F
Documentation of studies at the Royal Ghent Conservatory (Koninkilijke Conservatorium Gent) by Zachar
Laskewicz In the following document I will be
detailing the current work that I have been active in completing for two of the
courses that I am currently undertaking at the Royal Ghent Conservatory: Avant-Garde Chamber Music and Music-Theatre,
and Experimental Composition. The
experimental Composition class is held weekly and is a forum for discussion of
contemporary musical thought, including discussion of musical aesthetics,
musical discourse and semiotics, and more recently post-modern music. Musical communication has been an area of
concern, and traditional notions of "expressive" communication (left over from
the romantic era) is now rejected, and contemporary thought leads us to observe
new ways that music can actually communicate, or more particularly how we
communicate back to music allowing it to represent what is happening in the
world, hence discussion of music and politics. According to Godfried-Willem
Raes, the professor of experimental composition, music is not a 'fact of
nature' and is something certainly defined by certain cultural codes. His aim through the class is to define a new
system in which to place musical aesthetics:
"Aesthetics is politics and in the twentieth century it relates to
developments in technology." Previous
work of his course has been involved in similar work with redefining or rethinking
contemporary musical culture, including performance and analysis of the work of
Mauricio Kagel (revolutionary composer of music-theatre), and work in
"rediscovering rituals." These are representative of an attempt to explore
musical performance as a system of rules, and of Godfried-Willem's attitude to
experimental music whose purpose is to find new systems for creating these
rules, which can include creating entirely new structures for music by taking
them from other mediums: In the work in
"rediscovering rituals," the class were asked to define certain rituals and
create a performance that would act as a ritual for that event - like for
instance a ritual for cutting down a tree.
In our lives we have many rituals which are socially indoctrinated (such
as marriage) or that we repeat out of necessity (brushing our teeth). Discovering a musical expression for these
rituals seems an interesting basis for contemporary music performance: Music can no longer be defined as simply an
"expressive" medium that is beyond history, timeless, being as culturally
determined as every other art form.
Rediscovering or rethinking older theories, forms and rituals seems to
be the direction I am taking with my Russian futurist work. Discussion has covered much ground,
concentrating especially on two main areas:
Contemporary multi-media performance art and its position as a musical
discourse, and sound poetry in the twentieth century and its role in redefining
musical performance contexts. These
areas are especially important because of the concert that we are currently
organizing for new music week at the Logos foundation in February 1993. The theories discussed in the Experimental
Composition class and how they have found expression in my work will form the
basis for this paper. One of the first subjects discussed in
the class of Godfried concerned the position of the future of the traditional
forms of composing that are centred around "writing notes on paper." Godfried sees this as becoming a less and
less relevant and substantial part of contemporary music-making, which has
become more group-based, improvisatory, conceptual and appliance based: Multi media.
It is important to discuss this attitude to musical form and composition
in relation to the more traditional and conservative notions; that which is
being propagated in universities and conservatories around the world. Particularly noticeable in the Western world
is a quite limited definition of the concept of composition, where it is purely
the activity of conceptualising, setting and putting into writing of time and
space certain sonic events. Through this
the concept of composition was limited to the strictly musical. The existence of music as an autonomous
category has itself grown specifically in Western culture, and it was brought
to its extreme state at the turn of the century by the serialists represented
by Schoenberg who, through serial form were seeking to find the ultimate
solution for the enigma of classical "musical" form as totally abstract and
detached. However, there are a lot of
differing cultures where it is simply impossible to find something like
"abstract" music, just as not all languages recognize the word "music." The fact that the distinction between the art
forms exists can be seen as a historical product of Western culture, where in
favour of a greater productivity and efficiency, specialisation was necessary
and so a greater number of individual art forms came into existence. A class of specialists who could only work in
one single medium in which they obtained a certain technique, whose quality was
based on certain culturally and historically specific codes, came into
existence. Hereby this specialisation
became highly value-loaded, and this is particularly apparent in music and
musical form, becoming perhaps the most strictly culturally structured forms in
the Western world. This strict
marginalization of music could stem from its inherently dangerous power of
communicating in a way that goes beyond 'expression of reality' in the
traditional sense as it could be defined in other art forms, allowing the
possibility of transversing all other communicative forms. This can be
demonstrated by the strict control of musical form during the period of German
fascism and after the communist revolution in Russia. In the Western musical world an abstraction
has been made from everything that could allude to another medium. The performers themselves were dressed, and
still always are dressed in contemporary performances of classical music, in a
strict black and white uniform, in order to make their visual presence as
standardised as possible. Within the
composition itself, music was declared the highest form and composers tried to
reach this extreme intrinsic level. To
make the music value free, and to present it as a "universally" human
communicative mode, a music was formed in which no foundation for structure
could be found except within the music itself (classical form), free from any
reference to function or expression, so, free of the human in his relation to
the music. However, like anytime where
man has tried to structure himself outside himself, the results have
failed. At the beginning of this century
the Futurist movement in the arts had already revealed these myths as false, although
this was in rejection of an extremely stifling array of theatrical and literary
conventions which had for so long dominated these forms - strict
representation. This is certainly a
contrasting starting point, but the impetus for change is essentially the same,
but what the futurist did in rediscovering language and the word for purely its
sound value, is perhaps the most revolutionary of all developments for both the
musical and theatrical world. Since
Dada, more and more artists have widened their disciplines and even left their
own in favour of other disciplines.
