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Editorial: Alternative histories of electroacoustic music

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 July 2017

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Abstract

Type
Editorial
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2017 

In the more than twenty years of its existence, Organised Sound has rarely focused on issues of history and historiography in electroacoustic music research. Although some articles have adopted an explicitly historic perspective – often as the only such article within a given issue – many more have focused upon the documentation of current or recent creative practice and scientific research, the latest tools, techniques and software, or the development of new aesthetics, theory and analysis. Perhaps this should not be surprising given electroacoustic music’s close links with music technology, which like many technical disciplines is underpinned by an essentially modernist agenda of progress through technological innovation.

There are, naturally, a few significant exceptions to this generalisation. Issue 9.1, marking ‘a century of innovation involving sound and technology’ (and roughly coinciding with the establishment of the Electroacoustic Music Studies Network), included several articles that directly addressed an important historiographic issue, namely, developing and maintaining source materials for musicologists (Atkinson and Landy Reference Appleton and Perera2004; Battier Reference Austin and Kahn2004; Ramel Reference Prieberg2004; Teruggi Reference Tazelaar2004). This theme was taken further in volume 11, which foregrounded such issues as archiving (Chasalow Reference Charrieras and Mouillot2006; Dal Farra Reference Cox and Warner2006; Waters Reference Tresch and Dolan2006), preservation (Emmerson Reference Davies2006), approaches to technological obsolescence (Bullock and Coccioli Reference Braun2006; Polfreman, Sheppard, and Dearden Reference Pinch and Trocco2006; Wetzel Reference Weium and Boon2006; Yong Reference Wittje2006) and the study of tools and techniques as a method in historical musicology (Manning Reference Manning2006). Issue 18.3 – ‘Re-wiring Electronic Music’ – included a few articles documenting recent creative practice that implicitly adopts a historiographic or media archaeological perspective (Paiuk 2013; Parker Reference Paiuk2013; Riis Reference Ramel2013). Finally, issue 20.1, marking ‘20 Years of Organised Sound’, had an explicitly retrospective emphasis, and included a range of personal reflections on electroacoustic music’s history, as well as an article on canon formation in its literary history (Mooney Reference Moles2015). However, these articles represent a comparatively small proportion of Organised Sound’s total output, and many of them engage with history only from the perspective of its relevance to, or incorporation within, present-day creative practice. Manuella Blackburn’s editorial observation that ‘all this contemplation appears very current and future focused’ (Blackburn Reference Bijker, Pinch and Hughes2014) could quite reasonably be applied, then, to the majority of discourse within this journal.

There is, of course, a large body of literature beyond Organised Sound that directly addresses electroacoustic music’s history. The first substantial secondary accounts and surveys began to appear in the 1960s (Prieberg Reference Polfreman, Sheppard and Dearden1960; Moles Reference Manning1960; ORTF Reference Niebur1962; Davies Reference Dal Farra1968). These focused on composers, studios and technologies, and were often geographically organised, a gambit extended by many key sources that followed (Appleton and Perera Reference Adkins and Russ1975; Ernst Reference Eno1977; Griffiths Reference Ernst1979; Schrader Reference Schaeffer1982; Holmes Reference Helliwell1985; Manning Reference Latour1985; Chadabe Reference Cage1997). From the 1990s, disciplinary and methodological horizons broadened, with substantial contributions from the fields of anthropology (Born Reference Blackburn1995), sound studies (Kahn Reference Holmes1999; Cox and Warner Reference Cox2004; Sterne Reference Smith and Marx2012), history of science and technology (Braun Reference Born2002; Wittje Reference Wetzel2016), science and technology studies (Pinch and Trocco Reference Pinch and Bijker2004), gender studies (Rodgers Reference Riis2010), material culture (Weium and Boon Reference Waters2013), and critical organology (Patteson Reference Parker2016) to name a few. Focused studies have spotlighted individuals, institutions, and locales that had been omitted or scantily treated in earlier accounts (Kuljuntausta Reference Kane2008; Niebur Reference Mooney2010; Adkins and Russ 2013; Tazelaar Reference Sterne2013; Helliwell Reference Harrison2016). Reprints and new editions of iconic primary sources ensure that these texts remain important also (Cage Reference Bullock and Coccioli2011; Austin and Kahn Reference Atkinson and Landy2011; Schaeffer Reference Rodgers2012). Any brief survey must necessarily be partial, of course.

