Later
this week I’ll be giving a talk in Berlin as part of the Apocalypse Now (And
Then) festival. The week after, I’ll be in Tartu, Estonia, to give a talk as
part of the Prima Vista literary festival
1/ BERLIN
Apocalypse Now (And Then): The End of the World in Pop Culture(Thursday 3 May
— Saturday 5
May 2012)
My talk - “The Endless End, or, Better To Burn Out Than To Fade Away” - is at 7-30pm, Thursday 3 May.
It is followed at 9pm by a discussion with myself, Jens Balzer, Falko McKenna and Tobias Rapp.
Apocalypse Now (And Then) is curated by Christoph Gurk and Tobias Rapp. Other festival participants
include Greg Tate, Kodwo Eshun, Kode 9, The Caretaker, Diedrich Diederichsen, Christina
Striewski, Jens Balzer, Tracey Rose, Aethenor...
Location: HAU 1 theatre, Stresemann Strasse 29. Hebbel am Ufer, 10963 Berlin
(The next day I’ll be heading on to Tallinn, and the day after
that, making sure to rise at 5-AM so I can see what it looks like at dawn)
nuum / post-nuum / anti-nuum
1/ "End of the Road"
probing piece by Martin Clark for FACT on road rap and its implications for the (uncertain-looking) future of the hardcore continuum
"Pirate radio is being replaced with a primary medium that is
indistinguishable from media used by all other musical continuums, road
rap is absorbing grime’s road energy into hip-hop’s traditions, house
continues to satisfy ravers’ need to dance without a strong sense of
local identity, breakbeat/bass science rudeness or flava. Grime and UK
funky continue to iterate in interesting ways, ways that show real
promise but can’t claim the seismic bursts of intense energy they once
saw. Dubstep fans who reject brostep have dispersed into either purist
halfstep traditionalist stasis (“the dungeon sound”), floating islands
of the post-dubstep archipelago, trad European house and techno,
homogenizing crate-digging revivalism and eclecticism, US trap rap and
juke. So what’s next?"
2/ same old scene-not-scene
"What all three
tracks share in common is a profound, almost militant, resistance to the
immediate, booming gratification that the vast majority of contemporary
club music promises. Turning bass-music formulae inside out, they
represent the anti-drop. But here's the other thing: these tunes are so
extreme, in their own ways, that they don't exactly invite imitation.
They're difficult and hermetic; they don't play well with others"--Philip Sherburne, fromThe Genre That Shall Not Be Named (Dubstep)
Surprised to to see Phil, hitherto a comrade in neologistic arms, taking the naming = restriction stance here
of course what he's talking about does have a name, an unsatisfactory placeholder name: postdubstep
nu-IDM is what I used to call it for a while and i couldn't help flashing on that in this description:
"Objekt's
"Cactus"... was the first to catch
my ear with a weird inversion of dance-music energies: its bass wobbles
with the ferocity of the down-and-dirtiest dubstep, but the rest of the
tune feels gutted and hollowed-out.The drum track seems to be missing
information, as though a mute button had been pressed or a patch cable
had come unplugged; for all its heaviness, it's a weirdly enervated
tune, gliding listlessly like a sailboat stuck in the doldrums. I've
never heard it in a club, and I can only imagine that it would be tough
to play effectively"
[great youtube comment on this: "it's like someone put 1995 through a paper shredder" !!]
Phil
pinpoints what may well be the most interesting and revealing characteristic
of these hybrids, which is that they are one-offs...
