Towards a Transcendental Deduction of Jungle (Interview) (Part 1) – Robin Mackay
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ROBIN MACKAY
2019 Topics:
***Collapse, CCRU, Interview, Jungle, Mark Fisher, Music,
Nick Land, Sound, SWITCH, Timestretching, Virtual Futures,
Warwick University
This is the first part of a long conversation about Warwick in the
90s, CCRU, and the importance of music (particularly jungle) to
that scene. The interview was conducted by Christopher Haworth
as part of his AHRC-funded research project, Music and the
Internet: Towards a Digital Sociology of Music. Thanks to
importance of music to the Warwick scene/CCRU. (I’m sure my
memory of these years is not entirely accurate, so none of the
historical data here should be taken as authoritative, please
correct me if you feel slandered or misrepresented :))
A Russian translation is available at SpaceMorgue
CH: Would you be able to say something about your background, and
when you came to Warwick and came into contact with Nick Land?
RM: In terms of my background, I was into music, I’d been in bands, and
I’d also been an early adopter of home computing—I got my first computer, a
Sinclair ZX81, when I was six or seven. So I was very aware of programming—in
a way that children now tend not to be, even though they’re very familiar with the
use of digital devices. With those early home computers, you had to learn to
program it in order to make it do anything at all. There used to be magazines you
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TOPICS
Christopher for prompting me and eliciting my thoughts on the
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Robin Mackay/Texts/Blog Posts/Towards a Transcendental Deduction of Jungle (Interview) (Part 1) – Robin Macka.pdf
Towards a Transcendental Deduction of Jungle (Interview) (Part 1) – Robin Mackay
could buy with programs you could copy out into the computer. So that was an
early interest.
When I was sixteen and came to do my A Levels, I wanted to choose
computer science, but because of a timetabling problem I wasn’t able to do it, and
I ended up taking philosophy although I didn’t really know what it was. Thanks to
two really superb teachers at sixth-form college, I discovered that it was
something that I’d been waiting for in some way, something that really grabbed
me.
I ended up applying to the University of Warwick, not for any specific
reason—I didn’t have particularly pushy strategic parents or anything, I didn’t
know what I wanted to do, and I didn’t have any knowledge of the department, as
a lazy teenager I was just choosing randomly. I arrived there in 1993, I think. In
the interim, the main things I’d been reading that were influential on me were
Nietzsche especially, as well as some Freud. So my concept of philosophy
involved its being integrated with how you live your life—you know, existential
questions—and of course, as a teenager reading Nietzsche, it also clicks into your
instinctive feeling for how disgustingly banal and conventional the world is, and
that there must be something more interesting than this, there must be a way to
aim higher; and the idea that one can analyse, disintegrate, and remake oneself.
Unfortunately, having arrived at Warwick, the first year I found very
difficult, taking the first year courses was kind of appalling because…well, I kind
of enjoyed logic, since it was something akin to programming and so I was good
at it. I’d already done Plato at sixth-form college—we used to actually read out the
dialogues in class—and I enjoyed that. But the generic exposition of
epistemology, metaphysics, analytic philosophy, that didn’t exactly appeal to a
student hyped up on the prospects of Nietzschean self-overcoming.
I’ve talked about some of this before, but it was only in the second year
that I first encountered Nick Land. And I was taken by the very open and
enquiring personality of Nick and the fact that he seemed to be someone who was
actually doing philosophy rather than reporting back secondhand on others who
had done it, assessing and finessing what had gone before. There was an exciting
energy about what he was doing and also the thinkers that he then introduced me
to, or who I discovered through going to his classes.
There were two good courses, one was called Recent Continental
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Philosophy, at that time taught by Keith Ansell-Pearson, and the other one was
Current French Philosophy. And, you know, the very idea of there being ‘recent’
or ‘current philosophy’ seemed exciting and somewhat unexpected, even though it
was not really that recent, it was post-Heideggerian and then post-’68 thinkers, in
CFP mostly Deleuze and Guattari—but certainly, those were the exciting courses
to be on.
But I wouldn’t like to overstate the importance of the official academic
curriculum because, for me at least, that wasn’t what was important. At that time,
there was already a coterie of people loosely aggregated around Nick. And one
thing that was really good about Nick was that he didn’t just come in, do his job,
and go home. He would always be out at the bar; he would mix with graduates and
undergraduates. And he always wanted to talk and to listen to what other people
were doing. I think that helped create a certain kind of community.
I don’t know if that’s specific to Warwick, but it’s something that I have
noticed doesn’t exist, really, in universities I’ve been to over the last decade: there
was this sense of community in the philosophy department whereby the
undergraduates, people doing PhDs, and some of the staff, would mix; and among
those on the CFP course there was a sense that there was a common intellectual
project that extended beyond the teaching hours, which is something I haven’t
seen much in university departments since then. That may partly be to do with the
fact that Warwick is a campus university, out in the middle of nowhere, so it’s
kind of insulated, you see the same people all the time, and it’s an effort to go
anywhere else. Who’s going to make an effort to go to Coventry or Leamington
Spa anyway?! So, it had a kind of hothouse vibe about it.
All of this was before CCRU happened. But there was already this group
gravitating around the CFP course. In part it would be people like me who were
possibly in some way slightly psychologically damaged or desperate, or disgusted
with the world, and looking to philosophy to address existential questions; and
obviously, Nick, in his book on Bataille, had offered some extravagant answers to
those questions…well, perhaps not answers, but a certain way, at least, of talking
about them. And although I don’t think he would ever indulge self-pity or
existential melodrama, he took those problems seriously as problems, so it felt that
it wasn’t just a pathetic teenage whim to want talk about nihilism, and that you
could turn it into a positive enterprise of philosophical enquiry.
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In addition to this, Warwick was one of the first places to have a
philosophy and literature course, so there were also people who were studying
things like Blanchot, Deleuze and Guattari’s Proust or Kafka, but also science
fiction, cyberpunk, various things like that.
And then there was a contingent who were into the kind of stuff covered
in Wired magazine, getting excited about the early internet, neural nets, nanotech.
Of course the web was in its infancy. In my first year at Warwick, you would need
to go down into a dark basement where there was a big cavernous computer room
full of geeks, and that was where all the computers in the university were and you
could get online from there. I remember discovering through a very early browser
how to access what there was of the web at the time, and downloading texts and
books. At the time, for me that in itself didn’t necessarily seem like a huge deal,
but through contact with these ideas that were circulating in the department, it
became linked to a whole stream of theoretical speculation and became an
indicator of something much more expansive and future-oriented.