Painters began to use letter-signs, writers created sonic poetry,
musicians started theatres, plastic artists did performances; as such the concert stage and the theatre
were abandoned for the street, and multi-disciplinary actions flourished. Kurt Schwitters wrote his Ursonate, a
lettristic work adopting entirely musical form.
Tzara and Arp, the essential Dadaists climbed on stage. Satie organized "happenings," and later so
did John Cage, Nam Yun Paik, Mauricio Kagel, Josef Anton Reidl, the Fluxus
artistic group. Today this multi-disciplinary work
remains an important structuring element for many new composers, despite the
fact that the classical traditions of music are still taught as if they are the
basis for all possible ways to see musical form. Many composers are more than
ever becoming aware of the fact that when they let a musician play a piece,
they have to put them on stage whether they want to or not, and this attitude
allows a broadening of the palette of expression possibilities. This is especially true in the new
music-theatre where the possibilities have grown simply beyond playing with the
relationship between the musician, his instrument, and his position on the
stage. Through music-theatre and other
multi-media performance forms many new possibilities of expression through
musical form have become available to the composer. One could of course make the remark that such
simultaneous handling of diverse media already existed a long time ago in the
form of opera. Unjustly so, however,
since opera is an institution in itself, and of the high society where the use
of multi-media springs in no way from a resistance to the institutionalisation
of the media. Mixed media in the
specific sense of the term, reflects as it were on the polyphonic use of
variant expressive possibilities in which it isn't the goal to obtain the
greatest homogeneity possible; as it is in opera it does not seek musical,
thematic and narrative-based resolution.
Rather the tension between that that can be expressed in the different
media is exploited. In twentieth century art the use of
sound poetry has been perhaps the strongest and most present element in the art
world, in order to truly break down the barriers set up by years of form and
tradition, first in literary traditions and later in the musical
traditions. This multi-media sensibility
was first exploited completely as the basis for an artistic movement by the
futurists, occurring around the same time in Italy and Russia in the first
decades of the twentieth century. The
most well recognized figure of futurism was Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, who
published an enormous amount of art manifestos and sound poetry that called for
a complete rethinking of the literary medium;
he was a poet bent on devising a new technique of composition, an
engineer of words who decomposed them to arrive at the syllable and smaller
linguistic divisions 'as the nucleus
joint hinge of discourse.'[1] Officially
futurism began in Italy on the twentieth of the second 1909 with the
publication of the first manifesto of Marinetti in the Parisian paper 'Le
Figaro.' Although the work of Marinetti
was certainly a step towards finding new ways to adopt the literary form through
the rethinking of text as music, and the written form as vocal notation, his
work was essentially semantic and representative of a particular 'futurist'
reality. Where Marinetti used neologisms, they are almost
always onomatopoeic or at least mimetic of the expressed reality. His resistance against the dependence of
language on the regulations of writing expressed itself in the first place in
his violations against syntax, the structure of the sentence and grammar, and
the use of a greater number of words that did not exist in the traditional
language in favour of a greater oral and communicative directness: The language freed from syntactic connection
and punctuation are immediately stripped of logical values to the exclusive
advantage of sonic quality - rhythm, tone, timbre. Mental reading of the poem becomes absolutely
inadequate, vocal execution and declamation are essential. This rupture with semantics became even stronger
with other artists that Marinetti had gathered around himself. They were to extend art forms beyond their
traditional boundaries, especially in the area of sound poetry: Umberto
Boccioni, Francesco Cangiullo, Mario Carli, Giacomo Balla, Luigi Russolo. It is the declamation (=execution) that
realises the poem. Poetry, born of song,
returns to song, and the circle is completed.
