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Earthquake (1)
by William D. Routt
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The works of popular art seem particularly invested with time. Popular works age quickly: their materials, physical or cultural, are so notoriously subject to decay, injury, and effacement as to be classed as 'ephemera' by collectors. Perhaps in response to this material condition, popular artworks often seem concerned above all to articulate temporal experience. This is most obviously the case with music, of course, but it is no less true of movies, television programs, comics and fiction - all of which are these days principally understood as ways of telling stories. To be occupied with popular art is to be engaged in a pastime, to be passing the time, spending or dispensing it.
In What Is Philosophy?, Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari choose to begin their chapter on art with the image of a person gazing at a painting: temporarily moved, not temporally moving (163-164). This is an image fit for art taken seriously - which is to say, art defined institutionally - the art everyone knows is art. And, in its canny way, this is also an image of distraction, an illustration and a percept of how art works in our age of technical reproducibilty - if ours is indeed that age, if indeed that age is ours, if indeed art works. It is also an image about which I have written before. (2) But I do not see this image. Instead I see people with wires in their ears, with bobbing heads, with swaying walks, with twitching shoulders: people moving as they are moved. She turns pages faster as the tension mounts. Faced by the screen, she moves her hand before her eyes. Tears, tumescence, shrieking, laughing, clapping. Richard Meltzer writes: |
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The chapter on art in What Is Philosophy? replays a tension of motion and stillness familiar to readers of The Logic of Sense and A Thousand Plateaus, in which chunks of time are deployed within grand metaphorical spaces: series, planes, territories, lines; crossing, traversing, fleeing. The artwork, a thing of sensation incorporating the virtual event, is assigned the chilling name of 'monument' by Deleuze and Guattari. It finds its place in a series that includes bloc, compound, being, matter, zone, body, universe and infinity (not to mention territory) as well as sensation, affect, sensory becoming, and life; the artwork is, then, le tombeau de devenant, the eternally embalmed, undead. (3) And yet, within the crypt, the dead still dance. The work as it is realised, as haeccity, calls forth motion because it moves virtually. Vibrating sensation - coupling sensation - opening or splitting, hollowing out sensation (WIP 168): the famous becoming-Other not the passage from one lived state to another but man's nonhuman becoming (173). Does this matter?
Earthquake. I am told that Ian Hacking has claimed that an earthquake is not an event. Be that as it may, at least one is. (4) It is a recording originally released on the Imperial label, made in a studio in July 1952 in Houston, Texas, and featuring a tenor saxophone played by Joe Houston, backed by Marian McKinley (piano), Robert Gray (bass) and Robert Byrd (drums). After awhile there is some shouting, perhaps by the musicians or perhaps by others. (5) I want to write about the particular experience of time, movement and sound that this recording provokes by adopting something of the character of Jean-Louis Schefer's ordinary man. Music is not my profession, and I do not possess the necessary qualities to speak about popular music except insofar as I listen to it. What I can say, then, is not founded in any of the discourses of musical expertise: I cannot even read a lead sheet. Like anyone else, I am merely music's totally submissive servant and also its judge, yet I am drawn to a research whose object isn't a polished construction, but the enigma of an origin, that is, to write what I hear and feel and understand. (6) Here is what I might do. I might not play this recording incessantly, as I have in writing and speaking about it before, confusing our inner speech with sound. I might instead attempt to diagram its structure, insofar as I am able to apprehend it. Such a structure might consist of 10 'choruses' capped by a brief 'tag' or coda. These choruses might be grouped into large segments reminiscent of chapters or paragraphs or episodes. I might then elucidate the bases upon which I had made my divisions and some of the elements which, nonetheless, link the different episodes and make them consanguinal: doubtless including the six choruses of variation on a single phrase introduced at the beginning of the third chorus (five in a single bloc, one at the end). I might then indicate other structures of affinity and of divergence: repeated rhythmic or melodic motifs, like the low notes ('bomps') which recur at different points throughout, counterbalancing singular noises and effects, like the quick tag phrase which begins the eighth chorus. I might even include some of this in a handy table with aural examples. [See 'Earthquake structure'] And I might attempt some commentary on my affection for what happens - which is only what is expected of this kind of writing. For example, in the liner notes to an album that contains Earthquake, Ken Mills responds to its affect by invoking this species of understanding of musical form as a descriptive foundation: Elements of another approach are, as you may know, evoked in two chapters of A Thousand Plateaus. Here there is an effort to avoid unadulterated spatialisation - an effort which is all the more remarkable in the light of the relentless spatialisation characteristic of that work as much as of What Is Philosophy?. Instead there is a focus, a concentration, on becoming and what it might mean in an understanding of art.