Why, then, is there a relative lack of historic perspective within Organised Sound? One possible explanation stems from the demographic of Organised Sound’s reader/authorship. As Leigh Landy has recently noted:

most people writing about this music are those who are making it … In other words, many of these authors might have had difficulty writing from an etic (detached from the community in question) point of view. A significant portion of articles received by the journal are clearly emic – that is, from within the community and, not unusually, largely self-enclosed – offering a fairly tokenistic contextualisation. (Landy Reference Kuljuntausta2015: 4)

Although he goes on to note that author-practitioners have become ‘better able to look at their subjects from a distance’ in recent years, on the whole it appears that approaches to this have tended towards systematic rather than historical musicology, that is, authors have tended to frame their arguments and analyses in terms of abstract formalisms rather than by historic or historiographic contextualisation.

Furthermore, where authors have adopted a historic perspective, there seems often to have been a reluctance to deviate from a handful of well-trodden narratives about electroacoustic music’s history that stem from the activities of a few ‘canonised’ men (and, where applicable, their associated institutions). In Europe-focused accounts, the most obvious of these are Pierre Schaeffer – invariably cast as the ‘inventor of musique concrète’ (e.g. Kane Reference Kahn2007: 15; at the time of writing, Schaeffer’s name has featured in the titles of no fewer than fourteen Organised Sound articles) – and Karlheinz Stockhausen and his (N)WDR associates – typically cast as the progenitors of the ‘rival’ approach of elektronische Musik (e.g. Harrison Reference Griffiths1998: 117). John Cage and Edgard Varèse are often jointly associated with the ‘liberation’ of all sounds as potentially musical (e.g. Cox Reference Chasalow2009: 25), while Max Mathews is often described as ‘the father of computer music’ (e.g. Charrieras and Mouillot Reference Chadabe2015: 191). The point is not necessarily that such statements are ‘wrong’, rather, that collectively they reify a standard narrative that risks becoming an unquestioned part of Organised Sound’s collective emic perspective. If we want to broaden this perspective, then we will need to look for alternatives to, or extensions of, this standard narrative.

In April 2016, the editors staged a conference at the Science Museum, London, entitled ‘Alternative Histories of Electronic Music’ – AHEM.Footnote 1 In the call for participation, delegates were invited to address aspects of electronic music’s history that, they felt, had been neglected, marginalised, or simply not considered in previous accounts – hence ‘alternative’. The precise range of topics was deliberately left open; it was simply suggested that delegates might focus on little-known individuals, institutions, or artefacts, perspectives absent from ‘standard’ accounts (however defined), and/or promising methodological approaches such as those found in science and technology studies (STS). The response to our call was encouraging: we received some 110 abstracts – far exceeding the number that could be accommodated, even after extending the conference to three full days. The volume of submissions alone demonstrated that much of this research had clearly been waiting to be given a place/space in the field of electroacoustic music studies, and that the time was ripe for an increased attention to issues of history and historiography within this discipline.

The call for papers for this special issue was similar to that of the conference that preceded it, and likewise generated a high number of submissions, such that, unusually, there are no off-topic articles included here. Although some of the articles began their life as presentations delivered at the AHEM conference, the majority were developed independently of it, further illustrating the timeliness of the theme.