So, there was already a series of crossovers happening here because Nick
was into all of these things, he would always be interested in what was going on in
nanobiology, quantum computing, and so on.
Between ’94 and ’97 at Warwick there was this series of conferences,
Virtual Futures, originally organized by three postgraduates, Eric Cassidy, Dan
O’Hara, and Otto Imken. It was a coagulation of that whole mixed group of
students and their different interests, and also brought in people from farther afield
who shared those interests. In the early years it leaned more toward the Wired side
of things, speculation about the future of technology, but also with a strong current
of cyberfeminism and interest in the interference space between fiction and
philosophy. The conferences featured a lot of speculation about cyberspace, the
link between technology and social change, and so on. The first one was a smallish academic-style event with papers and panel discussions, but the event
exploded to ten times the size in ’95. You had people like Manuel DeLanda who
were doing syncretic work bringing together complexity theory and bold
sociological or political theses about technology, and essentially, a whole lot of
cross-disciplinary fertilization was going on. I think from the Warwick side a lot
of this was already coming out of the realisation that in Deleuze and Guattari’s
Capitalism and Schizophrenia they were presciently addressing a lot of these
questions around complexity, cybernetics, economics, desire, and the social in a
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way that anticipated the knotting-together of those things that was becoming
increasingly relevant as we approached the twenty-first century.
Those events were, I think, quite pioneering and unique at the time. I
think the feeling that there was some kind of homegrown way of approaching and
talking about these subjects and bringing something different to them was there
from the beginning and, although it wasn’t overt at first, there was an emerging
underlying scorn for the naivety of the Californian cyber-optimist ‘technology will
free us’ discourse. Notable was what became the traditional star turn by Stelarc,
this kind of bawdy semi-masochistic cybernetic bricoleur….and a scattering of
artists, performance artists, cyberpunk novelists, people talking about electronic
music, all helping inflect things more toward the wild side, as well as academic
theorists. And the conference was accompanied by a club night. From ’94 to ’95
the whole thing grew massively, and began to recognisably gravitate more around
a cyberpunk vibe than any recognisable academic agenda—or the agenda of tech
evangelists. Imported from the thinkers who were taught on the RCP and CFP
courses, Nietzsche, Heidegger, Bataille, Deleuze and Guattari, and reinforced by
artists’ explorations into the new cyperspace environment, there was more of a
dark side to the whole thing, more discussion of the idea of an abolition, or at least
derangement, of the human that wouldn’t be some kind of angelic migration into
cyberspace, but a disintegration of human society into its own machinic
infrastructure, which was bound to cause a massive disturbance to our sense of
ourselves, rather than just being a kind of transcendence.
Sadie Plant had been a presence at Virtual Futures, and it was ’96, I
believe, that she was employed by Warwick, to found the CCRU. Sadie brought
with her a number of her students from Birmingham. I’d already encountered
some of them because they’d given presentations at Virtual Futures and at other
events. But that’s when I properly met the group known as SWITCH, which was
Mark Fisher, Rob Heath, Steve Metcalfe (who didn’t come to Warwick), Tim
Burdsey, and Angus Carlyle (who was at Manchester). Suzanne Livingston was
also one of those students who came with Sadie, and she became a member of
CCRU proper and did a lot of the graphic artwork used in publications and such. I
don’t think she was a ‘member’ of SWITCH at that time… they were more of a
boy band! SWITCH was really cool because they’d turn up and do these
presentations together, against a backdrop of intercut video clips from Terminator
and Predator. I think already at that stage they sometimes used a soundtrack as
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well. That was something I hadn’t seen before. They had attitude.
SWITCH were all coming from a cultural studies background, because
most of them had studied with Sadie at the Birmingham Centre for Contemporary
Cultural Studies. So they were all people who were very well versed in the visual
culture of movies, music, popular science fiction, horror, etc. In the UK the
preceding decade had been the era of the scandal of ‘video nasties’, this invasion
of the home by supposedly disturbing and even socially deleterious violent
moving images, as the video market grew massively, conspiring with the
technological sophistication of special effects to create an escalation in the
speculative weirdness and violent scenarios that were being portrayed. SWITCH
used all of that, trying to imbue theory with the energy of that popular culture and
the fears and delights it tapped into, and also with the energy of the music they
were listening to, electronic music, rave, hip-hop, hybridising all of these forms.
Earlier on, when I was doing my A Levels, I’d had something of an
epiphanic experience when I read Simon Reynolds’s book on ‘shoegaze’ bands,
Blissed Out. That had been one of the first theoretical books that had really got me
excited because I thought, wow, you can take all of these (what seemed to me at
the time) exotic French philosophers smoking their pipes in Paris, you can take
their sophisticated jargon and use it to talk about the kind of music I’m listening to
—you can talk about My Bloody Valentine using Derrida, or whatever. The name
for the zine that I published around ’95-’96 at Warwick, ***collapse, a distant
forerunner to the journal published by Urbanomic, actually came from a chapter in
that book, on the band Loop. Just the chapter title for me was emblematic of this
pioneering spirit of applying maximally portentous philosophical language to pop
culture, something that would totally be a part of the spirit of CCRU later on. Not
only was the chapter entitles ‘Black Mysticism of Transcendental Collapse’, it was
about one of my favourite bands too! People ask me about the name Collapse and
think it’s some kind of reference to quantum theory but no, that’s the real reason
behind it!
So, I understood immediately that SWITCH were extending this kind of
practice, and meeting them was a renewal of the realisation that it’s possible for
theoretical work to be part of what Mark Fisher always called, simply, ‘cultural
production’: you’re producing something that’s aesthetically stimulating, that
involves narrative drive, images, sound, perceptual stimulation, but it’s also
theory, it’s also cognitive intensity.
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CH: And the students actually shifted institutional affiliation as well?
RM: Yeah. Some of them may have been on the MA at Warwick, I
think, before they did a PhD, I’m not sure. What I do know is that there was a lot
of weird institutional politics around Sadie being in the philosophy department
and a lot of grumbling, ‘That’s not philosophy. Why is she here?’ Probably, I
think, she had already gained a certain notoriety and been in the press, and so
there was maybe a business case made in Warwick, ‘Get this person who is going
to create a reputation for being “innovative” and “cutting edge” and install her
here.’ I don’t know whether that’s why it happened or not but… but there was
certainly uneasiness about it which was made clear to her at the time.