Becoming, yes - in a block.
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Block. Why block? Is there something blocked here, a movement balked just as the lines are thrown for its escape? Don't you imagine a solid square shape (perhaps with alphabet letters raised along its sides), something to be used like a brick to make a wall or, more forcefully, to express love? Becoming what? Woman, child, animal. Surely, in the end, only becoming-block. Becoming blocked. Only then, within the block, not around the block, is there becoming-animal. Deleuze and Guattari are Europeans; they write about the blocked animals on our block: becoming-rat, becoming-wolf. But Joe Houston, like many other rhythm `n' blues tenor saxophonists, plays music about becoming-hog. He grunts. He squeals. He roots. This is an animal from the back blocks, not the city blocks. Rats and wolves squeak and howl, they scurry through the walls and lope over the territory, barely brushing the surface of our block. Joe Houston gets down, down in the shit and the slops. He messes things up, leaves a trail. Rats and wolves are cunning. Joe Houston gets ignorant, hog-ignorant: one idea on his mind, who he is and what belongs to him. Rats and wolves are children of the night and the secret ways. A hog knows no secrets: openly, boastfully, it pounds down its wild ways at noontime, midnight, any time at all, trampling all over the block, all that precious ecology, gnawing those funky black roots - likes this path, let's take it again - well now, look there, that looks interesting; let's go skronch on that. Rats and wolves burrow from underneath and strike in packs from behind. A hog is on you suddenly in raucous fury; one hog and it comes from any side, all sides, and it takes you with it squealing, riding the hog's back, razorback, the hog carries its lunch, tenderising it in the saddle. And we, listening just a little unblocked, becoming, becoming little baby piglets that big hogs eat, riding and ridden by Papamummy, the hog loa. Let me begin again - with the typology exposited in Of the Refrain and transformed into vibration, coupling and splitting in What Is Philosophy?. First a child sings to itself as it wanders in the dark, then home-makers sing as they shore themselves against what is outside, and finally (hi ho, hi ho), the nomad sings, setting off to make a way in the wide, wide world. Each phase of the triptych is a story, and together they make a never-ending story, a bestselling fairytale, that doctrinal weapon of the young Kracauer and the old Gorky. The child: Who was that masked man? The settler: That was the Lone Ranger. The nomad: Hi yo, Silver, awaaaaay! The narrative form is itself as important as the specific open-endedness of Deleuze and Guattari's typology. For narrative surely gives a shape to time; it makes time in the act of passing it. Much structural analysis, much narratology, ignores or downplays the role of time in narrative in the name of synchronicity. Even diachronic analyses often treat story-telling as a species of building with blocks, as V. I. Pudovkin treated montage in the cinema, rather than as growing or journeying. However, in the tale of travelling to and from home, Deleuze and Guattari insist upon an understanding of narrative as the composition of time, as movement and becoming. No activity is ever completed (no one arrives, no territory is secured, no one vanishes over the horizon), there is no time to rest, to catch the breath. (7) I suppose the simplest understanding of Earthquake as the encryption of this story catches the sax-agonist in mid-journey in the two repeated phrases of the first two choruses, casting about for a direction or just pickin' 'em up and puttin' 'em down, the way Illinois Jacquet did on the stage of the Chicago Theatre - at any rate already in motion, virtually travelling. A territory is staked out, a world pole erected, perhaps in the ensuing set of variations on the phrase introduced at the beginning of the third chorus or when the first melodic fragment is quoted suddenly, like a breath released, at the end of a long and frantic rhythmic series. This is Big Jay on the floor with his back arched and his horn pointed toward the sky don't tread on me. And then it may be possible to discern propulsion outward introduced by the launch chorus, or by the suspended-time lick that begins the eighth chorus, or again perhaps along the lyric line of blasts that so enraptures Mills, followed by an abrupt end that is no end, the master disc is running out, the man is signalling from the booth, uh-uh, no more. Or. Perhaps. May be possible. I am not happy with this linear story that branches out, this too-facile mapping of narrative over music, mediated by an imaginary structural diagram. When I listen over, I dream it all again: the wandering, the claiming, the fleeing. Every story has a beginning and a middle and an end, he wrote us, but not necessarily in that order. And I think: in this piece it is all happening at once, three episodes narrated simultaneously in one voice. Every grunt or squeal is at once a cry of panic and a yell of triumph and a shout of farewell. Earthquake is no road system. What we have here are not routes but roots - those funky old roots again, truffles for hogs. And, to my surprise, I have learned something about the form of this