But if an ancient song was ritual, what is the modern execution but
modern ritual. Thus, declamation is
integrated by gesture, poetry is the theatre of words, words which are purely
euphonic.[2] The Russian culture in its avant-garde
period - soon to be classified under the general name of futurism - paid
particular attention right from the start to the phonic composition of its
verbal creation, in direct consequence of the importance attributed to 'the
word as such', which, according to the prophets of the movement, was rising
from the haze of indistinct singability to which the symbolists had consigned
it. The Russian futurists demanded a
radical reappraisal of language, and one of their primary poetic innovations
was "Zaumnu Yazyk" (abbreviated zaum ), meaning "trans-sense
language." This is basically a form of
poetic communication that was obstinately untranslatable because for the first
time pure vocal sounds were used, vocal fragments totally unsubordinated to
meaning, or that provided an entirely new way of looking at communication
through language that consisted of deconstructing the old. According to the futurists, poetry using
language restricted by strict referential meaning and grammatical structures
was no longer a valid form of artistic communication, which certainly reflects
my own attitude to the word. In Russian
futurism the strongest relationship was between the graphic and written
mediums. Futurists frequently tried to
add the visual element to their poetry using different typefaces, introducing
offbeat illustrations, and employing the author's handwriting. For these
artists, modern painting was "not only a new vision of the world in all its
sensuous magnificence and staggering variety, it was also a new philosophy of
art which shattered all established canons and opened breathtaking
perspectives."[3] Russian
futurist poets found immediate expression for cubist principles taken from
painting, where the principle of artistic distortion was grafted onto language
by equating the stroke on the canvas with sounds or phonemes. Instead of lines, planes and colours,
arranged in a unexpected order to present a fuller interpretation of reality,
the words were 'dislocated' and ungrammatically repositioned. This was to see its extreme expression in zaum, where poetry was extended to include
non-referential sounds that could nevertheless by enjoyed 'by themselves', more
closely associate with the condition of music.
The preeminence accorded by the
cubo-futurists to the word, no longer instrument but subject of poetic writing,
cleared the way for the doctrine of 'zaum language'. Alexei Kruchenykh and Velimir Khlebnikov
became the primary spokesmen for this new poetic language, and were joint signatories
of the manifesto "Slovo kak Takovoe" (The Word as Such, 1913): "Making use of quarter words, of half words,
and of their bizarre and abstract combinations.
It is in this way that one obtains the greatest expressive power, and it
is precisely this that distinguishes the language of impetuous modernity which
is destroying the fossilised language of the past."[4] Much
experimental work was also done using the performance medium, in fact
Kruchenykh, one of the primary theoreticians of 'zaum' language, said that he
saw zaum as the only possibility
for use in the new theatre and cinema, and Matyushin, a Russian futurist artist
and composer commenting upon an experimental futurist 'opera', said that
"through the disintegration of concepts and word, of old staging, and of
musical harmony, they presented a new creation, free of old conventional
experiences and complete in itself, using seemingly senseless words - picture
sounds - new indications of the the future that leads into eternity and gives a
joyful feeling of strength."[5] Sometime in 1916 Kruchenykh dodged the
draft by retiring to the Caucasus. There
he found work at a railway construction site, but found enough time for
literature. Tiflis (now Tbilisi), the
capital of Georgia, had become a literary and artistic oasis of Russia by the
time Kruchenykh had arrived there.
Futurism found fertile soil in Tiflis, in fact it could be said that the
inexorable development of what is known as Russian futurism from impressionism
through primitivism to abstractionism found here the final point beyond which
it never went. Kruchenykh formed a group
called 41°, a group consisting entirely of zaum poets, and it is in this group that the
extreme zaum work of Ilya
Zdanevich came to fruition. The most
unmistakable achievement among the members of this group must be credited to
Zdanevich: His work was an 'extreme'
formulation of zaum, more organic, more radical, but also more abstract, at the
limits of absolute comprehensibility.