I know that the students also had difficulties, in particular Mark, he had a
really hard time having to go to meeting after meeting and to the PhD review
sessions and justify what he was doing, you know, Toy Story and Baudrillard,
‘that’s not philosophy! That’s not rigorous. You haven’t read this; you haven’t
read that.’ I think that was a formative experience for Mark, in a negative sense, in
terms of his critique of intellectual authority, guilt, and class—and once he had
finished his PhD, it probably drove him further into wanting to create some kind
of ‘pop theory’ that would function via other channels and without encountering
those kind of institutional barriers.
There was a kind of mutual education that went on where, you know, I
certainly remember Mark introducing me, for example, to Paul Gilroy’s work, The
Black Atlantic, the kind of stuff which was canon for Cultural Studies in
Birmingham, but which I hadn’t really encountered before. And we talked for
hours about Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason…So there was a kind of crossbreeding of two fields, with Deleuze and Guattari increasingly becoming a
common language as we all read and re-read Capitalism and Schizophrenia
constantly.
RM: There was a group who were older than me, who were doing PhDs
when I arrived. But as I was saying, there was a quite a lot of mixing so you did
get to know people. I remember Diane Beddoes, who was doing a PhD on Deleuze
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and feminism, Justin Barton, who later did the audio essays with Mark and who
was certainly there doing work on Deleuze and Guattari. And then there were
people who I think may have been from other departments or who were kind of
working across departments. I know there was Michael Eardley, who was doing
some kind of research spanning philosophy and computer science. There was
Martyn Amos, who was from the biology department, who was interested in
nanotechnology. Eric, Dan, and Otto who ran Virtual Futures—these were all
people who would regularly turn up at the bar. I remember seeing Hari Kunzru
around too. Undoubtedly there are many others I’m forgetting, there was a kind of
shifting hard core and then a fringe of other characters who came and went.
But it was a kind of strange, heterogenous group of people, really. And I
guess the common language they were able to talk was this kind of Deleuze and
Guattari argot of complex systems, deterritorialization, strata, and so on, at a
maximally abstract level—a weird kind of abstruse machinic Esperanto.
Once CCRU was installed, there was another iteration of Virtual Futures
in ’96, subtitled ‘Datableed’, which I ended up being one of the organisers of.
Basically, there was a schism during the planning of the event, between those who
were into hard science and wanted to talk about complex systems and cybernetics
in a strong technical sense, and biotechnology and whatever—and a contingent
around CCRU who were very outspoken, and who were more interested in this
idea of cultural production, maybe looser with the ideas but arguably more
energetic and creative—obviously, at the time, led by Mark Fisher at his most
vociferous and sometimes borderline malicious! That confrontation was perhaps
based also in the fact that they had arrived in Warwick in the philosophy
department, they weren’t really versed in philosophy, and it was felt they were
trying, in some way, to take over Virtual Futures to make it into something else,
like to make it into some kind of weird Goth-Deleuzian post-punk performance art
meltdown! Which was true. So that was an interesting time. And I guess probably
only the presence of Nick was able to hold all those things together, but the schism
was evident, most of the original organisers of Virtual Futures having left, myself
and a couple of other people trying to pick it up, and the CCRU with a kind of
evangelistic fervour trying to steer it in their direction.
CH: And Virtual Futures, was it an independent conference or was it
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associated with Warwick and the department?
RM: It was always officially sponsored by the philosophy department
in some vague sense, but I have no idea how that played out in reality. In ’96,
when I was involved in organising it, there was a lot of financial irregularity, just
because no one knew what they were doing and I think that ended up getting the
philosophy department in trouble, which is why it didn’t happen again. Things
were looser then…I also used to steal the departmental photocopying card to print
***collapse, or I just took it to the print shop and told them it was for the
department, although for the second one I got called back in because they
considered some of the images to be pornographic and refused to print the cover.
But yeah, it was always connected with the philosophy department and
tolerated by them, I suppose. Certainly in ’95, where they had people like Stelarc
and Orlan, it was getting media attention and that may have been something that
seemed positive to the university authorities, if not to the philosophy department
—that it was somehow connecting with that whole Wired culture and getting
publicity for Warwick. But I’ve no doubt the whole scene and the publicity it got
did in fact bring students in to the philosophy department.
CH: Outside of Sadie Plant and you mentioned Keith Ansell-Pearson,
was Land mostly ostracised within the department or were there other allies or
part-allies? Was Andrew Benjamin there?
RM: Yeah, Andrew was there. I don’t really know that much about the
internal politics. I know all the time I was there Nick was definitely on good terms
with Keith. I know that they planned to write a book together during a certain
period, with someone from the business school…it was going to be called
Machinic Postmodernism. It’s not as if Nick was deliberately abrasive to the other
members of staff, I don’t think, but he would maybe say what he thought
sometimes injudiciously, and probably was not so keen on keeping up with the
bureaucratic side of the job. I would say from my observation that the older
Continental Philosophy staff were slightly condescending to him and to his
students. And then the more analytic philosophers in the department, I think he
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had a good relationship with Greg Hunt, for example, who worked on
computation. And I think Nick brought a lot of students into the department and
they couldn’t argue with that. It became more of a problem when it became
obvious that the activities of Nick and the students connected with him weren’t
merely academic, and didn’t fit into any known definition of ‘philosophy’.
I’m not really that clear on what happened and how the situation
deteriorated or even, really, how the official existence of the CCRU ended, except
I got the sense that Sadie didn’t feel welcome and she was the kind of person who
would just say ‘Why would I stick around and take shit if I’m not wanted?’
But during the time she was there and for about a year afterward, CCRU
existed, virtually. And physically—there was, for a certain period, a room where
people just used to meet and discuss stuff.
CH: This wasn’t at Warwick?
RM: Yeah, yeah…
CH: Oh, it was?
RM: In the philosophy department, yeah, there was a room at one point,
apart from Sadie’s office. Sadie somehow managed to make that happen, and then
for a while after she left even, the room was still there, and it was used as a kind of
common room for us—but CCRU was never really an officially acknowledged
entity.
CH: Didn’t it move to above a shop?
RM: This is after I left, but in 1998, some of the CCRU decamped to
that flat in Leamington, and then afterwards to a house which, apparently, is where
Aleister Crowley used to lived. I had done my degree and an MA and then I
started doing a PhD at Warwick. And I think by that time I was probably a bit
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directionless and stifled by being at Warwick for too long and I was not really
clear about what CCRU was doing, where that was going, or what I was doing.
