can produce an affective tonality of fear in which the body is left poised in anticipation, expectant of incoming events: every pore listens for the future. Just think of the uneasy listening
of atonal or discordant sound, or the sense of dread induced by low-frequency
drones.
Affective tonalities such as fear, especially when ingrained and designed into
architectures of security, can become the basis for a generalized ecology, influencing everything from microgestures to economics. As such, and unlike
an emotional state, affective tonality possesses, abducts, or envelops a subject
rather than being possessed by one. Possession, or affective contagion, has been
discussed as the short-circuiting of attention and consciousness by mnemonic
processes and the sonically induced, temporary, psychoaffective vacation of the
present, leaving residues of feeling resembling auditory déjà vu or déjà entendu.
It is in these dyschronic episodes of time lapse that predatory capital, in preemptive mode, can insert itself, mobilizing audio viruses to hook consumers
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in advance for products that may not yet exist. The affective deployment of
sound, we have also noted, may be more direct than the ominous tinting of
atmosphere or mnemonic intervention. As we have also seen, the soft power
of affective tone can be overridden by the immediate physicality of sonic violence where frequency is multiplied by amplitude into the sonic dominance of
acoustic weaponry.
Sonic Warfare has therefore underlined the ways in which affective tonality
in its broadest sense operates within a play of forces and that every nexus of
sonic experience is immersed in a wider field of power. But not just any mode of
power. By placing the discussion within the context of a mode of power-tagged
preemption, a deliberate attempt has been made to align the text so that its comments do not bear just on past and present distributions of sonic sensations, but
are keenly focused on futurity—the way in which the future is active virtually
in and is anticipated by the present—hence, the speculative focus on the time
anomaly of déjà entendu within virosonic branding, where the misleading sense
of familiarity with something never experienced renders, more likely, a future
disposition or affinity.
No doubt, the outline of preemptive power could leave one feeling despair
that the invention of new modes of feeling is always already co-opted in advance, that control has morphed into becoming, and vice versa. With capital’s
drive to incite creativity ever intensifying, the difference between cultural invention and the cynical fabrication of invention begins to blur. Taking the example
of piracy, some commentators have noted how it has become just another business model. And when the most banal popular music is simultaneously mobilized as a weapon of torture, it is clear that sonic culture has reached a strange
conjuncture within its deepening immersion into the environments of the
military-entertainment complex. However, the impasse of despair at such apparent undecidability would imply that the new is defunct and relegated to recycling. Sonic Warfare refuses this persistent, despairing echo of postmodernism.
Countering this despair, one of the threads that runs through the book, in
tension with control’s frequency modulation of affective tonality, finds in futurism’s art of war in the art of noise, and Afrofuturism’s revisions and updates,
one of the most potent, if problematic, conceptualizations of the aesthetic mobilization of vibrational force. Implicit in futurism is an affective politics that
goes well beyond its typecasting within music of “sounding futuristic.” What
was salvaged from futurism, after discarding its dubious political affiliations
and compromised linear temporality, was an aesthetic politics as a tactics of
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Conclusion: Unsound—The (Sub)Politics of Frequency
invention that suspends possibility for the sake of potential. We do not yet know
what a sonic body can do. This potential was pinpointed using the concept of
unsound, another name for the not yet audible. It describes the peripheries of
human audition, of infrasound and ultrasound, both of which modulate the
affective sensorium in ways we still do not fully comprehend. In its negative connotation, unsound aptly describes the colonization of inaudible frequencies by
control. But most important, unsound also names that which is not yet audible
within the normal bandwidth of hearing—new rhythms, resonances, textures,
and syntheses. Most generally, then, unsound denotes sonic virtuality, the nexus
of imperceptible vibration, masked due to limitations on not just the deficient
physiology of the auditory system, but also the policing of the sensible enacted
by groups defined by their affective affinities determined by taste, expertise, or
other audiosocial predeterminations such as class, race, gender, and age. Traditionally sonic virtuality has been understood in relation to concepts such as
silence and noise, with both offering, in different and sometimes conflicting,
sometimes complementary ways, vehicles for thinking the aesthetic, cultural, or
micropolitical potential of the audiosocial.
Together, the aesthetic politics of silence and noise has been a useful way of
framing or demarcating the field of sonic power. For example, in the history of
musical aesthetics, silence, from John Cage onward, has been conjoined to the
virtual in that it constitutes the shadow of audition, the nonconscious background, perceivable only through absence and with only a negative possibility
of entering conscious attention. Silence here is sound in potential, unactualized.
Similarly, the concept of noise, from futurism onward, came to mean the potential of any sound whatsoever to disrupt and move forward musical jurisdictions
as policed by generic criteria, critical border patrols, or harmonic or melodic
parameters of organized sound.
Both of these aesthetic tendencies, within the remit of a politics of amplitude,
are often placed in allegiance to an anticapitalist politics. In these cases, in noise
pollution policy, for example, strategic resonances are recognized in local tactical interventions into the force fields of sonic ecologies. Yet the silence-noise
axis has several drawbacks.
The politics of silence often assumes a conservative guise and promotes itself
as quasi-spiritual and nostalgic for a return to a natural. As such, it is often orientalized and romanticizes tranquility unviolated by the machinations of technology, which have militarized the sonic and polluted the rural soundscape with
noise, polluted art with sonification, polluted the city with industry, polluted
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thought with distraction, polluted attention with marketing, deafens teenagers,
and so on. Its disposition is almost always reactionary. In a much less strong
but more compelling aesthetic version, it sides with those lamenting the loss
of dynamic range within the “loudness war” that currently rages concerning
the overuse of compression in mastering techniques within sound engineering.
Dynamic compression here, or at least its overuse, in maximizing loudness and
minimizing dynamic range, is objected to as a weapon for enhancing the audio
virological power of sonic capital while deadening affect in the hypercompetitive economy of attention.
The politics of noise, on the other hand, may become an excuse for relativism
(one person’s noise is another’s music) or, in more militant mode, takes noise
as a cultural weapon, as a shock to thought, as a shock to bourgeois complacency, as a shock to tradition, as a shock to the status quo. The various positions
that can be grouped under this heading revolve around an array of definitions
of noise, from unwanted sound, to deconstructive remainder, systemic excess,
void, or disturbance through to acoustic definitions based on distribution of frequency and tagged by colors—white, pink, black, and so on. Aesthetically, however, in the soundtrack to the politics of noise, its weapons often remain trapped
within the claustrophobic confines of the dual (and usually white) history of
rock music and avant-classical sound art. Justified by Adornian propaganda,
the politics of noise may be enlisted to celebrate everything from the dreary to
the monstrous, with sonic dominance narrowly construed as the overpowering taken to the point of meaningless parody—instead of a shock to thought, a
provocation to boredom.
In its most convincing formulations, the negativity of the politics of noise is
twisted into an engine of construction, and noise becomes a reservoir of rhythmic potential, a parasitic probe beckoning the future. Usually noise here, in a
nontechnical sense, is black noise—the black noise of what Kodwo Eshun calls
the futurhythmachine. It is to black noise that twentieth-century popular music
owed most of its innovations. Black noise, painstakingly crafted in the context
of enforced migration, depressed urbanism, and ethnic suppression, becomes
a locus of affective collectivity. Feeling around in the dark, in the toxic smog of
megalopian pressure, when no hope seems to exist, when no stability persists,
rhythmic decisions still get made, collectives mobilized, and potential futures
produced. The rhythmic breakthroughs of the electronic musics of the Black
Atlantic have been countless.
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Conclusion: Unsound—The (Sub)Politics of Frequency
What is certain is that the dialectics of silence and noise cannot contain the
concept of sonic warfare developed here. Both the conceptual fetishization of
noise and silence as a politics of amplitude is always arbitrary. Hence emphasis
has been deliberately shifted to vibration—and therefore (micro) rhythm—as
that discontinuum without which a “loud” or “quiet” sonic ecology would be
inconceivable. Instead of obsessing on one or the other, it is clear that agencies
of both control and enjoyment, or repressive and mobilizing forces, reserve the
right to zigzag as and when it is pertinent to do so.
The problem of solely prioritizing the amplitude axis (between loudness
and quietness) when considering the politics of sonic intensity is that usually it
comes at the expense of a much more complex set of affective resonances distributed across the frequency spectrum. Some of these complexities have come
out in our discussion of unsound, from infrasonic and ultrasonic deployments
of sonic weapons through to the bass materialism of sound system cultures.
In other words, to a micropolitics of amplitude must be added a micropolitics
of frequency.
For sure, a more complete picture of the deployment of power within sonic
ecologies would have to delve deeper into issues of political economy and language. But it is precisely the usual obsession with these two themes, within cultural theoretical attempts to politicize sound and music, and the blind spot that
these dogmas have produced to date, that have made it impossible to take a
properly ecological vantage point. They constitute only the tip of the iceberg.
Yet for this very reason, some readers may understand sonic warfare, in its focused concern with this blind spot (and its only brief comments on economics via piracy and language via voice synthesis), as apolitical or, the preferable
term, subpolitical.
Other readers may detect, particularly in the discussion of the sound system
cultures of the Planet of Slums the suggestion of a latent, romantic notion of a
musical multitude of the global proletariat. There is, however, a key difference
between an argument about the affective mobilization and microcapitalist bootstrapping of the sound system cultures of the developing world and the internal
peripheries of the core, on one hand, and the influential notion developed by
Hardt and Negri in Empire, of an antiglobalization movement as creative multitude, on the other.
The claims made in Sonic Warfare are much less grandiose. It is one thing to find
a model of affective collectivity in the aesthetic invention, sensory engineering,
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and economic hacking of these local and digitized musical movements; their
force lies in their subpolitical, tactical, and aesthetic dimensions, as opposed to
being primarily based on belief or ideology. It is another much more contentious move to make grand claims regarding the spontaneous politicality of the
so-called emergent creativity of the multitude.
Where aesthetic and technological innovation, collective, affective, and economic mobilization, and social desegmentation coincide, the appropriate term
for such cultures, following Deleuze and Guattari, may be sonic war machines.
These sonic collectives may emerge out of turbulent, underdeveloped urban
ecologies, but their bottom-up nature does not in itself constitute an index of
a moral or political higher ground. Caution should be shown, for example, in
celebrating the pirate economics of music cultures. Preemptive capital is now ingrained enough that, through the convoluted geometry of viral marketing, cool
hunters, sonic branding, and journalism’s voracious thirst for an angle, piracy is
now conceived by some as just another corporate model, a new business school
rhetoric for getting ahead of the curve. It is essential, therefore, to get things in
perspective. The attraction and repulsion of populations around sonic affect,
and the aesthetic politics that this entails, while only the substrata out of which
sociality emerges, is still a battleground. Experiments with responses to frequencies, textures, rhythms, and amplitudes render the divergence of control and
becoming ever diminishing. For better and for worse, audio viruses are already
everywhere, spreading across analog and digital domains. The military makes
nonstandard uses of popular music, while underground music cultures make
nonstandard use of playback technologies, communications, and power infrastructures. As attention becomes the most highly prized commodity, the sonic
war over affective tonality escalates. But as Deleuze would remind us, “There is
no need to fear or hope, but only to . . . [listen] . . . for new weapons.”
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Glossary
Abstract vorticism —mode of rhythmanalytic thought that derives from Lucretius’s con-
cept of the clinamen, and continued in the ideas of Illya Prigogine and Isabelle Stengers,
Michel Serres on the birth of physics, and Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari’s concept of
the war machine. Abstract vorticism concerns itself with populations “far from equilibrium,” turbulence, and the emergence of rhythm out of noise.
Acoustic cyberspace —defined by Erik Davis as a synthetic, affective, immersive, synesthetic, haptic space as opposed to the disembodied, Cartesian, visual model of digital
space segmented by grids, lines, and points.
Acoustics —the physics of sound.
Actual occasions —the basic atoms of experience, as defined by Alfred Whitehead. Also
referred to as a throb or pulse of experience.
Affect —Spinozist conception of the power of one body to interact with other bodies. The
ontological glue of the universe. In its narrower definition, it diverges from psychoanalytical definitions that use it as synonymous with emotion, instead denoting collective
dynamics in relation to mood, ambience, and atmosphere as registered across networked
nervous systems. Theoretically denotes a plane ontologically prior to cognitive processes
and the plane of representation. Concept developed further by Gilles Deleuze and Felix
Guattari and by Brian Massumi.
Affective tonality —dimensions of mood, ambience, or atmosphere.
Afrofuturism —the intersection of black music with black science fiction. Generally un-
derstood as originating with Sun Ra in jazz, George Clinton in funk, and Lee Scratch
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Glossary
Perry in reggae. Chronicled by the Black Audio Film Collective in The Last Angel of
History / Mothership Connection and Kodwo Eshun in More Brilliant Than the Sun.
Analog fetishism —adherence and prioritization of an ontology of continuity and flow.
In sound, the fetishization of analog machines and sonics as truly authentic. Working
together with digital futurism, constitutes a block to a rigorous conception of the sonic
plexus.
Asymmetric warfare —conflict waged between two forces of radically unequal means.
Refers to a range of tactics and strategies that take advantage of decentralized, rhizomatic
networks. Resonates with strategies of guerrilla warfare and contemporary netwar.
Audio virology —theory and practice of cultural virology operating at the level of affective contagion, as opposed to the cognitive epidemiology of memetics.
Bass materialism —the collective construction of vibrational ecologies concentrated on
low frequencies where sound overlaps tactility.
Déjà entendu —the weird experience of time anomaly, specifically the auditory equiva-
lent of déjà vu, that is, the already heard, as opposed to the already seen.
Digital futurism —reductionist, fetishism of digital technology, or formalist, avant-gardist
tendency in digital sound design and microsound theory and practice. Working together
with analog fetishism, constitutes a block to a rigorous conception of the sonic plexus.
Ecology of fear —phrase coined by urban theorist Mike Davis to depict the affective
climate of catastrophic urbanism, the city and its control systems as affected by the threat
of natural, technological, sociopolitical, or economic disaster.
Futurism —the legacy of aesthetico-technical engagement deriving from the early mod-
ernist Italian art movement, for example, Marinetti, and characterized by an obsession
with war, machines, speed, noise, and sensation and a naively linear conception of technological evolution. Noted in the history of experimental music for Rusollo’s groundbreaking manifesto, The Art of Noise.
Futurity —immanence of the future in the present marked by anticipation or dread as a
future feedback effect. The domain of preemptive control.
Global ghettotech —attempt to forge together a radically synthetic counter to “world
music” that connects together the mutant strains of post-hip-hop, electronic dance music
from the Planet of Slums, from kwaito to reggaeton, to cumbia, to dancehall, to crunk, to
grime, to baile funk, and others.
Hard-core continuum —defined by journalist Simon Reynolds as a lineage of music in the
U.K. that emerged out of the collision with acid house with the sonic processes of Jamaican sound system culture. The continuum stretches through strains of hard core, through
jungle, drum’n’bass, step garage, grime, dubstep, bassline, and funky house.
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Glossary
Holosonic control —the convergence of direction ultrasound technologies with pre-
emptive power for audio virological objectives. Produces the effect of déjà entendu,
among others.
Hypersonic —inaudible affects of an ultrasonic encounter.
Infrasound —leaky, subbass frequencies under the auditory threshold of hertz, often
felt in terms of tactility or organ resonance instead of hearing.
Logistics of affection —distributed continuum of war machines (as opposed to military
machines) generative of the mutation of sensation in cybernetic society. In an asymmetric relation to the logistics of perception.
Logistics of perception —phrase coined by Paul Virilio in relation to the control func-
tions of militarized media culture in cybernetic society. In an asymmetric relation to the
logistics of affection.
Megalopolis —multicentered urban sprawls ranging from million to million inhabitants. Key actors in the evolution of the human species in the twenty-first century.
Military-entertainment complex —The idea that target populations in wartime are also
media audiences. Also refers to the migration of technologies and processes developed
in the military sphere to everyday media culture.
Military urbanism —the migration of the architectures of security from war to the design
of cities.
Nexus —a collective or society of actual entities that prehend each other, as defined by
Alfred Whitehead. The nexus itself constitutes an actual entity in addition to the sum of
entities out of which it is composed.
Planet of Slums —name for emergent, megalopian, and radically unequal urbanism of
the twenty-first century (Mike Davis).
Preemptive power —a speculative, postdeterrence mode of power that attempts to colonize futurity by appropriating the future-anterior. Attempts to operate in advance of itself. Instead of attempting to ward off, prevent, or anticipate future events, preemptive
power attempts to add a minimal dose of surety into an uncertain present, narrowing the
window of the future by instigating threatened events, making them actualize, even if
undesirable in the short term. Also known as science-fiction capital (Mark Fisher).
Prehension —a simple feeling, sensuous or nonsensuous (conceptual), as defined by
Alfred Whitehead.
Rhythmachine —defined by Kodwo Eshun as the abstract machine of rhythm, connecting smaller information components perceivable only nonsensuously through pattern
recognition. A parallel processing system enhanced by sonic science, with a potential to
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Glossary
reverse-engineer what a body can do. Reaches its hyperhythmic apex in the futurhythmachine of U.K. dance music, jungle.
Rhythmanalysis —philosophy of rhythm as developed by Pinheros dos Santos, Gaston
Bachelard, and Henri Lefebvre.
Rhythmic anarchitecture —the extensive continuum of Alfred Whitehead, or the nexus
of all nexus. That which gives continuity to the atomic nature of actual occasions, the
break and flows of matter.
Sonic plexus —the folded relationship between analog and digital sound culture.
Sonic warfare —deployment of sound systems in the modulation of affect, from sensations to moods to movement behaviors.
Subpolitics of frequency —the micropolitics of vibration that challenges the pervasive
discrimination against low-end frequencies. Also refers to the apolitical or subpolitical,
tactical nature of such a micropolitics, and therefore its possible appropriation by both
active and reactive forces.
Throb of experience —a basic aesthetic component of actuality for Alfred North
Whitehead.
Ultrasound —directional, high-frequency vibrations above the auditory threshold of
kilohertz.
Unsound —the not yet audible. Refers to the fuzzy periphery of auditory perception,
where sound is inaudible but still produces neuroaffects or physiological resonances.
Refers also to the untapped potential of audible bandwidths and the immanent futurity
of music. Sonic virtuality.
Virtuality —concept of potentiality as developed by Henri Bergson, Gilles Deleuze, Pierre
Levy, and Brian Massumi.
War machine —technical concept of Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari referring to a
range of collective phenomena engaged in the active decoding and deterritorialization
of strata. Can be conceptual, sonic, aesthetic, economic, political, animal, and so forth.
When contrasted to military machines, war machines are differentiated by not taking
conflict or violence as their primary object.
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Notes
Introduction
. Chris McGeal, “Sonic Boom Raids Cause Fear, Trauma,” Guardian, November , ,
p. . See also “Sound Bombs Hurt Gaza Civilians,” http: // www.taipeitimes.com / News /
world/archives////, and “Living with Supersonic Booms,” http://www
.ynetnews.com / Ext / Comp / ArticleLayout / CdaArticlePrintPreview / ,,L-,
.html. In , the United States was taken to the International Court of Justice by Nicaragua for using similar tactics.