"Jabbed
like iron rods into the clockwork of the night, they feel less like
seeds for potential subgenres and more like weed killer, burning off the
overgrowth."
hybridisation, in the era when analogue mediation still dominated, seemed to take the form of, well, forms...
new forms... these became the focus, the centripetal attractor, for a
collective surge, a
swarming... scenius logic: a strong new template off which
myriad minor variations could be "seeded" (to use Phil's organicist
metaphor)... this then created a monolithic vibe (Amentalism... Wobblism being the last of these -isms?) that
was both
impressively/oppressively total at any given rave or club night... but that also had
staying
power (a new template like breakbeat science, or bass-science, could last five or six
years before all the potential permutations got played out)
hybridisation,
in the post-broadband era (which quickly led to the not-quite-total-but-near-enough eclipse of analogue mediation) seems to rarely lead to anything.... anything much. Hence the the one-off hybrids.... they are non-generative, non-genre-ative.... instead, there's an interminable series of momentary
agglomerations... a particular collation of networked influences mesh inside a producer's digital audio software...
offering further thoughts on this zone and "the anti-drop" Rory Gibb at Quietus notes how "these
very UK-sounding hybrid forms don't exist in a vacuum. They're all held
suspended by a tangled web of reference points, connections and
affiliations. More so than, say, many early dubstep and grime producers [i.e. early 2000s, before broadband really seriously eclipsed the analogue channels-- hard to remember, but emergent/golden-age grime barely had any web presence],
many of these producers have a deep knowledge of music stretching far
beyond their immediate surrounds."
the more
connectivity in the post-geographical sense (and atemporal,
archive-raiding sense), the less connection to a here-and-now.... the
more that artists are drawn out of a fully current,
geographically-situated musical conversation... (a continuum)
as well as undermining the conditions for scenius to emerge, this centripetal, dis-integrative logic (inherent to digiculture, to networks?) seems to extend the other direction too...
to worm itself inside the practice of the individual producer... conceivably, it's as anti-genius as it is anti-scenius
for, at
the extreme, even the artist doesn't develop a personal style...
doesn't repeat themselves... each new track is another genre-of-one
style is related to a measure of inflexibility, a measure of
predictability... that's how we recognise artistic signature.... but in
the ultra-flexibilized conditions of digiflux, the artist is
encouraged to endlessly differ from himself or herself, is pulled
every-which-way by the same forces that (as described in Martin Blackdown's piece) are
dis-integrating the nuum
genre = collectivised style... it too depends on an element of inflexibility, an element of predictability... on lockstep
3/ oh those analogue days, those economy-of-scarcity days
A: Hardcore was what got me started buying music on vinyl, yeah. And it
was literally ‘cos you couldn’t get it anywhere else. I didn’t have
decks at the time, I couldn’t mix; I was like 11 or 12 years old. But I
used to save my pound lunch money every day, ‘cos the records were a
fiver, and on Fridays I’d go down to Wax City Records in Croydon..... At the
same time I was picking up flyers and it was like the same thing with
that, I started collecting flyers and just….being part of it. Being part
of that hardcore thing... It was all
about, if you’ve got it, then you were hardcore [laughs]. What I try to
do at the moment [with Swamp81] – it’s a similar kind of ethos. The
music’s there on vinyl. If you want to go and get it, you can; I’m not
gonna shout about it, I’m not gonna try to get it into HMV or whatever
the fuck the high street record store is now [laughs], I’m not gonna go
digital, I’m not gonna do all that shit… so it’s like, it’s over here.
If you want to be part of it, you can be, but you’ve got to make a bit
of effort. And that’s kind of what hardcore was about. If you made the effort to find your local independent record shop,
if you made the effort to get the flyer to go to the rave – ‘cos without
the flyer you literally wouldn’t know about it, there was no internet,
there weren’t many adverts, at least not for the smaller raves – then
you were hardcore. If you did make that effort, then you were accepted,
you were in a kind of gang, a club. It was a special thing, and it was
linked into the record shops, the vinyl, the pirates, the flyers – it
was all this one thing together. That was hardcore for me.
Over the next two weeks I'll be visiting Harvard to deliver the keynote speech at a symposium on art + pop and going to Chicago to talk about Retromania at the Museum of Contemporary Art.