So I left before the point at which all of them ended up detaching
themselves from Warwick, because everyone was finishing their PhDs, Sadie was
no longer there, Nick left or lost his job, and CCRU just became this free-floating
group unattached to an institution. I was there up until the period just before Nick
left, during the extreme number mania period, which was pretty disturbing,
worrying to see it happen. I wrote about this before, but I remember Nick giving
this seminar… at that time, Current French Philosophy was still an entity. And
Nick used to give this seminar in a bar which was called The Airport Lounge, I
don’t know why they built it to look like an airport lounge but it had windows all
the way round, and it was snowing, the snow was swirling round us. And this is at
ten in the morning, Nick hands out these sheets of paper, these diagrams of the
keyboard with the initials of the chapters of A Thousand Plateaus with lines drawn
between them—they’re reproduced in Fanged Noumena. You know, there was
something rare about that just because it was really beyond the bounds of any kind
of social and intellectual propriety, beyond the bounds of embarrassment at not
being intellectually rigorous or socially acceptable, it’s taking exploratory thinking
beyond all of that, you know, something genuinely strange is happening to this
person and we’re participating in it. I probably followed as far as anyone could
into this question of intensive numbering because it was something I’d tried to
work on too, and it was actually connected to the whole question of jungle in
certain ways, but eventually I couldn’t follow it any further either.
So that was worrying but it’s not something you can… we did say to
Nick, ‘We are actually worried about you, people care about you’, but you can’t
say that kind of thing to him. He’d just be like, ‘There’s no need, the entity has
something for me to do…’. Because there were various entities around at that
time, acting through people, that was really something we all cultivated as a more
precise way of talking about processes of production without referring it back to
persons—I guess something that became more and more central to CCRU later.
The Current French Philosophy course became Cur, this entity that puppeted all
the people who had been on that course. And then there was Vauung….
That period was the direct precursor to the material that’s in the CCRU
Writings book, the work they did post-Warwick, which is actually practising that
kind of practical abstraction, that depersonalisation where, by approaching things
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from an external, detached position you end up dealing with these cybernetic
hyperstitional entities or egregores that you treat as if they exist and by virtue of
doing that consistently in a group, in some sense you summon them—that’s a core
part of what CCRU called microcultural production.
The best way to understand what the programme was behind all of this is
by understanding the two words, ‘cybernetic culture’ as a double proposition: on
one side, yes, it was about the fact that computational, cybernetic machines were
playing more of a part in the generation of culture, in the shaping of the cultural
imagination. Of course we are living in ‘a cybernetic society’, a ‘cybernetic
culture’ in that sense. But then also, on the other hand, it was about projecting the
cybernetic understanding back into the very content of culture: trying to
understand cultural production itself as a cybernetic system, grasping how ideas,
images, words and sounds are synthesized and generated, how they spread and
propagate, are taken apart and resynthesized.
And I think that dual perspective was unique at the time. It’s very easy to
see a lineage, isn’t it, between what we were seeing in Wired in the ‘90s and
today’s TED Talks. You know, there’s always been this kind of very optimistic
discourse, which is essentially humanist, even when it’s talking about escaping
from the human body. It’s still humanist in the sense that it doesn’t really question
any of the fundamental conventional ideas of what it is to be human and what is to
be valued. CCRU was something different from the beginning. And I think that
that emphasis on popular culture is important because popular culture is the
culture that is engineered to travel through whole populations, to propagate itself
through machines and mass-produced commodities, and that produces waves of
collective affect and stimulates social change. That was something brought from
their Cultural Studies background but then mutated and developed in new
directions in the new environment.
CH: So, can I ask you what cybernetics you were reading? Was it the
only Wiener and the Americans or was or was there other stuff…?
RM: There was always that historical background, Wiener and so on.
Gregory Bateson. There was also autopoiesis, the work of Maturana and Varela,
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that generation of cybernetic thinking. But I think mostly the excitement came
through this kind of syncretic activity of people like DeLanda who, following
Deleuze and Guattari, used cybernetics as a framework with which to view
anything and everything. And more out-there stuff like Burroughs on addiction.
The central part of that, via Nick, was the question of positive and negative
feedback which, again, is really important in the sense of what today we would
call memetic production: How do you produce culture machines that propagate
themselves? So the cybernetics always had those cultural questions attached to it.
As I mentioned, at Warwick there were these different factions. So there
would have been some who really were going home and carefully studying
scientific papers on the cybernetics of fruitfly cell reproduction or whatever. And
then there were people who were just kind of picking up… I’m not saying this
disparagingly but, just picking up buzzwords, getting a general understanding of
it, and getting excited about it and connecting it to all sorts of other things. I’m
happy to admit I was more in the latter camp. But both of those things were a part
of what was happening, and that’s something that continues to this day, you know,
there’s always a contingent of people who are not scholarly about what they’re
doing, but they also contribute to the production of new syntheses and combining
different disciplines and different subjects and different approaches.
What’s interesting to me is that a group of people who have now revived
the Virtual Futures name, including one of the original organisers, it does have the
appearance of something more like the TED Talks. It seems cleansed of some of
the wilder elements that I found most interesting. And then on the other hand,
CCRU now has become something that people are increasingly into and trying to
find information about, but it seems like people are most interested in playing up
the occultish aspects of it.
CH: The cybernetics stuff is just really interesting to me because it
really feels like the intellectual waters in which so much of contemporary
technoculture swims nowadays. You cannot really avoid cybernetic ideas in
talking about technologically mediated culture.
RM: You know what the absolutely crucial missing link is here,
though? Cyberpunk. Obviously, in the sense that everyone was reading William
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Gibson, also Neal Stephenson, Pat Cadigan and others—but really Gibson was the
central reference—and that seemed to feed into this darker vision of the kind of
networked, technologically enhanced future, artificial intelligence and so on. But
more important than that was cyberpunk as a concept derived from punk, in the
sense of culture not being the domain of any authority, and technology not being
about magnificent, gleaming, perfectly-built corporate robots but about sticking
components together in a basement that you’ve picked up off the street and just,
you know, doing it yourself, even if in a very crude way.
And that’s absolutely how Switch and CCRU operated in real life. I mean,
I remember sitting on the floor with Mark with two VCRs, copying the same two
seconds of Terminator over and over again from one tape to another to make one
of these presentations, or filming the TV screen with a camcorder and solarizing
it, or whatever. And that was the attitude to the theoretical work as well: plug
things into one another, stitch stuff together. The Deleuzian/Guattarian term
‘assemblage’ is key to that cyberpunk understanding of materials: that there’s no
privileged level of theoretical or practical treatment, that everything plugs into
everything else on different planes, on the ragged edges. That conception of doing
cybernetics prevailed in CCRU over the scientific or rational exploration of the
concepts of cybernetics, because CCRU was always more concerned with doing
enough theory to enable cultural production.