. See Harlan Ullman and James Wade, Jr., Shock and Awe: Achieving Rapid Dominance
(Washington, D.C.: National Defense University, ), for the strategic manual.
. The term ecology of fear is borrowed from critical urban theorist Mike Davis, who, in
his book of the same name, discusses the impact of natural catastrophe on urbanism. See
Mike Davis, The Ecology of Fear: Los Angeles and the Imagination of Disaster (New York:
Picador, ).
. Psychoanalytic discussions of emotion use a much narrower definition of affect. While
the literature on shell-shock and trauma certainly resonates with the discussions that follow, the aim is to draw from and construct a wider definition of the term.
. This broad definition of affect is drawn from a theoretical lineage that stretches from
Spinoza to Gilles Deleuze and Guattari and, most recently, the work of Brian Massumi.
. Such a method crashes the codes and structures that organize the cultural analysis of
sonic and music culture as text, plunging instead into the materiality of sensation, revealing, on the way down, the operations of power that distribute vibration and produce
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sonic affects. This process of hacking opens onto a preindividual and impersonal virtual
ecology. Only an aesthetic method can connect with the sensations produced through
this decoding and destructuration, composing them into new modes of affective mobilization. This method intersects with that outlined by Felix Guattari in Chaosmosis, trans.
P. Bains and J. Pefanis (Sydney: Power Institute, ). The sense of ethics discussed here
resonates also with that of Deleuze, via Spinoza. That is, ethics does not refer to a morality of the “other” but rather strictly remains at the level of the pragmatics of sonically
constructive and destructive encounters. Ethics here therefore remains neither moral nor
strategic. It is beyond good and evil, and therefore it is somewhat indifferent to politics
as usually understood.
. Suzanne Cusick, “You are in a place that is out of the world . . .”: Music in the Detention
Camps of the ‘Global War on Terror.’ ” Journal of the Society for American Music , no.
(): –.
. Kodwo Eshun, “Abducted by Audio,” Abstract Culture, no. (), Ccru.
. The military-entertainment complex suggests the shared techniques, resources, and
content of these two sectors, in addition to interlocking corporate infrastructures and
ideological persuasions. As Stockwell and Muir argue, it also implies the idea, hammered
home by “shock and awe,” that the enemy in war is also an audience. S. Stockwell and
A. Muir, “The Military-Entertainment Complex: A New Facet of Information Warfare,”
Fibreculture, no. , http: // journal.fibreculture.org / issue / issue_stockwellmuir.html.
.
. The phrase sonic evangelism is derived from Jonathan Sterne’s depiction of the “audiovisual litany” in The Audible Past (Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, ), pp. –
in which he points to an almost religious tendency in many critiques of the ocularcentrism of Western culture, and the deification of the phenomenology of sound over the
other sensory modalities, devoid of technological, history, and political inflection. The
renaissance in studies of sonic culture coincides with the transformations of digital culture, particularly the ubiquity of the personal computer as sound studio, and builds on
the preexisting domain of experimental musicology, cultural studies of popular music,
but upgrades and moves beyond both fields.
. The phrase full-spectrum dominance, as used here, is a deliberate generalization of a
strategic concept that came out of the Pentagon in entitled Joint Vision , http: //
www.dtic.mil / jointvision / jvpub.htm, as a response to the problems posed by asymmetric warfare. I specifically deploy the concept to frame the field of a politics of frequency
and to refer to the expanded remit of “unsonic” culture that currently exceeds human
auditory perception, from infra- to ultrasound.
. The military-entertainment complex suggests the shares techniques, resources, and
content of these two sectors, in addition to interlocking corporate infrastructures and
ideological persuasions. As Stockwell and Muir argue, it also implies the idea, hammered
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Notes
home by “shock and awe,” that the enemy in war is also an audience. Stockwell and. Muir,
“The Military-Entertainment Complex.”
. Brian Massumi, “Potential Politics and the Primacy of Pre-emption,” Theory and
Event , no. (), and “Fear (The Spectrum Said),” Positions: East Asia Cultures Critique , no. (March ).
. Mark Fisher, “Science Fiction Capital,” , http: // www.cinestatic.com / trans-mat /
Fisher / sfcapital.htm.
Chapter 1
. Afrofuturism tries to break with many of the stereotypes of black music culture that tie
it to the “primitive” as opposed to the technological, the “street” as opposed to the cosmic,
and “soul” as opposed to the mechanical. While many have construed it to side with the
last, its more compelling version focuses on the tension between “soul” and “postsoul”
tendencies.
. Paul Gilroy, The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness (London: Verso,
).
. Gottfried W. Leibniz, Epistolae ad diversos, vol. , trans. C. Kortholt, (Leipzig, ),
p. . The work of ethno-mathematician Ron Eglash hints at the binary mathematics
implicit within Afro-diasporic polyrhythm cultures. See his articles “African in the Origins of Binary Code” and “Recursive Numeric Sequences in Africa,” Abstract Culture ,
Ccru, , and “African Influences in Cybernetics,” in The Cyborg Handbook, ed, C. H.
Gray (London: Routledge, ).
. Kodwo Eshun, More Brilliant Than the Sun (London: Quartet, ), p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Ccru, “Digital Hyperstition,” Abstract Culture, Ccru, Swarm , .
. Reynolds in particular follows the migration of sonic warfare memes around the Black
Atlantic. See “Wargasm: Military Imagery in Pop Music,” originally published in Frieze.
These quotes are taken from the expanded director cut available online at http: // critcrim
.org / redfeather / journal-pomocrim / vol-–virtual / wargasm.html (last viewed April ,
). He charts in particular the influence of Hong Kong martial arts films on the U.S.
hip-hop collective, the Wu Tang Clan’s mythology of “Liquid Swords,” and then into the
U.K. hard-core and jungle scenes of the early s. Reynolds also notes, on another
U.S.-to-U.K. vector, the migration of Detroit techno outfit Underground Resistance’s notion of guerrilla warfare on vinyl to pioneering hardcore / jungle label Reinforced.
. “Wargasm.”
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. Immanuel Wallerstein, World-Systems Analysis: An Introduction (Durham, N.C.: Duke
University Press, ).
. Afrofuturism has also been understood as a response to the idea that “authenticity”
in black music must necessarily be tied to “keeping it real,” to the “street,” chaining the
essence of “blackness” to the conditions of depressed urban existence with all the stereotypes of sex, drugs, violence, and hyperconsumption that this contemporary cliché, filtered through a globalized hip-hop culture, entails. James Richards has referred to this
simulation as the Ghetto Matrix, in which the ghetto becomes “a virtual reality (or more
accurately: an actual surreality)” (James Richards, “The Ghetto Matrix,” http: // blackfilm
.com / / features / a-ghettomatrix.shtml, ), an image (bought into by both American blacks and whites) deployed in the lucrative perpetuation of the prison, music, sports,
and fashion industries—a vast and profitable carceral archipelago. The notion of a “ghetto
matrix” can be useful, especially in an era in which some are suggesting an alternative
to world music that strings together those local mutant music cultures of the Planet of
Slums into a meta-movement termed “global ghettotech.” With the spotlight of ubiquitous media intensifying, through the penetrating glare of everyone from global brands
through to music bloggers, is the idea of a music underground, operating “off the radar,”
over? Are the depressed urban conditions that have motivated invention now merely a
marketing image used in the perpetuation of stasis? Sonic Warfare refuses this postmodern impasse, finding, camouflaged in the hype, a resilient set of concepts and processes.
Gilroy’s concept of the Black Atlantic begins to hack this matrix by challenging the
two positions whose dualism helps shore up its dimensionality, essentialism and antiessentialism, black nationalism and postmodernism. But Kodwo Eshun pushes this
further, bracketing this crisis of representation. The war of images and identities for
Eshun peels back to reveal a sonic materialism, and a war in which what is at stake is the
“redesign of sonic reality” itself: “Everywhere, the street is considered the ground and
guarantee of all reality, a compulsory logic explaining all Black Music, conveniently mishearing antisocial surrealism as social realism” (Eshun, More Brilliant Than the Sun, p. ).
Instead, the Afrofuturism that Eshun identifies attempts to fabricate an “operating system
for the redesign of sonic reality” through the construction of an acoustic cyberspace and
a new machinic distribution of sensations, escaping the terrestrial phenomenology of the
ghetto matrix for a both cosmic and submarine model of movement and sensation.
Chapter 2
. The conceptualization of the war machine developed here is inspired by Gilles Deleuze
and Guattari’s notion within A Thousand Plateaus, trans. B. Massumi (London: Athlone,
). Specifically, the (dis)continuum of war developed here is understood as stretched
out between two tendencies: the tendency of capture and that of escape.
. Russolo argues that between the partitioned pitches of the harmonic scale lies the “enharmonic.” The scale leaves out “the true shading” of the “passage from the highest pitch
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to the lowest.” “These enharmonic passages, from one pitch to another, which are also
found in the whistling of the wind and in the howling of sirens, are completely unknown
to today’s orchestras, which can produce only diatonic-chromatic passages.” L. Russollo,
The Art of Noises (Hillsdale, N.Y.: Pendragon Press, ), p. . Russolo’s also drew from
his colleague, Francesco Balilia in noting that futurist “enharmonism” facilitates “the
natural and instinctive modulation and intonation of the enharmonic intervals, presently unattainable given our scale in the tempered system, which we want to overthrow.
We Futurists have long loved these enharmonic intervals, which we find not only in the
discords of the orchestras, when the instruments are playing in different systems, but in
the spontaneous songs of the people, when they are pitched without the preoccupation
of art” (pp. –).
. Russollo, The Art of Noises, pp. –. Giving examples of the symphony of noises of
war, Russolo describes the “murmuring thunder” of artillery out of range, outlining a
futurist cartography of space. “But it is only when it comes within range that the artillery
reveals completely the epic and impressionistic symphony of its noises. Then the pounding of the firing acquires a timbre of metallic crashing that is prolonged in the howl of
the shell as it rips through the air, losing itself in the distance as it falls. Those coming in,
however, are announced by a distant, breathless thump, by a progressively louder howling
that takes on a tragic sense of impending menace, ever greater and closer, until the explosion of the shell itself. The whistling of the shell in the air with the different calibers. The
smaller the caliber, the higher and more regular the whistling. With larger calibers, there
are added other, smaller ones, with surges of intensity. With the very largest calibers,
there is a noise very little different from that of a train passing nearby” (p. ).
. Russolo’s influential formulation of the sound / war nexus also outlines the haptic navigation in the battlefield environment: “In modern warfare, mechanical and metallic, the
element of sight is almost zero. The sense, the significance, and the expressiveness of
noises, however, are infinite. . . . From noise, the different calibers of grenades and shrapnels can be known even before they explode. Noise enables us to discern a marching
patrol in deepest darkness, even to judging the number of men who compose it. From
the intensity of rifle fire, the number of defenders of a given position can be determined.
There is no movement or activity that is not revealed by noise.” Ibid., pp. –.
. Yet we can identify a number of distinct yet overlapping definitions of noise. First,
one everyday use relates to distortion in a textural surface. If we take the listening experience of pirate radio, for example, we may attribute part of the affective charge to the
dose of static interference, which intensifies the sensation of the music heard, intensifies
the conjunction of music and the nervous system, as if the frayed edges of percussive
and verbal rhythmicity roughen the skin like aerodynamic sandpaper, making it vulnerable, opening it to rhythmic contagion. Usually, however, noise is taken negatively, in
an essentially psychoacoustic fashion, which states that noise is relative and is an unspecified or unwanted sound. Within acoustics is a range of physical definitions, usually
given the names of colors such as white, black, or pink, which often refers to degrees of
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randomness within specific distributions of frequency. A further notion relates to the use
of the word noise (as entropy, for example) in information theory. Finally, and perhaps
most relevant here, is the chaos theoretical deployment of “noise” as positive chaos or
turbulence. This also converges with the constructive conceptions of noise being developed in scientific research into processes of stochastic resonance in which the addition of
noise into a nonlinear system can, at very particular thresholds, improve, not destroy, the
transmission of a signal. See B. Kosko, Noise (New York: Viking, ). Instead of noise
chained solely to a negative definition as unwanted, nonmusic, nonidentity, or incomprehensibility, we shall pursue instead the mode of vibrational matter that exceeds the
binary between noise and signal, chaos and order, violence and peace. Noise as weapon
of destruction becomes a field of virtual potential. Such a positive conception of noise is
actually implied, though usually underdeveloped, in any compelling notion of noise as
a weapon.
. Jacques Attali, Noise, trans. B. Massumi (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press,
), p. .
. Gilles Deleuze and Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, trans. B. Massumi (London: Athlone, ), pp. –.
. Schizophonia, splitting sounds from their sources, is the notion coined by R. Murray
Schaffer in The Soundscape to describe the rupture that the invention of recording imposed on the soundscape.
. From an excerpt from Varese’s lectures, “,” no. (June ), New York, translated
by Louise Varese.
. Simon Reynolds, Bring the Noise (London: Faber and Faber, ), p. xii.
. Ibid.
. On occularcentrism, see Marshall McLuhan, “Visual and Acoustic Space,” in The
Global Village (New York: Oxford University Press, ), and “Acoustic Space” in Media
Research: Technology, Art, Communication, ed. M. Moos (Amsterdam: G&B Arts, ),
Erik Davis, “Acoustic Space,” http: // www.techgnosis.com / acoustic.html (last viewed
May , ,) through to Martin Jay’s Downcast Eyes: The Denigration of Vision (Berkeley: University of California Press, ) and Jonathon Stern’s The Audible Past (Durham,
N.C.: Duke University Press, ).
. See, for example, M. Bull and L. Back, The Auditory Culture Reader (Oxford: Berg,
).
. The affective turn in cultural theory is most rigorously formulated by Brian Massumi,
Parables for the Virtual (Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, ). Massumi understands affect as the intermodal, synesthetic perspective of the virtual. On synesthesia,
see Barron Cohen, Synesthesia: The Strangest Thing (New York: Oxford University Press,
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Notes
); R. Cytowic, Synesthesia: A Union of the Senses (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press,
), and J. Harrison and S. Barron Cohen, Synesthesia: Classic and Contemporary Readings (London: Blackwell, ).
. Massumi’s introduction to Parables of the Virtual, “Concrete Is as Concrete Does,”
condenses these problematic obsessions of cultural studies succinctly.
. Attali, Noise, p. .
. See Michel Chion’s distinction between semantic, causal, and reduced listening in
Audio Vision (New York: Columbia University Press, ).
. Attali, Noise, p. .
. Curtis Roads, Microsound (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, ), p. .
. This refers to a basic distinction that underlies this book. This distinction can be
found in the history of military thought that opposes state to guerrilla warfare; see, for example. Robert Taber, The War of the Flea (Boulder, Colo.: Paladin, ). In the contemporary period, this maps on to what Arquilla and Ronfeldt described in their infamous
article for the Rand Corporation, “Cyberwar Is Coming,” Journal of Comparative Strategy
, no. () . Cyberwar is a high-tech, state-centered militarization of network society
and the electromagnetic spectrum, while netwar is an array of nonstate deployments, decentralized, and usually but not always nonviolent. The most profound and far-reaching
version of this conceptual distinction can be found in Deleuze and Guattari’s A Thousand
Plateaus, between apparatus of capture and the nomad war machine. Adapting Deleuze
and Guattari’s schema, this text aims to reframe debates around the micropolitics of
sound and music in terms of the pragmatics of sonic war machines.
. Brian Massumi, The Politics of Everyday Fear (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota,
), p. .
Chapter 3
. Project Jericho was broadcast on BBC Radio on February , .
. http: // www.forteantimes.com / articles / _sonicweapons.shtml (last viewed May ,
).
. See, for example, chapter , “War without Bloodshed” in Alvin and Heidi Toffler’s War
and Anti-War: Survival at the Dawn of the st Century (Boston: Little, Brown, ).
This book in fact fits into a much larger body of war research, but particularly aims to
complement both Martin van Creveld’s histories of war and Manual De Landa’s materialist philosophy of war in War in the Age of Intelligent Machines (New York: Zone, )
with a more affective analysis of popular culture and aesthetics. See also Elias Canetti’s
Crowds and Power (New York: Penguin, ) for an analysis of the physics of crowds.
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Notes
. M. Cloonan and B. Johnson, “Killing Me Softly with His Song: An Initial Investigation into the Use of Popular Music as a Tool of Oppression,” Popular Music , no.
().
. S. Cusick, “Music as Torture / Music as Weapon,” Transcultural Music Review, no. ,
, at http: // www.sibetrans.com / trans / trans / cusick_eng.htm
. Combining Michel Foucault and Gilles Deleuze with Marshall McLuhan, it could be
argued that the mode of security has expanded from the surveillance of panoptics, which
models the target in terms of its visual field, to pansonics, the subtle yet ubiquitous modulation of control in an immersive, synesthetic field closer to McLuhan’s descriptions of
acoustic space.
. Infrasonic waves are generated by an array of turbulent phenomena in the physical
world, from earthquakes, erupting volcanoes, and tidal waves to meteorological entities
such as hurricanes and thunderstorms. Such frequencies are known to induce anxiety
among animals, which have broader auditory bandwidths and less control over their
autonomic responses than humans do.
. Hyperstition, a concept developed by the Ccru (www.ccru.net), relates to fictional
entities or agencies that make themselves real. The classic example is William Gibson’s
concept of cyberspace from the s.
. One of the earliest mentions of Gavreau (or Gavraud, as some sources spell his name)
stems from Lyall Watson’s Supernature (New York: Coronet, ).
. Gavreau, “Infrasound,” pp. –, in S. Sweezey, Amok Journal Sensurround Edition: A Compendium of Pyscho-Physiological Investigations (Los Angeles: Amok, ).
See also Cody, J. “Infrasound,” , http: // www.borderlands.com / archives / arch / infra
.htm and G. Vassilatos, G “Nocturnal Disturbances and Infrasonic Hum,” , http: //
www.borderlands.com / archives / arch / nux.htm.
. Ibid., p. .
. Christian Nold, Mobile Vulgus (London: Book Works, ), p. . The Curdler was
also said to have also been used by police in the Bay Area of California in the s to
dissolve crowds and their production of noises such as clapping or chanting.
. “Deadly Vibrations,” in http: // www.overloadmedia.co.uk / archives / miscellaneous /
deadly_vibrations.php (last viewed July , ).
. John Pilger, Heroes (Boston: South End Press, ), p. .
. “The Wandering Soul Psy-op Tape of Vietnam,” http: // www.pcf.com / sealords /
cuadai / wanderingsoul.htm. This Web page features an audio clip of one of the tapes
used, a number of reports on the campaign, and the Vietnamese Buddhist conception of
the wandering souls of the dead on which it was based.
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Notes
. New Scientist, September , , in Swezey, Amok Journal, p. .