1/ TINNITUS: a symposium on art and rock’n’roll
date: Saturday, April 21
time: 9:15 AM Keynote Lecture by SR
location: Harvard Hall (room 104), Harvard University (Johnston Gate)
coming soon: details of my European mini-tour in early May: appearances at the Apocalypse Now (And Then)conference in Berlin (3rd to 5th) and at the Prima Vista literary festival in Tartu, Estonia (7th)
Sunday, April 15, 2012
Thursday, April 12, 2012
That's Not Funny, That's Ick
" 'Ick' means something. It either means you’re offended politically or you think something was morally compromised, or you find someone unattractive. So why don’t we articulate this 'ick' a little?" -- Lena Dunham, on reactions to the sex-not-sexy scenes in Girls
The Spanish translation of Retromania, published by Caja Negra, "premieres" at the Buenos Aires Book Fair on April 15th, and will be available in bookstores in other Spanish-reading nations in May.
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Q/A with me, part of The Guardian's series of mini-interviews with authors on the occasion of the paperback edition of their book
audio of the "Critical Mass: Music Theory in the Information Age" panel at the Off The Page festival February, 2012 - chaired by Anne Hilde Neset (The Wire) and featuring Andrew Male (Mojo), Frances Morgan (The Wire), Jennifer Lucy Allan (The Wire)and myself
Monday, April 09, 2012
the missus interviews Lena Dunham, creator of Girls
Tuesday, April 03, 2012
hipster hardkore (w/ Julianna Barwick as 4AD-ethereal-girl --as per lisa deadcandance on FSOL's "Papua New Guinea" or liz cocteau on messiah's "temple of dreams" -- except not sampled but the guest-vocalist)
Monday, April 02, 2012
And another -- Bat says "you forgot Attack The Block!" which is "brilliant"
excellent mix by Mordant Music at Vice Italia
a lovely pair of pieces from Neil Kulkarni on Oliver Postgate and children's teevee then and now
which makes him a perfect icon for connectivity: the same data-flows that join together the world financial system and enable the flightiness of capital also allow for the mobility of cultural capital from local scenes to global ubiquity... at the start of the Blackberry commercial, he speaks of traveling the world "collecting influences"
reminded me of what Arthur Kroker and Michael A. Weinsteinwrote in the early 90s (in Data Trash) about how digital music technology prefigured transformations to cultural economy under globalisation: sampling as "the harvesting of energy from the local and the bounded for the global and unbounded"; samples as "archived body parts... disguised in the binary functionality of data and pooled into larger circulatory flows"; samplers/deejays as "vivisectionists, vampiring organic flesh, and draining its fluids into cold streams of telemetry..."
"Ours is a time of non-history that is super-charged by the spectacular flame-out of the detritus of the bounded energy of local histories"
-
brand new issue of* Dancecult* journal, this one themed around "Doing
Nightlife and EDMC Fieldwork", i.e. participant-observer, i.e. caning it
first and wr...
-
*BASEMENT JAXX
"Red Alert/Yo Yo"
"Rendez-Vu/Jump 'N Shout"
director's cut, Village Voice, February 23rd, 1999
by Simon Reynolds*
Nobody exemplifies the pr...
"who are you, 2013?"
-
talking about retrodance, Martin Clark aka Blackdown takes Disclosure to
task in an open letter
which picks up on a quote Howard from the group said:
*“I ...
-
*FAVES OF THE 2000s aka the NOUGHTIES*
*FAVORITE ALBUMS OF THE 2000S *
0/ The Streets --Original Pirate Material
1/ Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti - The Do...
-
I've now added a bunch of bonus material to the footnotes -- FAQ, unFAQ,
RetroQuotes, articles pegged to or related to the book, interviews with the
author...
-
*FOOTNOTES #5*
**
*CHAPTER 4
CONTORT YOURSELF: No Wave New York
*
*[chapter 9 in the US edition]*
**
*Page 50*
>A British invention
The Sex Pistols’s...
"It's either them or it's me: And it's them"
-
Something was once here, and now it’s gone. Mourn if you will, but please
observe the requirements of the programme; and pay your respects to the
decease...
Message sent, message received
-
*I don't think you trust in my self-righteous suicide*
* *Insider accounts published in the British, French and Indian media have
revealed that US officia...
Siberian Gold
-
*"For help was coming from an unexpected dimension. In 1961, the first
oilfield had been discovered in western Siberia, and by 1969 geologists -
many worki...