Something I still try to stay true to myself is finding the correct balance
between these things: yes, you have to do a certain amount of theoretical work and
know the coordinates within which you’re working. Yes, there’s knowledge
production going on; but it’s always within the framework of cultural production,
in which you’re not standing above the thing that you’re talking about, you’re a
part of it, you’re participating in it and examining the effects, the feedback. That’s
also I think an antidote that Mark and myself arrived at in order to counteract the
kind of impostor syndrome you can get when as someone socially ‘unqualified’
you venture into an area like philosophy, and you always know someone haughty
is going to tell you you’ve got this or that detail wrong or that you haven’t taken
something into account. Deleuze and Guattari in a sense give us permission to do
this, to just plug theoretical machines into other machines and see what happens,
see what works.
So that’s exactly the kind of attitude CCRU had towards music, probably
conditioned by their prior involvement in Cultural Studies: there’s nothing
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interesting about just theorising about music. What you want to do is somehow
plug writing into the types of operations that are going on in the musics that excite
you. If you are compelled by the kind of cybernetic operations, the types of
synthesis that are happening in a certain music, whether it’s hip-hop or jungle, and
if you think that music expresses something crucial about contemporary reality,
then somehow work out how to plug writing into that and participate in it rather
than analysing it or writing about it.
CH: Yeah. I mean, that really comes across in the CCRU material that
you sent me. What was so interesting is the DIY cottage-industry style production
aesthetic across the Abstract Culture zine, the events you were putting on etc. I
didn’t realise that Collapse was originally a sort of fanzine.
RM: Yeah, the original one. I was doing ***collapse at Warwick
before Sadie and SWITCH arrived. And that was, for me, a kind of personal
release from academic work…. you know, I have spent my whole life now dealing
with books and quasi-‘academic’ materials, but I have just never really liked
universities that much, and I’ve always had this other kind of energy that doesn’t
fit there—basically what we were just saying, ‘cultural production’: I just want to
make stuff. I didn’t really know what I was doing and I wasn’t even immersed in
zine culture or anything, I just started making it, together with another student in
the philosophy department, Robert O’Toole, after meeting Nick and being
involved with this mini-community in the Warwick philosophy department.
***collapse became the expression of the most rabid punk side, the least academic
side, of what was going on at Warwick. I should also mention Michael Carr, a
peculiar chap who apocryphally, had been ejected from Warwick for telling the
then head of department David Wood to fuck off, in Latin, but who used to still
turn up every now and again, and who would make these unsolicited insane
photocopy posters for ***collapse. There was a whole cottage industry aspect to
***collapse. I used to get hundreds of stickers printed up and plaster the whole
campus with them, and go and leave copies of ***collapse in the University
newsagent shelves—‘surcapitalism’, I called it…. And somehow, I guess through
Nick, then through Sadie, the SWITCH crew had seen ***collapse and they
thought it was cool that these things were going on at Warwick.
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Similarly, when the CCRU kind of existed as a semi-official entity, Mark
and I would be the ones being annoyingly impatient about the production of some
external object. I think that was something that I always shared with Mark, this
impatience, always saying, ‘We’re talking about it but what are we going to
make? Let’s make something.’ So within the CCRU, subsequent to ***collapse,
that gave rise to the Abstract Culture journal, which I designed and which carried
on after I left, with the Digital Hyperstition issue. Abstract Culture was far more
together content-wise, where ***collapse really had just been an eruption of
delirious technoid nonsense made for the sake of making something.
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CH: There was also an actual CD release by CCRU.
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RM: Nomo, yeah.
CH: Could you just tell me about that?
RM: That was quite a bit later. First of all, to set the scene: Mark,
obviously, was totally into music writing and immersed in post-punk music. While
he was in Birmingham, or before that in Manchester, he was in this band called DGeneration, which was a kind of nihilistic, electronic punk or something; I don’t
know how to describe it. So, it was Mark and his friend Simon Biddell, I believe. I
don’t know if they ever actually played gigs or anything, but they put out one
record.
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And then on the first issue of ***collapse, myself and Ben Greenaway,
who was also part of this circle of people around Virtual Futures, had done this
tape, which was a reading of Nick’s text, ‘Meltdown’ by one of the early Apple
powerbook system voices, on top of some ambient techno done by Alan Boorman,
who was someone I knew from my home town, he was part of the local music
scene there, he’s now in the dada-esque band Wevie Stonder, but in those days he
was doing techno. So I think I had really come to this idea of combining
theoretical text and music myself in some way. I don’t think I’d had any
discussions with anybody about the idea of putting theory with music. It was just
something I did, again, out of this compulsion to make something. But it was
obviously an idea that was very much reinforced later.
In that first year of CCRU, other students came to study with Sadie
including Luciana Parisi, and Steve Goodman, later to become Kode9. At the
same time Anna Greenspan, who would be one of the core members of CCRU,
began an MA.
I think Steve’s presence ended up being galvanizing not just in reinforcing
the importance of music, but in the possibility of communicating with actual
practice and the scene itself. Steve wasn’t yet producing then, but he was a DJ and
knew what he was doing. He actually came from playing funk and then hip-hop, I
think, but by that time he had been closely following the evolution of jungle for a
few years and was an avid collector. So, you know, he was the cool one who dared
to go into a record shop and knew which were the right records to buy. During that
time I helped Steve learn Cubase because the year before I’d started making really
bad happy hardcore and pseudo-jungle tracks on a Sound Blaster sound card on
my PC. I was making mostly really terrible tracks pretty much continuously
throughout ’96 and ’97, and I used to record them onto tape and make everyone
listen to them. Steve and I also ran a jungle night at the Warwick Student Union,
which was called Ko::Labs. So I think once these new recruits had arrived, the
music side of things intensified further, we basically had our own club night that
was effectively a testbed for jungle phenomenology.
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There were also several CCRU productions, produced either for Virtual
Futures and other events, or made afterwards out of the materials. The track Gray
Matter is a good example of that integration of music and text, I’d taken a
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recording of a paper co-written by CCRU and spoken by Anna Greenspan, and I
took samples from that and integrated them in to a jungle track. There was a lot
more of that stuff than is actually extant today, although we’re turning things up
every now and then. Essentially, every time anyone was invited to give a
presentation, we would try to turn it into one of these multimedia things.