. According to SouthCom Network (SCN) radio, which supplied the music on request
by the U.S. troops, the playlist (with probably a few errors) included: “(You’ve Got) Another Thing Coming”—Judas Priest; “Fifty Ways to Leave Your Lover”—Paul Simon; “All
Over But the Crying”—Georgia Satellites; “All I Want Is You”—U; “Big Shot”—Billy
Joel; “Blue Collar Man”—Styx; “Born to Run”—Bruce Springsteen; “Bring Change”—
Tears for Fears; “Cleaning Up the Town”—The Bus Boys; “Crying in the Chapel”—Brenda
Lee; “Dancing in the Street”—David Bowie; “Danger Zone”—Kenny Loggins; “Dead
Man’s Party”—Oingo Boingo; “Don’t Look Back”—Boston; “Don’t Fear the Reaper”—
Blue Oyster Cult; “Don’t Close Your Eyes”—Kix; “Eat My Shorts”—Rick Dees; “Electric
Spanking of War Babies”—Funkadelic; “Feel a Whole Lot Better (When You’re Gone)”—
Tom Petty; “Freedom Fighter”—White Lion; “Freedom—No Compromise”—Little Steven; “Ghost Rider”—The Outlaws; “Give It Up”—KC and the Sunshine Band; “Gonna
Tear Your Playhouse Down”—Paul Young; “Guilty”—Bonham; “Hang ’Em High”—Van
Halen; “Hanging Tough”—New Kids on the Block; “Heavens on Fire”—Kiss; “Hello It’s
Me”—Todd Rundgren; “Hello, We’re Here”—Tom T. Hall; “Helter Skelter”—The Beatles;
“I Fought the Law and the Law Won”—Bobby Fuller; “If I Had a Rocket Launcher”—
Bruce Cochran; “In My Time of Dying”—Led Zeppelin; “Ironman”—Black Sabbath;
“It Keeps You Running”—Doobie Brothers; “Judgement Day”—Whitesnake; “Jungle
Love”—Steve Miller; “Just Like Jessie James”—Cher; “Mayor of Simpleton”—XTC;
“Midnight Rider”—Allman Brothers Band; “Mr. Blue”—The Fleetwoods; “Naughty
Naughty”—Danger Danger; “Never Gonna Give You Up”—Rick Astley; “Never Tear
Us Apart”—INXS; “No Particular Place to Go”—Chuck Berry; “No More Mister Nice
Guy”—Alice Cooper; “No Alibis”—Eric Clapton; “Now You’re Messin’ with an S.O.B.” —
Nazareth; “Nowhere Man”—The Beatles; “Nowhere to Run”—Martha and the Vandelas;
“One Way Ticket”—George Thorogood and the Destroyers; “Panama”—Van Halen;
“Paradise City”—Guns and Roses; “Paranoid”—Black Sabbath; “Patience”—Guns and
Roses; “Poor Little Fool”—Ricky Nelson; “Prisoner of the Highway”—Ronnie Milsap;
“Prisoner of Rock and Roll”—Neil Young; “Refugee”—Tom Petty; “Renegade”—Styx;
“Rock and a Hard Place”—Rolling Stones; “Run to the Hills”—Iron Maiden; “Run Like
Hell”—Pink Floyd; “Screaming for Vengeance”—Judas Priest; “She’s Got a Big Posse”—
Arabian Prince; “Shot in the Dark”—Ozzy Osborne; “Stay Hungry”—Twisted Sister;
“Taking It to the Streets”—Doobie Brothers; “The Party’s Over”—Journey; “The Race Is
On”—Sawyer Brown; “The Pusher”—Steppenwolf; “The Long Arm of the Law”—Warren
Zevon; “The Star Spangled Banner”—Jimi Hendrix; “The Secret of My Success”—Night
Ranger; “They’re Coming to Take Me Away”—Henry VIII; “This Means War”—Joan
Jett and the Blackhearts; “Time Is on My Side”—Rolling Stones; “Too Old to Rock and
Roll, Too Young to Die”—Jethro Tull; “Voodoo Child”—Jimi Hendrix; “Wait for You”—
Bonham; “Waiting for a Friend”—Rolling Stones; “Wanted Dead or Alive”—Bon Jovi;
“Wanted Man”—Molly Hatchet; “War Pigs”—Black Sabbath; “We Didn’t Start This
Fire”—Billy Joel; “We Gotta Get Outta This Place”—The Animals; “Who Will You Run
To?”—Hear; “You Send Me”—Sam Cooke; “You Shook Me All Night Long”—AC / DC;
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Notes
“You Hurt Me (and I Hate You)”—Eurythmics; “You Got Lucky”—Tom Petty; “Your
Time Is Gonna Come”—Led Zeppelin; “Youth Gone Wild”—Skid Row. http: // www.gwu
.edu / ~nsarchiv / nsa / DOCUMENT / .htm.
. See chapter in J. Ronson, The Men Who Stare at Goats (New York: Picador, ).
Ronson traces the recent history of U.S. psyops, including the deployment of silent subliminal sound, to the frankly unhinged First Earth Battalion Operating Manual of Jim
Channon. See http: // firstearthbattalion.org / ?q=node /
. See Cusick, “Music as Torture /Music as Weapon,” and Clive Stafford Smith, “Welcome
to the ‘Disco,’ ” Guardian, June , , http: // www.guardian.co.uk / world / / jun / /
usa.guantanamo.
. See the LRAD product overview at http: // www.atcsd.com / site / content / view / / /
(last viewed April , ).
. For a recent report on LRADs, see Jurgen Altmann’s Millimetre Waves, Lasers,
Acoustics for Non-Lethal Weapons? Physics Analyses and Inferences (Deutsche Stiftung
Friedensforschung, ). For Altmann’s earlier debunking of the hype over acoustic
weaponry, see Altmann “Acoustic Weapons—A Prospective Assessment” (Science and
Global Security , : –.).
. Amy Teibel, “Israel May Use Sound Weapon on Settlers,” June , , http: // news
.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap//ap_on_re_mi_ea/israel_the_scream (last
viewed June , ).
. http: // www.acoustics.org / press / th / altmann.html (last viewed April , ).
. Ibid.
. Rob Young, “Exotic Audio Research,” Wire, March .
. See in particular William Burroughs, “Electronic Revolution,” in Word Virus (New
York: Grove Press, ), pp. –.
. William Burroughs and J. Page, “The Jimmy and Bill Show,” in Swezey, Amok Journal,
ed. S. Swezey (Los Angeles: Amok, ), p. .
. J. Sergeant “Sonic Doom,” Fortean Times, no. , December , also available at
http: // www.forteantimes.com / articles / _sonicweapons.shtml (last viewed September , ), chapter in Simon Reynolds, Rip It Up and Start Again (London: Faber
and Faber, ), Simon Ford, The Wreckers of Civilization (London: Black Dog, ),
and V. Vale and A. Juno, eds., The Industrial Culture Handbook (San Francisco: Re /Search
Publications, ).
. http: // www.klf.de / faq / index.php?inte_id= According to the KLF Web site, Cauty
allegedly deployed one of his vehicles at a road protest in Devon: “As of hrs ..
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Notes
the armoured division of the A.A.A. Formation Attack Ensemble established a front line
defensive position at the Trollheim Hill Fort, Fairmile, Devon, in collaboration with A
Action in defence of the threatened trees, badgers and some insects. At dawn on ..,
the Triple A will activate their S.Q.U.A.W.K. sonic device in response to any offensive action taken on behalf of the Connect consortium. The autonomous communities of Fairmile, Trollheim and Allercombe have resisted the soul destroying consumer
nightmare of the private profit A through a year campaign of Non-Violent Direct
Action. Now armed with the Saracen armoured personnel carriers both loaded with
Kilowatt Sound systems and weighing over tons they intend to dance in the face of the
legions of destruction.”
. When Wagner’s “Ride of the Valkyries” was blasted out of General Kilgore’s swarm
of helicopters in Apocalypse Now, it was supposed to provide a high-octane soundtrack
to massacre for the U.S. troops, to get the adrenaline pumping but also to terrify the villagers below with its pompous Euro-classical bombast. In George Gittoes’s recent documentary, Soundtrack to War (Revelation Films, ), U.S. tank operators in Iraq were
interviewed about the kind of music they liked to listen to while going into battle. Many
of the soldiers hacked the wiring of their tanks so they could plug their CD players into
the communication system and share the music with their comrades using their helmet
earphones. The troops were roughly split along the lines of race in their preference for
their killing accompaniment. While the white soldiers tended to listen to metal and hard
core, the African American soldiers preferred hip-hop. In both cases, however, what was
needed to help pump the adrenaline was a testosterone-driven soundtrack.
Chapter 4
. Elias Canetti, Crowds and Power (New York: Penguin, ).
. Julian Henriques, “Sonic Dominance and the Reggae Sound System Session,” in The
Auditory Cultures Reader, ed. M. Bull and L. Back (London: Berg, ), p. .
. Jose Gil, “The Dancer’s Body,” in A Shock to Thought: Expressions after Deleuze and
Guattari, ed. B. Massumi (London: Routledge, ), p. .
Chapter 5
. Friedrich Kittler, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, trans. G. Winthrop-Young and
M. Wutz (Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, ). There are numerous intriguing twentieth-century entanglements of military technology with popular music culture.
See, for example, Albert Glinsky’s Theremin: Ether Music and Espionage (Bloomington:
University of Illinois Press, ). Kittler himself notes that when “Karlheinz Stockhausen was mixing his first electronic composition, Kontakte, in the Cologne studio of
the Westdeutcscher Rundfunk between February and fall , the pulse generator,
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indicating amplifier, band-pass filter, as well as the sine and square wave oscillators were
made up of discarded U.S. Army equipment: an abuse that produced a distinctive sound”
(p. ). Winthrop-Young points out how modern hi-fi technology built on innovations in
aircraft and submarine location technologies and how radio stations exploited the VHF
signal processing that guided General Guderian’s tank blitzkrieg. With Kittler, he goes on
to use the Beatles’ “Yellow Submarine” as a metaphor for our immersion in a “militarymusic” complex. He describes how on “ September . . . US forces liberating Luxembourg and its famous radio station came across an extraordinary magnetophone that,
to the amazement of Allied radio monitors, had allowed for a lifelike and scratch-free
fidelity of sound that ordinary transcription records could never have yielded. While
the commercial production of magnetic recording systems at Bell Labs was actively suppressed by upper management despite the fact that during the s, Clarence Hickmann had already developed them to the point of practical application, the German
development was fuelled by the need for superior combat recording technologies and
for improved means to analyze and manipulate secret Morse messages. Subsequently,
information gathered from captured German code-breaking equipment ‘enabled EMI
to manufacture tape and tape recorders, resulting in the production of the famous BTR
series which remained in use at Abbey Road for over years.’ The strange dispatches
allegedly encoded by Abbey Road’s most famous clients including the tidings that ‘Paul
is dead’—presupposed machines of German counterintelligence had used for decoding
enemy transmissions . . . the birth of full frequency range recording out of the technology of early submarine sound detection and identification practices. In , faced with
the prospect of losing the Battle of the Atlantic to German wolf packs, the RAF Coastal
Command had approached the English-owned Decca Record Company with a secret and
difficult assignment. Coastal Command wanted a training record to illustrate the differences between the sounds of German and British submarines. Such aural distinctions
were extremely delicate and to reproduce them accurately on a record called for a decided
enlargement of the phonograph’s capabilities. Intensive work . . . led to new recording
techniques.” G. Winthrop-Young, “Drill and Distraction in the Yellow Submarine: On the
Dominance of War in Friedrich Kittler’s Media Theory,” Critical Inquiry (): –
. Kittler, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, p. .
. “Records that hitherto had been used to liven up military communication in the
trenches of the Ardennes now came into their own. Otherwise people themselves, rather
than the government and the media industry, could have made politics.” Ibid., p. . As
Winthrop Young elaborates in “Drill and Distraction,” “The scenario that emerges and
which some would no doubt label paranoid is one of the military only consenting to the
civilian use of a media technology if it is too outdated to serve military purposes or if it
is certain that its release into the civilian world will have no negative impact on military
operations . . . . Beginning in May , primitive tube transmitters were used to transmit early radio programs along the trenches, but the upper echelons quickly put a stop
to such abuse of military hardware. With the demobilization of almost , radio
operators still in possession of their equipment and the revolutionary unrest following
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the lost war, however, the incipient republic was in danger of losing control of its recently
acquired airwaves” (p. ).
. F. Kittler, “Infowar,” http: // www.hydra.umn.edu / kittler / infowar-tr.html Ars Electronica Festival, , Linz, Austria, September – (last viewed April , )
. See particularly Martin van Creveld, Technology and War: From B.C. to the Present (New York: Free Press, ), and Manuel De Landa, War in the Age of Intelligent
Machines (New York: Zone, .
. With reference to historical material, such interpretations of Kittler’s work have already been seriously undermined by showing that in fact in many cases, war often hindered technological development. See G. Winthrop-Young, “Drill and Distraction in the
Yellow Submarine.”
. M. Foucault, Discipline and Punish, trans. A. Sheridan (New York: Penguin, ), and
Society Must Be Defended, trans. D. Macey (New York: Penguin, ).
. Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari, “Nomadology,” in A Thousand Plateaus, trans.
B. Massumi (London: Athlone, ).
. Kittler, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, p. .
. Ibid., p. .
Chapter 6
. Virilio understood both the military general and film director as strategists negotiating the “fog of war” within the logistics of perception. And their roles mutate in tandem
as the vision machines assemble and connect: “To grasp the objective truth of a great
battle, the camera eye . . . could not have been that of the general or the director. Rather,
a monitor would have had to have recorded and analysed a number of facts and events
incomparably greater than what the human eye and brain can perceive at a given place
and time, and then to have inscribed the processed data onto the battlefield itself. . . .
The level of foresight required by the geopolitical dimensions of modern battlefields demanded a veritable meteorology of war. Already we can see here the video-idea that the
military voyeur is handicapped by the slowness with which he scans a field of action
overstretched by the dynamic revolution of weaponry and mass transport. . . . The disappearance of the proximity effect in the prosthesis of accelerated travel made it necessary
to create a wholly simulated appearance that would restore three dimensionality to the
message in full. Now a holographic prosthesis of the military commander’s inertia was to
be communicated to the viewer.” Paul Virilio, War and Cinema: The Logistics of Perception (London: Verso, ), p. .
. Paul Virilio, Bunker Archeology (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton Architectural Press, ).
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. See R. N. Scarth, Mirrors by the Sea: An Account of the Hythe Sound Mirror System
(Hythe, U.K.: Hythe Civic Society, ). and R. N. Scarth, Echoes from the Sky: A Story
of Acoustic Defence (Hyth, U.K.: Hyth Civic Society, ).
. Virilio, War and Cinema, p. . The notion of the virtual (as potential) here owes more
to Massumi than to Virilio (simulation as substitution) or Baudrillard (simulation as the
implosion of the real into the hyperreal).
. See Douglas Richardson, An Illustrated Guide to Techniques and Equipment of Electronic Warfare (London: Hodder & Stoughton, ), pp. –.
. François Julien, The Propensity of Things, trans. Janet Lloyd (New York: Zone, ),
p. .
. Ibid., pp. –.
. Julien also sees in the difference the origins of the Greek idea of assembly versus the
Chinese concept of authority.
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. “Chinese strategy aimed to use every possible means to influence the potential inherent in the forces at play to its own advantage, even before the actual engagement, so that
the engagement would never constitute the decisive moment, which always involves risk.
In contrast, after the time of the skirmishes and duels described by Homer, the Greek
ideal was the ‘all or nothing’ of pitched battle.” Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., pp. –.
Chapter 7
. www.ghostarmy.org. Philip Gerard, Secret Soldiers: How a Troupe of American Artists,
Designers, and Sonic Wizards Won World War II’s Battles of Deception against the Germans (Penguin, ).
Gerard describes in detail these exercises: “But as the night wears on, the picture clarifies. A listening post up stream reports sounds of bridge building, while the listening post
miles down stream at the fixed bridge point reports hearing a column of tanks veer off
the road before reaching the bridge, detouring upstream along the river behind a screen
of dense trees and darkness. . . . Other listening posts concur. The tanks are counted as
their treads rumble across the wooden bridge, still heading upstream. Another listening
post counts them again as, one by one, they gear down to climb a hill. A third listening post farther on confirms the count as the sound of exhaust cuts out momentarily
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when they crest the hill and skid down the other side. The observers can’t see any tank
movement—but they’ve got ears. They’re close enough to the river to pick up every move
the Americans make, purely by sound. Finally, the listening post that reported the sounds
of bridge building now reports that the racket of steel-on-steel hammering has ceased.
A new sound has taken its place; tanks forming up and idling, then shutting down their
engines. . . . Now there is no doubt. The prefabricated bridge upstream is finished. The
American tanks will advance across it, trying to outflank the Germans. The General
makes the decision that will seal their fate. ‘Proceed as planned’” (p. ). And yet the
“battle just described never took place. It was staged for a top-secret training film scripted
by Darrel Rippeteau, shot on location at Pine Camp, produced at the Signal Corps studio in Fort Monmouth, New Jersey, starring B-movie actors and real sonic soldiers. . . .
The sonic deception it portrayed was very real. . . . At strategic points across the river,
invisible behind the thick forest, stationary sonic cars played programs of sound effects
specifically produced to create an impression of a tank moving up the river. . . . First,
the sonic car upstream began playing the sounds of bridge building. Then, as the real
tanks stopped short of the fixed bridge downstream, another sonic car switched on its
sounds of tank engines. At intervals, each new car stationed farther upriver switched on
its program—tanks crossing a wooden bridge with loose boards, tanks climbing a hill,
tanks descending, tanks assembling at the new bridge head and then shutting down to
wait for the assault. The cars downstream one by one shut down, and the sound magically ‘moved’ along the river upstream. . . . The sonic soldiers had rehearsed exactly such
a scenario on the Black River near Pine Camp. The objective: to force the enemy to repel
a sonic attack and thereby be caught unawares by the real one” (p. ). “First, they set
up their recording studio in a manoeuvre area near the Salt River. A tripod-mounted
microphone—an off-the-shelf commercial studio brand—was the key. They affixed to it
a wire basket covered in burlap to screen out wind noise. Cable snaked along the ground
to the radar van, a hundred or so feet away. Inside the van, two technicians manned
the turntables, on which a worm fear drove a recording head, etching grooves into a
sixteen-inch glass-based transcription disk, the same kind used by radio and recording studios, thereby recording the input from the outside microphone. . . . As the needle
scored the glass disk, one technician peered through a microscope at the recording head
to make sure that the sound input was not so loud that it caused the stylus of the recording head to cut across one groove into the next and spoil the recording. The other
kept a sharp eye on the oscilloscope, the glowing TV-like monitor that showed sound
frequencies and moving waves on its cathode ray tube, offering a real-time picture of
what they were recording. The technician could watch for spikes in volume and adjust
the levels accordingly. . . . To record starts, idling, and backing up, the tanks were kept
a hundred feet from the mike. For manoeuvring, he’d direct them farther and farther
way, have them return, then order them to circle again and again. . . . Circling around
the fixed microphone was a key manoeuvre, as the Bell Labs engineers pointed out. ‘In
this way, the collective sound of motor vehicles of the required type and number is obtained continuously and at high level, free of the revealing Doppler effect’” (p. ). The
“metallic clatter of bridge building, truck and jeep noise, soldiers’ voices, artillery tractor
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engineers, bulldozers grading roads, and military activity that could possibly be useful
in mounting a deception. Then they selected sound effects for specific training exercises
and dubbed them from fragile glass disks onto the more rugged stainless steel wire. . . .