From the point of view of semantic decodification, the zaum used by Zdanevich appears as an indistinct
phonic chain in which, from time to time, Russian roots or words barely
recognisable, often mangled in their pronunciation, in a structure designed to
imitate language, often enlivened by the flavour of oriental languages. More than that, the zaum was intricately orchestrated, where the
musical effects are absolutely preeminent and in which the characters speak
simultaneously, giving rise to a subtle interplay of accords and dissonances,
underlined by the superimposition in unison of vowels and syllables.[6] This work is
the height of what could be called 'Russian Dadaism.' Zdanevich found himself as an expatriate
after he was sent to Paris to organize an exhibition of modern Russian art. It is therefore no surprise that he decided
to stay in France and became an important member of the French Dada. The Dada movement however did not begin
in France, but in Switzerland. In Zurich
in 1916 the 'Cabaret Voltaire' was set up by the Dada performers, where most of
the early experiments took place.
Performance at the Cabaret Voltaire included dances and skits - many
employing masked performers, work with rhythm, noise music and typical dada
poetry. It was in the Cabaret Voltaire
that the 'simultaneism' of Robert Delauney found its most complete
expression. Experiments in simultaneity
led to multiple voices reading poems and manifestos, and the simultaneous
reading of unrelated texts (often in different languages). Dada was meant to be principally a focus for
an abstract art, and it had an absurd expression. It was in the Cabaret Voltaire that the work
of sound poet Hugo Ball came into existence.
He invented sound poems in which he composed with the sonic qualities of
vowels and consonants as the composer does with tones and instrumental
timbres. Some of the dada experiments
with language, particularly in the work of Hugo Ball, may be looked at against
a religio-mystical background. The
'magic' in religion has often been bound up with power-words like 'abracadabra'
whose meaning and linguistic provenance is obscure. Ball ascribed two-thirds of the "wonderfully
plaintive words that no human mind can resist" to "ancient magical texts."[7] Russian
futurism and Dadaism was perhaps the extreme point for linguistic
deconstruction; the work of French
Surrealism although important was basically an exploration of the subconscious
and this found expression through free combination of existing words that formed
a relatively 'strange' context but certainly not as divorced from the ordinary
linguistic conception of language as was found in the work of the Russian
futurists and the dadaists. Even Antonin
Artaud, who through his controversial vocal work, was able to demonstrate
extreme vocal and theoretical invention, his experiments were always based on
the structure of his native French language.[8] It is not until after the second world
war that we can see another really strong adoption of multi-media into artistic
form, especially musical form. It had a
strong revival, and found connection with the new available technological
possibilities: Recording equipment. This allowed sonic poetry to develop so much
further in the direction which we would call the musical: Isolation of sounds from spoken text, speed
modulations, build-up of spoken material, polyphony, space effects -all became
the simple possibilities. The first
group of poets were known as the "ultralettristes", and were a group who were
theoretically harking back to the work of Artaud, proclaiming the advent of
prelinguistic poetry. Prelinguism
consisted of the emission of sounds produced by the throat, lips and tongue,
without the intervention of words. These
"vocal" poets, as they liked to call themselves, used shouting, breathing, inarticulated
trumpeting noises produced by the muscles of the mouth as part of their work,
claiming that it expressed a potent charge of vitality. Works were composed that could only be
recorded by means of magnetic tape, improvisation with cries, shouts, noises
made with the lips, the tongue, the uvula, the throat.[9] Multi-media performance again found
expression in the sixties through the work and theory of John Cage, which found
extreme expression in the 'Fluxus' movement. John Cage's work involving indeterminacy,
chance, and simultaneous events was certainly influential forming performances
where the result is a display of unassociated actions and situations, an
assault on the senses of incoherent and inconsequential material which must be
observed impartially and dispassionately.
The initiative of theatrical performance art and music, seem to have
been refined after Futurism and Dada by the guidance of John Cage; the practice
spread widely, revealing new aspects and fresh possibilities not only in music,
but in painting, sculpture,literature, dance and drama.[10] The 'mono-structural' event became the
standard activity of Cage influenced multi-media artists of the 1960s: Fluxus performers. Typically, these would involve mainly one
performer (normally the composer), be of a short duration, be performed under
normal concert traditions, involve few or no environmental factors, and would
take place as part of a concert of other similar 'events.' The most important aspect of the Fluxus
movement is the radical redefinition of the elements that can be considered
music, opening the medium up not only into language but also 'events' both
conceptual and physical. In the field of
music-events Cage's most radical follower is probably La Monte Young. Below is an example of one of his 'Fluxus'
events: Composition 5 Turn a butterfly (or any number of butterflies) loose
in the performance area. When the composition is over, be sure to allow the
butterfly to fly away outside. The composition may be any length, but if an unlimited
amount of time is available, the doors and windows may be opened - the
composition may be considered finished when the butterfly flies away. La Monte Young, 1960 Young's works are also characterised by
long, ritual music-events consisting of electronic sound with live music played
over a sustained note, and light projections added: A hypnotic, timeless flow owing much to
Oriental influence. FLUX ART - non art - amusement forgoes
distinction between art and non-art forgoes artists' indispensability,
exclusiveness, individuality, ambition, forgoes all pretension towards a
significance, variety, inspiration, skill, complexity, profundity, greatness,
institutional and commodity value. It
strives for nonstructural, nontheatrical, nonbaroque, impersonal qualities of a
simple, natural event, an object, a game, a puzzle or a gag. This extract is taken from a manifesto
by George Macunias. Macunias makes
music-generated performance-pieces, like Piano Piece No. 13 in which each key
of the piano is nailed down, starting with the lowest notes and finishing with
the highest. He has further defined
Fluxus as 'mixed-media neo-baroque theatre'.