Swarmachines is an even better example. I think the story behind that one
is that in January 1996, Sadie had been invited to give a talk about situationism at
this conference at the Hacienda in Manchester, and we all produced
Swarmachines, which was a cut up-text where everyone contributed and then I
mixed a jungle soundtrack and we recorded the vocals and laid them over the top.
That must have been before Steve was around, because I did that by mixing it by
using the varispeed on a Tascam 4-track portastudio! It was early on, the
production is credited to ‘SWITCH/***collapse/CCRU’.
When we were sitting there writing the text together, we were just passing
stuff round and saying, ‘The bit you wrote could go here… no, move that bit
there’. It was a kind of collective cut-up method, it was literally taped together on
the floor of Mark’s flat in Birmingham.
And then we read the text, recorded the voices, and I remember me and
Mark sitting at my PC, putting different effects on all the different voices.
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Eventually, after four hours or so, we were so bored of it we were just saying,
‘Yeah, just do like a molar time-stretch on that one. Next…’. We were doing all
this as fast as possible the day before the conference. And the voice track was then
laid down on the 4-track on top of the music and mixed down onto a cassette to
take to Manchester.
That wasn’t just cyberpunk, it was totally inept cyberpunk—but just using
whatever we had, including our weak technical skills.
Steve was someone who was more sophisticated than that, he was far
more embedded in music culture and confident in how production should be done,
more than any of us were. But yeah, there were quite a lot of these experiments in
text, music, and then in putting the two together.
The Afrofutures event happened during ’96, organised by CCRU, with
Kodwo Eshun, and that now seems very much a pioneering event, thematically.
My memory is a little fuzzy on that but I know Steve DJed and I remember I got
to play at least one of my more experimental tracks called ‘Dread Afriq’ which
was in effect a kind of musical exploration of certain aspects of my
Wildstyle piece.
Then there was Katasonix at Virtual Futures ’96, which I did the music
for and Nick did the text with the artist collective Orphan Drift, who became
heavily involved in CCRU in the latter years. Now, that’s VF ’96 so this is the one
where CCRU semi-‘took over’. It was really a performative testbed for all of these
ideas. There was a series of four or five presentations, all of which were someone
speaking their text over a musical background that had been specifically shaped,
produced for the occasion.
So, Angus Carlyle, who was in SWITCH…
CH: Is he a sound artist?
RM: He is now, yeah, and he teaches sound art practice. He gave a talk
about corporeality and boxing, that text is in one of the issues of Abstract Culture
I think, and for that we mixed this loop out of Wu-Tang Clan, put it through
various filters, so the talk was given as a kind of performance over that. Rohit
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Lekhi did a piece called Black Bedlam, which I also made some kind of
atmospheric audio texture to go behind. There’s also a remix I did of one of his
papers called ‘Futureloop’, that was done around the time of ‘Gray Matter’.
Katasonix was the most sophisticated one, probably, it was a proper track
that I made out of breakbeats, with an ear to this question of the acoustic
correspondence between the beats and the components of speech. I really liked
that track, but I’ve never been able to find a copy of it since, or any footage of the
event.
So, VF96 was an opportunity CCRU used to try out that mixture of
theoretical text and sound, music, and use it as a performance—and to morph what
was a conference into a rudimentary kind of theory gig, I don’t know if it was
‘successful’ and probably that’s not really the point. But, reflecting this schism
that had taken place during preparation, the audience response was very much
mixed. There were people who had been coming to Virtual Futures since the first
one in ’94 who were like, ‘What’s this? There’s no one talking about cyberspace.
What’s any of this got to do with the future? What’s any of this got to do with the
virtual?’ And then maybe there were others who got into it. There are a lot of
people that I’ve met ten years, fifteen years on who were there and who remember
it.
CH: So when did the Nomo CD happen, and was it actually released in
any form?
RM: In 1999, the group who had more or less held together as CCRU—
Mark Fisher, Anna Greenspan, Nick Land, Suzanne Livingston, and Steve
Goodman—Mark, Anna and Nick having been largely responsible for most of the
material that appears in CCRU Writings, the real core pandemonium/CCRU
mythos stuff, they moved from Leamington to London, or gradually people ended
up in London. And they were somehow offered the opportunity to do this show at
Beaconsfield Gallery. And the Nomo CD was produced for that. It was the first
and only time, I suppose, that CCRU had been funded to do something.
But that was preceded by Steve and Mark’s KataJungle EP, which was
this kind of weird Gothic-nihilistic-UK-garage genre. I think that was the first
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record Steve put out, one of the tracks is credited to Kode9. And that must have
been around the same time.
Along with the Nomo CD, there was also another CD, Radius Suck, and a
catalogue/booklet that they made with Orphan Drift. And the show also included
there were also the diagrams that are at the back of Fanged Noumena, they were
all in the exhibition as well blown up into poster size, they were pages out of
Nick’s notebook, basically.
I remember going to that show and feeling there was something not
altogether convincing about how it was working, or that the setting was unsuited
to the material. Part of it was that I was then at quite a distance from it all, I hadn’t
participated in the preceding intense period of productivity and insanity, I’d just
gone and got a job and forgotten all about it…but another thing was the
importation of CCRU into the contemporary art gallery context—What do you do
with this white room?—and there were people wandering around nonchalantly and
not really knowing what was going on or how to deal with it except in a vague
respectful art-spectator way. It was a very different environment to the CCRU
collective as I remembered it, which was always a compact working environment,
and, as I said, I was always the one interested in producing replicable products
rather than performance.
I think also that show happened at the time when things were falling apart
—or it contributed to them falling apart. I know it was a very stressful, difficult
time for everyone involved.
The CD seems like a kind of continuation of what we were doing in those
earlier years. I think it was interesting in terms of Steve’s later work as Kode9, his
theorisation of the hyperdub continuum, and the birth of dubstep, that what you
hear on that CD is very much the idea of the beats being there virtually, there’s
this kind of pulsing through it, which is at jungle speed, but the beats are hardly
ever there, they just emerge from this murk every now and again. You don’t have
theoretical text over the top, it’s almost like the theory’s kind of putresced into a
few remaining elements that surface every now and again from the sea of slime.
So it’s almost like the digestion of theoretical activity by sound has been
consummated in those pieces. To be honest, it’s not something I listen to often—
but it’s an interesting further stage in that whole process.
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CH: Whose are the voices on Nomo?