He [Ted Cruz] could grab a platter and slip the needle into the groove precisely on the
desired sound effect. . . . At the Army Experiment Station, they worked in a studio above
the airplane hangar. But they could also create sonic programs in their mobile studio,
which contained three turntables off which they could dub sound to four wire recorders
apiece. Thus, preparing for action they could tailor a dozen wire spool recordings at a
time to the particular mission of deception, mixing armoured noise with voices, bridge
building, and so on” (p. ).
. “Sound propagation over distance is much better at night . . . because there tends to
be an inversion layer which makes the sound waves bend toward the earth. The inversion usually extends from the earth up to about ten feet. It’s what is called ‘inversion
fog’ which you can see in early mornings on the highway. . . . In practice, the sonic units
would rarely try to project their music beyond six thousand yards—about three and
half miles—the optimum distance for ranging accuracy. And they would target listeners
between and feet above the transmitting vehicles. The sound ranging tables cover
the three types of battlefield most ideal for sonic deception; flat open terrain, flat lightly
wooded terrain, and flat heavily wooded terrain.” Ibid., p. .
. “In practice, it meant that if all vehicle sounds were recorded moving past the microphone in a straight line, first sounding louder and then fainter, then projected later
over a great distance, they would sound fake because the frequencies would rise or fall
in a haphazard fashion. It would be impossible to project a continuous sound located in
space. This was the biggest problem of commercially available recorded sound effects
and the main reason the army had to create its own library of tactical sounds.” Ibid.,
pp. –.
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., pp. –.
. Ibid., pp. –.
Chapter 8
. According to Jean-François Augoyard and Henri Torgue, the sound object as formulated by Pierre Schaeffer is “a practical and empirical point of view, it describes the interaction of the physical signal and perceptive intentionality, without which there would
be no perception. From the theoretical point of view, it is a phenomenological quest
for the essence of sound. Finally, from the point of view of instrumentation, the sound
object is intended to be the elementary unit of general and multidisciplinary solfege of
sounds.” The problems for them of the category of the sound object is that “even with
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the ever-increasing possibilities offered by real-time analysis, if the sound sequence is
slightly complex or is spread over time, or if conditions of production are taken into
consideration in situ and not simply simulated, then sound by sound analysis become
extremely ponderous . . . [and] can hardly be used as a fundamental concept for the description and analysis of urban sounds” (p. ). At the other end of the spectrum from the
sound object, the macroconcept of the soundscape, as opposed to the microsound object,
Augoyard and Torgue reject R. Murray Schafer’s idea of the soundscape as a “masterpiece
of nature.” The soundscape here is not just the “sound environment” but more “what is
perceptible as an aesthetic unit in a sound milieu. Shapes that are thus perceived can
be analyzed because they seem to be integrated into a composition with very selective
criteria. One of these criteria, the selection of hi-fi soundscapes—is justified from both
an aesthetic and an education perspective. . . . However the application of the criteria
of clarity and precision discredits a number of everyday situations impregnated with
blurred and hazy (not to say uproarious) sound environments, which would belong to
the ‘lo-fi’ category.” So, they argue, we “lack the generic concepts to describe and design
all perceptible sound forms of the environment, be they noisey stimuli, musical sounds,
or any other sounds. The concept of the soundscape seems too broad and blurred, while
the sound object seems too elementary (in terms of levels of organization), to allow us
to work comfortably both at the scale of everyday behaviour and at the scale of architectural and urban spaces.” J.-F. Augoyard and H. Torgue, eds., Sonic Experience: A Guide
to Everyday Sounds, trans. A. McCartney and D. Paquette (Montreal: McGill-Queens
University Press, ), pp. –.
. Greg Lynn. “Blob Tectonics, or Why Tectonics Is Square and Topology Is Groovy” in
Folds, Bodies and Blobs (La Lettre volée, ).
. Augoyard and Torgue, Sonic Experience, p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. William James, Essays in Radical Empiricism (New York: Dover, ).
. B. Massumi, Parables for the Virtual (Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, ), p. .
. “The word is a blend of the Greek words for ‘sensation’ (aisthesis) and ‘together,’ or
‘union’ (syn), implying the experience of two, or more sensations occurring together.”
J. Harrison and S. Barron Cohen, eds., Synaesthesia: Classic and Contemporary Readings
(London: Blackwell, ), p. .
. Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, trans. B. Massumi (London,
Athlone, ), attribute, in the context of this haptic, synesthesic field of affect, a specific
piloting role to sound. Synesthesia is not for them “reducible to a simple color-sound
correspondence . . . [they] induce colors that are superimposed upon the colors we see,
lending them to a properly sonorous rhythm and movement.” For them, this role is not
based on the “signifying or ‘communicational’ values (which, on the contrary, presuppose
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that power), nor to physical properties (which would privilege light over sound), but
to a phylogenetic line, a machinic phylum that operates in sound and makes it a cutting edge of deterritorialization . . . music is plugged into a machinic phylum infinitely
more powerful than that of painting: a line of selective pressure” (pp. –). On the
relation between music and color, Messiaen remarked that he was “affected by a kind of
synopsia, found more in my mind than in my body, which allows me, when I hear music,
and equally when I read it, to see inwardly, in the mind’s eye, colours which move with
the music, and I sense these colours in an extremely vivid manner. . . . For me certain
sonorities are linked with certain complexes of colour and I use them as colours, juxtaposing them and putting them into relief against each other.” Olivier Messiaen, Music and
Color—Conversations with Claude Samuel (New York: Amadeus, ), pp. –.
. Stephen Connor notes that while the sonic is celebrated by the avant-garde as “the
most disruptive sense,” it is “also an insufficiency, in that the auditory always leads to or
requires completion by the other senses. The instability of the auditory self is such that
it dissolves the very autonomy, which seems to bring about the psychic unseating of the
visual in the first place. . . . It resonates beyond itself. . . . It is not in a pure, autonomous
faculty of audition that the greatest effect of the revival of the prestige of the acoustic has
been seen. Rather, it has been in the very principle of relativity that defines the acoustic,
the insufficiency that makes it impossible for the acoustic to stand alone. So bizarrely,
the most far-reaching effects of the return of the acoustic may be in the transformations it has allowed in visual concepts and ways of feeling.” Hearing for Connor operates
as the switchboard / matrix facilitating intrasensory contact and mutation: “Where early
modern technologies extended and amplified the powers of ear and eye, contemporary
technologies offer the prospect of sensory recombination and transformation as well.
The digitalization and consequent universal convertibility of information may make the
synesthesias dreamt of by the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries a common
actuality, creating new aggregations of the visual, auditory, haptic and olfactory senses.
Undoubtedly the dominance of vision in the constitution of the self would be put at risk
in such a new sensory dispensation, since that dominance depends upon the separation
of the senses one from another, and the existence of vision as an arbitrating meta-sense,
capable of distinguishing, overseeing and correcting the operations of the other senses.”
Connor, “The Modern Auditory I” in Rewriting the Self: Histories from the Renaissance to
the Present, ed. Roy Porter (London: Routledge, ), pp. –.
. Michel Chion, Audio Vision (New York: Columbia University Press, ), p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. “The eye carries information and sensations only some of which can be considered
specifically and irreducibly visual (e.g., color); most others are transensory. Likewise,
the ear serves as a vehicle for information and sensations only some of which are specifically auditive (e.g., pitch and intervallic relations), the others being, as in the case of the
eye, not specific to this sense. However—and I insist on this point—transensoriality has
nothing to do with what one might call intersensoriality, as in famous ‘correspondences’
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Notes
among the senses that Baudelaire, Rimbaud, Claudel and others celebrated . . . i.e. the
idea of intersensoriality: each sense exists in itself, but encounters others at points of
contact. . . . In the transensorial or even metasensorial model, which I am distinguishing
from the Baudelarian one, there is no sensory given that is demarcated and isolated from
the outset. Rather the senses are channels, highways more than territories or domains.
If there exists a dimension in vision that is specifically visual, and if hearing includes dimensions that are exclusively auditive, these dimensions are in a minority, particularized,
even as they are central. . . . When kinetic sensations organized into art are transmitted
through a single sensory channel, through this single channel they can convey all the
other senses at once. Silent cinema on one hand, and concrete music on the other clearly
illustrate this idea. Silent cinema, in the absence of synch sound, sometimes expressed
sounds better than could sound itself, frequently relying on a fluid and rapid montage
style to do so. Concrete music, in its conscious refusal of the visual, carries with it visions
that are more beautiful than images could ever be.” Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., p. .
Chapter 9
. Jacques Attali, Noise: Political Economy of Music (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press), p. .
. Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, Jr., in L. McCaffery, Storming the Reality Studio: Casebook of
Cyberpunk and Postmodern Science Fiction (Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, )
p. . McLuhan notes that since the invention of the telegraph, humans have been putting their nerves on the outside of their bodies. This “outering of the skin” and other vulnerabilities of the exteriorized interior is the root for McLuhan of our electronic unease,
and he remarks that the birth in of the first commercial telegraph in America coincided with the publication of Kierkegaard’s The Concept of Dread. See Marshall McLuhan,
Media Research: Technology, Art and Communication (London: Routledge, ), p. .
. Paul Virilio, War and Cinema (London: Verso, ), p. . The problem of military vision, for Virilio, is related to information gathering, transfer, and processing. The more
sophisticated the vision machines of war, the more overpowering the sheer weight of
information to be dealt with. The more overexposed the battlefield becomes, the more
appearance gives into an array of camouflage, decoys, jamming, smokescreens, and electronic countermeasures. To be seen is to be taken out. One can no longer merely invest
in forces, but must also invest in their concealment. Stealth, secrecy, and the logistics of
perception signal, for Virilio, that the war of images and sound had superseded the war of
weaponry. The coevolution of weapons and armor is paralleled by the coevolution of visibility and invisibility—the emergence of electromagnetic weapons of rendering objects
perceptible such as radar and sonar. “The projectile’s image and image’s projectile form
a single composite” (p. ). But the increasing speed of the “ballistics of projectiles and
the hyperballistics of aeronautics” are counterbalanced by the fact that “only the speed of
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film exposure is capable of recording the military secret which each protagonist tries to
keep by camouflaging ever larger objects” (p. ). So the “problem then is no longer one
of masks and screens, of camouflage designed to hinder long range targeting; rather, it
is a problem of ubiquitousness, of handling simultaneous data in a global but unstable
environment where the image (photographic or cinematic) is the most concentrated, but
also the most stable form of information” (p. ). The body or object disappears, to be
replaced by the detected patterns, vibrations, sounds, and smells registering on technological sensors; “each of the antagonists feel both that he is watched by invisible stalkers
and that he is observing his own body from a distance” (p. ). As that which must be
“acquired, pursued or destroyed,” the projectile is a screen glyph and the television picture “an ultrasonic projectile propagated at the speed of light” (p. ).
. Marshall McLuhan, “Visual and Acoustic Space,” in The Global Village. (New York:
Oxford University Press, ), p. .
. Jacques Attali, Noise: the Political Economy of Music, trans. B. Massumi Minneapolis:
University of Minnesota Press, ), p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. D. Kahn, Noise, Water, Meat: A History of Sound in the Arts (Cambridge: MIT Press,
), p. .
. Attali, Noise, p. .
. Jacques Attali, “Ether Talk,” Wire, no. (July ): .
. Ibid., p. .
. Jacques Attali, The Labyrinth in Culture and Society (Berkeley, Calif.: North Atlantic
Books, ), p. xxviii.
. Ibid., p. xxviii.
. Ibid., p. xxiv.
. Ibid., pp. –.
. There are significant parallels to McLuhan’s interest in the acoustico-synesthetic
sensibility of the electronic age and the corresponding turbulent dynamics of twentyfirst-century geotribal tension. Attacked for its technodeterminism and naive utopian
neoprimitivism from within the discipline of cultural studies, it is at least worth pointing
out that for McLuhan, the “global village absolutely insures maximal disagreement on
all points. It never occurred to me that uniformity and tranquillity were the properties
of the global village. It has more to do with spite and envy. The tribal village is far more
divisive—full of fighting—than any nationalism was. Village is fission, not fusion, in
depth.” McLuhan, “Visual and Acoustic Space,” pp. –.
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Notes
. Simon Reynolds, Energy Flash (New York: Picador, ), pp. –.
Chapter 10
. Luigi Russolo, The Art of Noises (Hillsdale, N.Y.: Pendragon Press, ), p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Marinetti quoted in ibid., p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. F. T. Marinetti, Selected Writings, ed. R. W. Flint (London: Secker and Warburg, ),
p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Paul Virilio, Speed and Politics (Los Angeles: Semiotexte, ), p. . Afrofuturism,
at least as processed by Kodwo Eshun in More Brilliant Than the Sun (London: Quartet,
), breaks from the futurist tradition in several important senses. First, while the Italian futurists celebrated the advance of technology without questioning linear progress,
Afrofuturism has a much more sophisticated conception of time and technology. Not
only is history cyclical instead of linear, but Africa is sent into the future of science, as opposed to degree zero from which Western thought progresses. On this point, see also the
Afro cybernetics of Ron Eglash, “African Influences in Cybernetics” in C. Hables-Gray,
The Cyborg Handbook (London: Routledge, ). Second, Afrofuturism’s sonic weaponry is not primarily noise in the futurist sense, but more fundamentally polyrhythm.
. Gilles Deleuze, Spinoza: Practical Philosophy (San Francisco: City Lights, [] ),
p. .
Chapter 11
. Chris Marker, La Jetée, Argos Films, .
. Kodwo Eshun, More Brilliant Than the Sun (London: Quartet, ), p. .
. Brian Eno, “Dialogue with Kevin Kelly,” Wired, May .
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. Eshun, More Brilliant Than the Sun, p. .
. Kodwo Eshun, “Further Considerations on Afrofuturism,” CR: The New Centennial
Review , no. (Summer ): .
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., pp. , .
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Kodwo Eshun and Edward George, “Ghostlines: Migration, Morphology, Mutations”
in Sonic Process (Barcelona: Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art, .
. Alfred North Whitehead, Science and the Modern World (Free Press, ), p. .
Chapter 12
. The sobering subtext of the ecology of fear is that environmental, meteorological, and
epidemiological catastrophe are coldly indifferent to the economic status of populations
(although the relation of wealth to taking precautionary or rehabilitative measures is
obvious.)
. Mike Davis, The Ecology of Fear (New York: Vintage, ), p. .
. Ibid., pp. , .
. Ibid., p. .
. Some have gone so far as to attribute the religious feeling of dread and awe experienced
within cathedrals, for example, merely to the relation between their sonic architecture as
resonance chamber and the imperceptible infrasonic vibrations emitted by pipe organs.
. Bigend in William Gibson’s Pattern Recognition (New York: Penguin, ), p. .
. But it has been argued here that futurism can be built on through a reexamination of
its orientation to temporality, reenergizing it as a set of tools for engaging with contemporary modes of aesthetic power.
. The affective sensorium consists of the nexus of sensory modalities. The exteroceptive (facing the external environment of the body) five senses must be supplemented by
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the proprioceptive (the feeling of the relational movement of muscles and ligaments,
enfolded tactility) and viscerality. Interoceptive, viscerality “anticipates the translation of
the sight or sound or touch perception into something recognizably associated with an
identifiable object . . . viscerality subtracts quality as such from excitation. It registers intensity . . . [and] registers excitations gathered by the “exteroceptive” senses even before
they are fully processed by the brain.” In B. Massumi, Parables for the Virtual (Durham,
N.C.: Duke University Press, ), pp. –.
. Joachim-Ernst Berendt, The Third Ear (Perth, Australia: Element, ), p. .
. Olive Lewin, Rock It Come Over: The Folk Music of Jamaica; with Special Reference to
Kumina and the Work of Mrs. Imogene “Queenie” Kennedy (Kingston, Jamaica: University
of the West Indies Press, ), p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. A useful exception from the domain of film theory is Steven Shaviro’s pioneering The
Cinematic Body (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, ).
. Interview with Gasper Noe by Exposure Magazine at http: // www.fullspectrumottawa
.com / directors / gaspar_noe.php.
. As R. M. Shaffer wrote, “In Greek mythology the Sirens were nymphs who destroyed
those who passed their island by means of their singing, at once so piercing yet dulcet as
honey. Circe warned Odysseus of the Sirens and so enabled him to elude their fatal song
by plugging the ears of his men with wax and having himself bound to the mast of his
ship. The Sirens thus signify mortal danger to man and this danger is broadcast by means
of their singing. There is good evidence that the Greek word siren may be etymologically related to the words for wasp and bee. Modern man has re-identified the concept of
danger with the wasp’s song. There is an obvious similarity also between the glissando
wail of the original siren and the human cry of pain or grief, diminished, however, since
the introduction of the yelp siren with its sudden switch-on-switch-off technique. . . .
The siren speaks of disharmony within.” The Soundscape (Rochester, Vt.: Destiny Books,
), p. .
. Heinz von Foerster, “Sounds and Music,” in Music by Computers, ed. H. V. Foerster
and J. W. Beauchamp (New York: Wiley, ), p. .
Chapter 13
. Joseph Ledoux, The Emotional Brain (New York: Simon and Schuster, ), p. .
. Brian Massumi, Parables for the Virtual (Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press,
),pp. –.
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Notes
. See Erin Manning, “Prosthetics Making Sense: Dancing the Technogenetic,” Fibreculture, , http: // journal.fibreculture.org / issue / issue_manning.html.
. William James, The Principles of Psychology (New York: Dover, .)
. Brian Massumi, “The Future Birth of the Affective Fact,” in Conference Proceedings:
Genealogies of Biopolitics (), p. .
. Brian Massumi, “Fear (the Spectrum Said),” Positions , no. (): .
. Kodwo Eshun, “Abducted by Audio,” Abstract Culture, Swarm , Issue (): Ccru,
–.
Chapter 14
. Mark Bain, “The Live Room—Transducing Resonant Architecture” at http://framework
.v.nl / archive / archive / node / text / .xslt / nodenr- (last viewed June , ).
. See Mark Bain interview with Josephine Bosma () at http: // www.nettime.org /
Lists-Archives / nettime-l- / msg.html.
. Ibid.
. “Interview with Mark Bain” by Molly Hankwitz and David Cox, January , , Artists’ Television Access, San Francisco, “qualifying this by noting that ‘to a certain degree,
developers and architects are terrorists in themselves . . . in the sense that most common
people who live in the street or who live in these buildings don’t have ownership on the
properties, and so the decision to make buildings or to develop areas of cities or towns
is really out of their hands.’ ” http: // www.nettime.org / Lists-Archives / nettime-l- /
msg.html (last viewed June , ).
. “The Live Room—Transducing Resonant Architecture,” Organised Sound ():
–. In his installation work, Bain seems to be aiming at a vibrational topology:
“I’m trying to find a bridge between the two, between inhabitants of a structure and
the structure itself. I am using a vibrational vehicle to connect them together.” One of
Bain’s installation projects, The Live Room, was described as constructing “a topological space composed of virtual objects which haptically interface with the audience. By
interacting with the cycling wave forms the visitor is occupied, infested with frequencies,
modulated by vibrational energy and imparted with the volumetric sensibilities inherent
within the body. The audience are the activated objects, traversing the site and feeling the
liveliness of themselves, others and the space within.” http: // framework.v.nl / archive /
archive / node / text / .xslt / nodenr- (last viewed June , ). See also M. Oliver,
“The Day the Earth Screamed,” February , , http: // arts.guardian.co.uk / features /
story / ,,,.html.