Fluxus concerts consisted of a number of disparate events rather than
all-embracing environmental whole that relate closely to Dada and its espousal
of chance.[11] The concert that will take place during
new music week in Ghent will be performed through the Avant-Garde Chamber Music
Class. The function is to explore the contemporary music theories discussed in the
experimental composition class by performing compositions by the composers who
take this class. The concert has two
main functions, the first is to explore new ways of performing music,
essentially examining the nature of music:
Its role in contemporary art, and its success and failings as a
communicative form, as well as the interface between music and other art
forms. Totally abandoning as many
traditional notions of performance as possible, the concert aims to present a
totally non-linear history of experimental performance art in the twentieth
century, including Futurism (Russian and Italian), Dada, and the influential
American arts movement in the sixties - Fluxus.
New compositions will be presented by the students, as well as
performances of Futurist and Dada poetry, and Fluxus events. According to Godfried-Willem Raes, Fluxus was
the most important movement in the twentieth century in relation to musical
thought and performance theory, where traditional notions of music were most
dramatically brought into question.
These movements were always at positions of radical social and/or
political change, and the art movements brought about changes in the way people
though about and could appreciate art.
The historical perspective itself is the impetus, but not the
structuring form for the concert, which will present a non-linear montage
structure involved more with musical form.
As well as the performance of pieces that were actually "composed"
(although the whole notion of this word is being questioned by the performance
events in this concert) during the avant-garde arts movements in question, the
new works that are being composed for this concert are based on new ways of
integrating these theories into contemporary music. The compositions that I have completed are
based on Russian futurist performance theory, and are structured around Russian
futurist poetry. The intention is by
presenting fragments of the older forms deconstructed, to create an entirely new
structure. It presents a contrast between
the avant-garde movements at the turn of the century who were driven by the
restricting literary traditions to explore multi-media, and movements such as
Fluxus in the sixties who worked in a similar way but from the opposite
direction; the restricting traditions of music forcing them to extend the notion of music into the
multi-media realm. I am presenting an
interface between these two perspectives, a text discovered as music, and music
communicating through text, the ultimate aim being to present ambiguity that
can provide many possible ways for 'meaning' to be rendered and to find a new
form for the expression of a performance text. One of the central concerns of the
avant-garde chamber music class has been the discussion and interpretation of
contemporary forms of music notation, and this has been particularly important
for me because of my interest in observing new systems in which performance
texts can be notated. In contemporary
music there has been a tendency in the
direction of consciously developing a multitude of internally different systems
of notation, individual from composition to composition. The notation, as a pragmatical sign system
(where the signs refer to actions, not to sound objects for instance) becomes
itself an expressive and meaningful piece of musical composition.This is a
completely understandable reaction against the profound alienation between
sound and notation, which occurred in the academic musical life of the 18th
century. The rules of music were
strictly formed, which set standards and structures as to exactly how music
should be listened and heard. This way
harmony, counterpoint and other forms of composition emerged, where it simply
wasn't a matter of working out a notation-system in which the ideas could be expressed
in a way musicians could translate them; but only a matter of a notation system
which was considered the criterium for the judgment of music. My work is certainly a reaction against these
traditions, and in almost every new composition I endeavour to find a new
notation system. The same is certainly
true of my new work for performance by the avant-garde chamber music class.. The complete Russian futurist
composition takes its name from that particularly Russian poetic innovation zaum.