RM: Usually there was a preference for female voices, partly because
the affect of the female voice always was more effective in that context, just as an
empirical observation that seemed to hold true; partly because sonically it just
works a lot better. On Nomo you hear Anna Greenspan and Suzanne Livingston
most prominently, but Nick is in there too.
At the time when it was a quasi-official entity, the people active in CCRU
would have been Mark, Nick, Sadie until she left, Anna, Suzanne and Steve and
Luciana. That would have been the core group I think. But there were never really
like membership cards or anything so it was always fluid…Rohit Lekhi, Tom
Epps, Iain Hamilton Grant, Kodwo Eshun and others were associated at some
time.
The weird thing is, you know, we’ve all been in touch more since Mark
died, it’s a sad fact that it took that, but it’s been interesting to talk to others who
were there and realise they have the same feeling about it: ‘Something really
important happened and then it just totally disappeared and I’ve been wondering
ever since what it was’.
CH: To what extent was music deemed to be something special or
significant within this assemblage of different references that includes cyberpunk
theory, cybernetics? And could you tell me a bit about this relationship that music
had to the future in CCRU?
RM: I would say music really entered as an important element with the
birth of CCRU and the arrival of Sadie and her students. That’s when we all began
to formulate more attentively the way in which it could play a role.
Before then, I think, there was a kind of vague thing about, you know,
‘We’re interested in cybernetics and the future, therefore, we listen to electronic
music’. And as I mentioned there had been a club night associated with Virtual
Futures. But that was as far as it went. What arose with the CCRU was this
understanding, firstly, that as a subject of analysis, highly synthetic electronic
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music was interesting particularly in so far as it was a futuristic form that emerged
out of a cultural process largely unplanned by any overarching narrative—a
process that was not part of a mainstream self-conscious modernism, for example.
Read through the framework of works like Paul Gilroy’s Black Atlantic,
there was also the idea of black music as resulting from a forcible virtualisation of
culture, which then reinvented itself with whatever happened to be at hand—in a
cyberpunk way—the idea of hybridisation in hip-hop, Kraftwerk being
transplanted into the Bronx and turned into something else…all of this fitted well
with kind of the idea of the assemblage and so on. So, there was this idea that this
lineage of music was exemplary for a cybernetic cultural analysis, precisely in
these two different senses that I’ve mentioned, a culture of the cybernetic age, and
culture as cybernetics.
But then there was also a second thing, which was that this music and the
experience of this music in what was, I guess, by that time, the post-rave scene,
the actual bodily experience of the music, was seen as acting like a kind of
antidote to ‘white-man-Reason’, you know, all of the classic enemies of post-’68
thinking. There is the Nietzschean idea that the philosophical exercise of reason is
intimately linked with a kind of repressive body posture, a way of holding the
body, a way of not experiencing the body—and that’s something that is inevitably
blown apart by the experience of music, and especially with the kind of bass
engineered specifically to induce rhythmic dance and to shake up and disrupt the
body.
So there were those two senses in which, as something to analyse or as a
model, the latest electronic music seemed particularly promising, and as
something to experience, it seemed to disintegrate theoretical structures or it
seemed like something that you could use as a meditative aid to find new lines of
thought through bodily experience.
So, that’s why, in particular, jungle became important and at that point it
was almost as if techno became the enemy because of its 4/4 rigidity and its lack
of syncopation and polyrhythm. You know, there’s a certain amount of caricature
in that: you could say that those two factions who were fighting over Virtual
Futures were also fighting over a model of music: druidic trance techno on the one
hand, as a kind of representative of the great monorhythmic priesthood of metric
regularity for the purposes of transcendence, and jungle on the other hand as this
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kind of weird multitemporal hybrid entity dedicated to picking apart the body and
disrupting it with polyrhythm and with bass. So, there was that kind of ideological
level to it, as well. As in all these things, you can’t overstate the importance of
Mark’s polemical character in this—that played a big role—when Mark became
an advocate of something, true to the spirit of musical tribalism, he was inevitably
fiercely against something else. And I think Nick also had and still has this belief
if you can produce a schism, then you should. So there were perhaps a lot of
cartoonish ideological divides being drawn with this hardline partisanship for
jungle, it became emblematic beyond just the music.
But I think what’s interesting is that this kind of idea of the experiential,
the idea of blackness and hybridity, the idea of virtualisation, this whole complex
around the experience of music that is on what Steve calls the ‘hyperdub
continuum’, i.e. polyrhythmic bass-heavy music which is, in a sense, a part of the
evolution of an engineered system, a collective evolution of effective technologies
for mobilising the body.
That’s all part of the discourse today, right? There’s a lot of writing and
thinking about that now. As I said, CCRU were doing Afrofuturism back in ’96!
But what’s really interesting here is the counterpoint between that and a
philosophical analysis coming from the other direction and looking into what
these cultures of sound are doing, the fact that their computational and acoustic
engineering is driven by practical imperatives—the music has to perform in a
certain way in a club—and what the technical operations consist in.
At a theoretical level we can see the operations happening in jungle in
terms of the type of thinking we were looking at then, and in particular that
chapter in A Thousand Plateaus, ‘Geology of Morals’, where D&G try to produce
a model of immanent materialism that escapes from hylomorphism by using
Hjelmslev’s theory of linguistics, which is already a bizarre hybrid of geology and
linguistics whereby, rather than having form and matter, you have a proliferation
and ramification of stratification processes—expression of content, content of
expression, content of form…the essential idea being that there’s never a
transcendent mechanism that imparts form to matter. There are always two series
or two types of matter, which interact to produce a plane of consistency.
Now you have this idea of double articulation. The classic model would
be geology, where you have particles that are formed in a certain way and are then
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selected, compacted and sedimented into a plane of consistency. So one thing I
tried to expand on, and which we talked about a lot, was the sense in which the
sonic technologies deployed in jungle served to break apart the double articulation
of sound.
Basically, if you think of the stave, that’s a heavily coded obvious double
articulation, because you have the notes as pre-packaged entities which become
inviolable units that can be arranged along the stave. And in a sense that
constrains your access to the matter, the virtual matter (what Hjelmslev calls
‘purport’) of sound, and the two articulations—packaging sound into notes,
arraying notes on the stave—are inseparable and in a relation of reciprocal
presupposition. But in the same way, going ‘further down’, even a waveform as a
conventional way to represent sound, is double-articulated, if you think about the
classic two-dimensional display of a waveform, you have samples of amplitude
against time, and again the matter of sound—which basically is intensity,
displacement, what happens ‘between samples’—is in a sense screened by this
operation of double articulation. The crucial thing is that the double articulation, in
actual fact, is not ‘perpendicular’ as it seems to be. It is produced by a kind of
folding of temporal perception (at the point where rhythm becomes tone).