. J-F. Augoyard and H. Torgue, eds., Sonic Experience: A Guide to Everyday Sounds, trans.
A. McCartney and D. Paquette. (Montreal: McGill-Queens University Press, ).
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Notes
. Mark Bain interview with Josephine Bosma.
. Hans Jenny, Cymatics: A Study of Wave Phenomena and Vibration (Macromedia Publishing, ), pp. –.
. Note particularly, via sonic dominance, the transduction of bodily movement via
dance.
. Note the vibrational tendencies of flat panel speaker research. “As an example, the
standard understanding of a ‘loudspeaker’ producing sonic waves has historically been
constrained by the semiotic end of the continuum. Given the liberation of forces from
such constraints allowed for by the military we find here that new avenues for sound
are opened up in their direct interaction with human and nonhuman bodies. Flat panel
speakers are a relatively recent technology in which dynamic surfaces are agitated to
produce audio waveforms. This technology is currently being developed by weapons
companies as a cladding surface for submarine vessels. If the waveform pumped out by
the speakers can be generated at sufficient scale it can act both as a sound dampening
technology and also as a means of repelling attacks by torpedo. As with contemporary
musical aid ventures, sound acts directly to save lives. But more importantly, recognising the material effectiveness of media, without constraint to merely semiotic registers
or the interminable compulsion to communicate allows media themselves to become
fully expressive.” Matt Fuller and Andrew Goffey, “Evil Media Studies” in Spam Book, ed.
T. Sampson and J. Parikka (Cresskill, N.J.: Hampton Press, ).
. The approach developed here sets up a parallel between bass and some of the ideas of
architectural theorist Greg Lyn, especially his notion of the blob.
Chapter 15
. It attempts to retain the exactness of concepts while leaving them vulnerable, open
enough to resonate in unpredictable fashion outside of their home discipline. As Brian
Massumi has argued, such an approach, for example, forces cultural studies to become
vulnerable to the effects of scientific concepts, compelling change to the degree that culture is (as if it ever was not) subject to the forces of nature. He calls such a method, following Deleuze and Guattari, machinic materialism. Machinic designates not a technological
fetishism but rather a preoccupation with rhythmic relation, process, connection, and
trade. But it is also inflected by Baruch Spinoza’s ethology, Alfred North Whitehead’s
process philosophy, and William James‘s pragmatist radical empiricism.
. Kodwo Eshun, More BrilliantThan the Sun (London: Quartet, ), p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. B. Spinoza, The Ethics (Indianapolis, Ind.: Hackett, ).
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Chapter 16
. Gaston Bachelard, The Dialectic of Duration (Manchester, U.K.: Clinamen Press, ),
p. . Bachelard goes on to describe how “rhythm is imprisoned in sound boxes. When
we see a rhythm preserved in a radio aerial, we cannot stop the image of reciprocal action between the geometric and temporal from intruding into our thought. It is therefore
in our interests to regard things as truly the products of stationary waves. Periods are
spatio-temporal functions. They are the temporal face of material things. As it vibrates, a
thought reveals both a temporal and a material structure.
“If we now add to this that periods are immediately translated into the language of
frequencies and that frequencies appear as relative to one another, we see the absoluteness and the continuity of time not just fade but disappear. In any case, the continuity of
absolute time that might serve as a basis for differentiating between periods is no longer
the immediate continuity yielded by crude observation. The causality studied on the basis of frequencies is indeed in play above the continuity that is postulated as fundamental
to duration of a period. In particular, the study of this causality through periods and
frequencies could, in our view, be limited to statistics of periodic events. The regularity of
an isolated vibration is postulated perfectly gratuitously, for in fact it is only the frequency
of groups of vibrations that is used. Moreover, it must be noted that most phenomena
which are explained by frequency are explained by a fairly large number of frequencies.
The low periods of astronomy do not serve here as an explanatory motive. If the earth
is considered as it moves in its orbit, it does not ‘vibrate.’ It follows its path. The time of
astronomy is therefore not yet ‘structured.’ If we can consider the monotony of planetary
motion, we can well understand how a uniform, continuous time came to be ascribed to
it. It is precisely a time in which nothing happens. It is an inadequate schema for establishing the realism of rhythm.
“When we go deeply into the finely detailed forms of multiple causality, we become
aware of the value of temporal organizations. We are less and less tempted to regard
causes as just breaks in a general Becoming. These causes constitute wholes. They act as
wholes, spanning useless intervals, without regard for images representing time as a flux
whose entire force lies at its limits. Causal energy is not located on a causal wave font.
The cause requires organic conventions. It has a temporal structure, a rhythmic action. It
belongs to spatio-temporal structure.
“Alongside the cause’s organic character and in connection with this character, we must
also make way for the kaleidoscopic and discontinuous character of material change.
Causal relations can thus gain in clarity when we study them from the arithmetical standpoint. There must be an advantage in arithmetising causality” (pp. –).
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., p. .
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Notes
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid.
. Ibid.
. Henri Lefebvre, Rhythmanalysis (London: Continuum Press, ), p. .
. Ibid., pp. –.
. Ibid., p. .
. G. Bachelard, Dialectic of Duration (Manchester, U.K.: Clinamen Press, ),
pp. –.
. Henri Bergson, Matter and Memory (New York: Zone, ), p. .
Chapter 17
. Here marks the divergence between radical empiricism and the speculative realism
of philosophers such as Graham Harman, who in Guerilla Metaphysics (Chicago: Open
Court Publishing, ), specifically reacts against the emphasis on relation of Whiteheadian thought and the way in which is sacrifices the possibility of rigorous conception
of the discrete, unrelated, “object.”
. Alfred North Whitehead, Adventures in Ideas (New York: Penguin, ), p. .
. Ibid.
. Ibid.
. Ibid.
. Ibid., p. .
Chapter 18
. Alfred North Whitehead, Process and Reality (New York: Macmillan, ), p. .
. This is a perspective that mathematicians such as Gregory Chaitin would certainly
adhere to when they describe their work as “sensual mathematics.”
. Alfred North Whitehead, Adventures of Ideas (New York: Penguin, ), pp. , .
. Ibid., p. .
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Notes
. Alfred North Whitehead, Religion in the Making (New York: Fordham University Press,
).
. Whitehead, Process and Reality, pp. , .
Chapter 19
. Alfred North Whitehead, Process and Reality (New York: Macmillan, ).
. A body, in this sense, like affect, can be nonorganic or organic.
. Gilles Deleuze, Spinoza: Practical Philosophy (San Francisco: City Lights, [] ),
p. .
. In his essay on acoustic cyberspace, Eric Davis critiques the detached, cerebral and
visual model of cyberspace passed down from Descartes, developing an acoustic version
in which the body is central, “Roots and Wires” ().
Baruch Spinoza, The Ethics (Indianapolis, Ind.: Hackett, ), p. .
. P. Virilio, Speed and Politics (New York: Semiotexte, ).
. Deleuze, Spinoza,, p. .
. Ibid. Gilles Deleuze and F. Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, trans. B. Massumi (London:
Athlone, ), p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Deleuze, Spinoza, p. .
. Deleuze and Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, pp. –.
. Ibid., p. .
. Deleuze, Spinoza, pp. –.
. Deleuze and Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, pp. –.
. Ibid.
Chapter 20
. Michel Serres, Genesis (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, ), pp. , .
. Alongside René Girard’s cultural chaos theory of sacrifice, Serres‘s concept of noise
provides the dynamic framework for much of Attali’s concept of noise. Serres’s concept
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of turbulence, on the other hand, is equally crucial to Deleuze and Guattari’s, and later
De Landa’s, dynamic notion of the war machine.
. We can follow this Lucretian abstract vorticism vector through most of Serres‘s texts,
from Hermes (Baltimore, Md.: Johns Hopkins University Press, ) and The Parasite
(Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, ) through The Birth of Physics (Manchester, U.K.: Clinamen, ) to his later texts, The Natural Contract (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, ) and Genesis (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press,
).
. Lucretius, On the Nature of the Universe (London: Penguin, ), p. .
. Gilles Deleuze, The Logic of Sense (London: Continuum, ), p. .
. Serres, Hermes, p. .
. Ibid., pp. –.
. War machines in this extended sense can therefore include configurations and consistencies in an array of populations, be they conceptual, molecular, bacterial, animal,
commercial, artistic, meteorological, or passional. These war machines are not primarily
concerned with resistance, and instead of taking violence as their primary object, they
have a synthetic relation to aggression forced in encounters with obstacles that split speed
into a space-time grid or apply a meter to an asymmetric rhythmicity, forcing a transversal spiraling movement into a barrier blockade of parallel channels. Metric apparatuses of
security function through the modulation of turbulence and the control of its contagious
trajectories, its escalative feedback gradients and tendencies to overflow. Yet with preemptive power, the power of the vortex is allied to control. Preemptive power produces
spirals in time through the production of future-feedback circuits.
. A war machine for Deleuze and Guattari can be constructed in any niche, and their
deployment is certainly not restricted to the field of human culture.
. Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, trans. B. Massumi (London:
Athlone, ), pp. , .
Chapter 21
. The document contextualized this device alongside two centuries of scientific research
on the vortices that occur in nature, such as tornadoes, aircraft contrails, cigarette smoke,
nuclear clouds, and waterspouts, from Helmholtz, better known as a pioneer of the physics of sound, to Kelvin in the nineteenth century, through to contemporary engineering
research. Enhanced by numerical techniques and powerful computerized simulations,
fueled by chaos and complexity theory, this research into the mechanisms and dynamics of formation, propagation, and stability of vortices has only intensified. Today the
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simulation of turbulence continues this long-standing tangle of physics and engineering
problems, relating to the behavior of systems “far from equilibrium,” the emergence of
order from chaos.
. A thermocline, a concept relating to the distribution of temperatures in hydrodynamic
situations, is a volatile layer or zone of transition between two relatively stable layers.
. See G. Lucey and L. Jasper, “Vortex Ring Generators,” in Non-Lethal Defense III,
(note ), Research report. U.S. Army, Adelphi.
. In physics, predictability has conventionally been based on Newton’s equations of motion. Given the forces, specific initial conditions lead to specific well-defined orbits in a
corresponding coordinate phase space. Laminar flow implies predictable behavior in that
stream lines that start off near each other remain near each other. Knowledge of motion
at one point in the flow at one point in time implies knowledge of the motion at neighboring points in space and time. However, in the fluid dynamics of nonlinear systems,
actual fluid movements exhibit both orderly and chaotic flows, with the nature of the flow
changing from laminar to turbulent as some parameter or combination of parameters
increases through some critical value. In turbulent motion, knowledge of the motion at
one location at one time conveys nothing about the motion at nearby points at the same
time or at the same point at later times, rendering prediction fundamentally impossible.
Turbulence is treated as one of the grand challenges of high-performance computing.
This is due to the massive complexity involved in simulating turbulent structures, where
a flow behavior at the most molecular scales can produce disproportionate effects over
large distances. Coveney and Highfield set out the problematic of turbulence simulation
in physics whose nonlinear dynamics map onto the dynamics of security in the ecology
of fear:
“Navier-Stokes equations describe the flow of continuous fluids; digital computers are
inherently discrete, however, so they necessarily approximate these equations by dividing
space and time into a grid and only take into account fluid behaviour at points on this
grid. Thus, the computational fluid dynamicist faces a dilemma: if she subdivides space
too far, then the time taken to obtain a solution to the equations will be prohibitively
long because she has a very great number of points to consider; but if she settles for a
cut-off that is too coarse, then she will omit important details that affect fluid behaviour
such as eddy structures. In fact, the time taken to perform a fluid simulation increases as
a high power of the Reynolds number, a measure of propensity for apparent mayhem of
turbulence. [The dimensionless Reynolds number is defined as the ratio of the inertial to
the viscous forces: the weaker the viscous forces, the greater the tendency to turbulence.
At values of the Reynolds number of order , flows are usually laminar; at values of order ,,, flows possess fully developed turbulence; intermediate values indicate the
transition regime between the two states- the onset of turbulent motion.] At sufficiently
high Reynolds values, the flow becomes turbulent and the Navier-Stokes equations are
then a major headache to solve. Even though this is not, technically speaking, an intractable [NP] problem, for any reasonably sized problem on any existing computer it is
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impossible to consider Reynolds numbers above around ,, a value corresponding
merely to the onset of turbulence, rather than the fully developed form” (P. Coveney and
R. Highfield, Frontiers of Complexity [London: Faber, ], p. ).
It is all too common for the rhythms of global insecurity to be described using metaphors of disorder, and commotion. James Rosenau, in his Turbulence in World Politics
(Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, ), makes the case for “turbulence” as an
analytical concept as opposed to merely a suggestive metaphor. Compelling as it may be,
an analogical use of “turbulence” proves, he argues, only a hindrance to the enterprise
of mapping outbreaks of war. A more rigorous alternative, Rosenau suggests, would be
to ground the concept in the various branches of physics in which the sciences of turbulence have recently emerged and that recognize the omnipresence of turbulent dynamics
across the continuum of the cosmos: Tennekes and J. L. Lumley remind us that “Most
flows occurring in nature and in engineering applications are turbulent. The boundary
layer in the earth’s atmosphere is turbulent [except possibly in very stable condition]; jet
streams in the upper troposphere are turbulent, cumulus clouds are in turbulent motion.
The water currents below the surface of the ocean are turbulent; the Gulf Stream is a turbulent wall-jet kind of flow. The photosphere of the sun and the photosphere of similar
stars are in turbulent motion; interstellar gas clouds . . . are turbulent; the wake of the
earth in the solar wind is presumably a turbulent wake. Boundary layers growing on aircraft wings are turbulent. Most combustion processes involve turbulence and often even
depend on it; the flow of natural gas and oil in pipelines is turbulent. Chemical engineers
use turbulence to mix and homogenize fluid mixtures and to accelerate chemical reaction
rates in liquids or gases. The flow of water in rivers and canals is turbulent; the wakes of
ships, cars, submarines, and aircraft are in turbulent motion. The study of turbulence
clearly is an interdisciplinary activity, which has a very wide range of applications. . . .
[Furthermore,] many turbulent flows can be observed easily; watching cumulus clouds
or the plume of a smokestack is not time wasted for a student of turbulence” (H. Tennekes
and J. L. Lumley, A First Course in Turbulence (Cambridge, Mass.: : MIT Press, ,
p. ). The dynamics of turbulence, like rhythm more generally, can be abstracted out of
research into liquid instabilities because “turbulence is not a feature of fluids [only] but
of fluid flows [generally]” (Ibid., p. ).
For Manuel De Landa, in his War in the Age of Intelligent Machines (New York: Zone,
), an abstract machine of turbulence transects a nature-culture continuum operating across an array of material instantiations. Alvin and Heidi Toffler in their book War
and Anti-War (Boston: Little, Brown, ) argue that postmodern violence can best
be understood through what they call its “Prigoginian” characteristics. In their seminal
work Order out of Chaos Illya Prigogine and Isabelle Stengers theorize the active matter
of systems “far from equilibrium,” drawing out some of the implications of a conception
of positive chaos, a patterning which does not just constitute the negative of order, but
rather the emergent properties of dissipative structures, that is, turbulence. As they write
in an oft-quoted moment, “For a long time turbulence was identified with disorder or
noise. Today we know this is not the case. Indeed, while turbulent motion appears as irregular or chaotic on the macroscopic scale, it is, on the contrary, highly organized on the
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Notes
microscopic scale. The multiple space and time scales involved in turbulence correspond
to the coherent behaviour of millions and millions of molecules. Viewed in this way, the
transition from laminar [i.e., nonturbulent or calm] flow to turbulence is a process of
self-organization” (I. Prigogine and I. Stengers, Order out of Chaos, London: Flamingo,
[] p. .
As H. L. Swinney and J. P. Gollub put it in Hydrodynamic Instabilities and the Transition to Turbulence (Berlin: Springer-Verlag, ), “Until recently, the practical definition [of turbulence] has been the appearance of apparent randomness in photographs of
flows containing materials which permit visualisation of streamlines or other features.
However, this approach omits the possibility of complex flow patterns that are nevertheless highly ordered” (p. ). Indeed recent turbulence theory agrees that turbulence
is not random, does not have infinite degrees of freedom, and is not merely “structureless meandering” but rather is “a well defined structure,” an “order in the midst of
chaotic motion.” Trevor H. Moulden, “An Introduction to Turbulent Phenomena,” in
Walter Frost and Trevor H. Moulden, eds., Handbook of Turbulence, vol. , Fundamentals
and Applications (New York: Plenum, ), pp. –; Alexandre Chorin, “Lecture II:
Theories of Turbulence,” in A. Dodd and B. Eckmann, eds., Lecture Notes in Mathematics: Turbulence Seminar, Berkeley / (Berlin: Springer-Verlag, ), p. . For a
similar conclusion, see Trevor H. Moulden, Walter Frost, and Albert H. Garner, “The
Complexity of Turbulent Fluid Motion,” in Frost and Moulden, Handbook of Turbulence
:–.
. On this point, Canetti, Crowds and Power (New York: Penguin, ), is particularly insightful in his description of the rhythmic crowd through an analysis of the New Zealand
Maori Haka, which while usually understood as purely a war dance, is actually a mode of
collective expression of a wide range of affects.
. Gilles Deleuze, Difference and Repetition (London: Continuum, ).
. P. Turetsky, in “Rhythm: Assemblage and Event,” in Deleuze and Music, ed. I. Buchanan
(Edinburgh: University of Edinburgh Press, ), pp. –.
Chapter 22
. Gilles Deleuze, Cinema (London: Continuum, ), p. .
. M. S. Howe, Theory of Vortex Sound (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
), p. .
. Ibid., p. . Howe continues that “the sound generated by turbulence in an unbounded
fluid is usually called aerodynamic sound. Most unsteady flows of technological interest
are of high Reynolds number and turbulent, and the acoustic radiation is a very small byproduct of the motion. The turbulence is usually produced by fluid motion over a solid
boundary or by flow instability” (ibid., p. ).
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Notes
. The concept of the rhythmachine should not be confused with the musical machinery
for making beats, the drum machine, but rather refers to the algorithmic entities that
organize music cultures from within.
. L. Russolo, The Art of Noises (Hillsdale, N.Y.: Pendragon Press, ), p. .
. Gilles Deleuze and F. Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, trans. B. Massumi (London: Athlone, ). p. .
. Oliver Messaien, Music and Color—Conversations with Claude Samuel (New York:
Amadeus Press, ), p. .
. Deleuze and Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, p. . William McNeil explains, in Keeping Together in Time (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, ), that the interface of war, rhythm, and discipline is complicated.
. Chernoff, African Rhythm, African Sensibility , (Chicago: Chicago University Press,
).
. Erik Davis, “Roots and Wires” (), http: // www.techgnosis.com / cyberconf.html.
. See, for example, S. Goodman, “Contagious Noise” in T. Sampson and J. Parikka, Spam
Book (Cresskill, N.J.: Hampton Press, ).
. See K. Eshun, More Brilliant Than the Sun (London: Quartet, ), for the Afrofuturist uptake of Paul Gilroy’s conception of the Black Atlantic as diasporic network of
cultural trade and transmutation.