The final "zaum" composition will be
a full scale three-movement work for five performers and tape, and although all
the movements will adopt Russian futurist texts, the second movement is most
relevant to this paper firstly because it most strongly adopts a contrasting
selection of multi-media elements, and secondly because it is the only
composition that will be included in the concert in January. Although the works form a part of the zaum super-structure, they are formed in such a
way that they will be able to be performed on their own. The tape part is for electronic sounds as
well as recordings of the performers themselves, reflecting a connecting series
of parallel structures that unite the work.
The zaum texts themselves
form the structural basis for this composition, uniting both the gestural, the
vocal and the musical communicative forms.
The emphasis is on creating a performance form that will produce no
'logical' expectations (as to narrative) through the adoption of musical
structures, but will still allow various forms of theatrical and musical
communication to be presented in forms that can flow between one another. The intention is to create interesting and
exciting contrasts through projecting these systems together, giving the
performance freedom to work on a number of different levels simultaneously,
presenting many possible interpretations as to the actual 'narrative' or
'narratives' at play. As all the texts
are firstly in Russian, and secondly have no direct interpretable meaning
anyway, the freedom attained is through assigning my own possible meanings to
these vocal sounds: The intention of course is to use this ambiguity between
text, language and meaning as the vehicle to create other communicative forms. During the course of the composition various
ensemble pieces will form and unform on stage, sometimes simultaneously,
sometimes solo, in order to present different aspects of zaum
communication, but still forming a part of the musical structure. Choreographed movement and interaction
between the tape and the live performance will play an important role. This is particularly important during certain
'interludes' in the composition where a phantom ensemble could be formed from
members of the performance group, that mime a simple musical performance on
tape with imaginary instruments. The
composition has no 'set'; place and absence of place are simultaneously created
and destroyed by the performers who move within a central performance area. Lighting and sounds (other than from the performers)
naturally play a role in creating the space in which the performers move. Costume design is relatively simple: The performers are called on to wear standard
dress suits, preferably of different colours (striking) and a little too
large. The presence of some kind of
similar hat is also important. The
costumes are not changed completely during the work, but at different times the
composition calls for certain elements of the costume to be removed or reworked
in some way - particularly the hat and the jacket. The purpose of this costume is first to
standardise the performers into a form that will allow them to be used during
composition as 'instruments' for the development, but at the same time will not
be alien to the audience and provide some ambiguity when these 'standard'
costumes are used by performers making very 'non-standard' gestures and sounds,
as well as actually 'using' these costumes for contrasting functions within the
work. The first movement presents an
exploration of Khlebnikov's attitude to zaum poetry.
Three underlying principles can be identified: First of all verbopoiesis (slovotvorcestvo). Khlebnikov was a poet-philologist, an
assiduous worker of verbal materials, a relentless excavator in the
vocabulary: Sounds induced him to
imagine significative potential that the
common language had not developed. Working with prefixes and suffixes,
sustantivizing adjectives and verbalising nouns, he created a magical
linguistic overworld in which he moved with absorbed fixation. The second principle of Khlebnikovian zaum is
phonowriting (zvukopis), which
induces him to seek in words a phonic-emotive expressiveness in complete
discord with the meanings, to the point of conferring on single syllables -
often intuitively extracted from a series of words able to be considered
homogeneous as regards some feature - independent meanings, which he
meticulously linked. Phonowriting gives rise to a whole series of phonoimages (zvukoobrazy) in his poetic writing. The third principle, is the mental
alphabet (azbuka uma) which seeks to
construct a language of hieroglyphs from abstract concepts, and is sometimes
called the "stellar" or "universal" language.
Here the Khlebnikovian 'zaum' attains its highest point of rarefaction,
and only conventionally can one speak of its possible decipherment.[12] This movement
will certainly adopt these three principles, but no attempt will be made to
differentiate them, and they will be combined freely, adopting a flowing
structure that will relate to the musical development. This is certainly a characteristic common
with Khlebnikov's work Elements of verbopoiesis,
phonowriting and the mental
alphabet are united by Khlebnikov's
interest in understanding of the power of the word as manifested in charms and
incantations, and especially through ancient Slavic myth.Through a combination
of story-telling where short mythical scenes are enacted (stories are heard on
tape in combination with some live vocalisations and are simultaneously acted
out centre stage by the members of the ensemble), combined with chanting (which
induces the attribution of a shaman-like intonation to the conception of
poetry), ritual gestures and movement, some sense of 'meaning' that goes beyond
the words themselves will hopefully be discovered: These linguistic structures are adopted as
part of the musical and gestural form. The movement will at certain times also
adopt Khlebnikov's interest in the relationship between sound and colour. A clear example is the text "Bobeobi" where a
phonopainting is explicitly
projected "on to the canvas," based on phonic analogies which can even be
translated on the basis of his note-books; but which should above all be
referred to as a mysterious relationship
between sounds and colours.[13] Colour slides
will be projected to present states of extended 'text', and during the
performance some kind of picture will be formed by the performers during the
course of the movement on an overhead projector, as certain elements are
simultaneously explained through gestural, musical, vocal and performance
orientated elements. Mention has already been made of the
important role played by Alex Kruchenykh (1886-1968) with regard to his theory
and use of "transmental" language. He
saw zaum as the leading mode of expression
because he believed that trans-sense language was demanded by the confused
character of contemporary life and served as an antidote to the paralysis of
common language. This was a reaction
against the obsession with meaning, reason, psychology and philosophy presented
by the conservative literary traditions.