Most of the articles presented here challenge the standard narrative in one way or another; however, this special issue was not motivated by a desire to reject previous scholarship on electroacoustic music’s history. Rather, it is supposed to serve as an illustration that all history is contingent: no account can be complete in every detail; none can accommodate all viewpoints, or interrogate all sources. In this respect this special issue can be seen as part of a wider musicological trend; the product of, as Georgina Born has put it, ‘a widespread sense that the historiographical foundations of music studies would benefit from being renewed’ (Born Reference Born2010: 238). Neither is the aim, here, to create a new conveniently reductive historic ‘context’ to replace the old one. Echoing Benjamin Piekut, we feel that ‘the danger of context is that it accepts and uses as explanations those stabilized contingencies that are themselves the formations that need to be explained’ (Piekut Reference Patteson2014: 205). Indeed, many of the articles collected here draw attention to the contingent nature of such familiar narratives. Above all, these articles are supposed to encourage scholars and practitioners to think about the history of electroacoustic music (studies), to productively defamiliarise the familiar narratives and to seed the development of a new historiographic musicology from within the (generally present- and future-facing) electroacoustic music community.

The first three articles explore or problematise the early roots of electroacoustic music. Two of these (Lautour, Cox) address the context within which musique concrète emerged in the 1930s and 1940s, and thus ‘open the black box’ (Latour Reference Landy1987: 1–17) of a creative practice that is taken as axiomatic in many accounts of electroacoustic music’s history. The other (Wilson) goes even further and bypasses that context altogether, replacing it with a series of vignettes from the nineteenth century that have rarely if ever found their way into the standard accounts.

Daniel Wilson’s contribution has something of Gibson and Sterling’s counterfactual novel The Difference Engine, which imagines a Victorian world of information technology come early courtesy of a more successful Charles Babbage. In Wilson’s account, electronic music – or rather, electrical music – flourished in the music halls in the hands of one Johann Baptist Schalkenbach, in the telephonic feedback demonstrations of John Gray McKendrick at the Royal Institution Christmas Lectures of 1895, and in howling sounds produced – sometimes deliberately, it seems – by the operators of early amplified radio sets. This forceful intervention in the alternative histories that are this issue’s concern demonstrates the virtues of leaving behind the well-travelled paths of electronic music historiography, and choosing instead excursions into the long-forgotten and little read literature of house clearances and the forgotten backrooms of second-hand booksellers.

Reuben de Lautour explores questions of the artistic status of what he calls ‘the phonographic arts’. Provocatively, he argues that, unlike photography and cinema, the phonographic arts lack a critical tradition because they did not experience an ‘Is it art?’ moment. Instead, he argues, audio recording is surrounded by an uncritical discourse about verisimilitude – a discourse that he claims ‘became embedded in the studio practice of Pierre Schaeffer’ despite being ‘not well suited to the demands of musique concrète (or indeed any other form of electroacoustic music)’. Through an analysis of Schaeffer’s practice and writings, and those of the Canadian World Soundscape Project, Lautour shows how notions of naturalistic fidelity have shaped practice and critical discourse in electroacoustic music.

Geoffrey Cox proposes an alternative (or, perhaps, parallel) history of musique concrète by uncovering the ways in which British documentary soundtracks prefigured many aspects of Pierre Schaeffer’s practice. He is careful not to present this sonic practice as the genealogy for what came after; rather he sketches a series of striking similarities between the two practices under comparison in aesthetic choices over the arrangement of recorded sounds in preference to conventional composition for orchestral instruments. Taking the less well-known example of the film 6:30 Collection (1934), as well as the famous Coalface (1935, made with the collaboration of Benjamin Britten), he highlights parallels between the affordances that filmmakers found in the technological paraphernalia of sound on film, and those that their successors found in the new post-war tape recorders. In doing so, he demonstrates that the axiomatic practices of musique concrète are not unique to that discipline.

The next four articles, rather than interrogate the roots of electroacoustic music, trace (or imply) lineages from past to present. Three of these reconfigure the standard narrative (Levaux; Long et al.; Cameron and Rogalsky). The fourth (Gardner) traces a lineage of smaller scale and scope by focusing on the development of a single electronic musical instrument: the EMS VCS3.