. See Simon Reynolds, Energy Flash (New York: Picador, ).
. Camilo Rocha, “Global Ghettotech: fresh musics from a post-colonial world” at http: //
www.norient.com / html / show_article.php?ID=. ()
Chapter 23
. Brian Massumi, “The Superiority of the Analog,” in Parables for the Virtual (Durham,
N.C.: Duke University Press, ).
. Pierre Levy, Becoming Virtual: Reality in the Digital Age (Perseus, ).
. H. Bergson, Creative Evolution, trans. A. Mitchell (London: Macmillan, ), p. .
. H. Bergson, Time and Free Will: An Essay on the Immediate Data of Consciousness,
trans. F. L. Pogson (New York: HarperCollins, ), p. .
. Aden Evans, Sound Ideas: Music, Machines and Experience (Minneapolis: University of
Minnesota Press, ), p. .
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Notes
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Massumi, Parables for the Virtual, p. .
. Evans, Sound Ideas, p. .
. Evans applies the concept of the surd to sound signal processing and defines it as
“a discontinuity that represents the specificity, the unique moment of the original signal—. . .[ ensuring] that no wholly accurate recreation is possible, that no analysis can
do justice to the original signal” (p. ). Such glitches force engineering to deal constructively with the problem, for example, the local intervention of the Lanczos sigma as
a response to the Gibbs phenomenon. Aden Evans, “The Surd,” in Virtual Mathematics:
The Logic of Difference, ed. S. Duffy (Manchester, U.K.: Clinamen Press, ).
. Evans, “The Surd.”
. Ibid., p. .
. Massumi, Parables for the Virtual, p. .
. See C. Roads, Microsound (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, ), p. .
. “Rhythm is perhaps the most primal of all things known to us. . . . Music is, by further
analysis, pure rhythm; rhythm and nothing else, for the variation of pitch is the variation
in rhythms of the individual notes, and harmony, the blending of these varied rhythms.”
Ezra Pound, , quoted in ibid.
. Philip Sherburne from Clicks + Cuts sleeve notes ().
. K. Pohlmann, Principles of Digital Audio (Indianapolis, Ind.: Sams Publishing, ),
pp. –.
. Ibid., p. . Pohlmann continues, “The theorem specifies that the sampling frequency
must be at least twice the highest signal frequency. More specifically, audio signals containing frequencies between and S / Hz can be exactly represented by S samples per
second. . . . When the sampling theorem is applied to audio signals, the input audio signal is lowpass filtered, so that it is bandlimited with a frequency response that does not
exceed the Nyquist (S / ) frequency. Ideally, the lowpass filter is designed so that the
only signals removed are those high frequencies that lie above the high frequency limit
of human hearing. . . . Consider a continuously changing analog function that has been
sampled to create a series of pulses. The amplitude of each pulse, determined through
quantization, ultimately yields a number that represents the signal amplitude at that
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instant. To quantify the situation, we define the sampling frequency as the number of
samples per second. Its reciprocal, sampling rate, defines the time between each sample.
For example, a sampling frequency of , samples per second corresponds to a rate of
/ , second. A quickly changing waveform—That is, one with higher frequencies—
would require a higher sampling frequency. Thus, the digitalization system’s sampling
frequency determines the high frequency limit of the system. The choice of sampling frequency is thus one of the most important audio design criteria of a digitalization system,
between it determines the audio bandwidth of the system” (pp. –).
. Roads, Microsound, pp. –, and D. Gabor, “Acoustical Quanta and the Theory of
Hearing” Nature (), (): –.
. R. Mackay “Capitalism and Schizophrenia: Wildstyle in Effect,” in Deleuze and Philosophy: The Difference Engineer, ed. K. Ansell Pearson (London: Routledge, ), p. .
. Gregory Chaitin, Conversations with a Mathematician: Math. Art, Science and the
Limits of Reason (Berlin: Springer-Verlag, ).
Chapter 24
. Brian Eno famously makes the analogy between generative music and military strategy,
pointing out, “I was quite fascinated by military strategy for a long while. I gave a talk
about the difference between the traditional Western European army and the guerilla
army. One of the things that I realized from that study was that, for a traditional army,
every emergency was . . . an emergency. Every lump in the ground, every deviation from
the right time of day or season for the battle, was an emergency. For the guerilla army,
every emergency is an opportunity. Every bump in the ground is a place to hide. Every
hole is a place to hide. Every spot of bad weather is a place where the regular army is
going to get bogged down.” Interviewed by Charles Amirkhanian in Reality Hackers,
Winter .
. Michael Nyman, Experimental Music (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
).
. David Toop, Haunted Weather (London: Serpents Tail, ), chap. .
. Kodwo Eshun, “An Unidentified Audio Event Arrives from the Post-Computer Age,”
in Longplayer, ed. J. Finer (London: Artangel, ), p. .
. E. R. Miranda, Composing Music with Computers (Burlington, Mass.: Focal Press,
).
. See P. Todd, “Simulating the Evolution of Musical Behavior,” in The Origins of Music, ed. N. L Walling, B. Merker, and S. Brown (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, );
E. Bilotta, P. Pantano, and V. Talarico, “Synthetic Harmonies: An Approach to Musical
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Semiosis by Means of Cellular Automata,” in Artificial Life VII Proceedings of the Seventh
International Conference on Artificial Life (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, ).
. Todd, “Simulating the Evolution of Musical Behavior,” pp. –.
. Miranda, Composing Music with Computers, p. .
. Miranda is particularly cautious of linear, progressive models of evolution: “Evolution is generally associated with the idea of the transition from an inferior species to
an superior one and this alleged superiority can often be measured by means of fairly
explicit and objective criteria: we believe, however, that this notion should be treated
with caution. . . . With reference to prominently cultural phenomena, such as music, the
notion of evolution surely cannot have exactly the same connotations as it does in natural
history: biological and cultural evolution are therefore quite different domains. Cultural
evolution should be taken here as the transition from one state of affairs to another, not
necessarily associated with the notion of improvement. Cultural transition is normally
accompanied by an increase in the systems’ complexity, but note that ‘complex’ is not a
synonym for ‘better’” (ibid., p. ).
. C. Darwin, The Origin of the Species (London: Murrary, ). R. Dawkins, The Blind
Watchmaker (London: Penguin, ).
. Miranda, Composing Music with Computers, p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. This idea combines the Musique Concrete notion of the sound object (Schaeffer)
with the breakdown of semantic and causal modes of listening (Chion) and R. M. Shaffer’s notion of schizophonia as sound object detached from its cause, and therefore unidentifiable. An audio virology explores the affect of such sounds. See The Soundscape.
(Rochester, Vt.: Destiny Books, ).
. Eshun, “An Unidentified Audio Event,” p. .
Chapter 25
. See, for example, in the field of media studies, Douglas Rushkoff ’s Media Virus: Hidden
Agendas in Popular Culture (New York: Ballantine, ). In the field of marketing theory,
a number of texts have explored the dynamics of hype in cultural virological terms, including Seth Godin’s Unleashing the Ideavirus (New York: Simon & Schuster, , ),
Malcolm Gladwell’s The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference (New
York: Back Bay Books, ), and Aaron Lynch’s Thought Contagion: How Ideas Act Like
Viruses (New York: Basic Books, ).
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Notes
. David Cronenberg, Cronenberg on Cronenberg, ed. C. Rodley (London: Faber and
Faber, ), p. .
. A typical definition of affective contagion within the sonic dimension has been outlined within developmental psychology. Daniel Stern outlines it as “automatic induction
of an affect in one person from seeing or hearing someone else’s affect display. This process may well be a basic biological tendency among highly evolved social species, which
becomes perfected in man. The earliest affect contagion that has been demonstrated
involves the human distress cry. Wolff found that two-month-old infants showed ‘infectious crying’ when they heard tape recordings of their own distress cries.” Daniel Stern,
The Interpersonal World of the Infant (New York: Basic Books, ), p. .
. Back in those turbulent bubble days, June to be precise, during the height of
the excitement over the insurgent potential of mp, West Coast gangsta rapper Ice T
participated in the second annual MP Summit in San Diego. Sitting on a panel examining the implications of the virulent and uncontrollable spread of digital music
across the Internet, entitled “Music as a Virus: Biological Warfare,” Ice placed his bets
on the virus winning out against the corporation’s autoimmune response of tightening
copyright control. For a summary of proceedings, see http: // www.ram.org / ramblings /
philosophy / fmp / mp_summit_highlights.html and http: // www.wired.com / news /
culture / ,,–,.html.
. On capitalism as composed by markets and antimarkets, see Fernard Braudel, Civilization and Capitalism, th–th Century: Structures of Everyday Life, vol. (New York:
HarperCollins, ), and Manuel De Landa, “Markets and Anti-Markets in the World
Economy” at http: // www.t.or.at / delanda / a-market.htm.
. See Michael Nyman’s Experimental Music (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
), for descriptions of some of the early adventures with indeterminacy in music.
. The Human Genome Project has generated much basic DNA sequencing data, including virus codes and bacterial and protein sequences. Some digital sound design projects
have sought to exploit such resources of data in order to generate musical parameters as a
direct transposition of molecular parameters. The general idea is that DNA code dictates
the particular configuration for the production of amino acids. The physicochemical
instructions provide an evolutionary set of rules for sonic composition when fragments
of DNA are transposed into, for example, MIDI events. One such example is the collaboration between artist John Dunn and biologist Mary Anne Clark, who collaborated on
the sonification of protein data. The elaborate process of transcoding is described in an
article at http: // mitpress.mit.edu / e-journals / Leonardo / isast / articles / lifemusic.html.
. Infection is generally used here as synonym for affection, although clearly with an
added sense of insidiousness. The target is close to rhythmic analyses of possession or, in
Kodwo Eshun’s terminology, abduction.
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Chapter 26
. According to the Elggren’s sleeve notes, this article was written by Alexandra Mir in the
New York Daily News, September , .
. A number of versions of the project’s explanatory text were published in Slovenian,
Norwegian, and Austrian newspapers in , and the photographs that accompanied
the project were exhibited in Finland and Norway.
. The kind of device that would make possible such recordings are being researched.
“There’s a whole world down there,” proclaimed scientist Flavio Noca at the Jet Propulsion Lab in California in . In order to capture the sonic hydraulics of microcellular
machinery, of swimming bacterium and viruses, a special “nanomicrophone” is being
developed. Based around the principle of the stereocilia, the layers of tiny hairs that line
the inner ear (as opposed to the membrane of the eardrum, which apparently gets too
stiff as you attempt to miniaturize it), they are composed of billions of tiny filaments
that respond to minute fluctuations of pressure. Noca noted that “in nature, membranes
are present only as coupling devices between the acoustic environment and the zone,
typically the cochlea, where the signal is picked up by stereocilia. Nature has evolved
toward this solution, probably because of the unique properties of stereocilia at very
small [submolecular] scales.” Stereocilia are ubiquitous. Interestingly, even “nonhearing” animals (e.g., hydra, jellyfish, and sea anemones) possess them as early-warning,
directional-pressure sensors. But it is the model of a fish’s lateral line audition for prey
detection, localization, and identification that most interests military researchers. See the
interview between Alan Hall and Flavio Noca at http: // www.businessweek.com / bwdaily /
dnflash / jan / nf_.htm (last accessed June , ).
. W. Burroughs, “Electronic Revolution,” in Word Virus: The William Burroughs Reader
(New York: Grove Press, ), p. .
. Ibid., p. . In Neil Stephenson’s cyberpunk novel, Snow Crash (New York: Bantam
Spectra, ), the virus is able to smoothly shift between hacker brains, computer systems, and physiology via a drug. A recurrent Burroughs-type theme throughout Stephenson’s book is the idea of language as a virus from an alien world.
. The engram, as the “basic pathogenic building block” of Hubbard’s system of dianetics,
corresponded to a pathological version of the Socratic demon or independent internal
voice or monologue. L. R. Hubbard, Dianetics (Austin, Tex.: New Era, ).
. D. Schacter, Forgotten Ideas, Neglected Pioneers: Richard Semon and the Story of Memory (Hove, East Sussex, U.K.: Psychology Press, ).
. Douglas Kahn, Noise, Water, Meat (Cambridge, Mass.: : MIT Press, ), pp. –.
. Richard Dawkins, The Selfish Gene, (Oxford Publishers, ).
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Notes
. Richard Dawkins, “Viruses of the Mind.” at http: // www.cscs.umich.edu / ~crshalizi /
Dawkins / viruses-of-the-mind.html, ().
. Ibid.
. Ibid.
. A more sophisticated memetics that moves beyond Dawkins’s almost religious scientism is developed by Robert Aunger who tries to discard with the hardware model
of human memory, which often seems implicit to many memetic approaches. In The
Electric Meme (New York: Simon and Schuster, ), Aunger argued that memes were
essentially a specific subspecies of memory. He compares the movement of memes with
the movement of information patterns through the brain; when a particular skill becomes embedded as habit, “a meme may migrate through the brain as it goes from being
a sensory stimulus to a short term then a long term memory”(p. ). For Aunger, the
birth of memory involved the emergence of a set of specialized neurons that, opposed to
receptor and motor neurons, would fire only on certain types of input fed to them from
other neurons; these were in a sense “interneurons,” or connectors (p. ). He maintained that memories were distributed across neural networks and were therefore always
relational. The exact process of this distributed memory storage was thought to vary
most importantly between long-term and short-term memory and went straight to the
heart of the primary raison d’être of memetics: the autonomy of cultural evolution from
biological evolution and, in fact, culture’s ability to adapt biology. Memetics attempted
to break with the dominance of genetics, which had repelled cultural studies from most
other varieties of social Darwinism.
Crucial to understanding the varying functions of memory, Aunger maintained that
the “primary difference between short-term and long-term memory is therefore the direct involvement of genes” (p. ). These memories were thought to be stored as variations in synaptic connections between neurons. These changes in the topology of the
network could occur because new cells (networked nodes) or new connections between
existing cells were added, thereby adjusting the physical wiring of the brain in relation
to feedback from the environment. Requiring new cells or parts of cells, these storage
systems related to more long-term memories. Finally, the plasticity of the synapses, that
is, the microtemporally varying strength of the synaptic connections themselves, were
thought to relate more closely with short-term memory, which, as Aunger argued, functions “independent of new protein synthesis” (p. ), and therefore defined a zone of
relative autonomy from genetic interference.
. In “Viruses of the Mind” Dawkins’s major polemic is against irrational belief systems,
specifically religions. When describing the symptoms someone would display if infected
by a thought contagion, he notes their irrational, faith-based convictions, their intolerance to rival memes, and their lack of interest in factual evidence that might undermine
their belief system into question. “Scientific ideas, like all memes, are subject to a kind
of natural selection, and might look superficially virus-like. But the selective forces that
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scrutinize scientific ideas are not arbitrary and capricious. They are exacting, well-honed
rules, and they do not favour pointless self-serving. They favour all the virtues laid out
in textbooks of standard methodology: testability, evidential support, precision, quantifiability, consistency, intersubjectivity, repeatability, universality, progressiveness, independence of cultural milieu. . . . For scientific belief, epidemiology merely comes along
afterwards and describes the history of its acceptance.”
. Manuel De Landa, One Thousand Years of Nonlinear History (New York: Zone,
).
. See, for example, Antonio Damasio’s development of anti-Cartesian neuroscience in
The Feeling of What Happens (New York: Vintage, ).
. See Gabriel Tarde, Laws of Imitation (New York: Holt, ), and P. Marsden’s “Forefathers of Memetics: Gabriel Tarde and the Laws of Imitation,” http: // cfpm.org / jom-emit /
/ vol / marsden_p. html, .
Chapter 27
. One online community has set up a users’ group for those suffering from earworm
infection: http: // www.livejournal.com / community / earworm / . One member of that
community has formulated a species analysis of the worms, dubbing them “mematoda”:
“Invertebrates of the phylum Mematoda vary wildly in appearance. Sometimes measuring several stanzas long, there seem to be two distinct types of average earworm anatomy:
divided into four sections of four (although I have occasionally come across three segments of four, and once an unprecedented Madison, be wary of the IDM earworms for
extraction seems to be nearly impossible, or completely smooth unsegmented cylindrical bodies, often narrowing at each end, where mouthparts and organs of aspiration are
located). Earworms possess the power of regeneration seen in their soil bound counterparts. Located on the sides of most Mematodes are several hundred tiny ‘hooks’ that
aid in locomotion (swing your hips now). Color and texture tend to vary wildly from
worm to worm, but sexing an earworm is surprisingly simple; as they appear to be almost
exclusively asexual, and reproduce primarily via karyokinesis . . . (karaoke). . . . Since
sexual reproduction is almost unknown among earworms, the standard earworm is a
solitary organism by both nature and choice . . . and gorges itself on its host’s misspent
potential for productive thought. . . . Gestation is nonexistent and generation almost instantaneous. The average earworm will utilize its host to assist with reproduction. Mitosis
occurs almost immediately upon communication and the young demur unconditionally
to their parent. The process of division secretes a slow acting enzyme that eventually
seizes the host with an uncontrollable urge (I want to tell you all about it) to sing, hum, or
otherwise vocalize the earworm’s genetic material. . . . The (almost identical, barring mutation) copies are propelled from the host to other unsuspecting persons. If not ejected
from the host soon, the young inevitably become part of the earworm’s supplemental
diet (for full maturation seems to be impossible with an older, identical earworm pres-
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Notes
ent). . . . Parthenogenesis (no one move a muscle as the dead come home) has also been
known to occur on the airwaves of the radio, but reports of spontaneous earworms have
been attributed to virtually any arrangement of sonic vibrations in time that produce a
continuous, unified, and evocative composition, as through melody, harmony, rhythm
and timbre. Rarely are earworms read, but it has been reported. . . . Blatant, unapologetic, parasites, earworms dwell primarily in the brains of their hapless human hosts.
But luckily, without a steady stream of conscious thoughts to feed on, the lifespan of an
earworm without a host is only a few frantic moments (typically around four minutes,
thirty three seconds). However, as anyone who has ever acquired an earworm can attest,
once a earworm is suitably situated in a host, its lifespan increases exponentially.” http: //
www.livejournal.com / users / ktrey / .html.
. Tom Vague, “Interview with Klaus Maeck,” Vague, / (): .
. William Burroughs, “Electronic Revolution,” in Word Virus: The William Burroughs
Reader (New York: Grove Press, ). Elggren, Virulent Images, Virulent Sounds,
. The military origins of Muzak derive from scientist, researcher, and inventor George
Own Squier. See Joseph Lanza, Elevator Music: A Surreal History of Muzak, EasyListening, and Other Moodsong (New York: St. Martin’s Press, ), and Robert Sumrell
and Kazys Varnelis, Blue Monday: Stories of Absurd Realities and Natural Philosophies
(New York: Actar, ).
. Annahid Kassabian, “Ubisub: Ubiquitous Listening and Networked Subjectivity,”
ECHO , no. (Fall ) .
. Jean-François Augoyard and Henri Torgue, Sonic Experience: A Guide to Everyday
Sounds (Montreal: McGill-Queens University Press, ), p. .