Listen to Giorgio Moroder’s first-ever DJ set
-
[image: Listen to Giorgio Moroder's first-ever DJ set]
*The grandfather of modern dance music dazzles a Brooklyn audience in this
75-minute set.*
On Mon...
Crystal Voyagers Pt 1/3
-
Crystal Voyagers: A Journey Through The New Age: Part One from The Wire
Magazine on Vimeo. Watch the first instalment of Crystal Voyagers: A
Journey Throug...
Festival Time
-
I don't really like summer festivals much. All that premeditated fun, mud
and bad music. It's a young man's game. I prefer to stay home where I can
be sure...
CELINE DION – “Think Twice” | FreakyTrigger
-
CELINE DION – “Think Twice” | FreakyTrigger:
I like this record. It’s a good, histrionic, ballad. The review ended up
concentrating on the ways it doesn’t...
Shimmy on Down
-
A new low in corporate clubbing at the Shimmy club in Glasgow, where women
have complained about a two way mirror looking in to the women's toilets
which g...
Watch Pulse Emitter on Experimental Half-Hour
-
For the 37th and latest episode of Experimental Half-Hour-- Portland's
aptly titled experimental music and performance show-- one of the city's
foremost...
Matthew and Pamela
-
Ages ago Matthew came round to the studio to meet my synths. He's the mad
genius behind ALM / Busy Circuits synth modules, in particular *Pamela's
Workout...
THE FEUDALISM OF THE PREMIER LEAGUE
-
In this season's Premier League the margin between 7th and 8th (12 points)
was almost the same as the gap between 8th and the relegation zone (13
points)...
New York City busting shareables
-
*Manhattan, always ahead of the curve. *If left unmolested, of course New
Yorkers are gonna turn their homes into illegal squat hotels. It’s New
York. Anyb...
OBlog: Wheelwright Prize 2013 Winner
-
Gia Wolff, Brooklyn-based architect, wins $100,000 travel grant for her
proposal *Floating City: The Community-Based Architecture of Parade Floats*.
The Rotters' Club
-
Angus Fairhurst, *Gallery Connections*, sketch for presentation, c 1995
Some straggling thoughts on the New/Young British Art topic of earlier...
The arti...
Collision-Detection Box Set (remix)
-
The inevitable remix of the article at Freq
There’s buckets of finely congealed empathy here, beautifully presented. Front
And Follow is an unusual, old-f...
recent publications
-
Some writings that first appeared on this blog have been published
recently. First, the latest print issue of Burning Ambulance comes out
today with my ess...
MUTANT DANCE
-
A HTV Documentary that aired on 02/06/1997 documenting the UK based Mutant
Dance Party Collective and Bristol Free Party Crew gearing up for a free
party t...
Bureau Rock
-
I do find Coldplay a rather fascinating phenomenon. There's a visceral
dislike of them prevalent among the cognescenti; they're viewed as the
epitome of bl...
Fragments on Time: Found Poetry in My Dashboard
-
I have nearly 50 drafts in my blog’s dashboard — waiting, forgotten,
abandoned. This week, I encouraged readers at the Daily Post, one of our
blogs at Word...
Nick Drake - Bryter Layter Boxset Review
-
Nick Drake
Bryter Layter Boxset
(Commercial Marketing)
*"I think that's one of the problems with Nick's legacy, if there is a
problem. I get sent tapes...
I Feel Like A Wog: Part 5 - For Yukio
-
The Stranglers’ relationships with both the Finchley Boys and the Hell’s
Angels would attenuate from 1978 onwards, as the band’s success saw them
playing ...
Brian Eno updates • May 4, 2013
-
IN THIS UPDATE: Eno/Bryan Ferry by Lester Bangs; Brian Eno's Lux; Music For
Hospitals; Steve Reich; Edinburgh Festival; James Blake; Emmylou Harris;
Seun K...
The Past is a Regional Dialect
-
Another dead blog post. This blog refuses to die. Should I just cut off
life support? Should I let it all go? Who the fuck is even listening at
this point?...