Christophe Levaux traces the history of ‘repetitive audio technologies’, from the earliest mechanical instruments of the ninth century, through the golden age of mechanical music in the nineteenth century, through the Hammond organ tonewheels of the 1930s, to the experiments with disc and tape loops by Cage, Schaeffer and others in the 1940s and 1950s. By focusing on mechanisms of repetition, he challenges the idea that the musical control of sound through cyclic repetition has its roots in the Cagean/Schaefferian avant garde – a notion that is, he argues, implied in most of the well-known accounts – and urges historians instead to consider ‘the long history of musical technology’ in their accounts of the organological roots of electroacoustic music.

Jason Long, Jim Murphy, Dale Carnegie and Ajay Kapur present a survey of musical robotics that serves as a history of ‘electro-acoustic music without loudspeakers’. Working backwards from the present day (thus following the opposite path to Levaux), they trace the lineage of mechanical actuation in music, from recent applications in popular music, to the experimental instruments and sculptures of Raes, Trimpin and Caulkins in the 1970s. They further trace the origins of the ‘concrete musical phrase as a compositional tool’ to the pneumatic and hydraulic machines of the nineteenth century and earlier. Like Levaux, Long et al. reframe contemporary electroacoustic music as part of a history that predates both loudspeakers and electricity – surely two of the most fundamental disciplinary axioms.

Laura Cameron and Matt Rogalsky frame nature recording as a precursor of modern soundscape composition. Through their analysis of A Day in the Life of Algonquin Park (1955) – an LP of birdsong recordings by the Canadian sound recordist William W. H. Gunn – they propose the genre of the ‘circadian audio portrait’, a naturalistic form that ‘represent[s] place and time through an artificial assemblage of recorded sequences’. Citing the technical skill and aesthetic choices evident in Algonquin Park, they argue that Gunn should be recognised as a pioneer of soundscape composition and acoustic ecology, despite never having self-identified in those terms (and, indeed, despite his practice having predated the widespread currency of those terms). In doing so, they allude to a parallel genealogy of electroacoustic music, with naturalistic representation rather than acousmatic abstraction as its point of origin.

James Gardner provides an account of the development of the famous EMS VCS3 synthesizer, and thus addresses historic lineage on a smaller scale, and within a narrower scope, than the previous three articles. In discussing the different stages of the instrument’s development, from bespoke one-off, to commercial prototype, to commercial availability, he highlights the social construction of the technology (Pinch and Bijker Reference Piekut1984) through the interactions of key protagonists including the members of EMS – Tristram Cary, David Cockerell and Peter Zinovieff – and the Australian composer Don Banks. In an approach not dissimilar to that taken by Pinch and Trocco in their account of the development of the Moog synthesizer (Pinch and Trocco Reference Pinch and Bijker2004), Gardner highlights how the social and technical contingencies that played into the development of this piece of music technology eventually became concretised within the artefact itself.

The next four articles challenge historiographic biases, whether these be related to the kinds of sources consulted and neglected by electroacoustic music historians (Bosma; also implicit in Wilson), the representation of women in, or their exclusion from, discourse surrounding electroacoustic music’s history (Morgan, Vàgnerovà), or institutional (non-)representation (Duffy).

Hannah Bosma criticises electroacoustic music’s written history for its obsession with technological innovation and its bias in favour of tape-based works. This, she argues, acts against practitioners working in performance-based forms such as live electronic music, or whose contributions to the genre have been musical or conceptual rather than technologically innovative. Through a discussion of three Dutch practitioners whose works ‘seem to resist documentation’ – Dick Raaijmakers, Michel Waisvisz and Huba de Graaff – Bosma urges historians to attend to musical innovation as well as technical, and argues for performance as a form of preservation for live electronic music.