And it seemed to us that the operations that were happening in jungle
tended to kind of collapse this double articulation and open up access to an
extended immanence of sound, and therefore promised new ways to construct and
experience sound.
One sense in which that is the case is when you’re exploring the territory
between percussive units and waveforms. So, if you have a snare and you repeat it
and bring it closer and closer and closer together, until you produce a kind of
buzz, you know, that becomes a tone. And you can pitch the sample up and down
and create these elastic runs of percussive samples that become tonal glissandi.
This is something that regularly happens in jungle, a slippage where encapsulated
units of sound freighted with a semantic status are ‘melted down’ and used as
sonic particles to forge some other fluid sonic phenomenon. So essentially in this
music there are produced spontaneously certain methods of problematising the
objectivity of the sound object.
Most importantly there is the use of timestretching endemic to jungle, and
the idea that timestretching is a fundamental diagonalization of the double
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articulation of acoustic time itself as expressed in the waveform, whereby, given a
recording on a physical medium, you usually can’t speed up its playback without
making the pitch higher. In violating this principle by using digital sampling, it’s
almost as if timestretching breaks time itself. That’s the affect of timestretching,
that’s how it feels when you listen to it, but also there’s a deeper kind of truth to it.
The score of Steve Reich’s 1967 conceptual piece, Slow Motion Sound
consists only of the command: Very gradually slow down a recorded sound to
many times its original length without changing its pitch or timbre at all. You can
see the later piece 1970 piece Four Organs as a realization of this idea, but only in
so far as the rigour of the instruction is essentially compromised, because one can
immediately hear that the difference between Reich’s original plan and this
realisation corresponds to a radical difference in register; that between a musical
operation and a sonic operation. Instead of the elongation of a sound (sound as
material object of the operation), Four Organs now elongates notes (notes as
preformed sonic structures, upon which the operation will be carried out).
In fact, a realisation of Reich’s piece would now be quite feasible using
timestretching, which was born in the 1960s with tape technologies, but only
became realistically viable for music production from the 1980s by virtue of
rapidly-accelerating processor speeds; because timestretching achieves this
impossible goal of slowing down a recorded sound without altering its pitch,
violating the reciprocal relation (double articulation) between duration and pitch.
The crucial thing here is, just as, in a sense, ‘below’ all geological
stratifications, all different rock formations, there is the same virtual material
(what D&G call ‘the body of the earth’), beneath all organised sound we can
similarly postulate a sonic virtuality. The ‘line of flight’ out of sonic articulation is
achieved precisely to the extent that one is able to access that virtuality, which is
the ultimate material basis of all sonic organization.
The terms ‘molar’ and ‘molecular’ are generally understood in a rather
vague way by commentators on Deleuze and Guattari’s work. In fact, ‘molar’
derives from the mole, an international standard term of measurement which
identifies the number of particles in a given amount of matter. For any given
atomic system, a mole is the amount of substance of that system which contains as
many elementary entities as there are atoms in 12 grams of carbon 12. In the same
way, we might say, a ‘note’ or a ‘sample’ presupposes a convention that is an
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arbitrary and externally-imposed statistical fiction in relation to the virtual matter
of sound. What we were looking for in jungle is moments when instead, a
molecular relation to sound is achieved—so to speak, an experience of sound from
the inside of matter.
But isn’t timestretching just a kind of trick? It’s never perfect, and all it
really does is cut up a recording more or less finely and duplicate and splice
waveforms to make it longer. Moreover, that process always produces weird
artefacts—which early jungle made a virtue out of, in the same way that people
now use autotune.
Reich’s specification was to lengthen the piece ‘without changing its pitch
or timbre at all’, and whereas you can easily cut up and stretch out a simple sine
wave, ‘timbre’ implies that the sound in question is more complex than this. and
the problem with which digital pitch-shifting or timestretching algorithms always
have to deal, is that they operate by slicing up a sound and duplicating and
splicing its parts; and it is impossible to find a ‘slicing’ frequency that will leave
all of the overtones intact; some will be sliced at the wrong point, producing
artefacts in the stretched sound. That’s what produced those metallic, shimmering
effects so characteristic of the timestretched samples in early jungle tracks.
But what is the criteria for judging the success of a timestretching
operation, for it not being ‘just a trick’? It could only be a comparison with a nonexistent, transcendentally impossible reality. The question, whether a
timestretched sample of a piano chord really is what a piano chord would sound
like were it stretched, seems a nonsensical one, unless we understand it to mean
‘were the pianist to sustain the chord for longer’, in which case we have missed
the point and are back with the compromise of Four Organs. In reality, to elongate
a note has no meaning outside the reciprocal relationships of speed and pitch, i.e.
inside sonic time. You simply cannot make ‘the same’ sound longer except by
slowing it down. Talking about it as artificial assumes a standard of reality we do
not have. So I would say that those artefacts are in a sense the audible indication
of a straining against the limits of sonic time. What if instead of timestretching
just being a ‘trick’, time itself was just an artificial capture mechanism imposed
upon perception by the evolutionarily contingent folding of the sonic
continuum…? It’s not that timestretching is a ‘cheap trick’ because it lacks the
profundity of the form of time it claims to subvert; instead, that form of time itself
never had anything profound about it, it was simply a matter of foldings, double
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articulations.
So, in short, it seemed like there was this whole set of operations which
were breaking apart the double articulation of sound, the way in which sound is
packaged and is expected to be delivered in certain types of units, if you like.
In that sense then, jungle also became a kind of model for diagonalizing.
How do we escape from double articulation? How do we escape from the strata, at
all scales? We looked in these new sonic operations as kind of exemplary models
for how one can operate this destratification, this return to the potential of virtual
matter, called for by Deleuze and Guattari.
The notion of diagonalization involves producing some machine within
the double articulated system—because we’re inside the strata, that’s where we
start—something that slowly breaks it apart or, to put it another way, disinters the
material continuum beneath the double articulation. That notion was hugely
important.
I remember being at a party and talking to Nick, and Nick scribbling in
his notebook about this. And, being dedicated Kantians, we were like, ‘It’s the
transcendental deduction of jungle.’ But yeah, I think what’s interesting to me
once more is this cybernetic/culture thing: how it’s come from both of those
angles. The experience of the music enables you to start thinking in certain ways,
but you can also do a theoretical analysis of what’s going on inside the sound that
you can then transfer to other realms.
[TBC]
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