recording from that intuition about rhizomic simultaneous narratives. I have learned that Earthquake is not crafted along the sort of trajectory that is sometimes found in the work of rhythm `n' blues tenor players and may be what most of us expect from them; solos which move towards home and settle the sucker like Hal Singer's Hot Rod, solos that take off from home into the stratosphere like McNeely's Deacon's Hop. (8) Instead, the music made by this record attempts to sustain itself in movement and turns aside from reaching anywhere. To listen to this recording in the expectation of something would be to hear nothing, or only failure. Beneath the horn which, I have suggested, moves hog-like, stomping zig-zags and scrawls, humping and wallowing, a little detached, above the beat, there are three other instruments, moving differently, along paths connected by their common roots. The drums jump between noise and silence: they hit, they beat, they slam (earth compressors, Mills says). The bass is walking: it moves easily with relaxed and steady power as it strides ahead, cooling the band, not looking around, never pausing. The piano rolls its boogie: muted, turbulent waves of sound churn across one another, head turning, eyes everywhere, every part of the body snaking, sidewise and forward, back and up and down. These different beats converge into one time, one becoming. I think now I am beginning to think of a form shaped in time: the rhythm of the earthquake, shape of its shuddering.
At first I believed there were two ways in which rhythm is discussed by Deleuze and Guattari in A Thousand Plateaus: directly, as rhythm, in Of the Refrain; and indirectly, as punctual system or Pierre Boulez's pulsed time in Becoming-Intense. However, that is not quite the case. The punctual system seems to be characterised by meter, and
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Indeed, the master narrative of Boulez's history of music in the earlier chapter is abstracted by Deleuze and Guattari in such a way that this distinction is prehended by it: |
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That is, the beat does not punctuate or divide, it does not stop. Rather, it impels and propels, it rebounds, goes on. At the same time, rhythm directs what I have called the dance of the dead, animating the becoming within the monument. I would say it forms (and de-forms) sensations within the bloc. It would appear that specific rhythms compose or are composed within specific blocs of sensation, even though rhythms may also act as the means of linking bloc to bloc, decoding and recoding flows.
In Of the Refrain, Deleuze and Guattari deal with rhythm only in conjunction with territorialisation. Presumably, this is because rhythm is an aspect of becoming, because it marks the in-between and connects heterogeneities, not because it is consubstantial with the homogeneous space-time of a territory.
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To be on the beat is to live between, where only the past and future inhere . . . the instant without thickness and without extension (LOS 164). There, on the surface, you look forward and backward at the same time, acting the pattern and sensing the surprise. It is a movie, just as one would have expected - but it is also a story in the making, questions and answers, events illumined in the light of a miner's lamp, as things change, T+1, panel by panel. (9) They think that I keep the beat, but they are mistaken, for there is nothing of the beat that can be kept. Nor, on the other hand (for there is no other hand), do I set the beat, as I suppose one might set an alarm or dig a pit for ravening swine. No, what I do is ride, or try to ride, the beat and, if I am lucky, maybe once a night, the beat rides me and, riding me, rides them and you too. People think of rhythm as a foundation and music as a building - even Deleuze and Guatarri think this. But rhythm does not come from underneath anywhere: rhythm flows ungrounded. Over the surface. Unceasing. Rhythm shares the properties of Aion. Past and future are bipolar possibilities in a system of thought that is often suspicious of dichotomy. Walking the line of Aion demands them. Rhythm knows other pairings of qualities, marking extremities that cannot be reached, crossing at the point of the beat. Deleuze and Guattari several times refer to 'speed' as though that were the only quality of becoming. No doubt their formulation has the advantage of reminding us that strict tempo, the rhythm method, only works for white folks - but 'speed' is always only an instant along the line of fast and slow. Rhythm rides rougher or smoother - that is, more or less disconnected or connected, hot or cool. It is louder or softer and it is heavier or lighter (these are not two ways of describing the same qualities: there is a soft, but heavy beat in Jimmy Forrest's Night Train). Rhythm slides between regular and irregular, simple and complicated, tight and loose.
And, of course, it swings more or swings less - which, as I have now come to understand it, means that any rhythm discovers itself always dancing along the dead line that unwinds from the circle of stasis and entropy, always fleeing between the frozen heart of hell and the heat-death of the universe. |
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