He thought that they placed serious limitations on poetic imagination,
invention, verbal play and spontaneous intuition. Kruchenykh suggested that the "emptier" the
poetic imagination, the more creative and fruitful the poetic result: The
penetration of the mysteries beyond the rational world.[14] These
anarchic attitudes to language form the basis for the second movement, which
nonetheless have elements of the super-structure (however well hidden): The emphasis however is on the rejection of
the idea of any 'sense' or 'meaning' as necessary to a work of art. This is presented by a constant
transformation between 'theatrical' and 'musical' form, or more correctly,
contrasting performance situations that allude to theatrical 'meaning' (by
adopting gesture-signs that have some meaning other than as part of the
performance) and totally 'meaningless' gestures/sounds: The composition begins with performers
adopting potentially 'meaningful' gestures which form into an abstract musical
form, just as the composition ends after an abstract vocal composition develops
into a performance that alludes to Russian 'slapstick' theatre. The central section uses fragmented
gestures adopted from the first movement, and the movements themselves become
directly represented by vocal sound; sounds on tape become representative for
the performer movements, dictating purely abstract gestures from the performers
who become 'puppets' to the tape.
Lighting emerges on the central ensemble, who stand side-by-side central
stage, staring blankly as if entirely disinterested in the performance
event. Starts first with the performers
using certain gestures randomly:
Coughing, inhalation, clearing throat, audible exhalation. This soon forms into simple musical
structures, where the gestures are no longer performed randomly but form part
of a simple rhythmic structure. The tape
part emerges from beneath the sound of the live performance ensemble with
whispered conversational vocal sounds that appear to come from nowhere, and a
sudden loud sibilant sound (Shh!) silences everyone. The tape part is formed by the five voices on
stage in their specified performance positions (surrounding the performance
space) through stereo placing. The first
reaction from the performance ensemble is to be seemingly shocked, causing them
to look in all directions to see exactly from where the sound emerged. A number of whispered sounds on the tape lead
to a shouted command which brings the ensemble to attention. Then another vocal command is uttered, this
sound becomes a name for one of the performers and causes him to move to a
certain position and face in a certain direction. This happens a number of times until all the
performers are named and positioned in abstract positions around the
performance space. Then simple abstract
vocal sounds adopted from Kruchenykh
poems lead to short movements and gestures from the performers, as if puppets
to the tape. The sounds become more frequent, sometimes simultaneous, until
finally all the performers are moving and performing gestures. The tape part becomes underlined with
sibilant and breathing sounds. The names
of the performers are called and one by one they move into the specified
positions in the performance space. When
they arrive at the positions, they start audible breathing. When all performers are positioned the tape
part fades out: The vocal composition
develops resulting in the live slapstick theatre piece. This slapstick theatre piece is separated by
lighting effects to differentiate the small sections. A final text from Kruchenykh is adopted:
"Lets put an end to this ridiculous vaudeville"
(in multiple languages). A loud sound from the tape ('nyet') results in
the performers stopping simultaneously, then performing a simultaneous gesture
(a finger to the lips to indicate quietness), after which the performance space
is quickly brought into darkness. Vasily Kamensky (1884-1961) was one of
the first futurist poets. He was a major
part of the early futurist activity, and soon after a brief retirement (after
the failure of one of his books), he rejoined the group at a time when it
definitely had switched from the impressionism of the old days to new,
avant-garde techniques. Kamensky not
only welcomed the change, but wanted to proceed even further in this
direction. Following the premises of
Russian cubo-futurism, he attempted to break down language and reconstruct it
in a totally new form. He became
interested in the phonic instrumentation, and in particular with the