Top 10/Bottom 3: May 2013
-
Top 10 What else? Boards of Canada, Tomorrow’s Harvest Make Noise Echophon
Game of Thrones Parks and Recreation New Venture Bros! Portland Timbers A
real ...
How the internet influences what we wear
-
I’m always fascinated with how the internet is impacting other creative
industries beyond music.
On Saturday I took my little sister to The Vogue Festiva...
GendyTrouble
-
Contrary to popular belief, programming sound in environments/languages
such as Supercollider is not just for boys and recent evidence shows how it
can d...
New Beatles Grammar Compilation / November 2026
-
The Beatles are to release the forth in their 'English Grammar best of the
Beatles series', with a new compilation album entitled *The 'Do Not'
Contraction...
ODDS AND SODS AND STILL ALIVE
-
I figure it might be a good idea at this point to say that I'm not shutting
down this blog. I'm hoping to become a little more active again come May,
but w...
The Landscape of Power
-
Sylvia Crowe, P.I.L.A.
The Architectural Press: London
1958
Printed and bound in Great Britain by STAPLES PRINTERS LIMITED
at their Roches...
tweeting on a #sorry day
-
#staring at a beige wall without a window at dusk;
#seeing your lover’s back as an expanse of desertous skin, without curves
or ripples;
#duneless woman...
Three events this week ...
-
1. Wednesday, 13 March at Waterstone's Trafalgar Square: Capitalist
Realism: What is it and how to fight it With Mark Fisher, Peter Fleming and
Alex Niven....
A falling fourth or fifth
-
Bitterly cold this morning in Queens Wood but not too cold to hear the
woman calling her dogs with a fluting falling call – ooh oooh – that
reminded me of ...
How to.
-
A quick note on the text.
To read sequentially just click "earlier posts" at the bottom of each page
or work down the list of posts from Intro. The posts a...
Issue #144 (Feb. 6, 2013)
-
*Centennial Beach, Naperville IL*
Photo by Joe Carducci
------------------------------
------------------------------
*United States of Nigger...
On Swansea City and England
-
I wish there could be an English Swansea City - a club simultaneously
rooted in its community and traditions, outside the control of plutocrats *and
*consc...
scissor lock - churn (self released)
-
Let’s begin with that cover. Because it’s not so much a cover as a framing
device. A freeze frame actually. Taken from the exuberant video to JB’s “Beauty...
Yacht Rock
-
Yacht.
Ca. 1557; variant of yaught, earlier yeaghe (“light, fast-sailing ship”),
from obsolete Dutch jaght(e) (“hunt”) (modern jacht), short for jaghts...
EP MANIA
-
Perhaps the main problem for poststep, the main reason it isn't recognised
as the uncontrolled eruption of revolutionary musical modernism that it is,
is ...
2012 in Music
-
*2K12 IN MUSIC*
Yo, this blog post will be in two sections, Part I dealing with my own
personal year-in-music, and the second a more critical look at some ...
Intro
-
In an interview in early 2012, doom-mongering Swiss Hedge Fund manager Marc
Faber cast a jaundiced European eye back over the last thirty years and
constr...
Get Free stuff and Free perfume sampels
-
Spending some time regarding free gifts on website is always pretty
pleasurable. It’s just like browsing increasingly more to acquire maximum
variety of ...
Babylon Reggae mix by me
-
Babylon Reggae Mix by Marc Dauncey on Mixcloud Here’s a new mix I did – a
selection of Jamaican roots reggae juxtaposed against UK fast chat, dub and
mor...
Tattoos
-
When people with ‘quality’ tattoos are asked to justify them they’ll say
it’s their body and they mean something to them and they’re not obliged to
expla...
Freeparty Photobooks
-
NO SYSTEM Vinca Petersen (Steidl)
Vinca travelled around with various teknotypes in the mid-1990s. A lot of
these snaps feel like holiday fotos and she...
Decadence and Dying Earth, Part 1.5
-
I'm reading Clark Ashton Smith for the first time, and I'm doing so with no
knowledge of the writer's personal life or work outside of *Zothique *and
the t...