Frances Morgan focuses on representations of women in popular discourse surrounding electroacoustic music history. Drawing examples from new digital media, she argues that images of ‘the lone, exceptional female “pioneer”’ perpetuate a male-dominant view antithetical to the ethos of many of the women thus portrayed, which, furthermore, does nothing to address ‘inequalities in the field of music technology […] that continue in the present day’. By eliding the ‘challenges, isolation and discrimination’ endured by the women they depict, Morgan argues that such images celebrate rather than critique the marginalisation of women in electroacoustic music, and reduce women’s contribution to a trope – a mere ‘gender as genre’ for a ‘presumed majority male, heterosexual audience’.

Lucie Vágnerová calls attention to the countless predominantly female labourers responsible for assembling audio electronics, and thus confronts the uncomfortable fact of their exclusion from electroacoustic music narratives. She addresses the issue of gendered, racialised, neo-colonial labour from a range of perspectives: by acknowledging the role that such labour played – and continues to play – in facilitating the widespread availability of cheap electronic equipment; by highlighting analogous exploitative labour practices in the fashion industry; and by exploring some of the ways in which slave labour has been foregrounded in Afro-futurist art, as opposed to the normally ‘sanitised image of technology’ that evades issues of race and gender. In doing so, she compels the reader to rethink the category of ‘women in electronic music’.

For Paul Duffy, the question is: what if the number of smaller institutions represented in accounts of electroacoustic music’s history was greater? Duffy’s contribution to this special issue is a detailed account of electronic music at the University of Iowa, his own institution. He shows how in this particular case, it was an approach from outside music – namely, the university’s physics department – that set in train more than fifty years of teaching and performance. In giving us a chronological account, appropriately detailed as regards heads of department, equipment and repertoire, he lays out a structure that could, as he suggests, enable comparative accounts of other universities (not dissimilar, in fact, to the approach taken by the British journal Contact in the mid-1970s); foundational empirical studies that will, in due course, enable a more synthetic alternative history to be composed.

Finally, disciplinary (or sub-disciplinary) boundaries take centre stage in two articles that foreground how such boundaries are created (Saladin) and maintained (Pigott) through creative practice with technology, and in two articles that explore how technical and creative disciplines collaborated in the co-advancement of computing technologies and their musical applications (Parolini, Doornbusch). Three of these articles (Saladin, Pigott, Parolini) make explicit use of the methods of science and technology studies (STS).

Matthieu Saladin, through his analysis of the work of Max Neuhaus and Alvin Lucier, explores the role that live electronic music – specifically, experiments with electroacoustic feedback – may have played in catalysing the emergence of a new art-form: that of the sound installation. For both composers, Saladin claims, the use of feedback led to an increased emphasis upon spatiality, rather than timbre, as a primary aesthetic concern, paving the way for an autonomous art-form ‘emancipated from the concert hall’. He relates this shift to the fundamental nature of electroacoustic feedback systems, which ‘[inscribe] the electronic device in a spatial dimension that is linked to the propagation of sound’, and thus draws attention to the kinds of ‘agency’ that technology can exert in the shaping of creative practice.

Jon Pigott compares approaches to the creation and use of electromechanical technologies in music, sound art, kinetic art and industrial contexts. By ‘following a technology across disciplinary boundaries’ – a method native to STS – he identifies the contrasting and context-sensitive ways in which electromechanical assemblages have been ‘black-boxed’, and the differing creative approaches this engenders. Drawing upon a range of historic and contemporary examples from experimental music and sound sculpture (and referencing the practice of more than one author from this special issue), Pigott urges electroacoustic musicologists to ‘combine and challenge standard divisions between the technical and the cultural’, as a way of providing new analytical frames for electroacoustic music past and present.