possibilities offered by onomatopoeic procedures (which nonetheless led to verbopoietic solutions, but of a very particular
nature): Here a melodic line came
increasingly to prevail. After
postulating the 'musical' orientation of the word, Kamensky asserted the poet's
right to his own unique understanding and vision of poetic beauty so as to
discover new poetic paths. A Russian
futurist critic wrote that "perhaps none other has felt the sound as an aim in
itself, as a unique joy as Vasily Kamensky."[15] The structure
of the third movement combines the structures of the poetic language and the
rhythm of the words, with structures from Indonesian gamelan, uniting entirely
gestural and musical elements from the first two movements into a complete
'musical' form: Musical structures
continually result in the formation of the text just as the reciting of
the text results in the creation of musical
structures. Multi-media performance, whether it is
adopted through the rethinking of musical or literary form, certainly provides
many possibilities for the artist, and it can be seen that in the twentieth
century this has been expressed potently through the medium of sound
poetry. Many new attitudes and methods
have become standard forms to express contemporary reality: The use of several
languages (natural and artificial) superimposed or juxtaposed, experimentation with language considered as
"material" and no longer as means, the decomposition of syntax and grammar to arrive
at relationships between the single word, emancipation of literary parameters,
recomposition in artificial linguistic structures and so on. But as can be
demonstrated in the work of the Russian futurists, the ultra-modern tends to
link up with the archaic; an eternal contradiction of the avant-garde, where
contemporary attitudes feed back to ancient and ritual forms of
communication. The adoption of harsh and
dissonant vocal sounds by the futurists and the ultralettristes certainly hark back to an ancient primeval
tongue. Kruchenykh himself also wrote
poetry consisting entirely of vowels, which can compare to the Egyptian priests
who chose a name composed entirely of vowels for the Gods in the most solemn
religious ceremonies.[16] The classical
tradition has obliterated this type of "Asian" invention and it has fallen to
the avant-garde to rediscover and appropriate it: "Without a religious sensibility it is
impossible to play the fool" writes the dadaist Hugo Ball; "we must withdraw
into the deepest alchemy of words, reserving to poetry its most sacred
ground." This programme would have
appealed to Velemir Khlebnikov who wanted to create a mythical "panslavonic"
language 'whose shoots must grow through the thicknesses of modern Russian.'[17] My intention
in the zaum composition is to
explore this connection between the ancient and the contemporary by adopting
certain attitudes to multi-media performance and linguistic theory in the
musical structure. I would like to thank Bart Maton for
translating much of the course material from Dutch into English. This material is taken from the complete
course work presented by Godfried-Willem Raes at the Royal Ghent Conservatory,
and forms the basis for much of this paper. [1] Mauricio Dell'Arco (Futura:
Poesia Sonora, Cramps Records) [2] Futura: Poesia Sonora ,
Cramps Records (Memoria Spa, 20123 Milano): Futurist Declamation. [3] Vladimir Markov, Russian
Futurism (MacGibbon and Kee Ltd, 1968):
Introduction. [4] Futura: Poesia Sonora: Zaum, transmental
language. [5] Susan B. Compton, The
World Backwards (British Museum Publications 1978). [6] Futura: Poesia Sonora: Zaum, transmental
language. [7] Annabelle Melzer, Latest
Rage the Big Drum, UMI Research Press 1980. [8] Futura:
Poesia Sonora: The Howl, Antonin Artaud. [9] Futura: Poesia
Sonora: The howl, ultra lettristes [10] Peter Yates, "Theatrical
Performance music", Twentieth Century Music, George Allen and Unwin Ltd
1968. [11] Adrian Henri, Environments
and Happenings (Thames and Hudson London 1974): Fluxus and the Event [12] Sonora:
Futura Poesia: Zaum, transmental language [13] Sonora:
Futura Poesia: Zaum, transmental language [14] Vahan D. Barooshian, Russian
Cubo-Futurism (Ardis Lakeland Press 1980): pg. 83. [15] Vahan D. Barooshian, Russian
Cubo-Futurism (Mouton Paris 1976): Chapter 5 [16] Sonora:
Futura Poesia: What is sound poetry? [17] Sonora:
Futura Poesia: Forerunners and Dadaists in Germany.
Š May 2008 Nachtschimmen
Music-Theatre-Language Night Shades,
Ghent (Belgium)*
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Major Writings
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