. A company called QinetiQ has been developing NXT flat panel speak technology, based
on military research, drawing on the vibrational potential of all surfaces. See the press release at http://www.qinetiq.com/home/newsroom/news_releases_homepage//nd_
quarter / _Your_captain_speaking__QinetiQ_makes_aircraft_cabin_announcements_
clearer_and_crisper.html (last viewed on Sept. , ).
. See, for example, http: // www.muzakoftoledo.com / index.html.
. The Taylorist Hawthorne effect described the effect of an environmental change in a
work setting to stimulate a short-term increase of workers’ productivity due to the feeling
that management was changing or monitoring it. The effect was named after productivity
experiments conducted in the s on telephone factory workers at Western Electric’s
Hawthorne Plant in Chicago.
. William James argued that we feel emotions due to a change in the physiological state
of our bodies, as opposed to the inverse. This idea, developed in parallel by Carl Lange,
supported the idea that by affecting the body physiologically, background music could assist in keeping workers calm, and so make them more emotionally stable during the trials
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Notes
of war. William James, The Principles of Psychology (New York: Dover, ). The James–
Lange theory of emotion contrasts with the more neurally mediated one developed by
Walter Canon in “The James-Lange Theory of Emotion: A Critical Examination and an
Alternative Theory,” American Journal of Psychology (): –.
. Sumrell and Varnelis, Blue Monday, p. .
. Michael Peters quoted in C. Dowdy, “Sonic Mnemonic,” Financial Time, January ,
, IT Creative Business Section, p. ,
. See James J. Kellaris, “Dissecting Earworms: Further Evidence on the ‘Song-Stuckin-Your-Head’ Phenomenon,” in Proceedings of the Society for Consumer Psychology,
ed. Christine Page and Steve Posavac ( (New Orleans: American Psychological Society,
), pp. –.
. The contagiousness of these audio viruses operates on a mass scale compared with the
rarefied domains of sound art and generative or algorithmic sound design, which tend to
still assume an ambient aesthetic. We can only speculative on their convergence.
. Kodwo Eshun, More Brilliant Than the Sun (London: Quartet, ), p. .
. See “When Branding Works” at http: // www.dunningsprague.com / articles / branding
.htm (last viewed February , ).
. A sonic logo, or aural trademark is a small nugget of sound lasting between . and
seconds. Sonic brands tend to be modular and fit into “templates” that dictate where
to position a sonic logo or where to use a voice over. Into the concentrated sonic logo is
nested what are known as earcons (a sonic version of an icon), which may be used for
particular buttons on, for example, a brand’s Web site. The sonic logo can be elaborated
into a complete piece of music. Sonic branding also issues a set of protocols for engineering the voice, known as “speech fonts,” which are algorithms for selecting the right voices
for brand communications.
Chapter 28
. E. Gobé, Emotional Branding (Oxford: Windsor Books, ), p. .
. Kodwo Eshun, More Brilliant Than the Sun (London: Quartet, ), p. .
. Gilles Deleuze, Bergsonism (New York: Zone, ), p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Jean-François Augoyard and Henri Torgue, Sonic Experience: A Guide to Everyday
Sounds (Montreal: McGill-Queens University Press, ), p. .
. Ibid., p. .
Steve Goodman-Sonic Warfare Sound, Affect, and the Ecology of Fear (2009)Steve Goodman / text
P. 262
Notes
. A. N. Whitehead, Adventures of Ideas (New York: Free Press, ), p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., p. .
Chapter 29
. Barbara Browning’s Infectious Rhythms, while limited in its representational methodology, maps the symbiotic relationship between migration and the virulent spread of the
AIDS virus through the African Diaspora. The text issues a useful cautionary note to an
audio virology regarding the racialized connotations of virological discourse. While this
book acknowledges such dangers, it is careful to investigate the sense in which we can
talk about contagious cultural processes underneath the level of representations, significations, and unproblematized identities caught in the essentialist-antiessentialist binary
that Gilroy’s Black Atlantic dismantles.
. In his “ Steps Back” article in The Wire, () Simon Reynolds noted how a number of breakbeat scientists understood their production processes as a sonic parallel to
“gene splicers designing viral pathogens for biological warfare.”
. See the sleeve notes of Interstellar Fugitives.
. See Frank Gunderson “Applying Memetics to the Historical Understanding of the
African Diasporan Music Culture of North America,” , http: // www.ohiou.edu / aas /
blackpraxis / articles / frank.html.
. Ibid.
. Ibid.
. Eshun, More Brilliant Than the Sun, p. .
. Kodwo Eshun and Edward George, “Ghostlines: Migration, Morphology, Mutations,”
in Sonic Process (Barcelona: Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art, ).
. Steve Barrow, “Version Therapy,” Wire, no. (February ): –.
. On the mutations of the dub virus connecting the dub scientists of Kingston to
early s post-punk, Berlin dub techno and UK jungleism see Eshun and George,
“Ghostlines.”
. See the sleeve notes to Kevin Martin’s Macro Dub Infection.
. From “Roots in the Music” on Prezident Brown—CD —Prezident Selections.
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Notes
. Gunderson, “Applying Memetics.”
. Formerly archived at http: // www.hyperdub.com / softwar / ukgarage.cfm ().
. Ian Penman, “KLANG! Garvey’s Ghost Meets Heidegger’s Geist,” in Experiencing the
Soundtrack: Cinesonic , ed. P. Brophy (Sydney: Allen and Unwin, ), p. .
. “Dub’s sub-sonic echo is no mere FX—it is the effect proper of a certain subjective
view of the world: the dark sonic mirror reflection of Rasta’s phantasmal worldview. Dub
versions are the shavings of(f) the certainty of (Western) technology as the unmediated reproduction of a singer’s performance. Dub was a breakthrough because the seam
of its recording was turned inside out for us to hear and exult in. We had previously
been used to the ‘re’ recording being repressed, recessed, as through it really were just a
re-presentation of something that already existed in its own right. Dub messes big time
with such notions of uncorrupted temporality. Wearing a dubble face, neither future
nor past, dub is simultaneously a past and future trace: of music as both memory or
futurity, authentic emotion and technological pragmatism. Dub’s tricknology is a form
of magic which does indeed make people disappear, leaving behind only their context,
their trace, their outline (Where does the singer’s voice go when it is erased from the
dub track?) It makes of the voice not a self-possession but a dispossession—a ‘re’ possession by the studio, detoured through the hidden circuits of the recording console.”
I. Penman, “Black Secret Tricknology,” Wire, no. (March ). Later, Penman takes
his dub theory further: “We inhabit a dub world now . . . a dub economy: a writing of
echoes, alternative versions, negative traces . . . displacement and omission, quotation
and stress; what have previously been considered the mere framing devices of Production
and Mix become, through dub, the means for unsettling new emphases. Dub breaks with
tradition. Dub breaks—intentionally, internally, massively—the tradition of Tradition.
Dub wreaks havoc, multiplying echoes. . . . Layered ambivalence of its echowerk: how
can we set store by any memorial overview once we know a ghost is loose in our ears? . . .
Double economy of dub: agonal reverberation of that which opens><closes according
to its phantasmal logic. Dub as simultaneously either-or, neither-nor; a double enunciation which unsettles such implicit assumptions as: local><universal; sacred><secular;
black><white; urban><pastoral; archaic><modern; analogue><digital; Muzak><wakeup
call; natural><artificial; roots><technology; homeland><exile.” Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., pp. –.
. Peter Manuel and Wayne Marshall, “The Riddim Method: Aesthetics, Practice, and
Ownership in Jamaican Dancehall,” Popular Music , no. ().
. Digital music was being produced in Jamaica from the early s onward (e.g., Prince
Jazzbo productions and Horace Ferguson’s Sensi Addict).
. A short list of the viral spread of the amen funk break as DNA of hip-hop and jungle
may track the migration of this drum pattern from the flip side to the Winstons’ top
Steve Goodman-Sonic Warfare Sound, Affect, and the Ecology of Fear (2009)Steve Goodman / text
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Notes
soul hit “Color Him Father” into turbulent breakbeat science of producers like Remarc
via the likes of Live Crew’s “Feel Alright Yall,” rd Bass’s “Wordz of Wisdom,” Hero’s “Escape That,” Amon Tobin’s “Nightlife,” Aphex Twin’s “Boy / Girl Song,” Atari Teenage Riot’s
“Burn Berlin Burn,” Brand Nubian’s “The Godz Must Be Crazy,” Deee-Lite’s “Come on In,
the Dreams Are Fine,” Dillinja’s “The Angels Fell,” Eric B and Rakim’s “Casualties of War,”
Funky Technicians’s “Airtight,” Heavy D’s “Flexin,” Heavy D’s “MC Heavy D!” Heavy D’s
“Let It Flow,” Heavyweight’s “Oh Gosh,” J. Majik’s “Arabian Nights,” J. Majik’s “Your Sound,”
Lemon D’s “This Is Los Angeles,” Level Vibes’s “Beauty and the Beast,” Lifer’s Group’s
“Jack U. Back (So You Wanna Be a Gangsta),” Ltj Bukem’s “Music,” Mantronix’s “King
of the Beats,” Movement Ex’s “KK Punani,” Nice and Smooth’s “Dope Not Hype,” NWA’s
“Straight Outta Compton,” and Schoolly D’s “How a Black Man Feels,” http: // hubpages
.com / hub / Samples-and-Breakbeats-A-Funky-Soul-DJ-Demonstration-Video-Part-.
. See Simon Reynolds, Energy Flash (London: Picador), p. xviii.
Chapter 30
. Simon Reynolds, “Back to the Roots,” Wire, no. (September ): . It is crucial
that the polemical context of the Reynolds argument be recognized, especially since a
large part of his own oeuvre in the past fifteen years has been devoted to the rapture
of dancer, producer, DJ-centered worlds of electronic dance music in which a parallel
denigration of human musician and singers occurs. On the other hand, the article is also
characteristic of another of Reynolds’s traits, a return to his own specific brand of inverse
sono-political correctness, which tends to be attached to various combinations of black,
proletarian, and femininist movements within music, sometimes at the expense of and
sometimes coupled to futurism. There is therefore a fascinating tension between tendencies in Reynolds’s writing and that of Eshun.
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid.
. Actually this is quite a bizarre argument considering that the bulk of the reception
of reggae music in the Western world had revolved around biographies of Bob Marley
and the intersection of his biographies with the overt politics of his music. It can only be
assumed that Reynolds, as is his tendency, was aiming the argument particularly at the
theoretically informed music journalism typical of Wire-related theorists such as David
Toop and Kodwo Eshun, and the tendency of that magazine to focus on dub over roots
reggae. Interestingly, this argument has much broader resonances, as Reynolds points out
later in the article, as it extends to a general preference for instrumental over vocal music
in the sound system diaspora, from dub over reggae, to drum’n’bass over jungle, dubstep
over vocal step and grime. A repeated theme in Reynolds’s work seems to hang around
an observation that there is a racialized politics of taste involved in the Western world’s
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reception of the musical black voice. In an earlier essay, I sought to move beyond the
opposition between Reynolds’s emphases and those of Afrofuturism. See S. Goodman,
“Speed Tribes: Netwar, Affective Hacking and the Audio-Social,” in Cultural Hacking, ed.
F. Liebl (Berlin: Springer-Verlag, ).
. Such an attempt in fact seems to encapsulate the multiplicity of voices contained under the umbrella of Afrofuturism, but particularly draws attention to the singularity of
perspective of Kodwo Eshun’s writings and what differentiates his conceptualizations
from, in particular, Afrrican American cultural studies, from Weheliye to Nelson, but
also the Afrofuturism of Paul Miller / DJ Spooky. It could be argued that U.S. Afrofuturism is shaped by a very peculiar nexus of black urban experience that is significantly
divergent from that of the U.K. In musical terms, it would seem that part of this divergence revolves around the sonic singularity in the U.K., the event of jungle / drum’n’bass
in the mid-s that seemed to catalyze one of the core innovations of Eshun’s text, the
futurerhythmachine.
. A. Weheliye, “Feenin: Posthuman Voices in Contemporary Black Popular Music,” Social Text , no. (Summer ), and Phonographies: Grooves in Afro-Sonic Modernity
(Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, ).
. F. Kittler, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, trans. G. Winthrop-Young and M. Wutz
(Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, , p. ).
. Ibid., p. .
. Weheliye, “Feenin,” .
. Ibid., p. .
. Weheliye also interestingly points to the “spirituals” as weapons for both white and
black abolitionists in a sonic war against American slavery.
. Kodwo Eshun, More Brilliant Than the Sun (London: Quartet, ), pp. –.
. Weheliye, “Feenin,” p. .
. Eshun, More Brilliant Than the Sun, p. .
. Kodwo Eshun, “The Kinematic Pneumacosm of Hype Williams: The Rhythm of Vision Is a Dancer,” in Cinesonic : Experiencing the Soundtrack, ed. P. Broophy (Sidney:
AFTRS Publications, ), pp. –.
. Kodwo Eshun, “Further Considerations on Afrofuturism,” CR: the New Centennial
Review , no. (Summer ).
. Weheliye, “Feenin,” p. .
. Reynolds, “Back to the Roots,” p. .
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Chapter 31
. Mike Davis, Planet of Slums (London: Verso Press, ).
. Mike Davis, The Ecology of Fear: Los Angeles and the Imagination of Disaster (New
York: Picador, ), p. .
. M. Davis, “Planet of Slums,” New Left Review March–April ), http: //
newleftreview.org / A.
. Ibid.
. H. De Soto, The Mystery of Capital (New York: Bantam Press, ).
. M. McLuhan, Understanding Media (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, ).
. Davis, “Planet of Slums,” p. .
. The early funk parties were know as baile funk de briga, in other words, fighting funk
dances. As Neate and Platt describe, “In the late s, baile funk was particularly notorious for outbreaks of violence between rival gangs. These were no typical brawls, however, but ritualized fights that were carefully orchestrated by the promoters using hired
security to separate the different galeras into two sides. . . . The DJ would put on different
tracks to stoke up the atmosphere and, with each track he played, the atmosphere got a
little more rowdy. Then fighting would break out, with the guys at the front punching
and kicking the hell out of each other. The security guards would let this go ahead but
then, at a certain point, they’d hit us with truncheons to get us to stop. All the funeiros
would obey.” P. Neate and D. Platt, Culture Is Our Weapon: Afroreggae in the Favelas of Rio
(London: Latin American Bureau, ), p. .
Robert Neuwirth describes his visit to a typical funk party in Rio de Janeiro: “At the
end of my first day in Ricinha, Paul Sneed, who brought me into the community and lived
in the flat next door to mine, took me down the hill to the baile funk: an all-night dance
party. Many favelas have them, usually on the weekends. Rocinha’s baile took place every
Friday night in the Valao. We took a series of becos that brought us to the bottom of the
hill in what seemed to me to be record time. The becos were quite active and several
bars—little more than counters set into the ground floor of buildings, with stools set up
on the lip of the pathway—were hopping. In the valao, a disc jockey had set up a wall of
speaker boxes alongside the foot wide channel of open sewage that ran down the
neighbourhood’s main drag and that gave the area its name. He was spinning aggressive, assault-your-ears rap and hip hop. Although it was past midnight, it was still early
for the baile. Hundreds of people were milling about. Three girls who must have been
or were doing synchronized dance steps at one end of the line of speakers. They
had synchronized their outfits, too: white hotpants and glittery, gold strapless tube tops.
Some younger boys had perched inside the speaker boxes and were simply sitting there,
banging to the beat, and no doubt, damaging their ear drums. More of the stores were
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open. And why not: it was too loud to sleep and the party would continue until dawn. Far
better to get some money out of the deal. Competing with the free baile was a nightclub.
Emocoes, located in a Spartan cement structure along the Estra da Gavea that seemed
like it might have been built as a parking garage. There, the loud rap sounds echoed off
the concrete. Entry was by paid admission—R$ (about $)- and although women were
let in with no trouble, any man entering was frisked by the sturdy bouncers. The frisk
finished with a quick squeeze of the testicles, to ensure no one had a concealed weapon.
It was crowded and humid inside. People pressed forward to dance or hung at the back,
where there was a makeshift bar. Here caipirinhas sold for less than a buck, and there
seemed to be no check at all on underage drinking. Rocinha has lots of these kinds of
parties, they were magnets for thousands of teenagers who lived in the community. Twice
a month, Beer Pizza sponsored a massive free dance party. . . . All across the favelas, few
people listened to the music that outsiders think of as Brazilian. Everyone knows the
samba, bossa nova, and Musica Popular Brasileira (MPB) hits. They’re the soundtrack of
the telenovelas—TV soap operas- and the ever-present background of everyday life. But
the mass of favela dwellers have embraced hardcore rap and funk (what Brazilians call
funk is akin to what Americans know as hip hop) as their emblematic sound. This music
can be raunchier than the West Coast variety that carries parental advisory labels in the
US, and is often blasting from various places in the favela at incredibly high volume.”
Shadow Cities (London: Routledge), pp. –.
. Matt Ingram, blog post, / / at http: // www.woebot.com / movabletype /
archives / .html.
. Simon Reynolds, “Piracy Funds What?” Village Voice, February , , http: // www
.villagevoice.com / music / ,reynolds,,.html.
. It is useful here to bear in mind the Afrofuturist critique of the stereotyped notion
of black music that ties it rigidly to the “street,” the “ghetto,” and superficial notions of
“realism.”
. Neate and Platt, Culture Is Our Weapon, p. .
. Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., p. . They further note that “there is also a popular sub-genre of the music
called funk probido or proidbiao—prohibited funk—that eulogises the drug factions,
violence and criminality in general” and in which rappers will “denigrate the police and
promote a particular faction” (pp. –).
. “Funk could be the colour of the city, the biggest generator of employment. It would
achieve much more than the government does with all its endless projects, projects and
more projects. Afroreggae works and is something that was born independently. With
the mass movement behind it, if funk got organized, set up an NGO and took action
inside the community, it would be the most powerful NGO in Rio.” Ibid., pp. .
Steve Goodman-Sonic Warfare Sound, Affect, and the Ecology of Fear (2009)Steve Goodman / text
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Notes
Chapter 32
. Simon Reynolds, Energy Flash (New York: Picador, ), p. .
. M. Fuller, Media Ecologies (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, ),, p. .
. See http: // www.ofcom.org.uk / media / news / / / illegal#content for recent antiviral activities.
. See Govil in the Sarai Reader, , p. , available at www.sarai.net.
. G. Bachelard, “Reverie and Radio,” in Radiotexte, ed. N. Strauss (New York: Semiotexte, ), p. .
. Fuller, Media Ecologies, pp. –.
. A key site of pirate listening is often in low-frequency intensified car sound stereos. See
Brandon LaBelle, “Pump Up the Bass—Rhythm, Cars, and Auditory Scaffolding,” Senses
and Society , no. (): –.
. B. Sterling, “The Sham Economy,” Wired (March ).
. Reynolds, Energy Flash, p. .
. In the U.K., an interesting case study is the publicly funded digital channel BBCextra
(http: // www.bbc.co.uk / extra) in which, simultaneously, underground music cultures
are incorporated into / infect the body of state-sponsored media. Contemporary capitalism is driven by the very tension between formal licensing structures and informal pirate
radio markets.
. M. Mason, The Pirate’s Dilemma: How Youth Culture Is Reinventing Capitalism (New
York: Free Press, ).