Giuditta Parolini uses a case study of the Italian cellist and composer Pietro Grossi to explore the intersection between music, technology and business in relation to the development of early computer music. She shows how Grossi chose to learn how to program computers so that he could realise his musical ideas; the results were also of value to the computer companies Olivetti-General Electric and Italian IBM, as a way of testing the software and hardware capacities of their machines. Adopting a strongly sociological perspective, Parolini’s case study highlights the debt that today’s discipline of computer music owes to the efforts of technologically adventurous musicians like Grossi, who were willing to invest considerable effort to bridge what were, at the time, formidable boundaries between the creative and technical disciplines.

Finally, Paul Doornbusch, in his discussion of ‘Early Computer Music Experiments in Australia and England’, traces the emergence of computer music-making applications from the error-checking routines and technical exercises of engineers working on automatic calculation machines in the late 1940s and early 1950s. Representing the earliest known examples of computer music-making, experiments with the Ferranti Mk. 1 and Pilot ACE computers in Manchester, and the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research Automatic Computer (CSIRAC) in Sydney, highlight how computers were ‘used musically since the earliest development of those machines’, several years before ‘the father of computer music’ Max Mathews’s canonical work on digital synthesis, and Hiller and Isaccson’s on algorithmic composition.

The articles collected here show how engaging with issues of history and historiography might help to broaden the sometimes problematically narrow, emic, present-day-focused perspective often adopted within Organised Sound’s pages. (Although two-thirds of the authors are composers, or have their own creative practice, none discuss their own work directly.) The articles also demonstrate some of the ways in which historiographic sensitivity can be used to challenge the ‘standard’ narrative of electroacoustic music’s history: by problematizing the early roots of the idiom; by actively seeking connections between past and present practice that upset assumed lineages; by interrogating disciplinary axioms and boundaries; by spotlighting historiographic biases. There remains, of course, much work to be done. We are aware that, with perhaps one borderline case (Vágnerová), the perspective offered in this special issue is exclusively Western; more work is needed to demarginalise non-Western histories of electroacoustic music. Partial as it is, we hope that this collection of articles will help to advance debate, stimulate interest in history and historiography among electroacoustic music’s scholars and practitioners, and prompt further research in this area.

We hope that you, the readers of this special issue, like the contributors to the volume and those who were at the conference, accept our proposition that electronic and electroacoustic music become more interesting by the opening-up of this diversity of interpretations. If you do, then we hope you will join us in extending this approach further in the years ahead. We feel that there is still more to be learned by working with our colleagues in science and technology studies (see Bijker, Pinch and Hughes Reference Battier2012), and in the history of technology. (Echoing Smith and Marx (Reference Schrader1994), to what extent does music technology drive music history, for instance?) We are confident that there is much to be learned from visiting the stores of the museums worldwide that hold the instruments that time may have forgotten (e.g. Mooney Reference Mooney2017). We know that some of our colleagues in organology are embarking on a similar journey (e.g. Tresch and Dolan Reference Teruggi2013). Who knows? Given musicians’ fascination for the pasts of electronic music (e.g. Eno Reference Emmerson2013), perhaps we can expect a positive feedback loop from this new approach to give us new kinds of music too.

We would like to extend our thanks to all the authors who have contributed to this special issue, to the numerous peer reviewers who generously and anonymously devoted their time to reading and commenting on the many submissions we received, and to the invited speakers, presenters and delegates of the AHEM conference, many of whom are not represented within these pages, but all of whom were instrumental in establishing the dialogue that led to this special issue. We also thank Leigh Landy for his patience and support in handling a larger number of submissions than expected. This special issue and the conference that preceded it were made possible by a grant from the Arts and Humanities Research Council, as part of the project ‘Hugh Davies: Electronic Music Innovator’ (ref: AH/M005216/1). Our final thanks go to the AHRC for providing this support.

Footnotes

1 See Mooney, J., Boon, T. and Schampaert, D. (eds.), ‘International Conference: Alternative Histories of Electronic Music’ (University of Leeds, 2016), https://doi.org/10.5518/160 .

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