. “Pirates have been the architects of new societies for centuries: they have established
new genres of film and music and created new types of media, often operating anonymously and always—initially at least—outside the law. They overthrow governments,
birth new industries, and win wars. Pirates create positive social and economic changes,
and understanding piracy today is more important than ever, because now that we can all
copy and broadcast whatever we want, we can all become pirates.” Ibid., p. .
. Ibid., pp. –.
. Ibid., pp. –. “When push comes to shove, copyrights PREVENT a lot of new
culture, and patents PREVENT a lot of innovation” (p. ). As Mason continues, “Entrepreneurs look for gaps in the market. Pirates look for gaps outside the market . . .
pirates have proved that just because the market won’t do something, it doesn’t mean it’s
a bad idea. . . . Once pirates find a space the market has ignored, they park a new vehicle
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in it and begin transmitting. Sometimes this new vehicle becomes more important. . . .
When pirates do something valuable in society, citizens support them, discussion starts,
and laws change” (p. ). Mason continues: “People, firms and governments are being
forced to do the right thing by a new breed of rebels using a cutthroat style of competition, which combines both their self-interest and the good of the community” (p. ).
And yet, he argues, they “are taking over the good ship capitalism, but they’re not here to
sink it. Instead they will plug the holes, keep it afloat, and propel it forward” (p. ). So,
for Mason, “Punk capitalism isn’t about big government or big markets but about a new
breed of incredibly efficient networks. This is not digital communism, this isn’t central
planning. It is quite possibly the opposite: a new kind of decentralized democracy made
possible by changes in technology. Piracy isn’t just another business model, its one of the
greatest business models we have. . . . Acting like a pirate—taking value from the market
and giving it back to the community” (p. ). Instead, he concludes, piracy “transforms
the markets it operates in changing the way distribution works and forcing companies
to be more competitive and innovative. Pirates don’t just defend the public domain from
corporate control; they also force big business and government to deliver what we want,
when we want it” (p. ). The ambivalence of Mason’s argument should now be clear:
what was radical about youth culture becomes taught in business schools as sensible
strategy, and the loop between underground cultural innovation and mass marketing
tightens and tightens to the point where capitalism begins to preempt innovation via cool
hunters and viral branding.
Chapter 33
. “The Mosquito has given us excellent results. We sited the equipment in the Coach
parking section of one of our Multi-Storey car parks. A local hotelier has continually
complained over a period of at least two years about the constant problems of youths on
skateboards, BMX bikes etc. in this area. We used to have to attend site at least six times
a day during the school holidays. We even went to the extent of bringing in a private
security firm to permanently cover the evenings and holiday afternoons, however due to
budget restrictions this has now been ceased. The hotelier went as far as reporting us to
the HSE due to the risk of injury to the youths from their behaviour. As you can imagine,
this has cost us tens of thousands of pounds over the last two years in staffing and remedial works to move on the youths. . . . Since installing the Mosquito, the reduction in the
number of incidents reported to us has dramatically reduced. We even received an email
from our number one complainant stating that he had experienced the quietist holiday
period ever. The only problem is that the youths have moved on and are now causing
trouble elsewhere! Make arrangements for its return, never. Just send me an invoice for
this one and hopefully, next financial year, I shall be placing orders for additional units.”
Rob Harmes, senior parking operations inspector, Mosquito press release. http: // www
.compoundsecurity.co.uk /.
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Notes
. Tsutomu Oohashi et al., “Inaudible High Frequency Sounds Affect Brain Activity: Hypersonic Effect,” Journal of Neurophysiology (): –.
. Super Audio format CDs and DVD audio have frequency ranges that go up to and
kilohertz, respectively.
. Alpha waves are electromagnetic oscillations in the frequency range of to hertz
arising from rhythmic electrical pattern in the human brain.
. S. Treister, Hexen : New Military Occult Technologies for Psychological Warfare
(London: Black Dog, ). Treister’s earlier work was situated as part of a loose collection of artists referred to, particularly in the mid-s, as cyberfeminist, (re-)installing
women, or femininity as protagonist within cybernetic culture. See, for example, Jyanni
Steffensen, “Doing It Digitally: Rosalind Brodsky and the Art of Virtual Female Subjectivity,” pp. –, in Reload: Rethinking Women and Cyberculture, ed. M. Flanagan
and Austin Booth (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, ). Steffensen’s cyberfeminist and
psychoanalytic reading analyzes Treister’s earlier project, No Other Symptoms: Time
Travelling, with Rosalind Brodsky in which Brodsky travels back in time to try to save
her parents from the Holocaust.
. U.S. patent ,,.
. Jon Ronson, The Men Who Stare at Goats (New York: Picador, ), p. .
. The two best-known implementations of directional ultrasound technology are known
as the Audio Spotlight made by the Holosonic Research Labs and the Hypersonic Sound
Device made by American Technology Corporation, better know for supplying longrange acoustic devices to the U.S. military for use in Iraq and New Orleans. For more
technical information on how directional audio works, see http: // www.holosonics.com /
technology.html. Also see Marshall Sella, “The Sound of Things to Come,” March ,
, http: // query.nytimes.com / gst / fullpage.html?res=EDFACA
CB.
. J. G. Ballard, “The Sound Sweep,” in The Voices of Time (London: Orion, ),
pp. –.
. On the unsound spectrum, silent discos can be contrasted to deaf discos that take
place in clubs with sound systems that produce strong. low frequencies so that the music
is inaudible to the dancers, but its subsonic rhythms are felt.
. M. Fuller, Media Ecologies (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, ), pp. –.
. A. Dunne, Hertzian Tales: Electronic Products, Aesthetic Experience and Critical Design
(Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, ), p. .
. Ibid., p. .
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Chapter 34
. We can find this strand of thought passing through the acoustic ecology movement,
particularly Shaffer and Barry Truax, who both tend to idealize nature, through to Virilio’s complaints against the “silencing of silence” through the sonification of art, through
to Stuart Sim’s frankly unhinged Manifesto for Silence, (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University
Press, ).
. The line passes from the Italian futurists’ manifesto for noise in the Art of Noises
through to Attali and recent texts by for example. It is interesting to note also that Cage
stands at the crossroads of both the politics of noise and silence.
. Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri, Empire, (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University
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. Gilles Deleuze, “Postscript to Societies of Control,” in Negotiations, trans. Martin
Joughin (New York: Columbia University Press, ).
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Filmography
Apocalypse Now, Francis Ford Coppola, .
Decoder, Muscha, Visionary Comms. Ltd., .
Ghost Army, archive footage, www.ghostarmy.com.
Last Angel of History, Black Audio Film Collective, .
La Jetée, Chris Marker, Nouveaux Pictures, (), .
Minority Report, Steven Spielberg, th Century Fox, .
Parlabor, Manga, .
Soundtrack to War, George Gittoes, Revelation Films, .
263
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P. 286
Index
Abstract vorticism, , ,
Acoustic cyberspace, , ,
Acoustics, , , , , , , ,
n, n
Actual occasions, , , –, , –
, ,
Affect
attention and,
capitalism and, xx,
contagion, xix, , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , , ,
n
dread and, ,
fear and, ,
feeling and,
film sound and,
instinct and,
James, William and,
mobilization, xix, xx, , , –, , ,
–, , , , ,
modulation, xiv, xvi, xvii, xviii, , , ,
, , , ,
ontology of, xiv, ,, , , ,
physics and, n
power, , ,
radio and, ,
rhythm and,
sensation and,
sonic, , , , , , , , , , ,
, n
Spinoza and, , , , , , n
synesthesia and, , n
theories of, , , , n
tonality, xv, xviii, xx, , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , , ,
,
vibration and, ,
the virtual and,
Afro-diasporic, , , , n. See also
Black Atlantic
Afrofuturism, , , , , –, ,
, , , , , –, ,
, n, n, n, n,
nn–, n
Altmann, Jurgen, , n, n
Amplitude, , , , , , –,
n
politics of, ,
tactics of, ,
Analog, xix, , –, , , –,
–, , , , , , ,
n, n, n, n
Steve Goodman-Sonic Warfare Sound, Affect, and the Ecology of Fear (2009)Steve Goodman / text
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266
Index
Apocalypse Now, xi, , , , –, ,
n
Asymmetric warfare, , , , , , ,
, , , n
Attali, Jacques, xviii, –, , –, ,
–, , –, n, n,
n, n, n, n
Audio virology, xix, , –, –,
–, , , , , , , ,
–, , n, n. See also
affect, contagion
Bachelard, Gaston, xviii, –, , ,
–, , , , n, n,
n
Bain, Mark, , –, , nn–,
nn–, n
Ballard, J. G., , , –, n
Bass, ix, xix, xx, , , , –, , , ,
–, , , , , , –,
, , , –, n, n,
n, n
materialism and, –, , , ,
,
Bergson, Henri, xviii, , –, –,
, –, , –, , n,
nn–, n
Black Atlantic, xix, , , , , ,
–, , , n, n,
n, n
Black Audio Film Collective, , , ,
,
Body, vii, x, xiii, xiv, xv, xvii, xx, , –,
–, , –, , –, , ,
–, , –, –, , ,
–, , , –, , , , ,
, –, , , –, ,
–, , , –, –,
, , n, n, n, n,
n, n, n, n
Burroughs, William, , , –, ,
nn–, nn–, n
Cage, John, , , , , n
Canetti, Elias, xix, , , n, n,
n
Capitalism, xix, xx, , , –, , ,
, , , –,
Cartesian, , –, , , , ,
n
Ccru, , n, n, n, n,
n
Chaitin, Gregory, , n, n
Chernoff, John, , n
Chion, Michel, –, , n,
n, n
Cronenberg, David, , , n
Cybernetics, xix, , , , –, , ,
–, , , , –, , , ,
, , , , n, n
Cymatics, , , , , n
Damasio, Antonio, , n
Dancehall, –, , , , , ,
n
Davis, Erik, , , , , n,
n
Davis, Mike, xx, , , –, , –,
–, , n, n, n,
n
Dawkins, Richard, , –, ,
n, n, n, nn–
Déjà entendu, vi, , , , –,
, , , ,
De Landa, Manuel, –, n, n,
n, n, n, n
Deleuze, Gilles
affect and, , , n
body and, ,
calculus and,
clinamen and, ,
control, , , n, n
Lucretius and, , ,
machinic materialism and, n
memory and,
Steve Goodman-Sonic Warfare Sound, Affect, and the Ecology of Fear (2009)Steve Goodman / text
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267
Index
noise and,
rhythm and, , , , , , , ,
, n
Serres and, , , ,
speed and, ,
Spinoza and, , , , n, n
synesthesia and, , n
virtual and, ,
war machine, , , , , , n,
n
Dos Santos, Pinheiros, xviii, , –,
Dread, xiv, xx, , , , , , , ,
–, , –, , , , , ,
, , n
Drum’n’bass, , , , n, n
Dub, , , , –, –, , , ,
–, –, , , nn–,
n, n
Dubstep, , , n
Ear worm, xix, , , , , , –
, –, n, n
Ecology
acoustic, xvii, xviii, , , , , ,
n
of affect, , , , , , , , ,
, n, nn–, n, n
of fear, xiv, xviii, , , –, , , ,
–, , , , , , ,
media / network ,
of speeds, , , , –
vibrational, xviii, xix, , , , , ,
Eglash, Ron, n, n
Elggren, Leif, –, , n, n
Empiricism, radical, , n, n
Eno, Brian, , , , n, n
Eshun, Kodwo
acoustic cyberspace,
Afrofuturism and, , –, –,
n, n, n
aliens,
dub virology and, , n, n
earworm and,
futurhythmachine and, , , , ,
, , , ,
futurism and, ,
inhuman,
music video, n
science fiction, ,
slavery,
sonic algorithms,
sonic fear,
sonic fiction, ,
sonic warfare and,
synesthesia and,
theory and, ,
Unidentified Audio Objects,
Extensive continuum, , –, ,
Fear, iv, xiv, xv, xviii, xx, , , –, ,
, , , –, –, , , ,
, , –, , , , ,
n, n, n, n , n,
nn–, n, n, n
Frequency, politics of, xvii, xvii, xix, xx,
, , , , , –, , ,
,
Fisher, Mark, , , , n
Foucault, Michel, , n, n
Fuller, Matthew, –, , n,
n, n, n
Futurism, xvii, xviii, xix, , –, , , ,
–, –, , , –, , ,
, –, –, n. See also
Afrofuturism
Futurity, , , , , , , , –
, , , –, n
Gabor, Denis, , n
Gavreau, Vladimir, , , nn–
Gibson, William, , , n, n
Gilroy, Paul, , , n, n, n,
n
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268
Index
Global ghettotech, , , , n,
n
Grime, , , , , n
Guattari, Felix, xix, , , , , ,
–, –, , –, –,
, –, , n, n, n,
n, n, n, n, n,
n, n, n, n, n,
nn–, n, n
Hardcore continuum,
Helicopter, –, –, , n
Henriques, Julian, –, n
Hip Hop, n, n
Holosonic control, –, , –,
, n
House music, , , , –,
Hypersonic, x, , , –, ,
n
Hyperstition, , –, , , , ,
n
Infrasound, x, –, –, , , ,
, n
James, William, , –, , , ,
, , n, n, n, n,
n
Jenny, Hans, , n
Jungle. See Drum’n’bass
Kellaris, James, , , n
Kittler, Friedrich, xviii, –, , , ,
n, n, n, n, n, n
Lao Tzu,
Ledoux, Joseph, –, n
Lefebvre, Henri, , , , , , n
Leibniz, GW, , , , , n
Logistics, v, , –, –, , , ,
, n, n
Loudspeaker, , , , , , –,
n
Marinetti, FT, , , , , –, , ,
n, n
Marker, Chris, , , n
Martial, xv, –, , n
Massumi, Brian, , , , –, –
, , , n, n, n,
nn–, n, n, n,
n, n, n, n, n,
n, n, n, nn–, n,
n, n, n, n, n
McLuhan, Marshall, , , , , ,
, n, n, n, n,
n, n
Memetics, xix, –, –, , –
, , , n, n, n,
n
Messiaen, Olivier, , n
Megalopolis, , , , , ,
Memory, , , , , , , –,
, –, n, n
Military-entertainment complex, v, xvi,
xviii, xix, xx, , –, , , , ,
, , , , n, n, n,
n
Military urbanism, xv, xvii, xx, , ,
Neuroscience, –, , , n
Nexus, xv, xvi, xviii, xx, , , –, ,
, , , , , , , –, –,
, –, –, –, , ,
, , , , , , , , ,
–, n, n, n
Noise
affect and, –, ,
Afrofuturism and, –, ,
Attali and, –, –, , –
black, xv,
chaos and, –,
futurist art of, xvii, , –, –, , ,
, , –, , –, ,
politics of, xvii, xx,
rhythm out of, xix, , , , , ,
, ,
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269
Index
Serres and, ,
silence versus, –
sound and, , –, , , , ,
white, xv, ,
Pain, x, xiii, , , –, , , ,
n
Penman, Ian, , nn–
Perception, vii, xvi, xviii, xx, , , , , ,
–, –, , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , , , ,
, , , –, n, n,
n, n, n
Planet of Slums, xx, , , –, ,
–, n, n, n
Preemptive power, xviii, , , , ,
–, –, , , –, ,
–, , , , , –, ,
, , n, n
Prehension, –, , , –, ,
Prigogine, Illya, , n
Psyops, , , , n
Public Enemy, xv, ,
Radio, , , –, , , , , , ,
, , , , , , –, –
, n, n, n, n, n,
n, n
pirate, , –, , n
Realism, speculative, n
Recording, , –, –, , ,
, n, n, n, n, n,
n, n
Reed, Ishmael, , –, –, ,
, n, n
Reggae, , –, , –, –,
, n, n, n, n
Reynolds, Simon, –, , , , –,
, , , n, n, n,
n, n, n, n, n, n,
n, n, n
Rhythm, xvii, xix, , , , , , , –,
, , , , –, –, ,
, –, , –, , ,
n, n, n, n, n,
n, n
Rhythmachine, vi, , , , , –,
, , , n, n
Rhythmanalysis, xviii, , , , –,
, , –, –, , ,
Rhythmic anarchitecture, –, ,
, , , . See also Extensive
continuum
Roads, Curtis, , , , , , ,
Ronson, Jon, , , n, n
Russolo, Luigi, –, , , , , ,
nn–, n, n
Sensation, xvi, –, –, , , , ,
, , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , –, ,
n, n, n, n, n
Serres, Michel, –, , ,
nn–, n, n
Shaviro, Steven, ii, ix, n
Silence, xvii, xx, , , , , , , ,
, , , nn–
Sonic
affect, , , , , –, , , n
dominance, –, , , , , ,
, n, n
ecology, , , ,
fiction, , , , , –, ,
nexus, ,
plexus, , –
warfare, xiv, xv, xvi, xvii, xviii, xix, , –,
–, , , , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , , –,
–, , , , , –,
–, , , n, n
Sound
clash, , ,
effects, xiv, , –, , , n, n
Steve Goodman-Sonic Warfare Sound, Affect, and the Ecology of Fear (2009)Steve Goodman / text
P. 291
270
Index
Speed, vi, xiii, , , , , , , , ,
–, , , , –, , –,
–, , , , , , –,
, n, n, n, n, n
Spinoza, Baruch, xvi, , , , –,
, , , , n, n, n,
n, n, n, n, n,
n
Stengers, Isabelle, , n
Sterling, Bruce, , n
Sun Tzu, , , –,
Synesthesia, , –, , , –,
, , n, n, n, n,
n
Tactics, xiv, xv, xviii, xix, xx, , –,
–, , , , –, , , , –
, , , , –, , , ,
, –, , , , n, n
Techno, , , , , n, n
Torture, , , , , , n, n
Touch, , , , , , , n
Treister, Suzanne, , n
Turbulence, xix, , , , , , –,
, , , , n, n, n,
n, n, n
Ultrasound, xvi, –, , –, ,
–, , –, n, n
Underdevelopment, , , , ,
Underground Resistance, , n
Unsound, vi, x, xvi, xx, , , , –,
, , , , , n
Urban, xv, xv, xvii, xx, –, , , , –,
–, –, , , –, , ,
, , –, , , , , ,
, n, n, n, n
Vietnam, , , –, , n
Virilio, Paul, xviii, , , , –, ,
, –, –, –, , ,
nn–, n, n, n, n
Virtual, xiv, xvi xvii, , , , –,
–, –, , , , –, , ,
, –, , –, , –,
, –, , –, , –,
, –, –, , n,
n, n, n, n, n,
n, n, n, n, n,
n, n, n, n, n
Virus
audio, xix, , , –, , –,
, , , , n
cultural, xix, –
Vocoder, xix, xx, , –
Vortex, , –, , , n,
n, n
Wagner, , n
Wallerstein, Immanuel, , n
War machine, , , , , ,, –,
, –, , , –, –,
n, n, n, nn–
Weapon, sonic, xiv, xv, , –, –, ,
–, , , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , –, ,
–
Weheliye, Alexander, –, nn–,
n, n, n
Whitehead, Alfred North, xviii, , , ,
–, –, , –, , –
, –, , –, n,
n, n
Whitehead, Gregory, –, –
Wu Tang Clan, xv, , n